Category Archives: wanderlust

I Have a Disease

Last night I met up with a traveler the boyfriend and I met in Argentina. We met towards the end of her trip, and the first night of ours.

It was really fun to talk about the different parts of the country we each visited, and it makes me want to go back to see more of the country, and South America as a whole.

This week in NYC, it seems to be field trip mania. Walking down the street in NYC I hear lots of languages. But I’d rather be somewhere I’m in the minority with regards to language, or even dialect. And that means on the road, and traveling.

Time to think about the next getaway!


Even Exchange…or not!

People ask me how I am able to travel so much. ‘Isn’t it expensive?’ I am asked. Well, yes, it can be…IF you stay in high-end hotels, travel in peak season, travel in comfortable (read: pricey) modes of transportation and pick places where your home currency is not valued well against the local currency, your trip might cost you a pretty penny.

Here’s how I try to combat what could be very expensive overseas trips — which in the end allows me to travel more:

1 – I love to take in as much local culture as possible so I choose bed and breakfasts or small local hotels. Bed and breakfasts are an incredible way to get inside information from your hosts, as well as local breakfast foods. It’s also a way to meet like-minded travelers.

2 – I am also very much an off-peak traveler. With a few exceptions (Patagonia in the summer, Iceland with 20 hours of sunlight), I tend to travel off-peak. Less crowds, better service and most importantly, more interaction with the locals. You also have some instant spontaneity since everything is not already booked. Off-peak doesn’t have to be December in Italy – though it’s lovely strolling in Venice with no massive crowds, but it can also be laying out on Croatia’s beaches in early September since all the Europeans visit throughout August.

3 – Utilize public transportation. Hiring a private driver is a good idea in some places for safety, or for those long-haul flights where you just don’t want to think about getting from the airport to your accommodation. Private drivers are great when you don’t want a big group tour, and letting your host know you are open to adding a few more people can save you money, and introduce you to other travelers. These comforts shouldn’t be your primary mode of transport. And do your research. Cabs in NYC are not for budget travelers, but cabs in Buenos Aires definitely can be.

And so for the final piece, do your research. Destinations with busted economies, unstable governments (but relatively safe) and currency that does well against your home currency (mine is the USD) are great picks – and probably not completely overrun with travelers…yet.

Ten years ago when I was backpacking around Europe, pre-Euro, there was different currency in each country. So, I would make my first meal McDonald’s (gasp!) when I arrived so I could get a better idea of the exchange rate in each country. The cost of my chosen meal (which I kept consistent across countries — value meal with two cheeseburgers, small fries and a medium soda) gave me a better idea on how the currency stacked up for me for lodging, food and purchases! [When I did this, Belgium was the only country that I never saw a McD’s!]

This was obviously not the best way to get a ‘taste’ of the country but when you’re backpacking alone and stink at math, it’s a good substitute. Now, I use oanda.com instead of testing my theory so I can enjoy local cuisine from the very start of my arrival in various countries around the world.

In no particular order…here’s a short list of countries that I know do well against the USD. My goal here is not to cover the world, just give some insight on places that some people may not instantly think of when they think of places to visit overseas. Countries I have been are in bold. Everything else is on my wishlist.

I welcome comments because it’s just more options to add to my list…if they aren’t already on my longer wishlist!

  • Croatia; Europe without the Euro exchange rate.
  • Bosnia; People still have imagery of a war-torn country. This is true but it is very cheap and very beautiful.
  • Iceland; A few years ago their very prosperous economy collapsed and how can you say no to 20 hours of sunlight in the summer
  • Argentina; Unstable economy. When I booked my trip, it was 3 pesos to 1USD; when I arrived, the exchange was 4 pesos to 1USD
  • Southeast Asia; Vietnam, Laos, parts of Thailand, Cambodia. Have never been but on my list.
  • Eastern Europe: Latvia, Hungary, Romania, Estonia. Prices in these places are supposedly what the Czech Republic was like 10 years ago.

Again, I very much welcome comments. Where have you been that the exchange rate was ridiculously good?


WHY leave?

This week’s WHY Wednesday questions why some travelers leave their comfort zone, only to eat foods that they are familiar with and know.

This was in the NYT and is crazy! The best part of traveling is eating like the locals…I don’t travel to faraway lands so I can eat cheese fries.

I have so many fond food memories from my travels but some of my favorites are getting freshly sliced cheese from a Swiss cheesemonger, spicy sausage on a roll with the local sauce in Bosnia and some unidentified tapas plate in Spain that the bartender sent over.

