Sunday 17 February 2008

Oh What A Lovely Journey - Route Version 3.1

Origin CityDestination CityDate
GillinghamLondonMon-01-Sep
LondonMadridMon-01-Sep
MadridAlcala De HenaresMon-01-Sep
Alcala De HenaresMadridThu-04-Sep
MadridSalvadoreThu-04-Sep
SalvadoreRio De JaneiroSun-07-Sep
Rio De JaneiroLimaWed-10-Sep
LimaCuzcoSat-13-Sep
CuzcoOllantaytamboSat-13-Sep
OllantaytamboManchu PichuSun-14-Sep
OllantaytamboCuzcoFri-19-Sep
CuzcoArequipaMon-22-Sep
ArequipaCuzcoThu-25-Sep
CuzcoLimaSat-27-Sep
LimaPiuraMon-29-Sep
PiuraGuayaquilThu-02-Oct
GuayaquilQuitoSun-05-Oct
QuitoCaliTue-07-Oct
CaliMenezalesThu-09-Oct
MenezalesBogotaSat-11-Oct
BogotaPanama CityThu-16-Oct
Panama CityCancunSun-19-Oct
CancunChitzen ItsaMon-20-Oct
CancunMexico CityThu-23-Oct
Mexico CityMoreliaFri-24-Oct
Mexico CityTeotihuacanTue-28-Oct
Mexico CityNew YorkThu-30-Oct
New YorkNiagra FallsFri-31-Oct
New YorkSanto DomingoSat-01-Nov
Santo DomingoPuerto PlataSun-02-Nov
Puerto PlataSanto DomingoFri-07-Nov
Santo DomingoNew YorkSat-08-Nov
New YorkLas VegasSun-09-Nov
Las VegasGrand CanyonMon-10-Nov
Las VegasHonoluluWed-12-Nov
HonoluluNadiTue-18-Nov
NadiAucklandSun-23-Nov
AucklandSydneySun-30-Nov
SydneyBrisbaneFri-05-Dec
BrisbaneCairnsSun-07-Dec
CairnsDarwinThu-11-Dec
DarwinSingaporeThu-11-Dec
SingaporeJakartaSat-13-Dec
JakartaSingaporeTue-16-Dec
SingaporeKuala LumpurFri-19-Dec
Kuala LumpurPenangMon-22-Dec
PenangPhuketSat-27-Dec
PhuketBangkokWed-31-Dec
BangkokPattayaFri-09-Jan
PattayaBangkokMon-12-Jan
BangkokSiem ReapWed-14-Jan
Siem ReapSaigonMon-19-Jan
SaigonHanoiThu-22-Jan
HanoiNanningSun-25-Jan
NanningGuilinFri-30-Jan
GuilinHong KongMon-02-Feb
Hong KongManilaThu-05-Feb
ManilaCebuMon-09-Feb
CebuManilaFri-13-Feb
ManilaHong KongSat-14-Feb
Hong KongShanghaiTue-17-Feb
ShanghaiOsakaFri-20-Feb
OsakaHiroshimaTue-24-Feb
HiroshimaHakataThu-26-Feb
HakataPusonSat-28-Feb
PusonSeoulTue-03-Mar
SeoulQingdaoSun-08-Mar
QingdaoBeijingTue-10-Mar
BeijingMoscowFri-13-Mar
MoscowMinskFri-20-Mar
MinskWarwawMon-23-Mar
WarwawPragueThu-26-Mar
PragueBerlinSun-29-Mar
BerlinDusseldorfWed-01-Apr
DusseldorfAmsterdamSat-04-Apr
AmsterdamLondonTue-07-Apr
LondonGillinghamTue-07-Apr

Sunday 10 February 2008

Travelling ... a word from the wise

Well having looked at a myriad websites about trains, planes and automobiles, oh and ferries, it would appear that trying to go "Around the world in 80 days" is not only very possible, but been done so many times by so many people from all over the world, and starting from just about anywhere you care to mention, that in fact it's almost becoming a bit old hat.
 
Also the cost isn't as much as you might expect either.
 
Nope, the real trick is to decide how long you can afford to go for, exactly which route you wish to take and how much of the locations en route you want to pause in enough to warrant a separate ticket or stop over.
 
Using public transport railways for instance :-
 
In 3 days you can reach Moscow from London, via Warsaw, for around £150.
In another 7 days you can reach Beijing from Moscow for around £300, or less if you speak fluent Russian or are well verses in using foreign phrase books.
And finally a further 2 days journey can get you to Hanoi from Beijing for around £71.
 
So you can see, in under 2 weeks you can go from London to the bottom corner of South East Asia and all for around £500, sound good?
 
Well maybe surprisingly no, as other than getting your passport stamped at the border, and not to forget having to buy all the relevant visas in advance, this is travel in its purest and simplest form, just getting from A to B.
 
It is not really visiting any of these places and you get no chance to be a tourist. This is not allowing for any stop overs, sight seeing, clothes shopping, photo opportunities ( unless you like blurred photos or those of far away mountain ranges through a pane of glass ), meeting / mingling with the locals, sampling native cuisine or haggling in market stalls for souvenirs to take back home.
 
In fact, in a way it is no better that flying from airport to airport with as soon as you land from your inbound flight being escorted directly to the departure lounge for your connecting outbound flight out again soon afterwards.
 
