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Traveler Interview: Mon Amye!

17/03/2015 by Jamie 28 Comments

welcomeFor this Travel Tuesday post I want to introduce my friend Amye! I love reading about her travels on her blog Mon Ayme and seeing all the amazing places she travels to. She is a Washington, DC based lifestyle blogger and she posts about travel and Connections on Mondays.

You can check her out on social media:

Instagram  +  Twitter  +  Bloglovin

Tell me about your early life. What do you think sparked your passion for traveling?

As I child I absolutely loved to read, above all else, and that has definitely contributed to my love for travel. In a book you can escape to an entirely different place. Through reading a lot of the classics, I followed the adventures of some incredible heroines that I am reminded of now when I go to new places in the world.

Sticking to the classics, many of which are British-based, was also one of the unspoken reasons I studied abroad in London for my first time overseas!

Tattered Cover Books | Bon Voyage Denver | MonAmye.com

(Photo above is from a trip to The Tattered Cover, my favorite bookstore in Denver. I always leave extra room to bring back some treasures from an afternoon spent there!)

What is your favorite place you have traveled to?

I’ve never been very good at picking favorites. I love each of the trips I’ve been lucky enough to take for different reasons – each place has something special to reveal. Traveling for business in recent years has also opened my eyes up to the pulse of different U.S. cities, even if I don’t get time to do much exploring during those trips.

What is on your travel bucket list?

I’ve been saying Greece, among other European destinations, but other trips seem more plausible in the near future. For instance, we’re currently planning The Texas Trip 2015 as something on our U.S. bucket list. I’ve been toying with the idea of going to Japan, but also feeling like a South American destination should be on the list sooner than later (any advice there?). Really, I’ll go just about anywhere :)

Bon Voyage | Qatar Bound | MonAmye.com

I know you like to travel with your husband. What’s your dream romantic vacation?

Oh, you mean our recent trip to France? :) That 10-day trip to Paris and driving through Burgundy wine country to the French Riviera was definitely a dream-come-true. The fact that it was lavender season was just a bonus! Beautiful places, amazing food – with wine and champagne aplenty! – in one of the most romantic places on earth with my guy. Can we go back now, please? (You can read more about our Paris itinerary, hotel, and some sights here and here.)

Paris, France 2014 | Bon Voyage | MonAmye.com

at the Rodin Museum in Paris, France

Who is the most interesting person you have met while on the road?

Goodness, that’s definitely Yorg. I studied abroad in Dubia / Doha and we crossed paths on a cheesy dinner cruise down the river. The cruise itself is another story, but Yorg was (supposedly) this middle-aged German mogul who befriended our group since he was traveling alone. He evidently led a fabulous jetset life – he was “The Most Interesting Man” before “The Most Interesting Man” even existed, and has become a larger-than-life character in our memories.

Dubai, UAE | Bon Voyage | MonAmye.com

Favorite Travel Quote?

25 minutes later she returned from Pinterest and said: Who could choose a favorite?

Eat Well, Travel Often.

Paris is always a good idea.

Travel is the only thing you can buy that makes you richer.

However you’re inspired to get going, the most important thing is to go.

What was the best meal you have eaten while traveling?

Italy is an obvious choice here, and certainly a favorite. Pizza, pasta, and all the gelato. Yes, please.

But to share something different, I’d say that the food in Iceland was surprisingly good! Seafood is common here, and lobster bisque was great from a mug at a hole-in-the-wall at the marina, or from a Zagat-rated ocean-to-table place in downtown Reykjavik.

iceland | Bon Voyage | MonAmye.com

After a day-long driving tour of the natural wonders of Iceland, I highly recommend a trip to Hamborgarafabrikkan (translation: The Hamburger Factory) – on the Icelandair flight over, watch the “behind the scenes” video of the guys that founded this place.

And finish your food journey with the most fantastic hot dog you’ve ever eaten. I’m ruined for backyard bar-b-ques forever now that I’ve had the Icelandic version. Others have attested to its greatness, and I can confirm the hype is real. I may not look thrilled in the photo below, but that’s because I hadn’t taken a bite yet. Don’t miss this one.

iceland | Bon Voyage | MonAmye.com

What is your favorite and most versatile outfit to pack in your suitcase?

