House Sitting for the Holidays

I”ve read about quite a few of my travel blogging heroes, such as Talon from 1 Dad, 1 Kid, using housesitting as a way to see the world from a different perspective; so when Charli from Wanderlusters got in touch about guest blogging on the topic, I jumped on board. It’s certainly something I’d love to try somewhere down the line.

I’m trying desperately to type but a big wet nose is perched on the edge of my keyboard and is pressing down on the backspace key so my words are being erased as fast as I try to type.

Monty is looking at me with his droopy puppy dog eyes.

He picks up his stuffed polar bear and shoves it into my lap.

I’ve no choice.

If I don’t play polar bear wrestle I’m never going to get him to leave me in peace.

House Sitting For the Holidays

I’ve come to know Monty and his beloved polar bear well over the last 7 days and while I know our friendship is only temporary – and based on the fact that I am currently the only person who will play polar bear wrestle with him – I’m grateful to have the opportunity to spend some time with this fun loving fur ball.

Travelling perpetually for the last 3 years has offered me the chance to explore some fascinating landscapes and soak up different cultures all over the world, however I’m really a home body at heart and at times I’ve struggled with being on the road for so long.

Just before I packed my bags and left my life of normality I discovered the concept of house sitting and it changed my perspective of long term travel.

Where once I was a little concerned that my dream of long term travel would result in regular trips home and thousands of dollars in long haul air fares, house sitting has offered a little respite from the open road and a homely environment in which to recharge.

House Sitting FAQs

For those who are not familiar with this budget saving travel hack house sitting is essentially an exchange of services between a home owner and a house sitter.

Home owners in need of property and/or pet care utilise a house sitter to take their place during the period for which they are away.

In the last 3 years I’ve looked after 15 properties in 6 different countries.

Registering with the largest online house sitting service Trusted House Sitters just before leaving the UK, I’ve definitely had my money’s worth from their annual membership fee.

If you average $50/night on accommodation – it will likely be more if you want to stay in relative luxury – 3 years equates to $54,750. Of those 3 years I’ve spent 22 months house sitting which makes the $89 annual membership fee fade into insignificance.

I’ve broken up my travels with assignments and found that each one has enriched my experience to a far greater extent than had I simply travelled to that destination.

Take Monty for example.

Our wrestling sessions are the perfect antidote for writers block and his daily walks encourage me to keep up with my exercise and get out into the fresh air.

My assignment in Costa Rica offered me the opportunity to sample rural rainforest living and with no convenience foods on offer I found myself cooking meals from scratch – a practise I’ve continued thanks to the improvement I saw in my health and waistline after ditching the junk.

Relaxing in a hammock while on the job in Costa RIca.
Relaxing in a hammock while on the job in Costa RIca.

House Sitting & Travel

In my mind there’s no better way to immerse yourself in the locations you visit than to house sit.

Not only will you save yourself a nightly accommodation fee, you’ll find that no hotel or hostel could ever provide the kind of experience had when house sitting.

Each time I’ve started a new assignment I’ve been welcomed into a new family. Not once have I felt as though I am there to simply house sit, the warmth of each reception has made it feel as though I am simply visiting old friends.

The assignments themselves have provided me with the chance to learn new skills and try my hand at some more unusual lifestyles.

In the past 3 years I’ve learnt the basics of macadamia and cashew farming, alpaca herding and equine care. I’ve lived in capital cities, beach front bungalows and rural lifestyle blocks.

Alpaca herding - just one of many skills Charli has picked up while house-sitting.
Alpaca herding – just one of many skills Charli has picked up while house-sitting.

I’ve stepped into the shoes of locals all over the world and tried their lifestyle on for size.

I’ve started to collect bits and bobs from each experience and collate them to create a vision of how I would like to live, what I want from the location and the property I call home.

House Sitting For Christmas

House sitting at Christmas is the perfect alternative to returning home for the holidays.

Personally I don’t like the idea of spending December 25th in a hotel so over for the past 2 years I’ve secured festive house sitting assignments.

The first year I was away from home I flew to Canada and looked after a four storey town house on the outskirts of Vancouver. I spent my days exploring the citiy’s festive markets, museums and galleries as well as learning to snowboard on the slopes of neighbouring Mount Baker.

reasons-to-house-sit-christmas-4

Last year I had my first hot Christmas while looking after the world’s best four legged Frisbee player in a suburb of Auckland. I spent my days relaxing on the beach, tramping through the neighbouring National Park and immersing myself in the creative vibe of the neighbourhood which was home to a mix of colourful artists back in the 60s.

