Many traveling Undercurrent subscribers undertake additional
tours before or after a dive trip. In today's post 9/11 world,
valid passports and visas are a must for travel. I learned that
before a planned stopover in Hanoi on my return trip from
Thailand. As I prepared to board a flight for Hanoi in Phuket,
the ticket agent handed back my passport. "Where is your
Vietnam visa? You can't fly to Hanoi without one."
I was startled. I'd put my faith in my travel agent to handle
the travel requirements or at least inform me of my responsibility,
and I was stuck. I was sent to Bangkok where Vietnam Airlines
determined that I could get a visa at the Hanoi airport, so I plodded
on to Hanoi, only to learn it wasn't true. I was detained for
22 hours in a shabby airport "transit" room, and when the
efforts of my Hanoi tour agency failed to get me a visa -- they
simply didn't have enough time to work through the bureaucracy
-- I was escorted directly to a flight to Singapore.
My U.S. travel agent said he had no responsibility because
he didn't book my land travel in Vietnam -- though he did
book the flights. He whined that he barely made five percent on
my fare. So what!
Yes, as a savvy traveler, I should have known to get a visa. So I
want to suggest that you personally check all official travel
requirements. There's hardly a country today that doesn't
require a passport and more and more are requiring visas, if for
no other reason than as retribution to U.S. citizens for new U.S.
immigration rules. Today, "proof of U.S. citizenship" means a
passport, not a birth certificate. Having your passport or visa
expire while you're in another country can mean detention.
And, if your passport isn't valid six months beyond your departure
date, you may not be allowed to leave home in the first
place.
NEED A PASSPORT OR VISA IN 48 HOURS, OR A WEEK? Travel
Document Systems makes it easy with their online registration.
Find them at www.traveldocs.com to fill out a form online or call
their Washington, D.C., office at 800-874-5100 or 202-638-3800,
or the San Francisco office at 888-874-5100 or 415-773-2829. You
pay according to how quickly you need it, and they can handle
requests in a couple of days.