A little black dress is never a bad idea to have on-hand! It’s not black, but I have this one dress that is impossible to wrinkle, always fits, and is seasonless and magically appropriate for all occasions. I’ve worn it to a wedding and out for casual drinks, and if needed I’d take a business meeting wearing this dress. It usually finds its way into my bag, especially if I’m having a tough time packing.

(some silly wedding photobooth snaps, but they showcase my travel dress! See the humiliation I’m willing to put myself through for a relevant blog photo? lol)

travel | Bon Voyage | MonAmye.com

What do you pack in your bag that isn’t totally necessary, but you just love traveling with it?

I feel like I only pack the essentials, but I’m actually writing this from a plane where I had to gate-check my bag since it was overstuffed, so, well, I’m sure I must have some non-essentials in there…

A simple thing that I always pack, and regret when I forget to include, are socks. If you’re out doing the touristy thing all day, or traveling on business and wearing high heels, its just a little luxury to put on fresh cushiony socks when you get back to the hotel to put your feet up.

Bon Voyage | Boarding Gate | MonAmye.com

Can you give us any tips on traveling on a budget?

Pack snacks! Its great to enjoy local cuisine but no one likes a “hangry” traveler, and the options in that moment might be limited or expensive. If you’ve stocked up on granola bars, fruit snacks, and other purse-friendly food then you avoid unnecessary expense and save time to enjoy the sights, until the next meal.

Bon Voyage, mes amies! And if you’d like to follow along with my journey, visit me at Mon Amye or @amyemae on Instagram.

Filed Under: Travel Interviews Tagged With: guest post, Travel Interview

Travel Interview | Meet Rhea the Adventure Traveler

30/12/2014 by Jamie 11 Comments

Rhea Travel Interview

Today I want to introduce a lady who has spent her life traveling the world! I met Rhea through my first grad class and we became friends and kept in touch. She is a Canadian currently living in South Korea and she travels ALL THE TIME. Meet Rhea!

Tell me about your early life. What do you think sparked your passion for traveling?

Actually, I had wanted to be a lawyer. I never really considered it consciously until I was doing my undergrad, and I saw posters up on campus for teaching overseas. I thought, neat – an easy fun way to pay off my student loan! Then later, I found an international program called Canadian Crossroads International that sent me to Africa. When I came back, I think I never really came all the way back. I just haven’t had the urge to live in my home country since then. That was almost 14 years ago. I speculate that, in my early years, I always preferred to be outside and on the go, walking through forests, riding horses, bikes, snowmobiles, and motorcycles, or going anywhere new and unexplored. At that time travel overseas just wasn’t something that could be a reality. Years later and countries later, I’m still not sure where it all started.

What was the best meal you have eaten while traveling?

Sooo hard to pick one. I will say fresh papaya in Indonesia or Thailand.

What do you pack in your bag that isn’t totally necessary, but you just love traveling with it?

Lightness. My favorite feeling is a bag pared down to the essentials: passport, money, and a few clothes.

Rhea Travel Interview 2

What is your favorite place you have traveled to?

Paris is my favorite city. Moçambique is my favorite place for natural beauty. Bali and Lombok are my favorite places to go to be uplifted and rejuvenated. India is my favorite place to have my mind blown. Every place is unique. I always love the feeling of getting out of a plane, and wondering what the air will feel and smell like.

Rhea swimming

What is on your travel bucket list?

These days I’m interested in trying travel on foot. El Camino de Santiago, or one in the triple crown of American hiking trails: The PCT, The AT, or the Continental Divide trail. I also want to revisit Bali and surf. Go snowboarding in Hokkaido. Try living somewhere to be immersed in a language and not be able to be dependent on English. Maybe Paris, for French. The bucket is deep, bottomless. I’ll see how many more places I have the chance to see, but I’m not in a hurry.

Who is the most interesting person you have met while on the road?