This year I’m house sitting in Melbourne. A vibrant city I’ve always wanted to visit but thanks to the exorbitant cost of living Melbournians endure  it’s always been out of reach of my meagre budget.

I arrived to meet Monty – polar bear in mouth – and his owners last week. The house was decked out in festive cheer and again I was welcomed with open arms.

While I know I will feel a little sad that I’m not close to my family when Christmas morning rolls around, I know that my day will be filled a new experience of Christmas, one that I’ll no doubt cherish for years to come.

Your Say

What have your experiences been with house-sitting?

Is it something you’d consider trying somewhere down the line?

 

6 Things to do Before You Leave on a Long Trip

Getting ready to head out on the road is an understandably exciting and stressful time. You’re in this hazy middle ground between your old life and the new life you’ve yet to begin, and it can sometimes be hard to keep track of all you need to do before leaving on that jet plane and going off in pursuit of worldly adventures.

While I’m not heading anywhere anytime soon, a recent email prompted me to write this short little entry. They asked “What are the things you need to do before you leave home for a long time?” and I thought I’d oblige with a post rather than an email in case others have the same question.

Obviously I’ll leave ‘pack’ and ‘say goodbye’ off the list :-p

#1 – Store Your Belongings

Unless you’re lucky like me and have wonderful parents and/or friends willing to babysit your stuff for a while, you’re going to need a place to keep your most precious belongings. Storage units are generally a pretty affordable way to keep things in a safe and secure location, and companies like Taxibox have the added benefit of bringing your storage unit directly to you once you’ve come home.

Photo courtesy of Scott Myers
Photo courtesy of Scott Myers

#2 – Set up automatic payments

If you’re going on the road a while, there’s a good chance you’re going to still have bills coming in every month. Don’t forget to cancel those services you won’t need and set up automated payments for those you’re locked into through contracts or necessity.

My poor cellphone provider back in Oz must get fed up waiting 2-3 months for me to remember I still owe them for the iPad I hardly ever use. Most banks now allow for scheduled monthly payments, and even PayPal can now be set up to take care of this for you. Avoid late fees!

#3 – Sell!

If you’re headed out for a long time – be it a year of backpacking or a lengthy, 5+ year ESL jaunt like my own, you’re going to need every last cent you can get your hands on. It might be a good idea to sell some of the things you’re unlikely to need again anytime soon.

When I left for China last March I made the (perhaps unwise for Future Chris) decision to sell all of my home wares to my housemate. I also sold my desktop to my brother and my TV to an friend. Why not? I wasn’t going to need them for the foreseeable future and the extra $600 was a handy cushion for when I touched down in China.

I know others who have held full blown garage sales to fund their trips and cut down on the amount of storage they needed. Smart!

#4 – Soak it In

It might be hard to realize it as you’re rushing around packing and saying goodbyes and daydreaming about all of the places you’re going to see, but I cannot stress enough how important it is to take a moment to soak it all in before you head out for a lengthy period of time.

The family and I back together for a family photo on our property
The family and I back together for a family photo on our property

Whether this means visiting a favourite quiet place, taking the time to really talk with your siblings, or indulging in a few of your favourite foods before you leave – do it!

Two or three months down the line you’re suddenly going to wish you’d had the opportunity, so make the best of it while you can.

#5 – Tell Your Bank!

Thanks to Nomadic American for reminding me about this one.

Any bank worth its salt is checking where transactions are being made, so be sure you’ve told your bank everywhere you’re planning to be. You hear too many horror stories about travelers stranded without a cent to their name after their bank locked their card due to a suspicious transaction in some faraway place.

It’s a simple process to get in touch with your bank and give them your itinerary, and it’ll avoid a big headache farther down the line.

#6 – Party

Saying goodbyes can take a hell of a long time if you’ve got a big family and/or a big circle of friends. While it would be nice to have personal goodbyes with everybody you know, it’s a fun (and time saving) measure to have a big farewell before you leave town.

David is less than impressed at his fiance's bold choice of goodbyes.
Dave is less than impressed at his fiance’s bold choice of goodbyes.

Pick your favourite bar or just host it in your house, put the word out that you’re leaving on a jet plane, and have a blast with the people you’re not going to see for a while. If you’re lucky, they’ll even shout you your drinks. Bargain!

