Details: Piazza San Marco Basilica. Venice, Italy. 2015.
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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Details: Piazza San Marco Basilica. Venice, Italy. 2015.
Parliament. Budapest, Hungary. 2015.
Man and his dog. Rijeka, Croatia. 2015
On the Canal. Venice. 2015
Miscellaneous Euro Travel Packing
Padlocks: To secure your bag or to attach to a locker. Add a security chain or a long shackled padlock to attach bag to bed frames or overhead storage as you sleep.
Copies of Passport: As well as taking your passport, make sure you take a few copies of your passport and any other documents you might need. Keep them in different bags.
Guide Books: To help you navigate the city and know what to do.
Journal/Plastic Wallet: Write notes on the journey, and a wallet to keep any maps, leaflets or tickets you want to keep safe.
Money Belt: To keep hidden under your clothes to keep your money and passport.
Alarm Clock: So you don’t have to rely on your phone alarm, incase you don’t want to keep it out while your asleep or waste the battery.
First Aid Kit: Paracetamol or Ibuprofen (pain) antacids (indigestion) Anti-diarrhoea tablets, plasters/bandages, blister plasters and sun cream. You may also want to add caffeine pills and sleeping pills.
Food: If you are on a budget, you can take a few (porridge satchels, tea-bags, cereal bars, nuts, couscous satchels, crisps, etc.)
Tupperware, cutlery, thermos mug: If you are planning on buying food from supermarkets, you will might want to take a container to make pack lunches or picnics.
Books: You can take one book, or a couple of small books that you can swap between friends.
Travel Neck Pillow and Sleeping Mask: To help you sleep or relax on trains and flights. You can always take a small cushion from home and also use it in the hostel, if the pillows they provide are flat. If you’re not keen on taking a pillow, then you can just use your hoodie, or a large scarf/shawl to wrap around your neck (also handy to put over your bed if the hostel is too cold).
External Battery: Incase you are stuck without charge on your Ipod or phone.
Adaptors: To charge your phone and camera.
Extension lead: In case there is only a limited amount of plug sockets in the dorm. Allows you and your friend to charge phones and cameras using one plug, so you don’t have all your things dotted around the room and you can’t be accused of hogging all the available sockets.
“Traveling is like flirting with life. It’s like saying, ‘I would stay and love you, but I have to go.”
Lisa St Aubin de Terán (via travelingilove)
Shy Guide to Making Friends on the Road: Interrail and Travel
Before you set out:
Book into popular hostels that are known to be social. Good way to find out is to check if they have a bar, and look through reviews to see what past travellers got up to.
Reconnect with old friends that you may be passing, and see if you can stay at their home. Gives you a chance to catch up and go out with their friends as well as save on money.
Download backpacker apps that connect you with your fellow travellers. Look into social apps like Backpackr and Tripr. Couchsurfing is an app that connects you to locals who can offer you accommodation and show you around.
Hostel Reception:
Soon as you get to your hostel, make sure you are friendly and chatty to the staff. Get all the insider goss on where to go, excursions and pub crawls. Staff are potential friends, if there’s a bar, you will often find them hanging around after their shifts, and they are usually really easy to chat to.
You can always ask if they know any travellers with a similar itinerary to you, and they might just introduce you to them, and help you get involved.
-Hostel Dorms
Book yourself into a dorm. You’ll be sharing a room, so don’t be awkward. Be friendly from the start, and initiate an introduction.
You’ll find simple questions like; Where are you from? Where are you heading? Where have you been? Will be enough to spark a lengthly conversation.
Take a bit of time to hang around your dorm or the common room areas, and chat to people. There are always solo travellers who will be keen to make friends so scout them out.
-Hostel Bar
Always check out the hostel bar, its usually cheaper than local bars, and a great way of meeting your fellow travellers.
If your hostel doesn’t have a bar, then make sure you find out where the ‘party hostels’ are at. You can usually walk straight in and engage with the residents.
A couple of well known ‘party hostels’ in Europe:
Flying Pig Downtown Hostel, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Wombat’s City Hostel, Berlin, Germany
Retox Party Hostel, Budapest, Hungary
Greg and Tom Party Hostel, Krakow, Poland
Go down for breakfast during the rush. Gives you a chance to sit down and chat to people.
Join pub crawls
If your hostel is organising a pub crawl, be sure to join in, not only will it save you trekking the streets at night trying to find a decent bar, it gives you a chance to get to socialise more with your dorm buddies and neighbours. It’s also a easier way of talking to people travelling in groups, who may seem more intimidating in their pack, back at the hostel common room.
Also look into cultural excursions and join walking guides with fellow tourists.
Transport
There’s bound to be backpackers on your trains, heading in the same direction.
Final Tips:
Make a goal of making friends at every stop. Keep throwing yourself into social situations. Your only in each place for a few days, so
If you make friends with travellers don’t be afraid to whip out your map and see if you meet up again along the way.
