What are STD shops in India for?

STD Shops in India
STD Shops in India: It’s not a shop to contract sexually transmitted diseases

 STDs.

You see them advertised everywhere in India. They’re posted on banners outside shops, lining highway roadsides, in towns and in busy cities.

To travelers, the abbreviations are misleading. They’re not what we know them as in the U.S.

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Trip planning for India: How India books travel at cheap prices?


Photo courtesy of Igougo.com

Planning my first backpacking trip to India, in 2008, was a stressful mess! I was Skyping with my girlfriend in California. We were both, wildly flipping back-and-forth between Lonely Planet Indiabuy lonely planet india guidebook pages and internet browser windows for hours, attempting to plan the best route around India and decode its train schedules and bookings.

This time around, I didn’t have the time or patience to repeat that kind of planning. Fortunately when I arrived in India, there was a wealth of travel agencies at my disposal everywhere I went. They’d give me advice about transportation planning and for a slightly higher rate, they would book my bus and trains for me. But I still felt there was a pot of gold deeper below the surface.

Midway through my trip, I met others and gained useful search tips to help me plan my trip on my own. Most of these sites were recommended to me by vacationing Indians, (more…)

Dealing with Indian currency and a torn rupee

There are times dealing with currency in India made me want to bark and growl with feverish frustration. It’s urked me so much I decided doing a post might relieve me and toss a head’s up to fellow travelers.

Three annoying ways India deals with money:

1.  The torn ruppee

So you have a torn rupee? Money is money, right? Not in India. Many store dealers and vendors generally refuse torn currency.  So what if you got it from the guy two stores down? As a tourist, you’re walking neon pawn! Fret not, this doesn’t mean the ruppee is not salvagable; just that you’ll have a crap time trying to use it. And what if the ruppee has a neatly placed scotch tape bandage over its tear ? It’ll be under careful scrutinizing with a 30-70% chance of being accepted.

Advice:

1. Look before you keep!

•   Examine your check for tears or taped ends before walking away from the register. If you find a torn note, show it to the cashier and ask for a good bill. He’s got one and if he doesn’t, tell him you’ll take your sales to another shop (you’ll see a new bill quickly surface from the cash register)!

2.  How to get rid of a wounded rupee ?

• Repeat the karma and slyly pawn it off on someone else!
• Use it on rickshaw and taxi drivers, guesthouses and vendors, who want your sale in any form.
• Saying “This is all I have“,  works in crunch situations.

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Photo from www.sessionmagazine.com

2.  “Sorry, I don’t have change.”

This line often rivals Namaste with vendors and it’s gotten to the point, I’ve learned to be a miser of 20Rs notes!  Most sales folk never have change for large bills starting from 100 rupee notes (approx $2.25)! At least that’s what they claim. And with ATMs and money exchange shops dispensing only large bills, how can you cash in your wad?

Advice:

• Collect a stock of 20 Rs notes in your wallet (they’re especially handy in small towns and rural villages).
• Get a Money Exchanger to give you a stock of small notes.
• Spend your large notes on hotel bills or on large purchases.
• Popular chain cafes/restaurants (i.e. Cafe Coffee Day, Barista Lavazza or McDonalds) will break bigger bills for you, if you buy something from them.

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3.  The joint restaurant bill

If you’re dining with friends at a restaurant, your waiter may ask you if you’d like a separate or joint check. Don’t be fooled; your reply won’t matter. The answer is always one bill and it’s combined. More annoying is getting a ‘combined bill’ in shops, when you and your friends are buying drinks and snacks.

Most of the time I’d buy snacks at shops in the hope of breaking my bill to get change. My friend, behind me, would be thinking the exact thing. But those Indian shop keepers are crafty devils!  Rather than giving each of us, change for our purchases, they’d charge our bill as one; thus, screwing us both, out of small bills and leaving us dealing with the debt of owing the other...change (which neither of us has)!  His excuse?  Sorry, I don’t have change.