Bucket List Item #166 – Seeing the Seattle Mariners at Bat

Chronologically, this entry should actually come before my day exploring the San Juan Islands. Whoops!

More importantly, this marks the final entry about last year’s five week tour of the United States! I could make some grand excuse as to why it has taken me this long but, in truth, I’ve just been a mix of lazy and distracted by other things (girls, cricket, booze, and video games for the most part). Here’s hoping that this streak of two posts in as many days will mean a return to my former literary fecundity!

Seattle

In my previous entry, I talked about my old friend, Liz. If you’re not up to reading a lengthy entry about friendship, suffice to say that Liz was a very dear and very important friend in my early days in South Korea and remains a friend to this day.

So, when it was clear that my tour of the United States last summer was going to take us to Seattle, it was a lock that I had to see Liz, her husband (and my former Dungeons & Dragons cohort) CJ, and the irrepressible and vivacious Ruby (another great friend from my time in Korea).

Safeco Field

Upon hearing the dates I’d be in town, CJ insisted that we go to a baseball game. His enthusiasm for taking my baseball virginity at a Mariners game was infectious, and before too long I was excited about the prospect of seeing the American pastime live and in the flesh.

Believe it or not, I’d actually played baseball growing up and was a passable second baseman in my day. Passable by Glen Innes High School standards, anyway; I imagine that’s somewhere near criminally bad by most American standards. I’d gone to a game or two in South Korea, but the standard of Korean baseball would be somewhat akin to watching basketball in China or ice hockey in Australia. Pretty shit, basically.

As luck would have it, the Mariners would be playing host to the Toronto Bluejays, so a win was very much a possibility.

Pre-Gaming

After paying entirely too much for parking and walking several blocks, we met Liz, CJ, Ruby, and a few of their friends outside the park.

Australia has a great many large and iconic stadiums, but it seems like collosal arenas are par for the course across the United States. Safeco Field is a particularly impressive venue, and the Pyramid Ale House being next door is just icing on a rather awesome cake.

Nomadic American and I out front of the field. Photo Bomb by Cody.
Nomadic American and I out front of the field. Photo Bomb by Cody.

Upon seeing me, CJ hurriedly thrust a Seattle Mariners cap into my hand and I donned it with equal haste lest I be mistaken for a filthy Bluejays fan. Our posse soon made its way to the Ale House to get a few beers and dogs into us before the first pitch was thrown.

I really enjoyed the whole vibe of the place. Standing outside on a warm summer evening with a chili cheese dog in one hand and an ice cold, surprisingly good beer in the other? Heaven.

Eating a real, genuine, authentic American hot dog.
Eating a real, genuine, authentic American hot dog.
The Korean crew (plus a few extras) together again.
The Korean crew (plus a few extras) together again.

 

To say it felt pretty surreal and cool to be drinking beers from a plastic cup and eating hot dogs before a baseball game is an understatement. My fascination with American culture meant that partaking in this slice of Americana was actually checking off part of bucket list item #166.

Alas, I couldn’t check off bucket list item #264 (getting to second or third base at a baseball field). There just wasn’t time >_>

The Game

To be completely honest, I don’t recall a great deal of the game itself. I’ve never been a big fan of baseball as a spectator sport – I feel like it’s cricket for people too lazy to run as often or stand for as long. On top of this, the game itself was a low scoring affair that ended in a Mariners win.

I was too busy catching up, eating unhealthy food and drinking overpriced beer, and being led around the stadium by a super enthused CJ to really pay attention. We watched players warm up (and Heather of Nomadic American secured me a ball by saying I’d traveled from Australia by way of China to be there), drank beers in The Pen, and I even tried my arm at pitching and was thoroughly emasculated by CJ, who still plays to this day.

The Seattle Mariners warming up.
The Seattle Mariners warming up.
The view from underneath the scoreboard (and the bar behind it).
The view from underneath the scoreboard (and the bar behind it).

 

I guess it was the alcohol, but I don’t recall nearly as much of the evening as I’d have liked. Judging by the 3-0 final score, though, maybe I didn’t miss too much when it comes to the game.

The most important thing out of the evening was the opportunity to catch up with old friends, and I certainly got to do that. We bade farewell to Cody and Dez (who had been our companions in Portland) and I got to catch up with Ruby, CJ, and Liz.