Don’t be picky. People you make friends with travelling, might not necessarily be the people you would approach back home. Try not to judge and you will find that you can get along really well.
Be open to changing your plans in the city, if you meet up with people.
What traveller doesn’t want to make a new friend? So don’t be shy or embarrassed about approaching anyone.
You are only in each city for a couple of days, so enjoy it as best you can!
Checklist before Travel
Hostels: Book up your hostels.
Start looking for travel buddies: If you are travelling solo, and/or want to meet people, start socialising with travellers on social media or connect with old friends in the countries you are visiting.
Itinerary: Make an rough plan of the things you want to do in each city. If you are only going to be there for a few hours or a day, you will want to micro-manage it so you don’t lose time.
Doctor: Check you don’t need any injections before you leave.
Travel Insurance: Make sure you have your EHIC Health card and have insurance.
Phone: Make sure you can make calls and use your data abroad.
Unlock Bank Card: So that you can use your card abroad.
Download apps: Useful apps like Currency Converter.
Electricals: Charge your camera/ipod/ipad/external batteries. Make sure you have enough room on your camera and phone for new photos. You might want to add download Dropbox so you can keep your phone pictures safe, and/or make more room on your phone.
Print: Copies of your passport, hostel reservations and train details. Keep them in a plastic wallet.
Maps: Print or take maps and mark them with important places: train station, bus stops, hostel, pharmacy, hospital, landmarks, museums, shopping centre.
Notebook: Keep a notebook with extra details, like important phone numbers, key words in each language, packing list, places to go, etc.
Money: Calculate roughly how much cash you will need in each place, and get the currency you need.
Security: Make sure you have items that will keep your things safe. A money belt, padlocks, security chain.
Pack: Make sure you make a list of all you need a few weeks in advance and start collecting everything. Don’t pack last minute, because you will end up chucking more into your bag and you are bound to forget something.
Things to share with friends travelling
Books: Take a few short books, and share them amongst yourselves.
Hairdryer/Curling tongs: Have one of each between you.
Extension Lead & Adaptor: Lets you both charge all your appliances and doesn’t hog all the sockets at the hostel.
Money Purse: You and a friend can put an equal amount of money into a joint purse, that will pay for accommodation, excursions and meals. It will eliminate the continuous need to split bills, and just makes paying a lot easier. You can have a separate amount for personal shopping.
Toiletries: If you are travelling for a long time, you may need full sized toiletries, so share the load. You can always pack a spare decanter to take what you need from your friend.
First Aid Kit
Clothes: Rather than take a couple of dresses each, just take one or two and swap with your friend.
Food: Share food shopping and make meals or pack lunches together to keep the cost low.
Phone: Charges abroad can be too expensive. If one of you has a good deal on their contract, then use the one phone to call home, hostels etc. Just make sure you can make emergency calls on your phone incase you need to contact your travelling buddy.
Guidebooks
Washing: Share your washing powder, and if you have a similar colour scheme, you can wash them together.
Muse: New York: Frida Kahlo
Kahlo is subject to a new exhibition in New York, with a focus on her relationship with nature with a series of botanical inspired paintings. Her use of botanics feature in numerous still lifes and for the background and setting for most of her self-portraits.
Frida first visited New York In 1930, when she accompanied her husband, muralist Diego Rivera. Rivera had been granted a solo exhibition and was commissioned to paint various murals, one of which, Man at a Crossroads, was famously destroyed for depicting Lenin at its centre. The couple lived in New York for four years.
In 1938, Kahlo had her first ever solo exhibition at Julian Levy’s gallery in New York, where she first garnered some fame and fortune usually reserved for her husband.
‘Self Portrait on the Borderline between Mexico and the United States’ by Frida Kahlo 1932
http://www.nybg.org/frida/
Books based in Amsterdam:
The Miniaturist by Jessie Burton
Fault in our Stars by John Green
The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
Lust for Life by Irving Stone
In Lucia’s Eyes by Arthur Japin
The History of a Pleasure Seeker by Richard Mason
The Girl With The Pearl Earring by Tracey Chevalier
Travel Souvenirs
Two souvenirs from a friend’s trip to Mexico: A day of the dead skull and a miniature bottle of mezcal (tequila) with a worm or ‘gusano’ at the bottom.
You can get a large variety of coloured skulls, and they are a perfect small gift or souvenir to take home from your travels.
Retiro Park. Madrid. Sunset.
The best advice you could get :)
Hayao Miyazaki’s Croatian Hideout
From Princess Mononoke to Howl’s Moving Castle, the fascinating world of Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki showed us that imagination has no limits, and that anime doesn’t have to be cheesy and naive. However, many are unaware that one of his less known films is stationed in Croatia….
“Live, travel, adventure, bless, and don't be sorry.”
Jack Kerouac