- Allow for a low activity week prior to departure. You will likely have visa and travel arrangements, family visits and last minute supplies to organise.
- Make certain that all you computer backups are be up-to-date.
- Test that all your essential files are accessible via the internet while you are away. With "cloud computing" you can now have a shared folder to use from anywhere. I use "dropbox" and have a 50 Gb space there. Just watch out if you go to China, you might be blocked by the big firewall. With DropBox you can use a folder you have already created, but cannot access the web interface.
- Subscribe to a "hotspot" wireless network so that you can check email in the airports and coffee shops without incurring Telstra roaming fees (I find Boingo is the best).
- For non-electronic communications, set up paper mail forwarding, letterbox checking and junk-mail removal by the your neighbours. Also notify neighbours you will be away.
- Delegate academic tasks requiring deadlines to trusted colleagues.
- Pay cellphone bills and top up credit cards in advance so that your telephone doesn't go off-the-air before you return.
- Carry a secure thumb drive with your recent work on it.
- Check that you have done the ISTAR USA visa form on-line (this is even necessary for Aussies. We are descended from convicts remember!).
- Don't drive yourself to the airport. You will be too rushed. If the taxi service is not 100% reliable, have a backup plan. Preferably, pay the extra $50 to have a private car service take you to the airport.
In the USA, address the issue of Jet Lag by arranging a schedule as follows:
- When arriving in the USA from Australia, try not to do anything critical for at least 4 days. If you immediately attend a conference you will sleep through it and learn nothing so your whole expensive trip will be wasted. Therefore, one strategy is to enter via Los Angeles on Monday or Tuesday, then continue straight through to Las Vegas for 4 days rest (Wed-Sat).
- Day 1-4: Sleep as much as possible, swim and walk around the streets for exercise and experience the sunny climate which helps you change your sleep/wake cycle. You don't have to gamble but Vegas never sleeps so at 3 am you can go out to eat. The Hotels are excellent with world class variety shows. Also, there are great outdoors attractions such as the day trip to the Hoover dam. All the top US technology stores are available and fast internet is the norm if you need to work.
- Airlines in and out of Las Vegas might be less reliable as they are the cheap flights. Also they have luggage limits sometimes.
- Day 5-9, (Sat-Wed): Travel to your final conference destination.
- Maximise your conference value by staying in the actual conference hotel because you can take a nap in the middle of the day so as to be fresh for the afternoon sessions. You also save bus travel time and/or cab fares. When looking at the actual extra cost, $150 per day extra is probably money well spent.
- Day 9-12, (Thur-Sun): Take a second break incorporating the weekend. This might involve a travel day and a rest period in a city where you can visit relatives or friends.
- Day 13-17 (Mon-Fri): These are more work days travelling to visit colleagues, conduct business, give seminars etc.
- Day 18-21 (Fri-Sun): These are final wind-up, consolidation and recovery days in preparation to travel back to Australia. In my case this involves one day of travel back to Los Angeles. Then during this weekend I recommend staying in Burbank - actually the Residence Inn - where you can have a hotel suite, free internet and free breakfast. While organising for travel back to Perth, do some final shopping, see a movie, enjoy the climate and throw away anything you don't need (especially conference materials). On the Sunday morning, my "must see attraction" is the Page Museum in central LA which incorporates the La Brea Tarpits which have trapped hundreds of prehistoric mammals. The LA Museum of Art is next door with a nice restaurant. Finally, allow two hours for a visit to Fry's Electronics, the world's largest electronics and computer gadget shop (it has 68 checkouts).
- Day 21-22 (Sun-Tues): Fly back to Australia. Realistically, four hours of low intensity laptop work, reviewing manuscripts etc. might be done during the trip. However, dry eyes and poor posture often limit this to less. Don't start something you cannot finish in the time available - you may not get back to it for several weeks. If you plan laptop work make sure you charge the PC before leaving. Sometimes the older planes do not have a compatible power connection, even on business class.
- Day 23-25 (Wed-Fri): Only essential work duties are possible. Don't expect to safely perform high level patient care or intensive administrative activities. My typical day starts at 4-6 am with 2-3 hours of email and document work, then 4 hours at the University from 9 am -1 pm, then a 2 hour nap after lunch and then an evening event from 6-9 pm.
- Day 26-27 (Sat-Sun): Perform activities necessary to follow-up from the international trip and revert to normality.
- Day 27-30 (Mon-Wed): Allow for a gradual return to normality. I notice that a depressed mood can continue until 12 days past the day I left East Coast USA. Thus, on the above trip, which allows for three final recovery days in Los Angeles, I am completely normal one week after arriving back in Perth.
There is often a temptation to extend a USA trip with academic activities at the end. My experience is that I am looking forward to going home by three weeks and I always regret the fourth week away. So in reality, a conference in the USA requires at least 14 days of related activity and 7 days of recovery time. If extra lectures are planned then allow a 50-50 split between R&R and work or you will burn out. Tomorrow I leave for a three week USA - Europe - UK - Asia international trip with just a carry-on cabin bag. My best record for this is 5 countries on three continents in three weeks but it was gruelling and my follow-up afterwards was very inefficient.