Special mention also to Gabe, who had kindly donated a dozen or so D&D books to my nerding collection a few years earlier despite never having met me. Legend.

Bucket list item #166 might not seem like a big deal to most Americans, but to me – it was a fantastic experience to attend a baseball match as I’d seen so many TV and movie characters do so nonchalantly over the year.

Next stop? Wrigley Field!

Deliriously happy celebrating my 23rd birthday with new friends.

My Best Birthday – Korea 2007

In less than a week now, I’ll celebrate my 30th birthday. When I stop and consider that age, I’m stunned. How could twelve years have flown by since I finished high school and emerged starry eyed and full of youthful naiveté? That younger, less beardy, and altogether more optimistic CWB dreamed of ‘meeting and marrying his soul-mate’: a direct quote from my high school yearbook, if you can believe it. He certainly had no designs on seeing the world.

My siblings and I at a 1999 trip to Mooloolaba. So young and naive!
My siblings and I at a 1999 trip to Mooloolaba. So young and naive!

They say that all of us have an internal age: the age we see ourselves as when we pause to think about such things.

For me, I’ll be forever 24. My 24th year on this earth was by far the most enjoyable and life altering. I turned 24 a week after moving to South Korea back in 2007, and that first birthday weekend completely redefined both my time in South Korea and me as a person.

I was not the shy, socially awkward wallflower I’d been in college. I was no longer the super geeky, naive kid who’d graduated high school. Despite my worries to the contrary, I wasn’t somebody undeserving of ‘cool’ friends or affection.

And all it took was a selfless act of kindness from somebody I’d never been particularly kind to.

Coming to South Korea

Korea terrified me from the start.

Prior to stepping onto that plane where tears stood in my eyes and a growing sense of anxiety screamed to me “What the fuck have you done?”; I’d never been farther afield than Newcastle – six hours drive from my parents and a ten minute bus ride to any of my grandparents or cousins. Hell, I moved there with my best friend.

To say I’d always played life pretty safe up until that point would be an understatement. I’d had best friends and/or family with me everywhere I’d lived since I’d left home.

I remember standing in the middle of my cold, largely empty apartment the day I arrived in Korea. My boss, well-meaning but perhaps a little ignorant of just how jarring the transition would be, had left me clutching a carton of milk and a loaf of bread. I wasn’t due at work until Monday, so he’d patted me on the back and told me he’d see me there.

My first Korean apartment. Note the mattress on the floor acting as my bed.
My first Korean apartment. Note the mattress on the floor acting as my bed.

Then, he’d closed the door and left me alone with my thoughts and the realisation that I hadn’t even known South Korea was in the northern hemisphere.

Thank God I managed to find an English language TV station. I drifted off to sleep that night with Return of the King for company.

My first week in Korea was a blur. I made a new friend (the sober but thoroughly inappropriate, Mike) and he introduced me to a few comforts that would get me through the worst of the culture shock. He showed me where to find Han’s Deli and Baskin & Robbins and TGI: Friday; but his sobriety meant he couldn’t introduce me to the night life.

Mike and I visit Unjusa; my first temple in Korea.
Mike and I visit Unjusa; my first temple in Korea.

It’s hard to express now just how lonely and out of place I felt in those first few weeks. I loved the newness of the experience, but every part of me screamed Go home! I had long, tearful conversations with my family in which I told them I was sure I’d made a bad decision and that I wanted to come home.

As my 24th birthday approached, I realised that there was a very real chance that I’d spend it alone and computerless inside an apartment that didn’t yet feel like home.

I braced for sadness.

Paul

It was during that week leading up to my birthday that I got a Facebook message from an old classmate, Paul.

We hadn’t been friends in high school. In fact, although we’d run in the same social circle, we’d often been actively antagonistic towards one another. If I’m being honest, I was the guilty party more often than not.

So his selfless offer to come and help me settle in and ensure my birthday wasn’t awful meant a lot to me.

It still does to this day.

Paul arrived with a pair of lovely South African girls and showed me that Korea wasn’t quite the scary, alien place it had felt like so far. We ate delicious shabu shabu (at the very venue I’d do my farewell dinner approximately a year later) and he introduced me to Gwangju staples like Soul Train, Abbey (RIP), and the Speakeasy.

It was my first experience with the truth that we change so much once we leave the social confines of high school. This wasn’t the guy who called me ‘fat’ in Year 11 and 12, and I certainly didn’t feel like the smart-ass who’d said all manner of nasty things to people in order to get a laugh.

