What to take
When gathering the items you wish to take with you, consider the
following list:
Medicines
- Prescription medicines and any drugs you frequently
use or carry as preventive measures i.e. painkillers and diarrhoea treatments.
- Disposable syringes (easily obtained from a travel
clinic).
- Vitamin supplements.
- Proof of health insurance cover and a stock of claim
forms.
- An initial stock of sanitary items.
Clothing
- Office wear is formal in winter with suites and
ties, and less formal in summer when short sleeved shirts are worn, sometimes
with tie. In winter several layers of clothes are desirable along with hat,
gloves and a long coat. Loose, light weight and light coloured trousers and
long-sleeved shirts are better in intense heat than shorts and T-shirts
because they reduce water loss and sunburn. Shorts are worn usually for sport,
and should not be worn in the streets.
- A pair of galoshes, wellingtons, or waterproof shoes
or boots are useful if you plan to walk the streets in winter when they can be
wet and slushy in the wet winter months.
- An umbrella can be useful in the rainier months.
Documentation
- A list of your credit cards and a list of their
numbers carried separately (see ‘Money’).
- A photocopy of your passport and visa, kept
separately from the originals.
- Several passport photographs (you will need
photographs for visas and membership cards).
- International driving licence.
Money
- Unmarked, new dollars (from 1988 and later) in small
denominations. The US dollar is the most widely accepted currency in hotels
and restaurants. German marks and other European currency can only be
exchanged into Manats, the local currency, at the bigger banks.
- Credit cards, charge cards and debit cards (Visa, Mastercard/Eurocard, Diners and American Express) are rarely accepted, but can
be used to obtain cash advances at the Vneshekonombank (Zhitnikov Street
opposite the Magtymguly statue).
- If you have an American Express card, consider
taking a cheque book as well because you can withdraw money from your cheque
account by using your card as security.
Household and other useful items
- Travel plugs and adapters. The voltage in
Turkmenistan buildings is 220 and sockets have two-pin, round plugs (European)
- Water filter and replacement filters.
- A universal bath/basin plug.
- Small introduction gifts e.g. Tacis pens, stickers,
badges, pins, lighters.
- Pocket phrase book and Russian-to-own-language
dictionary.
- Adapters for your television and video (if you take
them). The Turkmenistan system is SECAM (the same system used in France).
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