Benny Kieckhäben - Travelling (official)

There are many things to keep in mind when traveling, whether you are a budget traveler or not. You obviously want to keep what money you have for your trip rather than lose it or have it stolen. You also want to keep yourself and traveling companions safe from harm. Here are some tips to follow to ensure your trip is safe and enjoyable in a foreign country.
1. Have a valid passport and all visas required for your trip. Make two copies of your passport. Keep one in a separate part of your travel luggage and the other leave with someone at home.
2. Be aware of any travel warnings for the country you are visiting. Find out about security and safety conditions in your destination.
3. Secure travel insurance!
4. Ensure you have been vaccinated against any infectious diseases prominent in the area you will be traveling to.
5. To make sure you can be contacted in case of an emergency, make a copy of your itinerary and leave it with someone at home.
6. Travel light and don’t pack valuables that you wouldn’t want to lose. Leave your jewelry at home but take an extra pair of glasses if you can’t live without them.
7. Remember you are a foreigner when you travel. You are a guest in their country and therefore should abide by their laws, and to a certain extent, their customs. For example, if you are a female traveling in an Islamic state, be considerate of your dress.
8. Try not to bring too much attention to yourself when traveling. Don’t go out looking like a tourist with a flashy camera and expensive clothes. Try to blend into the scenery.
9. Travel in a group where possible and in well known areas. There will be times you want to get off the tourist track, so make sure you always have a traveling companion with you.
10. Only carry small amounts of cash on you. Your credit card and travelers checks will pay for most things.
11. Watch out for pickpockets! Wear a money belt and keep your purse/wallet in the front of your body. Report any loss or theft immediately to the local authorities.
12. Don’t leave your luggage unattended. Apart from having it stolen or items from it taken, you could also become an unsuspecting drug courier.
13. If traveling with a partner, pack half your clothes in their luggage and vice versa. This way if one of you loses your luggage, you will still have some clothes.
14. Lock your luggage and label everything.
15. Lock your hotel room. Keep money and valuables with you, not left unattended in your room.
16. When using public transport be aware of possible theft. If you are traveling overnight, secure your luggage and sleep on top of it if possible. It is not uncommon for tourists to be drugged while on trains and buses so don’t accept gifts of food or drink from strangers on public transport.
If at any time you feel unsafe, whether it is on the streets or in your accommodation, get out. Follow your instincts. Stay safe when you travel by being aware of the dangers and obeying the laws of the country you are visiting.
This article is brought to you by: Stuart S. Travel – Your Online Travel Guru
Watch the video related to travelling
Artist: Gabriel & Dresden Track: Beber & Tamara - Travelling on Genre: House Date: 2003/2004
Help answer the question about travelling
How long time spent the rocket travelling from the earth to the moon?1. With today's technology, how long time spent the rocket travelling from the earth to the moon, mars, jupiter, and pluto's orbit?
2. When will the NASA's next space travelling to the moon, and mars?
About Author
Stuart S. Travel / Your All World Online Travel Guru:
Sherry Hardesty has been a professional flight attendant for over 15 years. Her experience is extensive and she provides professional travel consulting and booking services at http://www.stuartstravel.com
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Comments
French or German, but I'd say French because it was more widespread and taught in schools before the English overtook after the WWII. Since you already speak English, you'd most likely be fine anywhere you go with another one.
Russian also would be a good choice, as you'd be able to use it in most of the ex Eastern Bloc countries, but this carries risks with it. Older people can speak it, but not the younger generations. They may also be unwilling to use it. Still, Russian could help you with understanding other Slavic languages - Polish, Czech, Slovak, Serbian.
The effective mass of an object depends both on it's velocity and also it's rest mass (mass when it's not moving at all). The faster something moves, the more mass it has (assuming it starts out having mass at all). At the speed of light, you would have infinite mass. Things with no mass always travel at the speed of light (like light, gravity, and little else). Nothing with mass ever can.
Now this suggests why it doesn't make sense, but it doesn't really say what happens if you try. If you have a ball moving half the speed of light, it will take a certain amount of energy to accelerate it to 3/4 the speed of light. It will take more energy to accelerate it to 7/8 the speed of light. As it gets closer to the speed of light, it takes more energy (not the same amount) to move it incrimentally closer, essentially because the mass of the object increases, so it takes more energy to get it going faster. To get an object to move at the speed of light, you need infinite energy. There isn't infinite energy in the universe (there's a lot, but it isn't infinite), so you can't move anything that fast.
Finally, you should keep in mind that Einstein's relativity doesn't work like Galileo's relativity. The first part is the same. If you are not accelerating, you can think of yourself as stationary and everything else moving around you. That frame of reference is called an inertial reference frame. If you are on a train going 30 mph, you see everything else going by you at 30mph and you feel yourself stationary. Physics doesn't distinguish between the different frames, you pick one and do the math and it works. There's no absolute reference frame, everything is just relative to everything else.