In fact, as I nervously stood outside the downtown Starbucks and waited for his arrival, I began to realise that I barely recognised the CWB who had left Glen Innes High School five years into the past.

We started my birthday eve with shabu shabu. Although this is a Japanese dish, it’s quite popular in South Korea as well. A warm, hearty broth full of meat and vegetables, and later soaked up with rice, it’s the perfect meal for a communal dinner in the country’s colder winter months.

As we sat around and I experienced my first Korean food not bought from a convenience store or eaten at the school cafeteria, I noticed something amazing: there were other foreigners here!

Of course, I knew there were foreigners in Gwangju. I’d spoken to Mike of Mike & Dave’s Speakeasy fame prior to arriving, but had yet to see a foreigner aside from my co-worker. To see a half dozen loud, drunk foreigners at the table next to us filled me with hope that maybe my year in Korea wasn’t going to be a lonely, miserable thing.

The photo I dreaded my mother seeing.
The photo I dreaded my mother seeing.

And when they passed me my first shot of soju and wished me a happy birthday, I knew I’d found something unlike the social circles I’d brushed against and often been ignored by in Australia.

Expats were, and still are to this day, the only people who I feel at home with.

The Best Birthday

It would be remiss of me to simply label my 24th birthday as the best without highlighting just how blessed I’d been with birthdays in the past. My family – particularly my mother- had always made every effort to ensure the day felt like something special.

I’d been given many memorable gifts but, perhaps more importantly from a memory perspective – I’d had a number of wonderfully fun parties. We’d hosted rugby league and baseball matches, all night LAN parties, and even the boozy affairs that were my 18th and my 21st.

The bar had been set pretty high, is what I’m saying. My 24th might not have matched these past birthdays in terms of extravagance or the number of people present, but it played such a huge role in defining who I now was and who I remain to this very day.

After our dinner of shabu shabu, we went to a Ministop (or possibly a Family Mart) where the girls went about secret business as the boys distracted me with cheap beer drank from plastic bottles.

As midnight approached, we were seated on cushions in the serene confines of Abbey: a now defunct hookah bar in which I’d later steal kisses with my first adult girlfriend and spend many a night out until the sun came up and I realised I’d be a wreck for work the following day.

“What’s your birthday wish, Chris?” Paul shouted across a table cluttered with empty Hoegaarden bottles and flavoured hookah. I remember feeling like such a rebel smoking this flavoured tobacco. I remember worrying what my mother would think if she knew I was smoking.

Deliriously happy celebrating my 23rd birthday with new friends.
Deliriously happy celebrating my 24th birthday with new friends.

“Uh…”, I began wittily. Before I could answer, though, the clock struck twelve and the girls stood up to shower me with confetti and streamers. A hat was hurriedly placed upon my head and I was hugged by this group of people who had been largely strangers only 3 or 4 hours earlier.

It’s a wonderful and sad thing about expat life – the evanescent nature of these friendships we form. It’s wonderful in that complete strangers can become fast friends over the course of a single evening, but sad in that these fast burning and fiercely fun friendships rarely last.

How many people have I befriended, shared a fantastic night or week with, and promptly forgotten?

My Facebook page is a graveyard for friends who I know longer speak to, but am too nostalgic for better times to remove.

In that moment, though, surrounded by my first expat friends and drunk more on the newness of feeling included than the doubtlessly huge amount of beer and soju I’d consumed, I was just grateful.

I still am to this day.

New Friends

The original point of this post was to have been about attending a Seattle Mariners game with Liz and her husband CJ. I got sidetracked and this happened instead, but I’ll introduce Liz now so that the next entry makes sense.

It was perhaps 2am at an uncharacteristically Speakeasy. There were maybe a dozen people in the bar aside from our party of five. I have vague, doubtlessly beer goggled enhanced memories of dancing with a buxom South African girl who I never saw again.

Sometime during the night, I got talking to an equally buxom Canadian by the name of Liz and her Aussie friend, Kirk. I talked about short-lived friendships, but these two would become the foundation upon which all of my future Korean friendships were built. While I’m sad to admit that I’ve let these friendships perhaps slip a little to the wayside over the years, I still keep up to date with their lives as best I can.