I remember one of the first times I went to London with my mother, it was such a big occasion, we went to the Imperial War Museum, I was rubber necking myself the whole time and the noise / pollution combined gave me a massive headache. These days I commute into London daily, often falling asleep on the train and listening to my Walkman all the way from the station to my office, only looking around enough to wait for clear ways through the road traffic and to avoid slower moving pedestrians.
 
Imagine a huge circular commute journey where you do nothing but catch 40 winks every few hours, grab an overpriced sandwich and mineral water when your peckish, and work your way through a novel or sudoku puzzle book, all the while trying to avoid the eyes of your fellow commuters. It would be the most pointless and needless waste of time imaginable.
 
Upon arriving home again would you be any more worldly wise? ... Would you have gained memories you will cherish for the rest of your life? ... Would you have enough photos to stick into 3 albums with which to bore your in-laws to tears? ... Would you have become firm friends with someone from the other side of the world with whom you have promised to keep in touch? ... Would you be eager to save up enough money and vacation time and do it all again if you could?
 
Probably not, no!
 
So as these days much of the chore has been taken out of travelling, this gives you more opportunity to enjoy it at your leisure and at your own pace, so I suggest you don't be in such a hurry, after all now more than ever it would be wise to keep in mind the age old saying "life is a journey, not a destination".
 
And thus if your planning a travelling trip, whether it be just around a single country or big enough to make it to the next continent, first off make a list of all the places/people/things you want to see, then decide how long you want to stay in each place before you even think about how to get from one place to the next or in what order you plan to do them all, and doing it this way afterwards you will be glad that you did.

Saturday 2 February 2008

The itiniary changes yet again

I would have liked to see all of the ancient seven wonders of the world, sadly six have been lost to the sands of time and so the pyramids of Giza is all that was left for me to visit.
 
I would like to visit all of the seven natural wonders of the world, yet they are all spread out across the globe and to reach them all is no simple or cheap journey.
 
I would like to visit all my friends, but again they are spread out all around the world far and wide.
 
I would like to visit all the wondrous places of my childhood fantasies, from Timbutu to Xanadu and everywhere in between, but that would be a journey of such epic extravagance for a man of my age, wealth and current social standing that it would rule my life for years to come in order to achieve it.
 
I have dreams, and I long to make them realities, but one of the biggest dreams is to find a sweet loving wife and settle down, and that would be made all the harder if I chose to give up a house, a job and a career forever in order to go chasing the wondrous world of my youth.
 
With my family and friends around me, I could pretend to play the prodigal son, go gallivanting around the world and hope that they are all there waiting for me with open arms upon my return, but that would be asking and expecting too much of anyone, as well as being totally unfair.
 
With this trip I have to be both pragmatic and realistic, accept that what I would chose to do if I have unlimited time and money is not always in line with what I can actually achieve without losing everything I currently have worked so hard to accomplish.
 
I must come to terms with what is real, what is possible and what really matters, and right now some of these places I would really like to visit but maybe this time right here and now is not my time to view them.
 
I am still young, 31 is not old, frail and grey and as long as I do not cut all my ties to the past it may be possible to do many of the things I want now and the rest later on in life.

Why Travel

I had a nice long chat with my mother today about all sorts of things, and of course my trip was high up on the agenda for many reasons.
 
It was a nightmare to chose where and why for certain places and I had to agree that it would take a lifetime to visit everywhere, see everyone and do everything that I wanted.
 
The main dilemma is that humans being are, almost by habit, walking wish demanding machines. All our lives we think, if only I can do this, I'd love to do that, why cant something be possible and so the more we live the more we want.
 
It is true that the happiest people I have met have also been the poorest, with little vision for what life could offer and almost no understanding of the many possibilities that are open to us as human beings.
 
Now I'm not saying that it is possible for anyone to just leave their home, reach civilization, travel the world and find the perfect job with their ideal partner, but it is true that in some circumstances ignorance is bliss, and the facts and possibilities that we fill our heads with the more the agony of choice clouds our thinking and makes us unhappy with our current situation.
 
My mother and I were in complete agreement that If I was in a job that I liked and was settled down with a wife and kids that my desire to travel would me much muted, and I would not even seriously contemplate the dream of every truly travelling around the world, let alone set myself a timeframe and go about finding out the costing of various trips.
 
I do not deny that I have always wanted to travel and explore the world, but it is without doubt the fact that I am so un-contented with my current life that has lit the fire under my feet enough for me to make this massive sacrifice.
 
Right here, right now, this travel is something that I feel I am drawn towards but equally it is that I feel nothing substantial keeping me here that is what is allowing my otherwise rational and down to earth mentality to be seduced by the desire to see other places, meet other people, and do what so few actually get a chance to attempt.
 
At first I thought that the trip would be a success if I got to see everything, came back and then wrote a massive best seller from my experiences and lived forever on the proceeds.
 
Then I mellowed to the logic that it would be a success if I got to see most of the things, came back and wrote a frailly successful book enough to break into the writing world.
 
Now, with actually having to try and pay for this trip, and already seeing the effort that is going into it, and the many sacrifices that I am having to make, I have come to the conclusion that it would be a success if I came back in one piece undamaged, having seen enough of the things that I really had my heart set on enough to make the sacrifices I am making worth it and to have been able to keep my house.