Secondly, as a long-term traveler looking to stretch my budget, I order on the cheap. But in an Indian restaurant, I only win at this if I’m solo. Dining with friends, others order drinks, a few side dishes and a full meal; then the bill comes to us combined. There’s always one friend that will chime in something the entire group will agree to, like:  Let’s just split the bill evenly.  Really? Do I look like I want to foot the bill for someone’s extra stomach, if I’m starving myself?

Advice:

• Don’t buy things near your friends.
• Go solo during meal time
Avoid eating with friends who have big appetites!

 

Have you ever experienced any frustrations dealing with currency abroad? Spill it…

 

Note: This article is penned from my experience and expresses my own sentiments but is a sponsored post If you’re looking for special deals and cheap holiday packages for layover countries on your way to India, check out cheap flights to Dubai.  Man-made islands, souks, chic Arab luxury and the tallest building in the world. Dubai can be your wonderous stopover before hitting India!


5 Travel Must-Haves for India

india flag pic
Reflecting on my recent 3 month trip to India, you might want to know what items were my travel gems and saviors. There certainly were things I thanked the heavens for either, having brought on my trip or having found in Indian stores, as they either made life easier or gave me much peace of mind.

 5 Travel Must-Haves for a long-term trip to India:

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1. Do you drink the water in India?

Does India have safe and drinkable H2O? No (Read my post: here). Having battled waterborne bugs for having brushed my teeth with the water, I’d (more…)

Where to lay your head in budget India?

places to stay in gokarna

I’ll be honest– finding a place to crash is one of my ugh parts of traveling solo in India. It’s literally draining.

Budget cradles here spell the need for an open-mind, with a crowbar of willpower and let’s face it– India is not as cheap as it was and your room doesn’t always match the higher rupee you’re paying!

I’m not saying that there’s no decent cribs in India; but as a solo female backpacker on extended travel, I’m hunting for a way to make my rupee stretch, without compromising decent, safe and clean (forget chic!). If I’m too cheap, I might find myself in the gut of a basement afraid to touch anything in my room;  something a little pricier might be better, but I’m still not in my skin.  Why? Obviously, the rules of the game and standards of house-keeping are different here.

Here’s two examples:


Blankets

Do you really think the blankets and throws on the bed get a wash each time a person leaves? (I don’t even use the throws on (more…)

Eating with your fingers in India

How do you feel about eating with your hands?

Culturally awkward?

For westerners, it’s a cultural taboo to “play with your food”. However, here in India it’s culturally feasible to do so.

My initiation into eating with my hands occurred when I met a pilgrimage family in Gokarna. They kindly invited me to eat with them in a food shack by the beach offering free food for worshippers. Foreigners aren’t allowed in any of the temples in Gokarna so I was hesitant to enter. Nevertheless, the family encouraged me on.

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Buying bottled water in India: is it an exercise in blind faith?

In India, purchasing bottled water doesn’t always ensure safety.

When I entered a guesthouse cafe in Hampi it was filled with fellow travelers. Food-wise, I felt a little safe. I walked past an employee sitting off to the side, with a line of empty water bottles and what did I see?… He was filling the bottles with tap water and recapping them!

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Dealing with accidents and injury in India

So you have travel insurance. Awesome.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t remove the fear and stresses of dealing with injuries when you get into an accident in India or abroad.

In four hours I was leaving Hampi, but I still wanted to get out to see the Monkey Temple (which was 20 minutes away by rickshaw)! Walter, a lanky 20-something Los Angeleno I’d met on the bus ride over, joined me . I wanted to rent bicycles but Walter advised the motorcycle would be the most efficient vehicle. The incentive being we’d split costs!
Had Walter driven a motorcycle before?

Sure…

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Travel Tips for India

India: Travel Tips…There are many websites and resources that willl give you tips to traveling in India. Here are a few of my own additions to those lists.

WHAT TO WEAR:

Buy native clothes and wear it! While as a tourist you WILL stand out like a sore thumb, donning the local wear helps you to blend a bit more and keeps you from being a “tourist” moving target. Also, the lightweight

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