Meeting Liz and Kirk for the first time at Speakeasy
Meeting Liz and Kirk for the first time at Speakeasy

When Paul and his friends returned to Seoul, it would be Liz and Kirk and their wonderfully inclusive circle of friends who welcomed me and made every effort to include me. I have so many fond memories of nights spent wandering snowy streets with this posse of wonderful people: Joy, Liz, Kirk, Brodie, Ken, and Vanessa.

For my first three or four months in Korea, all of them took me under their wing and helped me to realise that I wasn’t some loser undeserving of friends. Liz, in particular, was a rock for me. She taught me how to hug (it’s a sad truth that I used to hug ‘like a corpse’) and encouraged me to be more social and not look at myself as an ugly loser who deserved to be alone.

Liz pioneered the bearclaw in South Korea. Here she can be seen delivering one to me.
Liz pioneered the bearclaw in South Korea. Here she can be seen delivering one to me.

When I was depressed, it was Liz who came and dragged me out of my apartment to attend a flower exhibition. Liz who came over the night after my first break-up and sat with me as I cried like a little girl.

Celebrating New Year's at Soul Train in Gwangju with Liz, Brodie, and Joy
Celebrating New Year’s at Soul Train in Gwangju with Liz, Brodie, and Joy

Writing this, I tear up thinking about how blessed with friendship I was, and how undeserving I feel now knowing that I don’t speak to these people nearly as often as I should. If it weren’t for Paul and Liz and Kirk and countless others, I might not have made it beyond six months in Korea. Lord knows, I talked about leaving often enough.

More than that, though: if it weren’t for these people, I wouldn’t be who I am today. I could very well still be the same shy, self-loathing guy who had left Australia.

It’s cheesy to say it, but I was given a priceless gift on my 24th birthday. I was given permission and encouraged to like myself. It’s not always easy – and Lord knows there are days when the black dog makes it downright impossible – but I am an infinitely more confident, personable, and happy person now.

(And to my old friends who had been beside me in Australia, I fully acknowledge what wonderful and supportive people you were and remain to this day. It just took a change of environment and hearing the words from new faces to make me realise it was truth rather than blind loyalty).

Happy Birthday to Me

I turn 30 in two days. I’ll be lucky enough to spend the day with my brother and his girlfriend. While China has not been as warm and welcoming as Korea felt, in the recent weeks and months it has certainly come a long way.

I’ve got an entry coming up about exactly why Nanjing is finally starting to feel like a place where I could be happy, but more on that later.

But as I prepare for another birthday I’m dreading, it felt right to reflect on one I’d dreaded and that surprised and changed me so fundamentally.

I couldn’t possible list and thank the people who made my 24th year on this earth so memorable and life altering, but it saddened me to think that no record to that day existed outside of my own memory.

To those who made it such a wonderful day: thank you.

Your Say

What’s the best birthday you’ve ever had?

Or, if you’re feeling specific, what was the best gift you received?

Contiki Tour

The Benefits of Going Contiki

As a travel addict and long time wanderer, one of my favourite parts about being single is that I can have complete control over every aspect of my travel experience. I pick the hostel (and choose whether to sleep in until noon), I choose where to eat, and I dictate the destinations and the pace at which I visit them.

The flip side to this, of course, is that the onus of organising every aspect of the trip is on me. It’s only fair. But who amongst us doesn’t get tired of trolling through TripAdvisor and Hostel World poring over review after review looking for the perfect combination of price, location, creature comforts, and the all important free Wi-Fi? Who doesn’t get just a little bored of scanning through page after page of Google search results of articles and blogs describing in intricate detail the many sights, sounds, and tastes we need to experience in a given spot.

It’s all very exciting and part and parcel of the solo travel experience, but sometimes it can all be a bit overwhelming. And that’s where tour companies like Contiki come in handy.

I first heard of Contiki a few years ago when one of my good friends and fellow Newcastle Knights tragics booked his first trip around Europe through Contiki Australia. At the time I had still yet to set foot on a plane – let alone foreign soil – so it all sounded very glamorous. This idea of bussing across Europe with a group of drunk, beautiful travel lovers and stopping off at iconic spots along the way sounded like just what a casual retail worker and full time day-dreamer needed in his life.

#1 – Accessible Travel

And that’s really the first lure of a company like Contiki. Planning your own trip is not only hard, it can be downright daunting. While I’ve had plenty of practise now and have come to (mostly) enjoy the pre-trip research, it’s not the easiest of tasks for a first time traveler.

