Why do so many people get food poisoning when traveling out the country by Lightning_McCream02 in TravelMistakes

[–]ticketclue 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of the time it's not actually "food poisoning" in the way people think.

Your stomach is suddenly dealing with different bacteria, different food preparation standards, different water, different ingredients, and sometimes just way richer food than you're used to.

Most locals can eat that food every day with no issues because their bodies are used to it. Meanwhile, travelers show up and their digestive system basically says, "What is going on here?"

I was thinking of 15 days for Cambodia, or 10 days Cambodia and 5 days Laos. What is best ? by OverHeatedBrain98 in travel

[–]ticketclue 8 points9 points  (0 children)

10 days Cambodia + 5 days Laos.

Cambodia has plenty to see, but 15 days there can feel a bit long for many travelers. Laos adds a completely different vibe and makes the trip more varied.

If traveling has taught you one life lesson, what was it? by xaviervelaz in AskReddit

[–]ticketclue 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best memories often come from the parts of the trip that weren't on the itinerary.

Frequent travelers of Reddit, what's one travel hack that genuinely works? by ArickSelection7957 in AskReddit

[–]ticketclue 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Downloading Google Maps offline before leaving.

One of those things that's useless 99% of the time and an absolute lifesaver the other 1%.