My tip: two litres a day but not all at once. Seriously, get a big bottle of water, and pace yourself, and no sneaky soda either. Provided you’ve taken every opportunity to take a piss, you will be fine.
Good advice. One Greyhound trip can provide enough material for a short story writer or filmmaker o work with for the rest of their life. If you are an easy going person, taking Greyhound can be a lot of fun. I always kind of enjoy it.
The Weird One has some great practical advice, especially about the arctic air.
Heard a news item within the last day or two. Due to the incident in Manitoba, GH has been not allowing passengers to have *any *carry-on baggage. Everything goes underneith in cargo.
I can’t see anything on their website about the policy.
Okay, that’s just not cool. The main things that makes it less than miserable are the food, drinks, books, music, etc you bring to distract yourself.
Isn’t the time you save flying worth considering?
Here’s a travel blog entry I found dated 8-27-08:
Here is a CBC article (possibly the one the blog is referring to) on the same topic dated 8-25-08. Makes it sound like it’s completely up to the driver, with a precious few items exempt.
I’ve never traveled by intercity bus commercially, but I’ve been on a number of chartered buses (often Greyhounds) while traveling with various school bands in high school and college. That was fun, I thought, but many of the elements that made it enjoyable would be notably absent on a commercial version of the same journey.