A boy I met in India comes to mind. My friend and I asked him about a bus, and he gave us very helpful advice. He asked us for notebooks or pencils, so we gave some to him. I have a picture of him I will give you here. Just look into his eyes.

little boy rhea interview

I know you travel solo sometimes. What advice can you give to other women travelers about being safe, while still enjoying the solitude?

I have always been a bit of a tomboy. I think being physically active inspires self confidence and awareness of surroundings. Secondly, have faith. I don’t go into a situation expecting danger, but I trust my senses to tell me what to do and how to approach people. Fear begets fear, and a smile or a peaceful demeanor go a long way.

Most embarrassing moment while on the road?

Probably on my first trip, volunteering in Swaziland. I got really sick from eating meat at a fancy buffet, and my friends tried to get me to a hospital as soon as possible but we were a few hours away, as we had ventured out to a game reserve to watch animals. On the way to the hospital I was in the back of a truck, and couldn’t stop vomiting. I remember vomit flying out of the truck and hitting a person in the face, like a wet pancake. I felt so sorry and disgusted with myself, but I guess I couldn’t help it. I ended up being fine. It was food poisoning, and I had to get plenty of rest and hydration for a week. But yes, that was a moment.

Favorite Travel Quote?

“A journey, after all, neither begins in the instant we set out, nor ends when we have reached our door step once again. It starts much earlier and is really never over, because the film of memory continues running on inside of us long after we have come to a physical standstill. Indeed, there exists something like a contagion of travel, and the disease is essentially incurable.”
― Ryszard Kapuściński, Travels with Herodotus

I recommend the book this quote is from. It changed the way I thought about travel.

rhea yoga pose

Can you give us any tips for traveling on a budget?

Take stock of what you want to do, and prioritize. Don’t overestimate how much it takes to go experience what you want to.

Tell me about your job as a teacher. How did you hear about it and how can others interested in teaching abroad find a similar job?

My first teaching job was when I was 14. My new neighbours taught me sign language so I could babysit for their five year old son, Damian, who was deaf. His mother was very innovative, and got funding to run a summer sign language program, and convinced me to run it. I partially enjoyed it and partially thought, I never, ever want to be a teacher. It’s exhausting! Yet, I ended up in E.F.L. (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) and in spurts of teaching and traveling, the years passed by and I grew to enjoy teaching. I still don’t really identify myself as a teacher though.

If you want a job teaching, get on the internet and start searching. Everything you need to know is there, and your new life is just a few clicks away.

Rhea gadeok island

Have you encountered any foreign traditions that you loved so much that you would like to integrate into your life (or in the future with your own family)?

If I have a family I hope we can be nomadic, or at least quasi-nomadic, insomuch that we feel the world is our country. Living the dream, right? Haha. That’s probably why I’m still single. I’m not sure how practical that is but that is what I think I would want. Either that, or I would like to meet someone from another culture who invites me into their world to settle down.

traveltuesday

Filed Under: Travel Interviews Tagged With: Canada, Interview, South Korea, Travel Interview

Travel Interview with my Grandma | Barbara Pavitt

04/06/2014 by Jamie 10 Comments

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Juneau hike with my cousin Kanani, Aunt Bernie, Mom, and Grandma before her 75th Birthday.

My grandma, Barbara Pavitt,  lives in Juneau, Alaska, in the same home she raised her family of 7. She still travels extensively, hikes the mountains in Juneau, and kicks my butt in yoga at 82. I did a phone interview with her yesterday afternoon about her thoughts on travel.

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428820_3608261285270_1773120853_nJamie: Why do you like to travel? What is your biggest motivation to take a trip?

Barbara: There’s so many other places in the world that I want to see. My motivation is usually someone says, “Hey, you want to go to India with me? or I hear about a local group that’s going somewhere. Just because places are there, is why I want to go see them.

Jamie: What was your favorite trip you’ve ever been on and why?

