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A Chiang Mai Travel Guide For Shorter Visits

Chiang Mai, Thailand is the kind of place where you plan for a short trip, realize it’s amazing, then make plans to return for a longer stay. You can see in the video why and if it’s your first time, here’s what I recommend you try.

Where To Stay

There are a lot of hotels in Chiang Mai but if you want something central and cozy, Wannamas is a good choice. It’s near the Saturday and Sunday markets, has a home vibe and servers breakfast daily.

Get Coffee And Go

Akha Ama Coffee sources all of their beans from local farms around Chiang Mai. The food is strong and the drinks creative – try the mana mana, a blend of strong espresso, honey, and orange.

chiang mai thailand food

As your caffeine buzz kicks in you can walk a few minutes to the nearby Wat Phra Singh. It’s a beautiful complex of several temples with large open spaces, statues, and monks often engaged in meditation. There are plenty of temples in Chiang Mai and in town this is one of the most central. Admission is free to the site, the main temple has a small charge. A short car ride away is Wat Chedi Luang.

Getting Around

To avoid the heat during the day your best bet is to use the Grab app. It’s a local ride sharing service that let’s you pay by car, see how much a ride will cost, and choose from cars to tuk tuks. There’s even an option for electric vehicles if available and overall much more convenient than hailing a cab on the street.

Wat Phra That Doi Suthep

Highlights And Food

There are temples and then there is Wat Phra That Doi Suthep. This large temple complex sits on a mountain overlooking Chiang Mai and is one of the most interesting, peaceful, and idyllic places that shouldn’t be missed. You can arrange a ride through your hotel or take public transportation up – with the ride being around 30-40 minutes from town. Be prepared to walk when you are at Doi Suthep and plan to stay at least 90 minutes, there is so much to experience here.

There are also some amazing places to eat from street food to the healthiest local Chiang Mai dishes you can find. Don’t neglect visiting Chiang Mai during a trip to Thailand and for some extra fun, plan your trip around Songkran.

How To Kill Indoor Mosquitos With Water

Mosquitos are the worst. Seriously, even many scientists are wondering if we shouldn’t just kill them all. Until then though, the pesky blood suckers have a way of getting indoors, despite your best efforts. And nothing, I mean nothing, is worse than hearing the annoying buzzing of a mosquito near your ear at 3am.

Fortunately, there are a few ways to kill indoor mosquitos by mainly using water. You can watch the video above or read on for the highlights.

Use Your Hands

Well, duh is what you’re probably thinking. But ever notice how mosquitos tend to always be just out of reach when you try to slap them out of existence? There are some theories as to why this happens – from a cushion of air or the mosquito simply bouncing off your hand – but either way, having wet hands solves the issue. Have a bottle of water nearby or if there’s a faucet close, wet your hands and grab mosquitos out of the sky (i.e. smoosh them).

Manage Pools Of Water

Drains, that odd bit of water under the toilet scrubber, any sitting water you can eliminate the better. And for drains where it might not be possible, if you can, close their doors. Bathrooms, kitchens, wherever there might be standing water, try to create a barrier between you and that area.

You can also use smelly socks as mosquito traps or make use of that leftover vodka from the night before.

Visible By Verzion Has An International Problem

Visible by Verizon, the monthly prepaid cellular service has a two big problems: their customer service and international coverage. Here’s what can happen to your IMEI if you use Visible’s Global Pass abroad and how it may potentially brick your phone from network coverage.

What’s An IMEI?

IMEIs are International Mobile Equipment Identity which are essentially a number unique to each individual mobile phone, they are something all phones have. Most newer phones have 2 IMEIs to support dual SIM functionality, which basically means you can use more than one physical or electronic SIM card at the same time. So what do IMEIs have to do with Visible? Well, network carriers can block IMEIs which means you can’t connect or use their service.

This could happen in the case where you report your phone stolen to your carrier, to prevent someone else from activating it on Verizon, T-Mobile, Visible.. whichever your current carrier is. These blacklists are a way to prevent stolen phones from being used on specific mobile networks and reporting a stolen phone to your carrier is generally a good practice.

Global Pass On, Off, And IMEI Blocks

The issue can happen where you activate, then deactivate Global Pass when you’re abroad. Doing so can automatically security flag your IMEI, getting it blacklisted from your Visible service or use on other U.S.-based carriers. An IMEI blacklist also means Visible won’t let you use another phone on their service, making things even worse.

visible by verizon review

Visible doesn’t have a phone number to call or email address, you can only really get in touch with them through a live chat. It’s very slow and you’re often waiting more than 5 minutes per response and more support cases in my experience take over half an hour for even the simplest requests.

Unblocking IMEIs Ain’t Easy

Visible will ask you to prove the phone is yours and not blacklisted by a previous carrier or manufacturer (for example if you bought the phone directly from Apple.) This can be a lengthy process of you getting in touch with your old mobile providers or maker of your phone, getting the needed evidence, then waiting for what is usually a negative response. Visible seem to keep placing the blame elsewhere for their own block.

Mint Mobile for example, who have their problems no doubt, at least let you get in touch with someone on the phone to sort out issues. Even an email address for Visible customer service would be useful – they send you responses but you can’t email them. Which means you have to waste your time waiting for a chat window when you could literally be doing anything else.

It’s a shame because Visible has good deals, good service in many places, and a solid set of features for the price. But it’s not worth the hassle if you ever have to deal with their customer service or plan to use their service abroad.

How To Search A Hotel Room For Bed Bugs

Arriving at your fresh hotel room after a long trip can feel like the weight of an elephant has been lifted off your back. Ready to start an adventure or vacation after a little rest, it’s tempting to plop yourself down on the bed and nap. Or open your suitcase and unpack everything so decide on an evening outfit.

