Navigation

Travel Money Belts - Travel Security

News

  Home
Select a destination
Site Map
About Us

 

Related Articles

 

Travel India Holidays-Rajasthan Goa Kerala,Taj Mahal,GoldenTriangle,Incredible India Travel Packages, South North India Holidays

Booking Travel Online - 5 Tips You Must Know

Bhutan Majestic Travel

How To Travel The World For Free

An Adventurers Travel Checklist

Money Saving Travel Tips

Spain Travel Tips

Travel Journals - Preserve Your Travel Experiences

Seasonal Travel Ideas

The Top 100 Travel Products That You Can’t Live Without

Greek time in Athens Greece , Greek travel travelling in Athens Greece free travel tips.

Top Travel Reservation Tips For A Stress-Free Trip!

Travel to Denmark During the "Year of the Renaissance."

Best Price Cruises! A Few Simple Steps To Booking Cruise Travel Deals Online

How To Create Your Own Travel Discounts!

Four Ways to Free/Low Cost Travel

Health Tips for Travellers

China Travel Tips

Traveling on a Budget? Try These Money-Saving Vacation Ideas

How To Be Safe While Traveling

Travel Hong Kong: 12 Must See Places

Travel Health Insurance: Reimbursement Depends On Following The Rules

Budget travel and free flights - how to get yourself bumped

Traveling ! Be sure to have a valid passport.

Traveling With Diabetes: 11 Tips To Make It Easy For You

How To Keep Yourself Healthy While Traveling

Using a vacation club to keep your travel budget under control

What You Need To Know About – Cancun Travel

San Francisco Travel - Discover the Mission District's Murals

Safe and Sound Winter Travel


 
 






 

More Articles, Click Here

Travel money belts are still a good way to carry cash. They're common, and thieves know of them, but it isn't easy to tell if your belt has a hidden compartment, and it isn't easy for a robber to get at it quickly. It is a good way to carry SOME of your cash when you travel. Here are some more ways. Losing Money In An Ecuadorian Disco Travel gets me thinking of ways to hide money. I had the idea that a hundred dollars, wrapped up in an ace bandage on my leg, would be safer than in money belts. It worked for ten days on our trip to Ecuador, until we went dancing. The cash danced to its own tune, which I didn't even notice until morning. The lesson is to wrap it up tight, or don't go dancing. Hiding Money And Documents There are travel options other than money belts for hiding cash and important papers. Use several of them, rather than putting everything in one place. Don't carry too much cash. It's easy now, almost everywhere, to access your money using an ATM, so carry enough for a few days, or a week at most. There are pouches that hang under your shirt to carry your passport and other papers. They're obvious if you're wearing a light shirt, but then it is always hard to thoroughly hide a passport on your body. In any case, it isn't easily accessible to pickpockets. I cut a pocket from some old pants and used a safety pin to attach it inside my travel pants. This has worked well on several trips. It's not noticible, and would be difficult for a thief to get at without taking off my pants. However, it is inconvenient when I'm


travel,,Flights,,vacation package

asked for my passport, since I have to reach into my pants. Hiding Money In Shoes If the inner soles of your shoes are removable, put twenty dollars under each one for emergencies. This works well for me, but then I don't have expensive shoes that could themselves be a target. It is just another place to hide cash, and you should always have several different ones when traveling. Think creatively. Roll up a bill and put it in the handle of a disposable razor. Just don't throw it away by accident. Find or make other hiding places. If your money is in several hard-to-find places, it will take a persistent thief to find all of your cash. Make robbers truly work for their living. Hiding money in your hotel room requires some thought. There are many good places. Ask any thief, and he'll tell you the best ones. Just choose a safe hotel and be careful. Of course, hiding things will at least reduce the temptation for bad employees and lazy thieves. I once had a wallet stolen from a zippered back pocket. It was a decoy wallet, so the pickpocket's skill earned him a few pieces of paper. Another time I had to drag a robber off a bus and wait for police, but his accomplice escaped with our money. Travel is about adventure, but fortunately we can avoid this kind most of the time. About the Author Steve Gillman hit the road at sixteen, and traveled the U.S. and Mexico alone at 17. Now 40, he travels with his wife Ana, whom he met in Ecuador. To read their stories, tips and travel information, visit: http://www.EverythingAboutTravel.com

Written by: Steve Gillman



Web www.hotelesyvuelos.com



GooGle News

XML error: mismatched tag at line 20