6 Ways to Stave Off Layover Boredom |

If you’re going abroad, you’re inevitably going to spend some time in airports, just sitting there and waiting for a plane to whisk you away. As boring as the flights can be sometimes, sometimes waiting for the flight is even more annoying, simply because you’re not making any progress. Here I present a number of solutions to your layover boredom, in the hopes that they brighten your long days of travel just a bit.
1. Try to get the free WiFi. Sometimes this is easy, sometimes this is tricky, and sometimes there simply is no free WiFi, but if you can get it, that opens up a whole world of possibilities for entertainment!
2. Document your boredom with multiple Facebook statuses. Yes, for one day you can be that annoying person who uses his/her status as a journal, except that you’re going someplace awesome so it’s kind of acceptable.
3. Window shop (or actually shop). A few ideas for shopping:
4. Survey all of the other flight options and make sure your trip is to the coolest location ever – if not, see if a switch is possible! ;)
5. Repack your suitcase so everything fits better – you have time, right?
6. Read The Hunger Games. Trust me, it won’t take as long as you think, but when you’re absorbed in it, you’ll be complaining that it’s time to board because you won’t want to put it down! If you’re going abroad, you’re inevitably going to spend some time in airports, just sitting there and waiting for a plane to whisk you away.
Old Glory in Bilbao? Oh, never mind. |
Old Glory. The Stars and Stripes. The be-all and end-all of Betsy Ross's oeuvre. Call it what you will, the American flag was not something I was expecting to see flying from practically every floor of every building in the Plaza Moyúa in downtown Bilbao. Nevertheless, there it was! It didn't make sense.
On the Grid in Baixa, Lisboa |
The Brett Favre of Backpacks |
I knew that this package was going to be a bit ungainly, but I didn’t expect it to be such a masterpiece of engineering. It arrived barely intact, bearing the scars of the long trip from the West Coast: three big recycled boxes, all strung together by gobs of tape and patched with other shipping/receiving detritus. Enclosed within was a frame backpack from Eurotrips of generations past, brought out of retirement in my garage into the wild world once more. This was the Brett Favre of backpacks.
Preparation |
Good day, sirs and madams. I am Christine, your Guardian through Austria and Hungary.
A Spanish Drink with Pomp and Circumstance |
Consuming alcohol in Spain is practically a requirement. What with the two-hour break for lunch that most Spaniards enjoy daily, who wouldn’t be tempted to have a glass of wine along with the midday meal? Dinner is sometimes considered incomplete without the requisite glass of Rioja or Cava wine. I, for one, drank my fair share of sangria and jerez (Spanish sherry) during a recent visit to Madrid.
For 52 years, we have published the world’s favorite budget travel guides, written entirely by students and updated every year. With pen and notebook in hand and a few changes of underwear stuffed in our backpacks, we spend months roaming the globe in search of travel bargains.
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