March 18, 2010

Travel Gear Review: The Pacsafe Travelsafe

May 15th, 2007 by Pia Taylor

Pacsafe TravelSafe

This week we got to try out the TravelSafe, the portable safe from Pacsafe.

It doesn’t look like much when you unpack it – it’s a flat, pouchlike bag that doesn’t at first glance resemble anything like our traditional notions of a safe.

But when you start loading it up with all your valuables, you start to see how much it can actually hold, you feel the comforting layer of safe-guarding mesh hiding under the cover of slashproof material, and, with a sense of achievement, you begin to figure out how it all works.

We stuffed our TravelSafe with two medium-sized travel books, a passport, a plane ticket, an entire travel wallet with money and documents, an ipod, a cellphone and a digital camera, and it all fit just fine with a little breathing room to spare.

Pacsafe TravelSafe

Consulting the simple manual we worked out how to close the safe, pulling the stainless steel cord tight (bit stiff at first, but it started easing up after a few goes at it), thereby closing the mouth of the pouch and locking our goodies inside.

We docked the locking bead into the ‘locating recess’ and looked around for something to which to attach the safe. A chair leg was the closest to hand (pick something more secure when travelling!) so we wound the draw wire around that, lined its ‘eye’ up with the locking device and clipped the padlock into place.

Pretty simple, really – the bead can’t move because of the padlock, which means the mouth of the pouch can’t be opened. The outer material is slash-safe and the cord and mesh are made from high tensile stainless steel: basically you’d need some serious hardware and a whole lot of undisturbed time to get through to the treasures inside.

When you’re done guarding your goods, you just unlock, unclip and flatten it out again. It’s light and lies flat so packing space won’t be an issue.

Pacsafe TravelSafe

Times this baby is going to come in very handyl:

  • when you’re on an overnight train and you want to get some sleep without worrying that your stuff will be whipped away during your slumbers (secure it to a rail)
  • when you want to do outdoor activities that preclude carrying your documents with you (bit hard to snorkel or abseil with all your valuables ain’t it)
  • when you’re travelling with people you don’t know too well, and you really want to go for a swim, or take a bath – basically anything that involves having to part from your valuables (you can secure the Travelsafe to a thick tree branch, a pole, a door hinge – whatever’s secure).

Whatever you do, though, don’t go losing those keys, and definitely make sure you leave one with a trusted person who can rapidly post it to you should that happen. Otherwise, it’s going to be one long exercise in finding out just how safe these things really are.

The TravelSafe is available online here at a recommended retail price of US$39.95.

PS. We’ll be taking the TravelSafe with us on a backpacking trip later this year, so watch this space for a follow-up review, rating its performance ‘in the field’!

Related entries:
Travel Gear Review: The Pacsafe Stashsafe

Travel resources backpackers might find useful:
Cheap hostels -choose from over 12,000 hostels worldwide and book them online!

Travel Insurance – instant, cheap travel insurance for backpackers
Travel newsletter – sign up for our free monthly travel newsletter ‘From The Road’

Posted in Reviews, Travel Gear, Travel Tools | 3 Comments »

Last Chance To Enter The March Travel Quiz (And Win A Metrosafe Travel Bag)

April 9th, 2007 by Pia Taylor

The Pacsafe Metrosafe 100

Today is your last chance to enter the March Travel Quiz. One lucky backpacker will win a Metrosafe 100 – the funky shoulder/hip bag from Pacsafe.

MetroSafe 100 features eXomesh® Slashguard in the front and bottom panels, slashproof shoulder strap and tamperproof main compartment.

It can either be worn as a shoulder bag or a hip pack and also has great internal organisation features.

Pacsafe Travel Gear

So, get to it, and enter the draw for this awesome travel bag by visiting this page, answering the travel quiz questions and sending us your entry before midnight GMT today (10 April 2007)

Good luck!

Posted in Competitions & Giveaways, Travel Gear | No Comments »

March Travel Quiz 2007

March 20th, 2007 by The Backpackers Team

The Pacsafe Metrosafe 100

It’s travel quiz time again!

Each month, one of our friendly sponsors provides us with a cool travel prize to give away to one of you guys out there.

We ask you a few travel-related questions, you send us your answers, we hold a draw. Simple as that!

This month, we get to give away a Metrosafe 100 – the funky shoulder/hip bag from Pacsafe.

Pacsafe Travel Gear

MetroSafe 100 features eXomesh® Slashguard in the front and bottom panels, slashproof shoulder strap and tamperproof main compartment. It can either be worn as a shoulder bag or a hip pack and also has great internal organisation features.

All you need to do now to stand a chance to win this awesome travel bag is to answer the following questions and send us your answers before 10 April 2007:

  1. True or false: The Metrosafe’s detachable shoulder strap converts to a waist belt? (here’s a hint)
  2. Name the new African Burning Man-styled festival coming up in July this year? (here’s a hint)
  3. Around what country is our guest blogger, Dominik von Werdt, currently travelling? (here’s a hint)

A backpackers giveaway!

Good luck, guys!

_The fine print: competition closes 10 April 2007; winner will be notified by email; if the winner cannot be contacted within 30 days of the prize draw, another winner will be selected.

Posted in Competitions & Giveaways, Travel Gear | No Comments »

Gadgets For Flashpacking

March 15th, 2007 by Pia Taylor

GPS - Photo by Jan Roger Johannesen

Are you a flashpacker?

If you travel like a backpacker (independent, long-term, spontaneous changes of plan) but your budget isn’t your largest concern whilst travelling, a hostel’s rates aren’t the main criterion for selecting one, and you’re packing some serious tech gadgets – you probably are.

Well, if you are a flashpacker, and you’re wondering what gadgets to take around the world with you, this thread on Slashdot should give you some ideas.

Thanks, Timen, for that link!

Useful resources for backpackers:
Travel Insurance – instant, cheap travel insurance for backpackers
Cheap Hostels – find and book cheap hostels online.
Round The World Tickets Explained – GapYear.com’s useful guide to round the world tickets

(Photo: Jan Roger Johannesen/SXC)

Posted in General Travel, Travel Gear | No Comments »

Going… Going… One Stashsafe Up For Grabs - But Not For Long!

March 14th, 2007 by Pia Taylor

The Pacsafe Stashsafe 100

We have one beautiful, shiny Stashsafe to give one of you equally beautiful, shiny backpackers (there’s only ONE DAY LEFT for you to enter!)

Yes, indeed – this super cool, immensely useful anti-theft hip pack from travel safety fundis, Pacsafe, is indispensible for backpackers on the road.

To enter the draw for this cool travel prize, take a look here and name two of the Stashsafe 100’s anti-theft features.

Pacsafe Travel Gear

Use our contact form to send your answers and contact details to the ‘February Travel Quiz’ by the 15th of March 2007. First correct entry drawn, wins. It’s as easy as keeping your stuff safe with a Stashsafe…

A backpackers giveaway!

Good luck, guys!

_The fine print: competition closes 15 March 2007; winner will be notified by email; if the winner cannot be contacted within 30 days of the prize draw, another winner will be selected.

Posted in Competitions & Giveaways, Travel Gear | No Comments »

5 Cheap Methods to Safeguard Travel Gear

March 9th, 2007 by The Backpackers Team

The following is a rather lengthy (but very useful) post we found in our travel forums – all about the cheapest ways to keep your travel gear safe, and dry. Some great tips for budgeting backpackers

Backpacks - Photo by Carla Finley

It’s undeniable that backpackers in general are rather thrifty
creatures. This is completely understandable.

From the moment you hit the road your bank balance goes into flat spin, each day plummeting closer toward harsh letters from the bank manager. In essence, the size of your bank balance will have a direct affect on the time you have experience wonders that life on the road can bring.

For the most part, budgeting begins the moment you step from your front door and into the unknown. But why not start this trend a little earlier? Surely if you can save a few dollars in the preparation stage then there will be a little more in the pot for your forthcoming adventure.

And with that in mind, here are 5 ways to ensure you start that journey with both a healthier road fund and greater peace of mind.

1. Rucksack waterproofing.

There are many shiny options here – of which vacuum sealing, space making bags, kayaking dry bags, and rucksack rain covers are but a few. So what do you opt for? The cheapest thing that does the job, of course. Rain covers are out because they are just that, Rain covers.

Not only do many of them look the same, which can lead to confusion if your pack ends up as one of a large pile – as sometimes happens if you are on a heavily trodden backpacking route – but if your pack ends up in the drink as you embark/disembark a boat then you may still be sitting in wet underpants and updating your soggy journal the same evening.

To avoid this, line the inside of your pack with a large, durable,
plastic sack. It’s such a simple concept, yet seldom utilised. A well
washed out agricultural fertilizer sack is first class, but there are
many other similar types out there, such as refuse or rubble sacks, that may be more suitable for your style of pack. When full, roll the top down a few turns and fold the remainder over, tucking it tightly in the space between the inside of the pack and the outside of the waterproof bag.

Never again will you worry about putting your pack on the roof of a Honduran Chicken Bus in monsoon season. Instead, you can opt to either rest easy with your latest book or just wallow wholeheartedly in the palpable malaise evoked by shoehorning four adults onto a seat primarily designed for two schoolchildren.

2. Rucksack security.

Sakbags (lockable bags in which to put your pack), Pacsafes (slash proof wire meshes that cover your pack) and Wrapsafes (cables to wrap around/secure your pack) are among the many arrangements on offer to the security conscious traveller. Most have their merits and do the job admirably. Unfortunately they aren’t cheap, whereas I am.

Several lengths of multistrand steel wire (off the roll from many
hardware stores) about 3mm diameter or so and around 50 to 100cm long will serve the purpose.

Fold one end back on itself to form a small loop and slide a collar cut from a length of copper pipe over the two bits of steel wire that are now side by side. Choose a diameter of copper pipe that is snug when over the two bits of steel cable. With the collar in place, simply crimp it as tight as possible in a vice – hey presto, one secure loop.

Repeat this on the other end and you have a ‘padlockable’ strop. Photos of the finished article can be found on the www.ubertramp.com blog.

Make one for your pack, one as a leash to attach your now secure pack to a permanent fixture (such as a stoned hippy on Lake Atitlan, Guatemala), and a couple of spares to see you through.

All these gadgets are by no means impenetrable, but they serve as a good deterrent for would be thieves. It may sound a little cutthroat – but if it makes your pack less attractive than the one next to it then it’s served it’s purpose. It’s a quick and easy method of affording you a better night’s sleep – be it in a 12 man dorm in New York or on thesleeper train between the Thai Islands and Bangkok.

In addition, this cheapo method is a little more subtle than the commercial offerings. It states that ‘I’m not easy pickings’ but doesn’t scream ‘valuables inside!’.

3. Valuables

Most people these days will travel with some form of gadgetry – be it iPods, Digital cameras and spare memory cards, Memory sticks, or other such items. If you want to prolong their life and protect them, then I have one word for you. Tupperware. Procure a couple
of small, airtight containers and the world is your oyster.

Now there’s a statement if ever I heard one. With so many different shapes and sizes available you are sure to find one almost tailor made to the traveller’s needs. Not only are they such an inexpensive way protect sensitive electronic goods and afford a
durable shell for smaller breakables, but they are a great place to keep all the odds and ends that inevitably accumulate after months on the road.

Embrace Tupperware and gone will be the days of hopelessly
foraging for your padlock key amongst the fluff, shards of broken soap and candy wrappers that will eventually dominate the bottom third of your rucksack. To some, this prospect of a semblance of order may come as welcome news, to others it may be perceived as an invasive and unnecessary evil. If this is so, then I will apologise to them in person the next time I drop by to unlock my rucksack.

4. Toiletries

Again, this one is very simple, but extremely effective. Forget bulky toiletry bags – too much space and too much weight. It really does all add up. Three plastic bags do a fine job. One to wrap up your toothbrush/toothpaste, one to wrap your soap, and another to put those in along with any other sundries you may have.

The beauty of the bags is not only the weight and space it saves, but also the damage containment factor should you do have a blow out on one of your bottles/tubes whilst going from A to B. Sure, a plastic bag will inevitably get a little slimy from soap after a while, but they are all replaceable.

If, however, you are worried about the environmental impact
that this may have, then use an existing bag that someone else is going to discard. Cheap and a little green to boot – who could ask for more?

5. Documents.

We all have to carry some form of documentation – passports, photocopies of traveller cheque numbers, birth certificates
and the like. They are all valuable documents that enable us to travel, and can even get us out of the poo from time to time, so its well worth keeping them in good order.

And although we now all have a rucksack so waterproof that we could sit on it and paddle from Borneo to the Philippines, it doesn’t stop ourselves, and therefore our precious paperwork, from getting soaked through.

This is why a handy roll of A5 size ziplock (or similar – read cheaper) bags are invaluable. A passport, a few dollars, and some well folded photocopied documents slip into an A5 sealable bag perfectly.

They offer excellent protection against penetrating sweat, sudden
downpours, and my pitiful inadequacy in a kayak. Only costing pennies for a big bundle, you can take more than you think will suffice thus enabling replacement when they wear out. I don’t know where I would be without them – probably in an Indonesian Prison, but that’s a tale for another day.

Some may argue that some or all of these items are unnecessary. I agree that you could travel without them and save yourself the outlay of a few pennies, but in view of the increased protection and security that these small measures afford, I wouldn’t leave home without them – and for me to choose functionality over frugality, they’ve got to be good…

( The guy who wrote this rather useful guide also posted it on his own blog: Ubertramp.com )

Photo by Carla Finley/Flickr

Posted in General Travel, Travel Gear, Travel Tips & Planning, Travel Tools | No Comments »

2007 February Travel Quiz: Win A Pacsafe Stashsafe

February 23rd, 2007 by Pia Taylor

The Pacsafe Stashsafe 100

Last year we got to try it out for ourselves and gave it a big thumbs up – and now we get to give one away.

Yep, it’s travel quiz time again, folks, and seeing as the uber cool Stashsafe is so very popular with y’all, we are giving yet another one away, courtesy of Pacsafe, leaders in international travel security.

StashSafe 100 is an anti-theft hip pack with eXomesh® Slashguard front and bottom panels, a slashproof and lockable belt, lockable zippers and the unique ability to lock to secure features.

Pacsafe Travel Gear

And that’s not all, folks. The StashSafe 100 has 3 zippered pockets packed with clever internal organisation as well as a padded, breathable backing for maximum comfort.

To enter the draw for this cool travel prize, take a look here and name two of the Stashsafe 100’s anti-theft features.

Use our contact form to send your answers and contact details to the ‘February Travel Quiz’ by the 15th of March 2007. First correct entry drawn, wins.

A backpackers giveaway!

Good luck, guys!

_The fine print: competition closes 15 March 2007; winner will be notified by email; if the winner cannot be contacted within 30 days of the prize draw, another winner will be selected.

Posted in Competitions & Giveaways, Travel Gear, Travel Tools | 3 Comments »

My Travel Backpack Photo Contest: You And Your Backpack, Somewhere Cool On The Planet

February 22nd, 2007 by Pia Taylor

My Travel Backpack Photo Competition

Been somewhere interesting with your trusty backpack?

Sure you have, but did you stop to take a photo of you, your backpack, and the interesting somewhere?

Yes? Then head on over to a new site called My Travel Backpack and enter the mytravelbackpack.com Photo Contest.

The prize: 3 books from Europe From a Backpack.

If, however, you haven’t got any snaps of “You and your backpack somewhere cool on the planet!â€?, you can always make yourself insanely jealous by browsing through the photos of those cooler and more fortunate than we.

