Category Archives: Journal

The long delay and the uphill walk – Day 22 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Transit

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 22 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by Rusaila Bazlamit - http://flic.kr/p/fELph

Prompt #22: TRANSIT

“The word travel comes from a French word meaning “work” and sometimes, getting there is work. Between crowded buses, long airline delays, overnight trains and crazy rickshaw rides, transportation can be stressful, but it can also be a rewarding part of the tip. Tell us about a time when the journey became more important than the destination.”

The long delay and the long uphill walk

Edinburgh’s March night air was surprisingly warm as I walked out of Waverly train station. Looking over Princes Street Gardens to the Royal Mile, the moon hung high over Old Town Edinburgh and the Castle. The quiet night seemed to have hardly so much as a taxi, but then again, I’ve never had much luck with taxis.

Jaysus, I stank. That happens when you’ve worn the same clothes for days, traveled from the northwestern U.S. to Scotland, and are lugging around not only a rucksack nearly the same size as you, but also a large rolling suitcase. Over a day earlier, I’d been flying east across the U.S., fresh from visiting friends in my future home of Oregon. It was March 2000, and I was on my way back to Scotland, first for a quick respite in my former student-exchange-and-work-visa home of Edinburgh, then to Ireland on a 4-month work visa.

Everything had gone fine, until Philly.

From Philadelphia I was supposed to connect to a trans-Atlantic flight to London. From London, I planned to make my way by train back to my beloved Edinburgh. Only trouble was, my slightly delayed Philly flight had touched down at about the same time my London flight took off.

Bugger.

The airline managed to just squeeze me onto the last trans-Atlantic flight of the evening: Madrid, Spain.

I had just enough time to grab a pay phone and ring my old flatmate, Ewan, who was expecting me. He didn’t have a mobile, so I left a voicemail on the landline phone explaining the delay. With a layover in Madrid, a later flight to London and, of course, the train time, I’d wind up arriving back in Edinburgh nearly a day later than originally planned.

In Waverly, I called my old flatmate again. Still no answer. Some instinct began to jangle in the back of my brain. I rang another friend’s flat.

“Oh my god!” she said, husky Scottish brogue welcoming me back. “We’ve been wondering where you are! Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” I said, “I’ve been leaving messages with Ewan that there were a bunch of flight delays. I just got to Edinburgh.”

“Oh no!” she said. “He’s been sick, and went home to Glasgow to stay with his parents.”

Oh. He hadn’t gotten the messages. No one knew where I’d been.

“Come and stay with us,” she said. “Plenty of room.”

“That’d be wonderful,” I replied, telling her I’d find my way up there.

Luggage in tow, I trudged my way to Princes Street to snag a taxi. As I mentioned, taxis and I do not get along. I’m not sure at what point I offended the taxi gods of foreign lands, but there must be a nasty flier of me up somewhere, so that taxi drivers know I’m to be ignored. On one of the (usually) busiest streets in Edinburgh, I could not get a taxi to save my life.

After a few minutes of futile flagging and waving, I decided to start walking. My new destination was a couple of miles away, some of it uphill. The delays, trans-continental and trans-Atlantic flying had left me knackered and jetlagged. And now I had to walk uphill, lugging all my stuff.

Lovely.

Backpack straps cinched and huge suitcase in tow, off I went, beneath the full moon over Edinburgh. I was sweating almost immediately, my already-reeking shirt threatening to combust from my dirty, sweaty traveler foulness. Now and again I’d try to flag down a taxi, still to no avail. Soon I stopped trying.

Shortly after that, I realized something about me was feeling different. Step after step brought me ever closer to good friends, a hot shower, a cold drink and a warm bed. The toil became challenge, the exertion a sort of mellow traveler’s high. Stubborn determination transmuted into adventurous joy, and I realized that I wasn’t just trudging my tired body and heavy possessions uphill on a spring night in Scotland, I was enjoying myself.

An hour or so later, I could hardly see the moon for the taller buildings where I was. The cool night air had dried the worst of my sweat, though I wonder if my friends could smell me coming before I pressed the buzzer for their flat.

They welcomed me with hugs and relief. Soon I was cleaned up, and we were swapping stories over a relaxing drink. I was back amongst friends, in a city I’d come to love.

But for all its challenge, getting there had become just as fun as being there.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

So many stories I will never kiss and tell – Day 21 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Love Affair

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 21 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by CubaGallery - http://flic.kr/p/6MVhk4

Prompt #21: LOVE AFFAIR

“When we travel, our senses are heightened. We feel more alive and we’re more free to do things we might not at home. We can be who we want. There’s an air of urgency to everything we do – we know our time here, in this place, and with these people, is limited. If we want to do something, we have to do it now. It’s no wonder then that many travelers have relationships on the road. Tell us about a “special someone” you met while traveling. “

So many stories I will never kiss and tell

Hell, I’ve spent all day with this blog prompt in the back of my head, and I’ve got bupkis.

Not that I’ve never loved on the road, or let the road lead me to love. On the contrary. Travel has taken me out of relationships, brought me to relationships, and deepened relationships. Or I could go crass and simple, say that travel made a man out of me, a-hur-hur-hur. But I’ll leave the shoulder-punching and ribald chuckling to others.

Travel brings out so many raw emotions. Lust and loneliness, hope and pining. I’ve broken hearts, and I’ve had mine broken. I’ve made mistakes, and I’ve made some amazing memories.

Just none I’ll talk about. And that’s the thing. There are parts of travel that go so deep, are so private, that you don’t kiss and tell. There are some things that aren’t for others—they’re just for the two people involved.

There are moments of love so tender that they turned me into a better man. There are times of passion that turned me into a better… well, never mind. And there are the pains of heartbreak that took me ages to get over and put behind me.

When I think of all the memories from my trips that I’m willing to share, my romances have never been big on my list. They aren’t for the after-dinner-and-over-a-few-drinks stories. I won’t slap shoulders and say, oh, aye, there was this one time… There aren’t even tender reminiscences, told with wispy eyes and a sense of “well, who knows what might’ve…”

Those memories are just memories now. My greatest love affair I’m still living. We share the road and far more with every trip abroad or in day-to-day life at home.

I ain’t telling anything about this one, either.

But it’s incredible.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

Beers of the world – Day 20 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Drink

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 20 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by Bernt Rostad - http://flic.kr/p/8RNsYj

Prompt #20: DRINK

“Just as the cuisine of a place reveals clues about its culture and history, so does its signature local drink. What’s the best drink you had on the road, and did the drink have any connection to the place where you drank it or the people you drank with?”

Beers of the world

Beer and I did not start off as friends. Growing up in Virginia, beer was pale fizzy water that tasted like something between nothing and crap.

Then I moved to Scotland. I’ll never forget evenings in the university pubs, drinking pints of Tennent’s Velvet 70, McEwans 60 and McEwans 80. “You mean this stuff can be good?” I recall saying after a couple of pints… or it might have been that ceilidh (traditional Scottish dance party) at the Caledonian Brewery in Edinburgh. It was over beers in Scotland that I solidified many a friendship, and toasted special occasions, trips to other parts of the country or just another day of being in a different country.

In Galway, Ireland, I worked a while with a jeweler who gave me some sage advice, during a weekend hanging out in his home village: “Never drink the Guinness in the cities,” he said. “People are always in too much of a hurry. Only drink the Guinness in the villages and the country, where they pour the pint properly and give it time to settle.”

Sage words. Though honestly, to this day I just can’t bring myself to drink Guinness outside of Ireland at all. (I also can’t so much as think of vodka and Red Bull without gagging, but that’s another story entirely.)

In the U.S. Pacific Northwest, though, beer and I sealed our friendship. Beer was not just good—beer was bloody amazing. From the wheat and lemon of hefeweizen, to hoppy Northwest pale ales, to my absolute favorites: darkest stouts and porters, I have raised many a pint glass since moving to Oregon in 2000. I’ve toasted friends, fallen in love, planned next moves in life, and become evermore a Northwesterner over beers shared with friends and my wife.

From Scotland to Australia, India to British Columbia, Oregon to New York, I’ve shared a pint and friendship with those closest to me. In every glass, and despite the occasional hangover, I’ve come to learn much about beer, people and the world.

It has me always fondly remembering old adventures, and looking forward to new ones. It has me thinking of who I’ll see again, or who we’ll meet next. And it definitely has me intrigued, for the folks and countries of the world as are varied as their beers, and vice versa.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

Why I’ll never be a Buddhist – Day 19 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Spirit

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 19 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by Samantha Henneke - http://flic.kr/p/8L5pXR

Prompt #19: SPIRIT

“Some places have the power to make even the most die-hard agnostic reconsider their position. Have you ever been in a place where you felt more alive or more connected to nature, the universe, or a higher power than anywhere else?”

Why I’ll never be a Buddhist

Photo by Lino M - http://flic.kr/p/6ohSxs

The Golden Buddha in Bangkok is the ultimate symbol of the divine behind the mundane. In its presence, I learned that I would always be a willful smart-ass, and never a Buddhist.

The story is that for centuries the Golden Buddha was, in fact, the Plaster Buddha. Everyone thought it was ugly, but they just had to live with it.

Then in 1955, a crane was moving the Golden Plaster Buddha to a new site in the temple. The crane dropped it. The next day, the temple’s abbot came to examine the damage. Through a crack in the plaster, he saw the forgotten truth: beneath the plaster skin, the 10-foot tall statue was not plaster, but pure gold.

Nowadays, believers and tourists all come to stand before the amazing Golden Buddha of Bangkok. And I certainly was one of the lookyloos, one December day in 2003. The heat of the Thai day making me pour sweat, I stood in my t-shirt, pants and sandals, thinking about the symbolism of a plain exterior that conceals the divine beauty and worth beneath.

I pondered the divine, and my life, and the lives of those I knew and loved. I wondered if we had souls, and if so, did we have just one shot at life, as many Americans and Europeans believe? Or did we have multiple lives, as was held true in much of Asia?

And that plaster-and-gold thing… Do we cover our true worth with a plain, rough covering, to weather the difficulties and iniquities of the world? Do we forget that beneath all that worthless skin, we are golden and divine? Is our duty to crack the plaster, and let the true self shine throughout the world, its value known regardless of what may come because of its inestimable worth?

A sharp pain ripped up from my left ankle to my brain, tearing my gaze from the Buddha and the mysteries beyond, to my feet below.

A black ant, nearly an inch long and with jaws so large I could see them opening, was munching on my instep.

“Fuck that,” I said. In front of the Buddha. Without thought, instinct picked up my right foot and scraped my sandal down my instep. After knocking the ant and its saw-like mandibles from my skin and onto the stone floor, I stepped on the ant, crushing its little life beneath my Tevas.

In front of the Golden Buddha of Bangkok.

Oh, bugger.

Would I die right then and there, I wondered, breathless, and be reincarnated as an ant? Would panels open in the walls, for a monk SWAT team to rush out to deliver divine justice on my ant-killing, blaspheming ass? For a moment I feared the worse.

Nothing happened. I started to breathe again.

Far as I can tell, no one even noticed. Except for the Buddha, who was looking right at me. “You could’ve just flicked it off,” he seemed to say. “You didn’t have to kill it. Would you want to be snuffed just because you were being a pain?” I guess I should’ve thought of that.

I left the temple soon after, my mind of two minds about the ant killing. On the one hand, it’s just an ant, and you could argue I acted in self-defense. On the other hand, I did take a life for no reason other than it was being a nuisance. And while I’m not religious, it was a little weird that I’d done this in front of a statue of the Buddha. Come on—if you were getting communion before a statue of Jesus, wouldn’t you think twice about swatting a bug in front of the same god who says he knows when so much as a sparrow falls?

Years later, I don’t know exactly what that ant incident means for the sort of person I am. Maybe nothing. Maybe everything.

Or maybe I’m still covered in plaster, and have forgotten that within there’s a true self, glittering, divine, priceless, and kind.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

A little saved here, a bit more spent there – Day 18 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Budget

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 18 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by Claire L. Evans - http://flic.kr/p/2oFNXN

Prompt #18: BUDGET

“Every traveler has a budget; for some it just might be higher of lower than for others What’s your style? What do you spend very little on and what are you always willing to pay more for?”

A little saved here, a bit more spent there

When Jodie and I travel, we try to budget according to what matters most to us:

Accommodation

We love hostels but prefer our privacy. We pay extra for private rooms instead of dorms.

Transport

Getting around via public buses and trains saves us money and shows us far more of day-to-day life where we are. We also don’t have to worry about the expense and logistics of renting (and parking and gassing up) a car, and we save more expensive taxi fare for when a taxi ride is really needed.

Trains and buses are where the regular people are, and we ride to see this slice of life. The routes also let us see more of the place than we could observe if we were driving.

Food

If there’s anywhere we scrimp in some areas to be lavish in others, it’s food.

When traveling, we usually breakfast on fruit, granola and yogurt at our hostel, with the occasional brekky at a must-try local place. Lunch varies: if we have a big breakfast, lunch can be bread, cheese and fruit. We snack when needed, because what’s traveling without sampling delicious lovelies from shops, stalls and pubs?

If lunch is a larger meal out, we have a light dinner back in the hostel. Some dinners we have out, at a place we’ve been wanting to try, or so we can have a date.

Souvenirs & Gifts

We’re not big souvenir people, and don’t want to bring home more stuff to dust. Instead we take lots of pictures and do journaling. We also try to find one thing that could be beautiful, useful or both for us and our home. (Since Jodie knits and sews, this is often yarn, fabric or really neat buttons.)

At Home

Of course, all this budgeting has to start somewhere. At home, travel is always a big priority for us. We regularly set aside money here and there for future trips, and that bit of budgeting helps a lot.

For us, how we budget our trip funds is all about our priorities. We can pick a lavish dinner one night, knowing that the next day we’ll eat cheaper DIY meals. Our tastes and pleasures are simple, but when we do see something that for us is a splurge, we feel okay doing it.

Overall, though, we know how fortunate we are to be able to travel, and we make sure that we savor every moment and every dollar of the trip.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

Passion wasn’t enough – Day 17 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Passion

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 17 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

http://flic.kr/p/afZ8eF

Prompt #17: PASSION

“It’s easy to be passionate about travel, but does that passion permeate the rest of your life? Do you live and work with passion? Why or why not?”

Passion wasn’t enough

Ah, passion. It’s become one of the great buzzwords of the past 10 years. “Follow your passion!” we hear. “Your work should be your passion!” we see in the blogs. “Live your passion!”

Viva la passion, indeed.

Passion is wonderful. Passion gets your heart going, and reminds you you’re alive. But from my experience, I’ve learned passion isn’t enough.

I’ve been consumed with passions, but they were unfocused. All that passion, all that energy, could be misapplied. I’d wind up confused, lost, burned-out. Then I did some maturing, and better understood that what I lacked wasn’t passion… it was focus.

Over the years, life has taught me to hone and direct my passion through focus and direction. The result? My passions have grown. They recycle themselves, becoming stronger, deeper and richer over time. The more I’ve done this, whether it’s been work, travel or love, I’ve done my best and been my best when I focused my passion.

Ever since, trips have been easier and more enjoyable. It’s become easier to do the work needed to reach my goals. I’ve changed my work life, and now work on client and personal projects that are far more aligned with my passions.

We live in such a varied, amazing world. Traveling through it, working in it, living, just living, all amaze me every day. Whether at home or around the world, there’s so much to be passionate about, more than I could ever hope to take in and be part of.

But through focus, I’ll do what I can, and together, passion and focus have become more than enough.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

Skipping the stress flight – Day 16 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Baggage

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 16 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by Dennis Sitarevich - http://flic.kr/p/a89Ru

Prompt #16: BAGGAGE

“Mental baggage can weigh us down as much as physical baggage when we travel. How do you travel lightly – either emotionally or physically?”

Skipping the stress flight

Our plane was late, and I was pissed.

After an amazing trip to New Mexico, my wife and I were on our way to San Jose, California, where I was attending an e-commerce conference. There’d been delays and confusion over our flight, and it was getting to me. Talks with the gate agent and phone calls to customer service were getting nowhere. My temper no longer felt like flaring. It felt like erupting, Vesuvius-style.

My wife finally smacked me down: “What are you so stressed about?” Jodie asked. “We’re still going to get there.”

And it floored me. She was right. It’d be later than we’d planned, but that wasn’t a big deal. All we had to do was settle in; the conference didn’t even start until the next day.

I stopped stressing about the delayed flight, and everything worked out fine. Ever since, I’ve been trying not to stress about travel. That’s not to say we let things slide; Jodie and I always try to be on top of arrangements and particulars. Diligence and mindfulness are one thing, but stress over stuff we can’t control? That crap gets left behind now.

That’s not always easy, but in the end the low-stress, mellow-mojo attitude has always proven worthwhile. I enjoy myself more, and Jodie doesn’t want to slap me—everybody wins. By not worrying about this or that travel arrangement, delayed flight, or some such bit of bother, our trips have gone smoother and we’ve enjoyed them far more. We’re more open to what’s around us, whether it’s a bit of people-watching or some smack-talking over a game of cards. We take in more detail, and find more things to talk about.

We roll with things better too. When we were taking the ferry to Saturna Island, BC, we realized the walk to our B&B was farther than would be good for my one-legged beloved to undertake that day. (And the island has no public transport.) There was a time that would’ve stressed me out, but not now. After discussing our options, our Plan B of hitchhiking got us to the B&B just fine, with the aid of a woman happy to give us a lift.

That woman, by the way, had a car full of camping gear, water supplies and her young daughter. It turned out later that she had gotten off the ferry on the wrong island. She didn’t worry about it at all—and things worked out just fine.

That’s something I’ll keep in mind the next time our flight is delayed.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

My 3 favorite cities – Day 15 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – City

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 15 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by Stuart Caie - http://flic.kr/p/6NfKNk

Prompt #15: CITY

“What is your favorite (or least favorite) city and what do you love (or hate) about it?”

My 3 favorite cities

While I love my wee home of Eugene, Oregon, there are 3 other cities that are my favorite: Seattle, Washington; Edinburgh, Scotland; and Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Seattle, Washington

Photo by Andrew E. Larsen - http://flic.kr/p/4VyeW7

Set on a wedge of land between Puget Sound and Lake Washington, Seattle’s buzz and vibe belies its association with ever-rainy skies. When it’s clear, you can see the Olympic Mountains to the west, and Mt. Rainier to the south. The food dazzles. Eating fresh, hot donuts from Pike Place Market at a nearby park remains one of my fondest memories. I’ve shared Seattle with so many friends, relatives and my wife; it stays with me always.

Edinburgh, Scotland

Photo Chris Yunker - http://flic.kr/p/4PkaPA

Edinburgh cut my teeth on international travel, and the year I spent there turned me into a traveler. It was in Scotland that I ate my first (and only) deep-fried Mars Bar, and where I learned that beer could actually taste good. Scotland taught me to love and to be a better friend. I’ve wandered countless steps and streets in that city. Its old roads, old hills and old buildings always seemed to hum a peaceful tune to me.

Chiang Mai, Thailand

Photo by Fernando Nunes - http://flic.kr/p/9Nr7mk

Noodles and broth by the old city moat at midnight. Reeking of raw garlic after a 2-day cooking class that seared a love of Thai food into my very soul. People-watching over mellow cups of good coffee by a busy street. The hills of northern Thailand. I could eat in Chiang Mai forever.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

“Do whatever the fuck you want” – Day 14 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Quote

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 14 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Photo by pixagraphic - http://flic.kr/p/7t47oS

Prompt #14: QUOTE

“What’s your favorite quote about travel? Why does it stand out to you?”

“Do whatever the fuck you want”

If ever BootsnAll had a travel god, his name was Nick O’Neill. Nick grew up in England, left, as he said, “because Great Britain wasn’t so great,” and has spent his life traveling and globetrotting. He lives simply, and one of the things he was fond of saying was a concise, simple statement of life and world philosophy:

“Do whatever the fuck you want”

I remember how much these words stood out, back when I used to work with Nick at BootsnAll. The meaning, like the words, is simple: life doesn’t stop for you, life doesn’t expect things from you; what you do, whether by will, circumstance or both, is ultimately up to you. Be a saint, be a jerk, whatever. It’s your choice, and how you define the terms is up to you.

Good on ya, Nick. Keep on doing whatever the fuck you want.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

More like this: Urban Fantasy and Travel Stories from Rucksack Press »

What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »

Wherever she is – Day 13 of 30 Days of Indie Travel – Home

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie Travel

Day 13 of 30 Days of Indie Travel Project, from BootsnAll

Anthony & Jodie, married 2009

Anthony & Jodie, married 2009

Prompt #13: HOME

“For some people, no matter how much they love traveling, there’s always no place like home. Other travelers make their homes wherever they happen to be. Tell us about your home – where is it and why do you consider it your home?”

Wherever she is

This prompt is easy.

I grew up in Virginia, went to college in Tennessee, lived in Scotland and Ireland, and moved to Oregon in 2000. My passport’s taken me from Tibet to Thailand, Nepal to Canada, Australia to India. Over these years and travels, I’ve seen so much of what makes home, home.

In 2009 I got married. As my wife and I make our way in the world, I now know where my home truly is.

Home is wherever she is.

See all of Anthony St. Clair’s travel blog posts for 30 Days of Indie Travel »

See all 30 Days of Indie Travel blog posts »

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What is the 30 days of indie travel?

BootsnAll 30 Days of Indie TravelEvery day in November, the BootsnAll Travel Network is inviting bloggers from around the world to a daily blogging effort designed to reflect on how our travel experiences over the last year (or whenever) have shaped us and our view of the world. Bloggers can follow the prompts as strictly or loosely as we like, interpreting them in various ways and responding via text, photos or video posted on our own blogs. More information: Join the 30 Days of Indie Travel Project »