READERS' CHOICE: What Is Your Favorite Cruise Line?

By Budget Travel
October 3, 2012

We get to share our travel picks with you all year long. Now it’s your turn.

Over the next several weeks, we’ll be asking for a few of your favorite things, both large (airline, cruise port, national park) and small (which hotel has the best toiletries?). Then we’ll compile your suggestions and let you vote for your top pick in May. Come back often—we’ll be posting a new question almost every day.

Today’s question:

What is your favorite cruise line?

Previous questions:

What is your favorite ski area? Foreign or domestic.

What Is Your Favorite Under–The–Radar Girlfriend Getaway?

Which airline has the nicest flight attendants? We know you have your favorite.

Which city has the most user–friendly public transportation system?

What is your favorite rental car company?

What is your favorite historical spot in America?

What's the top destination on your bucket list?

Which airport features the best food?

—Marc Peyser

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Travel Tips

Reader Tips on How to Avoid Being Pickpocketed

Budget Travel received a lot of smart and unexpected responses when we recently posted "Avoid Being Pickpocketed with These Tips." Richard G. shared his sad story of how he was pickpocketed in Paris: I was at a Paris Metro station some six years ago, and when the train door opened, I entered, and an elderly man standing inside had just dropped his ticket. Naturally, I stooped to help him retrieve the ticket, and when I arose, he had run out the door I entered in by. I called out, "Monsieur! Monsieur!" and I noticed a black wallet fall to the floor of the car as he departed. I called "Your Wallet!!" I looked again, disbelieving. It was MY wallet! The 500 Euros I had just gotten from the ATM had been swiftly removed. All else was in place. The man had disappeared. Standees next to me looked away into the air when I pleaded with them to tell be what just happened. My front pocket must have bulged enough to advertise what it was, but thye thief was obviously trained in a ploy that was polished to an acrobatic act. It was my first day in Paris, and I was so discouraged, that if I hadn't booked for 5 days, I would have left. I was miserable the whole time. It's terrible how pickpocketing can ruin a traveler's experience. But if we all share our strategies for avoiding pickpocketing, we can help each other out. We're calling some of advice from readers that struck as as particularly smart and helpful. I highly recommend PacSafe and Travelon bags. Zippers clip or lock shut, making it harder to get inside, and they have steel mesh under the fabric and steel cables in the straps. The purses are stylish and have locks that allow the purse strap to be locked to a chair arm or table leg so they can't be snatched. The straps can be adjusted long enough to be worn cross-body. I also use a money belt. If you're carrying a small day pack, you can use small locks on the zippers.—Judi Daunell Great idea, Judi! The respected editor of the Practical Travel Gear blog, Tim Leffel, has recommended PacSafe bags for years. Some months ago, Leffel praised the Venturesafe 200, from $35 on Amazon. Another fine luggage maker with decades of experience is Travelon. As always, be sure to comparison-shop online for the best prices at major travel shops, such as Magellan's, Orvis, and TravelSmith. I agree with Judi's advice to use small locks on the zippers of your day pack. I know someone who had her wallet stolen out of her leather pack while touring in Beijing. You may not look as fashionable with locks on your pack, but it is better to make yourself a more difficult target for thieves. When I first met one of the Canadian government counsular staff in Berne, Switzerland for lunch, the first thing she asked me, Where is your passport? After I reassured her my passport was in my money belt under my pants, she told me even in "safe" Berne, Switzerland many Canadians were often surprised to find their passports and wallets pick pocketed.—Mika Good advice, Mika! By the way, we seem to keep talking about bags, but for people who prefer not to carry bags there are other options. In 2011, Clothing Arts began selling cargo pants called "P^cubed Pick-Pocket Proof Pants." It's loaded with covered zippers and a hidden passport/money pocket, and pockets large enough to store smart phones and digital cameras. The twill fabric is coated in Teflon to resist stains, which may explain the high price of $110, plus tax and shipping. The pants' designer Adam Rapp says he has sold about 2,000 pairs since last autumn, with positive feedback so far. I recently visited Barcelona, which is supposed to be full of pickpockets. I had no trouble as I bought a cheap zippered wallet and attached one end of a pocket watch chain (about 8 inches long) to the zipper pull of the wallet and the other end to a belt keeper on my trousers. I kept the wallet in my front pocket, and the chain was long enough to permit the withdrawal of the wallet when needed. Local shop keepers said this was a great idea.—Alan M. Thanks, Alan! It's important to underline that you don't need to buy expensive products to travel safely and happily. All it takes is a bit of cleverness. For people who prefer to buy something ready-made, there's the Civilian Lab Duo Lossless Wallet, from $38. Having lots of little locks on your day pack can make it rather heavy. Instead, use the tiny screw-gate carabiners that are sold as key holders. The screw gate makes them difficult to open quickly or without notice, yet have almost no weight. Be sure locked bags left in your rooms do NOT have the self-healing nylon zippers... A thief can can simply pry open the teeth on the bag, take whatever they want, then by sliding the zipper back and forth, 'heal' the break-in. You'll never know there was a theft until you open the bag and check. PacSafe makes a small lockable pouch that you can use for your extra cash, traveler's checks, and passport when locking them in the hotel/guest house safe. Hotel employees may have access to the inside of the safe, but not to your personal belongings. I happen to prefer to carry my wallet in my back pocket so I made some changes to my clothes; I added a velcro closure to that pocket, and a chain to the wallet. I also sewed in a 'second' front pocket, inside the first, with a Vecro closure. I keep my 'walk around' cash (pocket money?) in that pocket so I don't have to go to my wallet as often. Despite 20+ years of wandering the streets of S.E. Asia, I have never lost a thing! —Steve Clever! Thanks, Steve! I put a medium sized safety pin over the zipper of my handbags to make pickpocketing less easy. You can use the a bigger safety pin on the backpack too. My husband and I travel a lot to S.E. Asia and Europe. The only time I got pickpocketed was inside a bank at the ATM line in Frankfurt, Germany 3 years ago. I had the safety pin removed so that I could get to my card easier.—Erin It's ironic that Erin was robbed where she least expected it. But it's often precisely when we feel we can let our guard down that we're at our most vulnerable. The best plan is to have one or two simple habits and use them at all destinations routinely, don't you think? Only place for wallets & passports is in neck pouch tucked inside your shirt. I've also had no trouble with zippered pockets on the inside of a jacket. The only safe way to carry a ladies handbag is to have one with a THICK leather strap. Sling it over one shoulder and under the armpit of the opposite arm with the clasp side against your body. Have some fun with pickpockets. Get a cheap wallet at a thrift store, stuff it with newspaper cut to bill size, and put in your hip pocket, or do what I did on St Petersburg Metro. I left the padlocks off the zipper on my backpack that has 4 zippered compartments. Zipped them all up. Back pack was empty. Everything was in the neck pouch. Rode up an escalator in a metro station & at the top, every zipper was open.—Keith Baker Hilarious, Keith. And fantastic advice, too. Thanks for sharing. We really appreciate hearing from you, because the art of traveling trouble-free, like the games Sudoku and Angry Birds, takes time and expertise to master. Thanks for your comments! SEE MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL Avoid Being Pickpocketed with These Tips (17 comments) Video: How Safe Is Your Hotel Room Safe? (50 Facebook likes) Luggage Theft: A Couple May Have Stolen Nearly 1,000 Bags from an Airport (9 comments)