The difference in Einstein's theory is that even though movement is relative, the speed of light is still constant. If you are on a train moving forward at 30mph and you throw a ball forward at another 30mph, someone on the ground sees the ball move forward at 60mph, but you see it move at 30mph relative to you. But if the speeds get really really big, that math doesn't work anymore. If you're on a train going half the speed of light and you throw a ball forward at half the speed of light, someone on the ground will see the ball move forward not at the speed of light, but at a slower speed, around 3/4 of the speed of light (I'm guess, I haven't done the math in a while). An if you are on a train, going any speed at all, no matter how fast, and you shine a light, you will see it going at the speed of light, but someone on the ground will also see it going at the speed of light. They won't see it going any faster just because you're in a moving frame of reference.
So no matter how fast you're moving, you see yourself as stationary and your mass as your rest mass. Everybody else sees you moving at some relative speed and sees your relativistic mass and energy approach infinity as your speed gets closer to the speed of light, but you can never reach that speed. Note that for you to get to that speed, you would see everything else moving at the speed of light in the other direction, which would also require infinite energy, and thus it is impossible from your reference frame as well (the physics always works equally well from all reference frames).
It's a complicated theory. If you want to learn more without going into the math (the math isn't really helpful in understanding the concept anyway), I recommend The Elegant Universe by Brian Greene. Read as much as you can. When it gets too complicated, stop. You'll have gotten a lot of interesting ideas out of the book no matter how far you get into it.
It's not so much of an event, is it? It's more of a birthday to a tragedy… The 100th is an event, and people are probable to show up… But 96th? makes no sense
In the United States, it's not a requirement for your parents to accompany you to the airport if you are over 11 but it's safer especially if you are going to a foreign country. They would have to fill out a form requesting permission to take you all the way to the terminal. If they want the airline to watch out for you they have to pay about $60.00 each way. I am not sure how things are done in Melbourne.
First, I'll state the obvious and let you know that your first step is obtaining a passport. You can usually get the forms from your local post office, and you will need a birth certificate and a few pictures you can obtain from any drugstore like Walgreens or CVS.
Next, do some research into the countries you want to visit. Decide what you are looking for–adventure travel, culture, history, parties, or a combo of all of the above. Look into forums like these for advice on places to visit.
Once you have an idea of the countries you'd like to visit and what you'd like to do there, start looking at local travel agencies or local guides. You can find hotels rated by regular people, not to mention open forums where you can ask questions and find out places to visit, on sites like TripAdvisor.com or on these Yahoo forums.
Now that you have everything in mind, plan for a time to visit according to either weather or seasonal prices. You can find cheap airfare on mobissimo.com–they search like 100 sites to find the best ones.
Once you have most of that planned out, go buy a Frommer's guide or other guide book to the country, and possibly a phrasebook. Try to find people in your area who speak the language of the countries you will be visiting to get a heads up on good words and pointers to know. Also, read the guide book and phrasebook before you leave–it makes life much easier when you know what to expect and how to handle different situations, like being served guinea pig in a restaurant.
Finally, have an open mind to new experiences, and realize that life is different abroad. Enjoy!
I don't think you need a Visa to enter the country as your country is within ASEAN but do remember that you can not carry dairy such as cheese (you can but have to report it, and usually they will take them away from you, from my experience), foods that are not canned properly (most countries have this rule), dangerous goods (which I believe you already know this).
Indonesian customs are well known for abusing their "power" at the airport, they just love to order international passengers (doesn't matter they are Indonesians or Foreigners), looking for your mistakes, and would love to "take away" your belongings.
Try to learn a little Indonesian, just incase you got stuck at the airport while trying to enter the country, you might find it easier to communicate since many custom people have broken English. Some have excellent, some others plain nothing and I have seen many Foreigners stuck for a while since there are lost in translation situation.
Once you are in Indonesia, it is easy for you to travel to any cities, any islands, without having to show your passport everytime.
Have fun in Indonesia!
Apollo took 3 days to go to the Moon. Any space craft planning to stop at the Moon will take 3 days to get there. The New Horizons unmanned space craft recently sent to Pluto took only 9 hours to pass the Moon, but it didn't stop. It was going WAY too fast to stop even if it wanted to.
The various unmanned space craft that have been sent to Mars all took about 8 to 10 months to get there.
The New Horizons space craft passed Jupiter 11 months after launch.
The New horizons space craft will take 9 years to get to Pluto.
On August 4 2007 NASA launched the Phoenix space craft to Mars. It will take 10 months to get there,arriving May 25, 2008.
NASA has no firm plans for another mission to the Moon in the next few years. They are planning to send new manned missions there in 2020 or so, but those plans may change.
Mexico requires minors traveling without their parents to carry a letter of permission. See site below for sample letter for Canadian minors.


Madagaskar II ?
I think that that track was the melody of the movie 
i liked it and searched for it,but only found the part of the movie where its played