Barbara: I hate that question! I would probably say India with Road Scholars. It’s not just being a tourist, we heard lectures by local people about the culture and different aspects of the country. We visited the Taj Mahal. It’s nice because you don’t feel like a tourist, you’re more like a guest. We got to actually meet some women in the village and they talked to us about politics and education. They still have the caste system even though it’s illegal.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

My Mom, Grandma, and Aunt Bernie at the Louvre Museum, Paris

Jamie: Were the Indian women what you expected or did what they say about politics and education surprise you?

Barbara: Well I didn’t have preconceived notions of what they would be like, so no. But I also realized it was a select group of women, not necessarily representative of all the women in India.

Jamie: How do multiple stories about a country change how we see them?

Barbara: It gives us a broader view of a country. We know with our own country there’s a lot of different cultures. You hear about hillbillies in the south, eskimos in the north. If you’ve never heard anything about a country, and you only hear one story you only get that one side, it’s incomplete.

Jamie: In my Travel Writing class we watched a TED Talk by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie “The Danger of a Single Story.” She says: “The single story creates stereotypes, and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story” (12:57).

Barbara: Yeah that’s what I said!

Jamie: In your travels where did you get most of your information on the local culture?

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Patisserie in Viralet, France with local hostess Irene Hecht

Barbara: I’d like to say talking with people but It’s usually from the tour guides. You’re kind of shielded from the people when you’re on a tour. I did this backpacking trip in Switzerland, we were on our own, the four of us. That time we stayed in hostels so we talked to people that worked there and other travelers, met people on the way. It’s more personal and interesting when you actually meet people and exchange names.

Jamie: Why is it important that we listen to different stories or go to different countries?

Barbara: Well I think the more we know about other cultures the more we can all get along. There’s more understanding, we’re less likely to think of other people as enemies when you go those countries and you’ve met them.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

The house of friends who hosted her in Viralet, France

Jamie: Is there anything else you want to share about your travels?

Barbara: I went to France [80th birthday trip] and stayed with people that knew the area, met some locals. One day your Aunt Bernie and I took a couple busses and went to a little café, sat there and watched people, it was fun, that was the way I thought it was going to be in the first place [before scheduling all the sightseeing tours], doing whatever we wanted to do.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Lunch after a hike to neighboring village in Dordogne, France

When I reminded my Grandma this morning that I wanted some of her photos from her travels, she said she was getting ready to leave for a hike so she would send them later today. I hope I am that active throughout my life!

There used to be a time when women were not the normal travelers, it was a break in the norm. Mary Suzanne Schriber said “Travel rewrote home in new and more appealing terms.” I think for me, my reasons for travel usually involve wanting to break out of my normal routine and see something new, so that I can come back home with fresh eyes. But I suppose if someone said “Hey, you want to go to India with me?” that would be a good motivation to travel, too, right Grandma?!

Modern advances now allow travelers to enjoy comfortable accomadations throughout most of a journey, allowing for both young and old to travel extensively. In the 19th century things were very different, and that’s just one of the reasons that women didn’t often travel. Here’s an account from “Traveller’s Tales: North America” of Isabella Bird (1831-1904), an English woman traveling to the American West. Here’s an excerpt from her travels:

Wagons with white tilts, thick-hided oxen with heavy yokes, mettlesome steeds with high peaked saddles…There, in a long wooden shed with blackened rafters and an earthen floor, we breakfasted, as seven o’clock, on johnny-cake, squirrels, buffalo-hump, dampers, and buckwheat, tea and corn spirit, with a crowd of emigrants, hunters, and adventurers; and soon after re-embarked for Rock Island, our little steamer with difficulty stemming the mighty tide of the Father of Rivers [the Mississippi River].

Honestly, if that’s the way I had to travel now, I would just turn my suitcase into a flower planter and never look back. Luckily, even the cheapest modes of transportation available now are far superior to riding wagons pulled by oxen while snacking on squirrels.

More photos coming soon… as soon as Grandma is back from her hike!

Update: Grandma made it back safely from her hike and sent me pictures as promised :)

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Grandma and me reading a book on her boat – Juneau, Alaska 1989

Filed Under: On Travel Writing, Travel Interviews Tagged With: Alaska, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, France, India, Interview, Juneau, Louvre, Paris, TED Talk

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