Is Renting Out a Bedroom to Random Strangers for You?

Airbnb.com is encouraging more people to "Live a Richer Life." How so? Naturally, by inviting strangers to crash on your couch or spare bedroom. Airbnb, the online marketplace that hooks up travelers with hosts who have room to spare at the right price, has had an enormously successful run. Born in 2008 (and based in San Francisco, of course), the site recently hit the 5 million mark for total number of nights booked, and, at last check, boasted nearly 20,000 hosts in 192 countries. Even so, the push is on to attract more business. A new "Life" page has just launched, featuring a series of videos designed to highlight the upsides of being an Airbnb host. It's all about making money from renters, and what that money can do for you. Empty nesters, homeowners struggling to pay the bills, artists pursuing their dreams, families who want to spend more time with their kids: They're all potentially good candidates for the "Airbnb" lifestyle. The page also has a calculator where would-be hosts can estimate how much they'd make by taking in travelers. You enter your zip code, along with the kind of lodging you can provide (entire house, living room, bedroom, "unique space"), and the calculator spits back the amount you could be earning each month. A bedroom rented out at an apartment in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood, for instance, is expected to yield a maximum of $2,850 per 30-day period, or $95 per night. An entire two-bedroom home in San Diego, meanwhile, could bring in nearly $5,000 a month, at a rate of $165 nightly. Several of Airbnb's videos show parents discussing how taking in Airbnb renters have allowed them to stay home and spend time with their children, rather than being forced to work. Such an idea might strike many parents as bizarre, or even reckless. We tell our children to be wary of strangers, but here are parents who welcome them to spend the night? Naturally, a big part of Airbnb's marketing push deals with concerns about safety, and how hosts can protect themselves. The efforts seem especially necessary after last summer's Airbnb scandal, in which a host's home was reportedly trashed, and the guests drilled through a wall to steal her jewelry, electronics, and other valuables. Soon after the event made news, Airbnb announced the"$50,000 Airbnb Host Guarantee," explained here: The Airbnb Host Guarantee is designed to reimburse hosts for up to $50,000 in damage to their property as a result of theft or vandalism by Airbnb guests who book the host’s accommodations through the company’s website. The site also ramped up its Trust and Safety Center, which includes tools such as video profiles, requirements for complete profiles, an enhanced section for references, and various verifications designed to make it less risky to accept bookings. MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL: The Dark Side of Vacation Rentals Trip Coach: House Swapping What's the Best Social Network for Travel?