The bad news is, these are all things you shouldn’t do if you want to avoid bed buds. To avoid the bloodsucking nightmare that can ruin a trip and your return home, watch this video where I show you how to properly check a hotel room for bed buds.

Some Tips

  • Keep your bags as far away from the bed as possible, preferably in the bathroom during your inspection.
  • Keep your clothes in your zipped bags until you actually need to get stuff out of them.
  • Use darkness to your advantage and make sure to check out the entire mattress.
  • A thorough check should take you about 10-15 minutes.

How To Protect Yourself In London From Phone Snatching

You may have seen recent videos like this one from London, England where brazen thieves on e-bikes snatch people’s smartphones out of their hands in broad daylight. It’s a quick crime that’s been reported over 73,000 times in a recent 12 month span. Despite the headlines though it’s an classic crime and the tactics to avoid it are nothing new.

What’s Phone Snatching?

Phone snatching is a type of theft that’s just what it sounds like: someone grabbing your phone out of your hands and making off with it. In London the increasingly common tactic is several thieves working together on e-bikes in busy areas who quickly and quietly come up on someone texting, talking or just holding their phone. It’s a quick grab and by the time you notice they’re speeding away down the street.

london phone snatching

Phone snatching also occurs on metro platforms where thieves can grab your phone just as the doors close. Again, the tactics is snatching, whether it’s a phone, purse, or backpack so here’s how to protect yourself.

Avoid Being A Phone Snatching Victim

There’s often a spotter looking out for people texting, talking, or simply walking with their phone held in hand. The crooks are looking for distracted people so the first line of defense is when you’re not using your phone, keep it in your (front) pocket or purse. When you need to text or make a call “pull over” away from the center of the sidewalk so there’s some physical barrier like a way on your back. This cuts off the angles someone can attack you from or just have a look around and get to a less crowded spot.

Same thing goes for when you’re taking photos. When you are looking at your phone it’s most vulnerable so try to be mindful of what’s going on around you. Also, knowing where phone snatching rates are highest in London can help you increase your own awareness.

What To Do If Your Phone Is Snatched

Now if your phone does get snatched make sure to report it as soon as possible. Then, as quickly as you can, log into Find My Device on Android or iCloud for iPhone to mark your device as lost. You’ll also want to update your phone service carrier as well. If your phone was unlocked when it was snatched then be sure to change all of your passwords as soon as possible. That includes email, iCloud, social media, and cancel all of your credit cards and report them stolen if they were on your phone through Google or Apple Pay. I would also let your friends and family know in the meantime that your phone was stolen and to ignore any suspicious calls or texts from you until you’ve had a chance to reset all of your passwords and get a new phone.

Prevention is key to avoid being in this situation so no matter where you are in the world, be mindful when you take out your smartphone, know the local areas more prone to snatching theft, and create a backpack security system.

Does Garmin’s Jet Lag Advisor Really Work?

Garmin smartwatches can tell you a lot about your body with real-time updates of heart rate, stress, calories, respiration and more. The higher up you go in their line the more data you get and recently Garmin has introduced a Jet Lag Advisor that takes that information to help with every travelers headache.

I tried Garmin’s jet lag advisor for several months and over 50 time zones to find out if it really works. You can watch the video above and read the recap below.

What Jet Lag Advisor Does

For Garmin watches that do support jet lag advisor (Forerunners 265, 965, Fenix series, and others) when you have a trip coming up go into the Garmin Connect app on your phone – it’s the only way to enter your trip data – go into training and planning, and then Jet Lag Advisor. Once there you can enter in any number of flights you have coming up. Note that if you’re taking a long flight but don’t cross any time zones, Jet Lag Advisor won’t be used and will let you know (although you can still enable it anyway).

garmin forerunner 265s

For flights that do cross time zones though, you enter in your departure and destination cities – Jet Lag Advisor tells you to ignore any layovers.

Before Your Flight

One the details are in Garmin Connect it will sync with your watch in the upcoming trip in the Jet Lag Advisor glance. A few days out Jet Lag Advisor will begin alerting you with recommendations on moving your body clock closer to your destination time. These notifications can be toggled on or off as you like with recommendations on when to avoid or seek light, take a nap, use caffeine, get some exercise or take melatonin as some examples.

When you’re actually traveling you’ll still get prompts but even more. A neat feature is the timeline both on your watch and in the Garmin Connect App that shows good times to eat or take a nap and at the beginning of each windows you’ll get a notification on your watch. It’s fun having the recommendations but when you’re traveling they often are just that – recommendations you can’t practically use at certain times when you’re actually in transit. Avoiding light when you’re waiting for your next flight on a layover wouldn’t be feasible for example. During these times I would put the Jet Lag Advisor as something fun rather than an actual coach you can use to adjust your body clock. But where it can actually help that I noticed, it when you finally arrive.

Kicking Jet Lag Upon Arrival

Once you’re at your destination Jet Lag Advisor reminds you of when you should sleep or not. It’s that common traveler dilemma when you get somewhere new and are tired but don’t know when you should sleep without completely throwing off your body clock. Jet Lag Advisor gives good guidance on getting your clock adjusted and coaches you during the first few days.

I use the Jet Lag Advisor most closely after I’ve arrived somewhere and will avoid napping or force myself to get outside or keep the lights on based on the watches recommendations. I’ve found Jet Lag Advisor does help reduce the amount of time you feel jet lagged. You’ll still feel jet lag of course but having a coach that keeps you on the schedule can help and if that doesn’t work, peanuts might be another jet lag cure.

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About Anil Polat

foxnomad aboutHi, I'm Anil. foXnoMad is where I combine travel and tech to help you travel smarter. I'm on a journey to every country in the world and you're invited to join the adventure! Read More

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