Tag Archives: travel security

Travel Safety and Security in Potentially Dangerous Locations

Tips based on a 10 night trip, using local transportation, in 3 Ecuadorean cities: Cuenca, Otavalo and Quito.

Roasted pig, roadside in Cuenca, Ecuador

The most dangerous thing I encountered in Ecuador… Cholesterol

For all I know, Ecuador is completely safe, and rumors of the danger there are equivalent to the outdated ideas people have about safety in New York. But, after reading multiple forum posts from recent travelers about knife-point robberies in broad daylight in the cities I would be visiting, I began to consider security issues beyond the usual concerns of a woman traveling alone.

As the plane began its descent into Guayaquil, the women around me began stuffing money into their bras. Normally, I would be doing the same, but I already had my money separated into 3 places and was only taking a cab 2 kilometers from the airport to my hotel. Most of my money and credit cards were in my money belt; small bills to pay the cab and tip in the hotel were in my jeans pocket, and $40 was in the tiny jeans “watch” pocket to hand any knife-point robbers lurking in the airport.

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My Top 10 Indispensable Travel Products*

 

*not counting the camera and laptop

April school break and summer travel will be here before you know it. Are you ready? Here are some of my favorite travel products and gadgets to make me more comfortable, and more secure on the road.

Noise Canceling Headphones – I’m sure the Bose are better, but I am happy with my Audio Technica ATH-ANC7Bs for 1/2 the price. And, they’ve lasted for years unlike the cheaper sets I used to have to replace every 6 months from Radio Shack. The carrying case is huge, but it is smaller than the Bose.

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On the Trip – Security Advice & Checklist

Ring Fort, Inishmore - Aran Islands, Ireland

One of many ancient ring forts on Inishmore, Aran Islands, Ireland

Know where you’re staying. Is there a room safe? If not, I would minimize the valuables. If there is no safe, I have a tendency to do 1 of 2 things. Lock my valuables in my suitcase and pray – or carry a Pacsafe. In my experience no one is going to risk their valuable job slashing open your luggage. But, when I’m traveling with my laptop and SLR and there is room in my bag, I will throw in the Pacsafe. This mesh thing wraps around your bag and affixes to a stationary object in the room. Anyone with a small hand can get into the mesh, so it’s a good idea to padlock any compartments containing small valuables. My fear isn’t the hotel staff, but more that other guests in certain types of places can get into the room.

You can also leave valuables with the front desk when there is no safe in your room. If they don’t have an individual safety deposit box you can lock yourself, put everything in a manila envelope, seal it with tape and write your name across the tape making sure to extend writing over the envelope. You should be able to tell if anyone opened the envelope.

If you don’t want to carry around a heavy Pacsafe and only need to secure   your laptop, consider a Kensington lock. It locks into a slot on your laptop and a cable wraps around a stationary object in the room, like the Pacsafe.

Don’t carry things around that advertise your wealth. The first accessory I bought for my digital SLR was a non-descript strap that doesn’t have CANON DIGITAL EOS in 64 pt type! Yes, the camera is visible, but why have a billboard announcing it’s a new digital camera when the thief could possibly think it’s an older film camera? In the same vein, I wouldn’t carry a laptop bag with a huge Dell or IBM logo – in fact, I’d be more likely to carry it in a bag that doesn’t look like it would have a laptop inside.

In Transit Security Checklist

 
  

The Arch, Antigua, Guatemala

At the Airport, Train or Bus Station:

As you approach, remind the driver if you have bags in the trunk and leave the passenger side door open until you retrieve all your items from the trunk.

Never leave your bags unattended.

Make a mental note of how many items you are carrying and be sure to check you have them with you after each stop.

At the airport, do your best to be sure you and your valuables go through the separate metal detectors as simultaneously as possible. Wait until there is no line for the machine your bags go through before walking through the metal detector – or your bags could be sitting unattended on the terminal side of security. In airports with long snaking security lines this isn’t as much as an issue where there are many short lines.

If you know you’re arriving in a unsafe destination (or one known for skilled pickpockets), secure all your valuables in your money belt and have cash readily available for ground transportation so you don’t need to access your money belt in the airport, station or terminal.

If you’re traveling with children, let them go through first and assist them from behind. I cannot tell you how often I assist children through the machines while their parents are well ahead. If there are 2 parents, one should go first, one should go last with the kids in the middle.

Never leave your bags dangling off the back of a chair. Ever. Anywhere. It amazes me how many women do this in NYC. I’m not a thief, but your Hermes Kelly bag is screaming “steal me!”

If the only hook in a restroom for your bag is on the back of the door, hang it around your neck. Avoid hanging bags where they can be easily snatched.

Thanks to a barrister friend in London, I now also know to never leave my bag on the ground under a restaurant table – thieves there use umbrellas to pull the bag out from under your feet.

Pre-trip Security Checklist

Claddagh Village, Galway, Ireland

Claddagh Village, Galway, Ireland

The following are pre-trip steps and tips to keep you safe and secure on the road:

Don’t put your travel status on Facebook or on your outgoing answering machine if you live alone or the entire family is traveling.

Give your credit card companies and bank that issues your ATM card your travel dates so you will be able to use your cards overseas and so that if charges occurs after you return its easier to prove its fraud so the bank can begin an investigation.

Cancel newspapers/mail delivery for the length of your trip.

If you live in a house, consider getting electronic timers to turn lights on and off and random times.

TSA locks for your luggage – get a couple of extras to take with you. They break, they get cut off, and sometimes they fall behind a 500 lb. dresser where you can’t retrieve them.

Photocopy your passport/ID so that you have a copy to carry around at the destination; not the original. Obviously, drivers should have their real license. It’s also a good idea to scan ID and email it to yourself. Keep it in a file with a bland name, not “passport photocopy” so that you can retrieve it from anywhere in the world.

Luggage tags should have your office address if possible. If you must use your home address, I suggest investing in a tag with a cover, so that every person you pass dragging your bag isn’t aware that the home at 84 Oak Ridge Road is unattended. Your name and address should also be inside the bag. I use a bright blue polka dot luggage tag to differentiate my bag from the others on the carousel.

Plus – in the rare event I check a bag, the name and address of my first hotel will be on a post it note on top of my business card which slides into the luggage tag.

Money belt. I have very mixed feelings about enrolling in the fear of pickpockets lurking around every corner, but I do use it in transit. The more I think about how often my valuables are sitting unattended before/after the metal detector even for a few minutes, the more I realize all my money and credit cards should be more secure. Money belts and “fanny packs” are not the same. The money belt is always worn under the clothing and the object is not to look like you’re carrying a big bulky wad of cash. You never want to access it in public.

Valuables. Don’t carry things that advertise your wealth. The first accessory I bought for my digital SLR was a non-descript strap that doesn’t have CANON DIGITAL EOS in 64 pt type. Yes, the camera is visible, but why have a billboard announcing it’s a new digital camera when the thief could possibly think it’s an older film camera? In the same vein, I wouldn’t carry a laptop bag with a huge Dell or IBM logo – in fact, I’d be more likely to carry it in a bag that doesn’t look like it would have a laptop inside.

Know where you’re staying. Is there a room safe? If not, I would minimize the valuables. If there is no safe, I have a tendency to do 1 of 2 things. Lock my valuables in my suitcase and pray – or carry a Pacsafe. In my experience locking valuables in my bag for years, no one is going to risk their valuable job slashing open your luggage. But, when I’m traveling with my laptop and SLR and there is room in my bag, I will throw in the Pacsafe. This mesh thing wraps around your bag and affixes to a stationary object in the room. Anyone with a small hand can get into the mesh, so it’s a good idea to padlock any compartments containing small valuables. My fear isn’t the hotel staff, but more that other guests in certain types of places can get into the room.

If you don’t want to carry around a heavy Pacsafe, and only need to secure your laptop, consider a Kensington lock. It’s a heavy duty cable that wraps around a stationary object in the room and locks into to a slot in your laptop.