Flickr Freshens Up, But Is It Still Tops for Travel Photos?

On Tuesday, the world's largest online photography storage site, Flickr, debuts a major makeover, catching up with the innovative features of rival photo-sharing and storage sites. Photos on Flickr will appear four times larger than before. Hover your cursor over any given image, and it will pop out in a magnified view. In another fix, uploading images will become more intuitive, thanks to a fresh drag-and-drop interface. No more clicking "blue links," searching through your hard drive, and puzzling out the mysterious names of photo file. Instead, simply look for the thumbnail image of the photo you want, and drag it into the uploader. Overall, Flickr is moving away from its signature design of plenty of white space and small photos. In this way, it is copying the success of competitor websites, which have been publishing user photos in much larger, richer detail, such as 500px, Facebook, and Google+. The changes have begun to appear on Flickr member's contacts pages (the most visited pages on the site) and will appear on other sections of Flickr during the next few months. These changes are one more sign that websites and smart phone apps are ramping up the competition to become your main digital method of showing off and storing photos. To help travelers choose the best ones for their photography, I created the following cheat sheet for photo storage and sharing sites. It is not an exhaustive list, but it highlights the online tools that are growing and that have tools that would especially appeal to travelers. Flickr Key advantage: It has 3.5-million daily uploads and is profitable—sparing members from the risk of having to switch providers within the next few years. Snags: The site could make it easier to share photos. Its guest-pass based system for non-members is cumbersome. But on the flip-side, Flickr has some air-tight privacy protections, allowing users to share selected images with specified contacts only. It also prevents your copyright-protected images from being "reblogged" on Pinterest, Tumblr and other sites. Pro tip: It's worth it to pay for the annual membership fee for the option of unlimited uploads of large images. (A two-year Pro subscription is $45.) In comparison, free accounts allow for the upload of 300 megabytes' worth of imagery each month, or about 100 standard-sized photos Facebook Key advantage: Easy sharing. Facebook stores more photos than any other website and no other site makes it as easy to share photos, as long as privacy isn't much of a concern. Snags: You can't export your photos back out of Facebook. Coming soon: Facebook is adding wide-screen format to its photos, spotlighting them well. Soon, it will introduce ways to add "filters", such as making your photos appear as if you shot them using a Polaroid camera, says The New York Times. Pro tip: Upload photos to Flickr with one-click by using popular photo editing software tools Adobe Photoshop and iPhoto. Google+ Key advantage: Makes photos look beautiful, at no cost. The newcomer social networking site has had its greatest success with photographers, especially fans of HDR photography, because of the beautiful way the site presents photos in large format (2048 pixels on their broadest edge). For example, check out the Google+ page of Trey Ratcliff, who has drawn more than one million followers to see his gorgeous travel photos. (Note: You don't have to belong to Google + to see his photos.) Snags: The fate of Google+ is still up in the air. But if the site fails, your photos will still be available for exporting through Google's Picasa storage albums. Google+ recently bought Picnik, a smart photo-editing tool, so better photo-editing will be baked-in to the site soon. (Flickr already has Picnik.) Pro tip: As of last week, you can download a free app (Google+ for mobile) for iPhone/iPad devices as well as Android ones and instantly upload photos to your Google+ page—a handy tool for travelers. Snapfish Key advantage: Has the most seamless service for printing and shipping high quality prints and photo books. Accounts are free and allow unlimited storage of a small number of photos. Owned by HP, the site is here to stay for quite a while. Snags: Not as flexible as other sites. Pro tip: Do an Internet search on discount/promotion codes to save money on printing photos and photo books with the service. In recent months, its rates have been cheaper than rival service Shutterfly. 500px Key advantage: If you want to make a living out of photography, this site is one of the best tools for presenting your photos in the best light. Snags: Free accounts offer little, and paid accounts cost $50 a year. On the bright side, the paid accounts come with unlimited uploads and the largest file size limits of any major photo-sharing site. Pro tip: The site makes it easy to post images under your custom domain, meaning your own website or blog. People won't have to be members of 500px to see your images. Instagram Key advantage: Your best camera is the one you have with you at all times, and for most people, that means their smart phone. Users of iPhone devices will find that the most popular photo-sharing app is the free Instagram. Snags: Not available for Android devices. Pro tip: Use CanvasPop to order large, high-quality prints of your Instagram photos. SEE MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL 4 Ways to Find The Best Views for Travel Photos New Apps Let You Create Animated Photos 5 Smartest Vacation Photos You've Never Taken