Personally, I’m not traveling just so I can eat something that I would eat after a night out at the bars when I was 22.

Eating while traveling is about finding a local market, tasting things on the menu you can’t get at home and being offered foods that you wouldn’t otherwise try. I ate fruits I never heard of in Costa Rica, I ordered fondue in Brussels only to find out that was actually mozzarella sticks and drank locally sourced milk at a market in Denmark!

Yes, sometimes there can be a negative experience. Like the time the boyfriend ordered the daily special in a small town in Tuscany and wound up getting a plate of fresh meat. So fresh, and chewy, in fact that he, a meat lover, had to follow each bite with a glass of water and a sip of wine. The place was small, and the staff attentive. Not wanting to insult, he finished most of the plate. I went with the pasta special of the day. Even now, years later, I remember how good my gnocchi and wine tasted. But he tried his, didn’t like it and didn’t insult anyone either and now we have a great story.

If something is on the table that you’ve never seen or tried, at the very least, take a bite! You’ll find yourself eating foods you wouldn’t have otherwise found!

Now the exception to this french fry story is ordering pommes frites in Belgium…you’ll need to get them topped with a few squirts of mayo, just like the locals!

Do you have any fond food memories? Feel free to post in the comments section.


Like I need more encouragement

The New York Times Travel Show was held this past weekend at the Javits Center. I went on Sunday and now the wheels in my head are spinning to decide where to visit next!

Iceland has been at the top of the list for some time – plus their economy tanked so it’s a bargain destination. If you eliminate the Galapagos, Ecuador is also a good bargain against the dollar. Nicaragua is up and coming. Spain and Portugal weren’t in attendance but a return to Spain has been on the list for a while. Egypt had a booth and it will be a great bargain when they stop being in the news.

And if I decide to stay in the country, Maine, Oregon, the Gulf Coast and the Carolinas all seem like good places to visit.

I could go on and on and on…there’s really no where I wouldn’t consider.


Ancestry

No one seems to know much about where I came from. I have bits and pieces to work from. Has anyone out there been successful in tracking their ancestry? If you are related to me, even better. If you are related to me and live in a foreign land, seriously awesome.

Am heading to the birthplace of my great grandma later this week, and all I have is a copy of her original birth certificate (though I realize this is an awesome start). There’s an immigration museum in Buenos Aires but it would have been her parents that immigrated there. But lacking lots of info like possible years they came, from where (conflicting reports within my family) and how (I assume steerage on a ship unless there’s some kind of royalty lineage – doubtful).

Know I also have family that came from Eastern Europe and Russia but they had such common surnames that it’s going to be a difficult search. Trips to those lands will not happen in the dead of winter. Need to not be wearing an ushanka (google ‘big Russian hat’ – that’s what I just did) when I go to unearth the mysteries of my family history. Am thinking more like flip flops and a sun dress. Like I will be later in the week in BsAs 🙂

Let the sleuthing begin.


New Business Idea

I have an idea for (what could be) a very profitable business. It will require me to do a bit more research first but I imagine I will be sending a letter to, the one and only, Sir Richard Branson in the very near future.

Stay tuned. It should be a good letter.

Update: when looking for Sir Branson’s email address or information on how to submit ideas to Virgin I found this customer letter. And Branson personally responded to the writer by telephone. Telephone! How awesome.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travelnews/4344890/Virgin-the-worlds-best-passenger-complaint-letter.html


Don’t cry for me Argentina, here I come!

Argentina – here we come! The boyfriend, who does not have the wanderlust I do, agreed to a trip to Argentina! This is not without hesitation on his part (as with every trip). Super excited.

We have the international flights in and out of Buenos Aires booked and are working on the internal flights throughout Argentina, and places to stay. The trip is three weeks from today!

I know how the boyfriend travels, and he needs a rough (but confirmed) plan. He won’t take an active role in making the plan, he just needs one. Good thing that I enjoy doing the research (and have been on it for months!). I love a happy boyfriend, so a compromise of some planning and some spontaneity it is!

Can’t wait!


Winter Blues

I suppose you can call it that. Or just a sense of perpetual wanderlust that sets in especially in the winter.

It’s the time of year when everyone (or maybe just me) seems to wonder…why do I live where I live? It’s cold. There’s snow. It’s dreary and a little depressing.

Right now, there are people who are living at the beach, leaving windows open for fresh (and warm) air, wearing short sleeves and even sporting bathing suits. Some call it living somewhere nice, some call it vacation and others may call it retirement.

In the meantime, I need a getaway to summertime. Where the living’s easy.