Travel tips that you have picked up.

Caporegime
Joined
20 Oct 2002
Posts
75,519
Location
Wish i was in a Ramen Shop Counter
I thought it would be both fun and useful to share travel tips we have learned in our travels. I will start with Morocco since I’ve recently been going there quite often. Feel free to share your tips with any particular places you have recently visited.

Things I’ve learned.

Tipping – Tipping is welcomed but there are ways to do it.

At restaurants, a waiter will serve you and when you ask for the bill, he will bring it over. You pay him what it is on the bill, when you get the change, then only after that you give him the tip directly. You don’t take the bill up to the till inside to pay. If you do, the waiter, for some reason, need to also be there. I think it’s all to do with commission.

Saw an American lady asking the lady at the till to add 10% to the total and they were so confused.

In average, £2 is normally more than enough. £2 there is a paper note and most people tip in coins so that is max a £1 value or so.

Tip the waiter directly with cash, even if you pay by card or contactless at the til.

Taxi – I am not sure if this is in the capital or other cities but there are lots of different kind of cabs. In Casablanca there are 2 colours, one for inner city, one for outer city journeys. So need to know which one for your journey before getting in. In Rabat, if the taxi isn’t full, the driver will let in other people on the street if he get flagged down by another passenger and then will negotiate if they are going to the same direction in order to pick up extra fare. It’s like Uber share feature in action. Very confusing at first.

No tipping usually required but the meter do run to more decimal points than I normally have the cash to so they always round it up to the next 10p equivalent.

Watch out for people ripping you off. Try not catch taxi from the taxi rank next to the main stations. Walk a street or so over. Especially if they smell a foreigner. I’ve paid £8 for a 15min taxi, which in the UK seems cheap but over there, it’s £2 max. I guess it is hard to know unless you’ve done it a few times with this one.

Crossing the roads

Need to watch out for drivers, they should stop but they don’t seem to have driving codes. People cut in everywhere and anywhere. As a pedestrian, if you are crossing the road, you really need to watch the traffic, some crossings have no lights at all and expect you to play real-life Frogger. Not as intense as Vietnam but still a lot more chaotic than Europe.

The cafes are their pubs, where you can watch football.

Back to not getting ripped off, it seems bribes are like an unwritten rule. Went to the largest mosque and saw there were barriers and was closed for visitors until next prayer time. There was a security guard trying to get us to pay him to let us in until it is officially open. £5 for my friends who are local and £7 for me. When we know it is free anyway, we can see other people walking around on the grounds 30 meters away.
 
Last edited:
I have been thinking about getting some air tags. Other than knowing your luggage is close by, which it is almost 100% of the time, in the very rare chance it could be lost I'm not sure knowing where it had ended up would help or hinder my anger or anxiety!

It does a few things.

I keep them in my car for example, it helps to know it’s not been stolen when I’m away, and when I get back to the car park, I can find it quick enough.

The check in luggage, it tells me it has safely landed then I just waiting for it coming through the belt. So if it pings 5000 miles away then it’s no point waiting and straight onto the airline making a claim.

I even put it in my hand luggage and another in my wallet.
 
This may be short lived, but if travelling with a partner, I chuck all our electronics into one laptop slip case so only one of us has to get rubbish out of a backpack when going through security. If we're going for a longer holiday this is usually a laptop, ipad, couple of kindles. Hate security and boils my blood everytime I go through it seeing the stupidity of so many people. why I never wear a belt to the airport, minimise my time there to lose my rag.

Paris CDG (at least in Terminal K) has new scanners in the last month installed. They no longer ask you to take out the laptop, in fact, they tell people not to. Just liquids...which also, should be short lived I think.

I really hate it too. In fact I would so much as take my watch off when in the queue so I can put it into my bag instead of having my watch in the tray.

The liquid in clear plastic bag rule also means I haven't used a travel toiletries bag in yearssssssss. I just can't be bothered having to separate things so I put all my toiletries in those clear bags.
 
Thankfully they’re installing them in more and more airports, hopefully become the standard sooner.

I’ve bought a sling bag for carrying all the little bits of junk you need to carry like passport, keys, phone, airpods, chewing gum etc so I can just dump that in a box save me having to empty my pockets at security and just dump that in the box. Hopefully it’s a game changer haven’t had a chance to try it out.

Another thing I’d say is get a arcade belt so much easier than having to take it off at security and it’s actually comfy to wear and doesn’t have the stupid flap bit either.

I bought a sling bag too recently, actually I bought 2. The one I prefer best doesn’t actually fit a laptop or iPad though but it is definitely the way to go.
 
Reddit suggests there's no tipping culture in Morocco according to locals who live there.


so my tip would be, check reddit before you go somewhere and see what the locals are saying.

Ignore what you see American tourists doing.

FYI, the Americans were there on their first day, they don’t know what they are doing. I tip according to what the locals say not what Reddit suggests. You don’t tip by asking the counter to add 10% to the bill. Rather slip the waiter some cash. Like in the UK you don’t have to tip, and if you leave a couple of quid on the table, the waiter isn’t going to chase you to return it like Japan.

My top tip is to avoid Morroco. I've never been somewhere I wanted to leave so quickly, almost all due to being harrassed all the time.

They are an absolute nuisance…come to you even when sitting down in a cafe, selling tissues, or polish your shoes. Especially me…stands out like a sore thumb.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom