A Travellerspoint blog

Uncategorised

The Hippo Roller Challenge

Those of you who have been reading this blog for a while might remember the interview I did with Rob and Pol Summerhayes a few months ago. Rob and Pol are on a cross-continental bike trip from South Africa to Wales. Along the way they're raising funds for two great charities.

One of those charities was The Hippo Roller. Never heard of a hippo roller? Neither had we until we started reading Rob and Pol's blog. A hippo roller is a simple invention designed to help rural impoverished communities with limited access to water. The roller is a large drum that can hold 90 litres (24 gallons) of water and can be pushed along the ground, making it much easier to transport clean drinking water. It's a simple technology that has the capacity to make a huge difference in places where water is scarce.

large_KidsWithRollersHL2.jpg

Cool, huh?

We think so anyway. That's why we're launching The Hippo Roller Challenge to raise funds to buy hippo rollers. Our goal is to donate as many hippo rollers as possible, while also continuing to make our user-generated travel guide the best travel wiki out there.

The way this challenge works is very simple: The more people contribute to our wiki travel guide, the more hippo rollers we will donate. There are six milestones along the way, and whenever we reach a milestone, we'll donate a designated number of hippo rollers. Here's how it breaks down:

  • When we reach 15 million characters in the guide, we will donate 1 hippo roller
  • When we reach 16 million characters, we will donate 2 hippo rollers
  • When we reach 17 million characters, we will donate 4 hippo rollers
  • When we reach 18 million characters, we will donate 8 hippo rollers
  • When we reach 19 million characters, we will donate 16 hippo rollers
  • When we reach 20 million characters, we will donate 32 hippo rollers.

The challenge will run from November 2 to February 28. If we've reach 20 million characters in the wiki travel guide, we will have donated 63 hippo rollers! At US$ 105 each (including transport), that's a total donation of US$ 6615, an amount we'd be delighted to be donating! There's actually a slight headstart on reaching the first milestone, as there are currently 14,084,982 characters in the guide.

Of course, we could just donate the money, but where's the fun in that? We want you to be a part of this. So, are you with us?

Getting Started

So you want to get involved, right? If you're not sure how to get started, here are a few good starting points:

If you've never written for the wiki travel guide before, here are some great guides to help you get started:

Now, that's all from us for now. We're really excited about the potential for this challenge and look forward to seeing how many hippo rollers we can donate! Keep an eye on this blog for updates about how the challenge is progressing.

Posted by dr.pepper 5:38 PM Comments (1)

Travellerspoint nominated for 2009 Travolution Awards

TravolutionAwards_finalist

TravolutionAwards_finalist

Travellerspoint is a finalist in this year's Travolution Awards. We're among some pretty stiff competition in the Best Travel Information Website category. Lonely Planet, WAYN, TripAdvisor — that's just a few of the other sites we're up against.

Of course, we would never have been nominated for a category like that if we didn't have an awesome community of members who put a lot of time into helping other travellers, be it through the forums, the travel guide or through our brand-new blog of travel advice, Travel Unravelled. To all of you, thank you!

We find out later this month if we win. Suffice it to say our fingers are crossed!

Posted by dr.pepper 7:29 PM Comments (2)

Talking Travel with Brendan Harding (Zaksame)

This month, we put Brendan Harding (known around Travellerspoint as zaksame) on the spot. Brendan is a passionate writer who abandoned the working world to focus on his writing. In 2006, he started a charity working to provide basic eye care services to the people of a remote area of Kenya. We caught up with Brendan to find out more about his writing, charity and - of course - travel.

1A0P4274_SMALL.jpg

How long ago did you leave the working world to focus on writing?

My last full-time paid job was in 2002 when I worked as a graphic designer for a large print house here in Ireland. I left that company to continue my career in graphics as a free-lance designer but I found myself with a lot of free time on my hands as I waited for clients to come on-stream.

It was during this free time that I started writing again – something I hadn't done since the early nineties when I lived in Russia. Once I started writing again it was just like filling in the final piece of a jigsaw that had been missing for a long time.

So in answer, there wasn't really a date on a calendar when I said I'm a writer now, but an evolution which dove-tailed neatly into my existing life.

That must have been a daunting experience. Who or what encouraged you to do it?

It has most certainly been daunting at times (and continues to be) when the bills are due and solutions are hard to find. It really is like doing an apprenticeship and gathering the information, the knowledge and the contacts that it takes to make some kind of a living from my writing. Just like an apprenticeship, you don't get paid much but you continue to hope that one day, in the future, you can make a life for yourself using all the components you've gathered along the way.

I had a wonderful English teacher in school who taught me the love of the written word, so I guess it was this one thing that really made me want to write. Also a strange thing happened one day in my home town's public library: I found a leaflet for a creative writing degree and put it in my bag, when I arrived home later that day a copy of that same leaflet had been posted to me by someone, who to this day I still don't know their identity. Subsequently, I enrolled in the course and over the next couple of years whilst studying, writing took over my life completely.

Together with your colleague Bernard Jennings, you've started up a charity called Asante, which provides eye care services in a remote, drought-afflicted part of Kenya. What first inspired you to start Asante?

My colleague Bernard Jennings is a well-known optician in Ireland and it was through his friendship with a Catholic nun named Sr Goretti Ward that the whole thing came about. Sister Goretti, who was based in my home town of Carlow for most of her life, moved to rural Kenya when she was 65 – a time when everyone else wants to retire and put their feet up. On one of her visits home she was having her eyes tested by Bernard when she happened to mention the wonderful work an optician could do in her remote Kenyan village. On Christmas eve 2006 - after several beers it has to be noted - Bernard asked if I'd be interested in traveling with him to Kenya and write about what I saw. And so it began.

In Kenya I was gripped by the inequality of life to such a degree that on our first evening in the bush we decided that our clinics shouldn't become a one-off arrangement. Since that first year, we have returned annually and brought several other opticians along with us. Through an alliance with the Kikuyu Eye Hospital in Nairobi the numbers of people tested have risen to over 1500 and from that number almost two hundred people have had their sight restored completely or partially. We continue to raise money from the people of our home town and from the business community of the area; without them nothing would happen.

What are the main challenges and obstacles to running a charity like Asante?

We've been really lucky in running Asante in the fact that we have people on the ground already - the nuns of the Mercy community in Kenya - who pave the way for our arrival each year. They organise our calendar and get the word out into the communities of our arrival. Often when we arrive at a village we wonder if the people will turn up, and always they arrive, usually having walked many miles in murderous temperatures to get there.

Having said that, the logistics involved can still prove a headache with simple things like equipment going astray in transit. After the post-election violence of 2007/8 we had safety concerns of course, but these proved to be unfounded and existed only in our minds.

Asante (which by the way means 'Thank You' in Swahili) now runs pretty smoothly and most of the organisation involved is in the raising of funds.

How much have your travels and experiences in Kenya shaped your world view?

I was a late bloomer to travel and didn't get to travel until I was thirty years old. I had seen all of my friends leave Ireland during the recession of the eighties and was always so envious of the stories they told on their visits home. When I did travel in August of 1990 it was to the Soviet Union, Moscow in particular and I knew the very moment, on my first night in Moscow, as I walked in Red Square that there was a big world out there waiting for me. I went on to spend five years in Russia and got to see a large portion of the country in that time, every new sight and every new person I met seemed to make up for the years of lost traveling.

But Kenya has really changed my perspective on life, so much so that I feel I will end up going back there to live at some point. It is our undying devotion to materialism that has upset me most since my first visit. It really saddens me at times to see people complain over trivialities when almost all of us have everything - and more - we could ever use in a hundred lifetimes.

One day near Tsavo, in the south-east of the country, as I sat at a railway station in the terrible heat a small child was watching me from the doorway of a crumbling, mud hut. After a short time of watching me, half-hidden from sight, she boldly walked up to me carrying a bowl of maize porridge and offered to share it with me. It was all she had. Her smile was as big as the plains of the Masai Mara and to this day she is still never far from my thoughts. If that's change, it's change I'm happy with.

Do you have any trips planned for this year?

Let me start by saying I'm open for any assignment!

But the truth is, unless I'm commissioned to travel for a newspaper of some other publication it's unlikely that I'll get to travel before next spring. I've been to Asturias, Cantabria, Galicia, Portugal and Kenya this year and also spent a fantastic week here in Ireland at the West Cork literary festival in Bantry. There's still an awful lot to see and do in Ireland.

In the future I would really like to spend an extended period of time in my favourite place; Croatia. I have an idea for a travel-novel set on a Dalmatian island and would love the chance to go back and learn the language allowing me better access to the hidden Croatia.

But even if I'm not traveling physically between one place and another, I am continuously traveling in my mind.

You can some of Brendan's writing and see his artwork on his website.

***

Check out these past interviews in the Talking Travel series:

Posted by dr.pepper 9:41 PM Comments (2)

Talking Travel with Jennifer Johnson (Jennylynn)

For the latest installment of the Talking Travel series, I decided to interview Jennifer Johnson, known in these parts as jennylynn. Jennifer lives in Seattle with her husband and she's been busy over the past few months blogging about trips around her local area and further afield. Her easy-to-read writing and wonderful eye for photography make for a great blog, which I can heartily recommend.

In this interview, Jennifer shares a little more about her passion for travel, photography and more.

Europe_2586.jpg
Jennifer at the Pyramids of Giza.

Why did you decide to start a blog?

In the past as I traveled I kept a series of hand-written travel journals. They now sit on a bookshelf and collect dust. I would often send emails back home to friends and family updating them on my journeys, but essentially I was rewriting everything from my journals. It just didn’t make sense and was quite time consuming. I started my blog primarily to share my journeys with the people who know me best, but as time goes on I have received lots of positive feedback from people all over the world. Now I write with the goal of inspiring others to travel. Visiting foreign places, exposure to new cultures, and learning from new people promotes compassion and understanding and breaks down stereotypes. Additionally, I want to express to readers that travel is accessible to every one. I reiterate this frequently on my blog, but we are capable of making great discoveries right within our hometowns. Often the most memorable journeys are the ones that have a special meaning or purpose, and these can take place right within your neighborhood!

What inspires you about travel?

I am inspired to travel because the world is completely accessible and available for discovering. In my life I want to utilize every opportunity to learn everything I can about this amazing place we call home. I can read every history book or guidebook, but nothing truly compares to walking through the streets where locals live and work in some obscure city on the other side of the globe. I want to look back on my life one day and know that every moment was lived to its fullest and no opportunity was missed. The world is literally our playground for discovery and knowledge, why not conquer it all?

You recently went on a cruise up to Alaska. Was that your first time on a cruise?

On my recent trip to Alaska my husband and I traveled by cruise ship for the first time. I can’t say that it was the highlight of the trip. There are definitely benefits to taking a cruise, but personally I found it difficult to be trapped on a boat as we are passing by beautiful scenery. I would have rather been on the shore, exploring by foot. When stopped in Ketchikan, Juneau, and Skagway we were only given a limited amount of time in each location and I found that difficult to work with. Travel is essentially freedom, freedom from work, chores, and life in general, and I definitely felt that we lacked a lot of freedom on the cruise. On the other hand, we could have never reached as many places if we traveled in any other way. Alaska is so enormous that we could have spent weeks exploring on our own and never gotten as far.

One of the things I really love about your blog is all your photos, which add a lot of colour to your entries. What kind of camera do you use?

Photography for me is a love hate relationship. Although I love capturing moments on camera, sometimes I wish I could just leave it at home. Then I could stop worrying about fiddling with aperture and shutter speed settings and just experience the moment without all the hassle. Recently when I was traveling in Greece, a taxi driver saw me messing with my camera settings and he said to me, “The greatest photos are not taken with a camera, but are made through your eyes.” I definitely identify with that notion, but at the same time when I upload the photos and one stands out, I feel a sense of accomplishment that makes it worth all the fuss. That being said, I use a Canon Rebel XT with an 18-55 mm lens and a Canon Rebel XSi with a 55-250 mm lens. I always carry my trusty tiny Nikon Coolpix camera in my purse as it has proven itself very useful when I least expect it.

You blog quite a bit about Seattle, where you live. What are some of your favourite places in Seattle?

I absolutely love Seattle. The diversity ranges from the grungy University District to the artsy Fremont to the rich and wealthy Microsoft Executives living in nearby Redmond and Bellevue. There is literally a neighborhood to meet every need. Discovering each of them is just part of the fun of living here. My favorite areas of Seattle include Queen Anne Hill (the views are breathtaking), Pike Place Market, and the communities of Ballard and Fremont (so many yummy places to eat at!). I blog a lot about Seattle because I enjoy discovering the many quirks of home and consider this a form of travel. Although I may not be trekking around the globe nearly as often as I wish, I can still make travel a part of every day.

Do you have any more trips planned for 2009?

My next trip is in October. My husband and I are going to Maui and Kauai along with a dozen or so of our closest friends and family to renew our vows on the beach. We had such a private, small ceremony when we got married that we thought it would be fun to celebrate in style! Other than that, we have small trip planned to the Olympic Peninsula and lots of weekend getaways up our sleeves. I am also known to make last minute travel arrangements, so who knows where I could end up!

  • **

Check out these past interviews in the Talking Travel series:

Posted by dr.pepper 6:05 PM Comments (1)

Talking Travel with Sander

This month, I interviewed Sander for our Talking Travel series. Sander is a travel-loving web developer from Holland who you're sure to have come across if you've spent much time on the Travellerspoint forums. In this interview, we chat about how travel has impacted his life, his thoughts on travelling with laptops and his future travel plans.

You travelled for two and a half years after you finished studying. Looking back, how much do you think those two and a half years of travel impacted your life?

Trying to imagine my life without that period, I come up with a life which is recognizable only in vague outlines. I'd still be working in IT, and I'd have the same friends (in this country at least), but the qualitative difference would be huge. Travel has made me a much more confident person; where once I neurotically triple-checked every little detail about everything and was preparing for things weeks in advance, now I revel in my ability to leave things like packing my bags until the very last minute, and still bring exactly (and only) what I need. I'm far less anxious or stressed out about things I can't influence, and a lot more willing to attempt changing things which I can influence. Travel also allowed for meeting vague acquaintances from online communities, many of whom have progressed to being genuine friends, whose lives have shaped and enriched my own. And I only ever was able to start up my own web development company here in the Netherlands because being a freelance web developer was the norm in Australia, and taught me how easy and good it is to be your own boss.

tp-2005081..t_night1.jpg
The Opera House and Harbour Bridge

On your profile, you describe that trip as a real soul-searching sort of trip. I find it interesting that many people seem to have trips like that. Why do you think travel is such a good way to answer (or at least try to answer) some of life's big questions?

I think the main reason is that when you're travelling, you can rediscover who you are, free from the constraints of everyday life. When at home, people know you and have expectations of who you are and how you behave. You have obligations and responsibilities, deadlines, routines and recurring events. In the midst of all of that, it's really hard to first find the time to thoroughly think through how the web of all these things affects you and steers you in certain directions, and to then actually effect changes.

When you're travelling, there is no one who knows you. No one wants anything from you, no one expects you to do anything. You don't have to try to explain or justify your actions, not even to yourself. At the same time, you're exposed to a much wider variety of experiences than you would at home, where most days the horizon barely stretches far enough to cover the distance from home to work, and so you can discover how you react to and feel about a wider variety of input. Moreover, where the same things would also hold for a short vacation, the difference with long-term travel is that a vacation is mostly seen as a break from your life (and so what you do during it has their air of "it doesn't really count"), while long-term travel by necessity has to be your life. You have to act in a sustainable manner; be a person who you can continue to be for years. What you do and experience during this time counts - but the only one who'll *know* about it (no matter how many blog posts or emails home you write), is yourself.

Of course you're starting out on travel still set in your old ways, and a lot of these ways really belong with who you are. Yet other ways are formed through social pressure, and so can slowly bend back to their natural inclinations over the months and years where that pressure is missing. Changing your life isn't a particularly swift process, and at least for me there was no all-consuming moment of epiphany. Rather, as over the many months of my trip I mulled over aspects of my life and what I put value in, I was able to come to a series of small conclusions and value-adjustments, and keeping those in mind, I was able to later re-align my life to be more to my liking.

I very much don't have all the answers, but what travel has taught me is to keep examining my life and the choices I make, including the ones where I'm not at first aware that I'm making them, and to adjust who I am to the result of those choices, or to make different choices next time, to get closer to who I want to be. I have many memories of long bus journeys where I'd gaze through the windows without seeing anything of the landscape I was passing through, instead mentally reviewing conversations and events and realizing how those had affected me. Having these times is one of the things near-inherent in long-term travel, and in itself a minor reason for me to keep returning to it. I've occasionally feared that I'll become so familiar with the travelling lifestyle that it itself becomes a routine with set expectations and constraints, but so far the world
has been vast and varied and unknowable enough that this hasn't been a realistic fear.

You're a web developer by trade. Do you take your computer with you when you're travelling?

Heh, the question of whether or not to take a laptop while travelling is such a common one on the forum that I could nearly dream my response to this. Yes, I take a laptop on any trip lasting more than a handful of days. I'd do this even if it wasn't for the ability to do web development work (which I try not to do when I'm just travelling). My reasons for this can be summed up in two words: security and convenience.

The main part of the security aspect is the old computer security adage, "If a bad guy has physical access to your computer, it's not your computer anymore". This means that for anything where you care about security, such as online banking, the private conversations you have over email, etc., using a public computer (whether to be found in an internet cafe, at a hostel, or wherever) is batshit insane from a computer security point of view. The only thing protecting people in everyday life is the law of big numbers: There's not nearly enough criminals (and they're not nearly advanced enough) for a significant percentage of public computers to have been compromised in such a way that a random travelling user of that computer will suffer the consequences. However, the damage which can be done to your life (or the lives of people you care about) if you're the unlucky person to hit that compromised computer, right when you were writing that email with really private information, is just way too large to trust in "being lucky". Beyond that, for me personally I enhance my security by sending a large percentage of my emails encrypted with OpenPGP and use various other tools, all of which wouldn't be found on public computers, and so I need my personal computer with me to be able to do these things.

The convenience aspect starts with having all my bookmarks right there, continues to being able to burn DVDs with photos at the end of the day (during my last three-month RTW trip, I took 33 DVDs worth of photos; needing to have those burned at internet cafes would've been a royal pain) as well as being able to review and edit and email or upload those photos, and from there on meanders to lots of other little communication-related activities. I live a large part of my life online, with friends in a vast number of timezones, and online communities which over the course of the last decade have become a second home. Having all of that in easy reach is a great goodness. When I first set out travelling in 2003, bringing a laptop along was rare. Yet on my RTW last year, I was barely able to enter a hostel's lounge without seeing half a dozen laptops, and WiFi seems to have become a standard service offered at most any hostel. This easy connectivity greatly enhances the value of carrying around a laptop, so the choice to do so has only become easier.

What are some of your favourite places to visit in the Netherlands?

I'm quite partial to the Japanese Garden at Clingendael, though its very limited opening times (just a few weeks each year) combined with my travelling habit means that I'm hardly ever in the country to enjoy it. The city centers of Delft and Leiden (both student cities) always appeal to me, particularly this time of year, when nice weather results in a wonderful bustle of activity. Beyond those, favorite places are tied to specific times of the year: the flower fields in spring, the polder on a snowy winter's day, any wooded area during autumn, any dike alongside a canal when a storm is brewing and I have the need to struggle against the wind on my bike, or fly along with it.

travellers..hepherd-3.jpg
Lake Tekapo.

Do you have any dream destinations you want to visit one day?

I do indeed, and the list is ever-growing. Right near the top of it are Patagonia, Iceland, the Himalayas and of course Antarctica. (Also, do places you've visited before count? If so, Lake Tekapo all the way!) I love wild and barren places, where nature shows its true power, as well as mountains to conquer and admire views from. My absolute dream destination, which it would take a near-miracle for me to ever actually visit, would be the Îles Kerguelen, a French territory in the Indian Ocean, far to the southeast of Africa. The only people who ordinarily get to visit it are French climate scientists, but I would love to one day hike my way across a part of the main island, photographing the gorgeous desolate landscape, glaciers and birds without count.

Speaking of which, do you have any trips planned for this year?

None, actually. This will be the first time in six years that I'm not out of the country for three months or more. I do have the tentative idea to go see some cities come September/October; probably Rome and Budapest, and if timing happens to work out with acquiring a next big project to work on, I might yet go and take a vacation of a couple of weeks somewhere (Croatia? Estonia/Latvia? Ireland? Iceland?), but mostly I'm focusing on 2010/2011 with planning: 2010 will be the last year during which I can enter Canada on a Working Holiday Visa, an opportunity which I don't intend to miss, and hope to make the main part of a new RTW trip. I've come up with some crazy itineraries to include the aforementioned dream destinations of Patagonia and the Himalayas in the same trip, as well as familiar old mainstays such as Australia and New Zealand to get to hang out with all my friends there again. It's still completely unknown what the final trip will look like, but I'm having a lot of fun with exploring options.

  • **

Check out these past interviews in the Talking Travel series:

Posted by dr.pepper 6:00 PM Comments (4)

(Entries 1 - 5 of 127) Page [1] 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 .. » Next