Contiki takes the often arduous task of planning a whole trip out of your hands and lays it out for you in an easy to understand itinerary that takes care of everything from food to accommodation to the all important task of choosing destinations and getting to them. What you lose in flexibility, you gain in having to not worry about anything beyond what to drink at the bar, which photos to take, and how much spending money to bring along.

Contiki does all of the planning, so you can get on with enjoying the trip.
Contiki does all of the planning, so you can get on with enjoying the trip.

My aforementioned friend was hooked from the first go. These Contiki tours around North America, Europe, and the rest of the world have become milestones towards which he works. While pouring himself into his work, he keeps in the back of his mind that he’s got a hassle free, awesome trip ahead of him to look forward to.

And for a first time traveler, it can’t be understated just how helpful this is. We’ve all got our horror stories of lost bookings, dodgy cab drivers, and completely underwhelming ‘must see locations’. Yes, these stories are great to tell people over a beverage or two post trip, but they’re the kind of things we’re used to. A first time traveler – fresh off the boat, so to speak, isn’t going to be quite as well equipped to deal with the hardships of a trip gone wrong.

With that first epic trip under your belt, the idea of planning your own trip further down the line is suddenly a little less daunting. You’ve survived the language barrier and dealt with the early starts – you can do anything! And that leads me to…

#2 – Bite Sized Travel

Byron from Byron and His Backpacks described Contiki tours as “a travel sampler”. You’re not going to find the best hole in the wall restaurant or that idyllic little beach that nobody has heard of through a big tour company like Contiki, but what you will do is get a broad introduction to the area you’re traveling through.

“There’s not really any reason to go to Pisa except to see the Leaning Tower,” he observed, “And take the obligatory stupid picture of you trying to hold it up. With Contiki you’re in, you take a few photos, and then you get the hell out”.

Now *that* is a pretty original take on the Leaning Tower of Pisa shot...
Now *that* is a pretty original take on the Leaning Tower of Pisa shot…

We’ve all made that trip to an out of the way locale to see something we’ve only ever dreamed about. Those moments are worth the trip, of course, but there’s something to be said for seeing what you came to see and then moving on. When time is at a premium, you don’t want to be stuck trying to kill 24 hours in BFE.

#3 – Social Travel

Traveling solo can be, by definition, a rather lonely affair. Sure, you’ll make friends and short term travel companions along the way, but there are going to be moments where you’re alone in a crowded city and that sense of isolation is going to descend on you. During her recent three month tour across Asia, Nomadic American dealt with this first hand. For every day where she had a travel buddy or some people to have a few drinks with, there’d be several where we’d text or Skype because the loneliness was getting to be a bit too much.

For me, part of the fun is forcing myself out of my shell and forging a few new friendships, but that can be a daunting prospect to a first time solo traveler.

Contiki tours are group affairs in which you’re traveling with the same people for however long your tour is. You eat your meals with these people, see the sights with them, and party with them when the bus comes to a halt and it’s time to relax for a while.

Making new friends on the road is much easier in a pre-organised tour group.
Making new friends on the road is much easier in a pre-organised tour group.

The number of friends that my Knights supporting friend has made in his travels is nothing short of impressive. His Facebook page is an envy inducer. Here’s one of him in front of the Eiffel Tower with a leggy blonde. Here’s one of him drunk off his head with five similarly inebriated fellows outside a bar in Germany. Here he is with twenty odd people all beaming with the post-coital bliss of an unforgettable trip.

You’re always going to make friends and acquaintances traveling, but a Contiki Tour takes the leg work out of it for you. You’ve got a built in support network of sorts from the get go, and lifelong friendships can be forged along the way.

In Summary

I’m not going to lie. This is a sponsored post that Contiki have approached me about writing, but the opinions and experiences in here are my own. Or borrowed from people I know in real life, in some cases.

This is a sponsored post but opinions are my own.

While I’m all about the road less traveled and seeing the world through my own eyes, the lure of a tour with a company like Contiki is always there. It made my time in Fiji all the more fun to not have to sweat the small things, and someday I’d love to have the money to go on a hassle free, fun laden tour with them.

If that hasn’t whet your appetite enough, Contiki have put together this little video as part of their No Regrets competition. Give it a gander and go sign up!

Your Say

Have you ever traveled with Contiki? What were your feelings about the experience? I’d love to hear more from my readers.