Useful resources for backpackers:
Cheap Hostels – find and book cheap hostels all over the planet
eBags – get your own backpack and start finding cool places for narcissistic photo opportunities

Posted in Backpackers Bookmarks, Competitions & Giveaways, General Travel, Travel Community, Travel Gear | 2 Comments »

Would You Know How To Survive A Hostel Fire?

February 13th, 2007 by Pia Taylor

A week ago, a hostel in Chile caught alight, and ten backpackers died in the blaze. A horrible story with a very unhappy ending.

Would you know what to do if a fire started in your hostel? Or would you panic?

I’m not sure I would have the faintest clue what to do and was very happy to hear that Flarebrands (creators of the Flaresafe – portable smoke detector/torch) have put together a free guide on how to survive (and prepare for) a fire.

Some handy tips mentioned in the fire safety guide:

  • when checking in at a hostel, ask at the reception about fire safety measures
  • make a note of exit points when you arrive (smoke is likely to obscure exit signs)
  • remember that smoke is often more dangerous than the fire itself – cover your nose and mouth
  • if there is a fire – stay low: smoke and heat rises, oxygen sinks

These may sound paranoid, or overkill, but building a quick check into your routine takes so little effort, and could save you from what is a horrid horrid death.

Take a moment to read through the Fire Safety Guide – it’s worth the effort.

Related stories:
‘Backpackers Killed in Chile Hostel Fire’ (Backpackers.com)
‘Australian dies in Chile hostel fire’ (The Age)
‘Aussie killed in hostel inferno’ (Sydney Morning Herald)
‘Fire at hostel’ (Newsshopper.co.uk)
‘Melbourne Hostel Blaze Kills Backpacker Couple’ (Backpackers.com)
‘Flaresafe: Torch, Smoke Detector And More’ (Backpackers.com)

Useful resources for backpackers:
Flarebrands website – creators of the Flaresafe smoke detector/torch.
Hostels Worldwide – find and book cheap hostels online

Travel Tips Forum – share your own travel tips or warnings with fellow travellers.

Posted in General Travel, Hostels, Travel Gear, Travel News, Travel Tips & Planning, Travel Tools | No Comments »

Backpackers Killed In Chile Hostel Fire

February 7th, 2007 by Pia Taylor

Blue House Hostel - Chile

Yet another hostel has gone up in flames – this time in southern Chile.

According to The Age, on Saturday night (3rd of February) the fire, blamed on an electrical fault, razed the Blue House Hostel in Punta Arenas, leaving thirteen people dead – ten of them foreigners.

This, and a similar (though less extreme) blaze in the UK once again bring into the spotlight the possible dangers of staying in cheap hostels.

I generally have a fatalistic attitude about these things (if your time is up, your time is up), and even horrific stories like this are unlikely to stop backpackers from choosing budget accommodation over hotels.

But there is a travel tool out there that could give backpackers who get caught in situations like this enough time to escape a fire before it gets out of hand..

Remember the Flaresafe? It’s the smoke-detector/torch we wrote about back in October last year. We even gave two away in November.

It may seem a little pricey for the average backpacker’s budget (around the £45 mark), but, dramatic though this sounds, in a situation like this recent hostel fire, the Flaresafe’s top notch smoke detector alarm could be the difference between life and death.

Related Stories:
‘Australian dies in Chile hostel fire’ (The Age)
‘Aussie killed in hostel inferno’ (Sydney Morning Herald)
‘Fire at hostel’ (Newsshopper.co.uk)
‘Melbourne Hostel Blaze Kills Backpacker Couple’ (Backpackers.com)
‘Flaresafe: Torch, Smoke Detector And More’ (Backpackers.com)
‘What Makes A Good Gift For A Backpacker?’ (Backpackers.com)

Useful (related) resources for backpackers:
Flarebrands website – creators of the Flaresafe.
Hostels in South America – find and book cheap hostels online

Travel Tips Forum – share your own travel tips or warnings with fellow travellers.

Posted in Travel Gear, Travel News | No Comments »