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Posts from the ‘Travel Stories’ category

London Food Guides on Travel with Kate

Let’s celebrate Friday with a virtual vacation. Kate has been exploring the food scene in London with Sakhr and Matthew as her guides. These videos are a sweet treat from her adventures in noshing.

A Foodie’s Paradise in London on Travel with Kate

Hungry yet? Oh, there’s more goodness to come…

A Street Food Party in London on Travel with Kate

Kate is an on-camera host, travel expert and producer of travel media. We love her charming personality and passion for engaging with locals. Keep up with her latest journeys on her website Travel with Kate, where you’ll find enough fun videos for a marathon weekend of virtual vacationing.

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On Being Inspired by the World Around You

“Travel is more than the seeing of sights; it is a change that goes on, deep and permanent, in the ideas of living.” – Miriam Beard

We’re inspired by the places we explore and the people that we meet there, and our guides feel the same way! Hannah, who organizes a Sunday Drawing by the Beach activity on Vayable shares her story about traveling to India and being inspired by the land, people, and energy of the world around her to create beautiful paintings (featured here in this post).

by Hannah, painter, model, interior designer, Vayable guide in the Los Angeles area

I came to India to travel and to visit my good friend, Lobsang, whom I’ve known for many years. He is a Buddhist monk from the region of northeast India between Bhutan and Tibet, called Tawang. I met him when I was in high school and decided to attend weekly Buddhist sanghas to deal with the pressures of being a teenager. He was always the friend who I would sheepishly go to with “what does it all mean” questions, and the friend I would proudly show off and introduce to my other high school friends as my very own “spiritual mentor”.

Lately he’s transitioned more to the role of “good friend” and “life-consultant”. A few years ago he built a school for orphaned children and village kids who live in extremely dire circumstances, deep in the foothills of the Himalayas, where he grew up. He wanted to provide for children who are living much the same childhood he led until he entered the monastery - a life devoid of parent figures, full of hard manual work (beginning at age 3), suffering abuse, starvation, and lack of any basic hygiene or health care. The school is located in an extremely tiny village with very few people, and is a three day drive from the nearest (slightly bigger village) over waterfalls - that’s right: real, gushing waterfalls which CAN kill you - and the broken down remains of old carrier trucks and military vehicles that did not make it over the narrow roads of the mountain pass.

I traveled to the school with a friend who was teaching English in Asia and wanted to join me in my journey. We intended to spend a week visiting and ended up living there for almost a month, teaching English, some art, some history, and helping to put on a sloppy, but cute Himalayan version of the Ugly Duckling. We also spent time with the live-in, resident teachers discussing their syllabi and the differences between an Eastern and Western approach to teaching and raising children. I think perhaps I learned more from them than they did from us!

The location was incredibly beautiful - saddled between Bhutan and the beginnings of the Himalayan steps toward middle Tibet, we were literally in the clouds. Sitting on the side of the hill, listening to the monkeys rustling the trees in the nearby jungle, watching the clouds slowly envelop the jutting peaks in the distance and smelling the nag champa incense burning for evening prayer (in English, Tibetan, Hindi, and the native language of Tawang), I truly felt that I was in Heaven.

I sketched the face of every kid at that school, but I did not truly start painting until I traveled back to grimy, hot, jungly, bustling Delhi. For me, Lobsang’s school was too perfect, too beautiful. It was the areas on the way from Bengal to Delhi and in western Rajasthan that truly inspired me to make paintings. There was something to the way people lived in these areas - literally on top of each other and yet, to some extent, in harmony. They bathed openly in the lakes surrounding tourist-ridden Jodhpur architectural ruins; they laid out fabric at night and slept alongside each other in groups of over a hundred on the train platform and shaved over the tracks in the morning while waiting for the express train.

The presence of people was everywhere: in the embers and smells of the burning trash piles on the corner of the street, in the Tibetan scrawlings on the side of a road-side shack from Kathmandu to Darjeeling, in the candle-lit Hindu altar seen through a crevice in the crumbling wall of the Red Fort in Delhi. And the colors were enough to throw my painter’s brain into a tail-spin. I feel sympathy for artists who visit this area of the world - there is simply TOO MUCH to take in. I fell in love with the orderly chaos of life in these places that I visited. In this work I want to show people a view of the world that may not be easy to look at, but perhaps is the best view for us to see.

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A few days in Korea: South and North

While on my trip to Asia last week, I was suddenly given the chance to visit Seoul, South Korea. I jumped on it and made my way out to Seoul from Tokyo for three days. As my plane from Tokyo approached the beaches of Incheon airport, all I could think about was General Douglas MacArthur’s landing at Incheon with UN troops back in September of 1950. This risky invasion ultimately split the North Korean forces in half and turned the tide in the Korean War. While the war is still technically unresolved, the importance of this mission still lies in the eventual recapture of Seoul. Of course, as a History major, I feel it is my duty to inform you of these little things.

Anyways, the ride to Seoul from Incheon took a remarkable hour and a half of driving on massive newly built freeways surrounded by even larger developments sprouting up all over the place. One thing that struck me about Asia more than anything else was just how much construction is going on EVERYWHERE. It was as if this construction went uninterrupted from Incheon airport to Seoul city itself. It was truly amazing. With that said, I have to admit I wasn’t nearly as excited about visiting Seoul as I was about visiting Tokyo, Kuala Lumpur or Singapore (of which I had visited in the preceding week). However, it wasn’t until night time that I came to enjoy Seoul for what it really was: the True City of Lights. Now I know Paris has long taken the name of the “City of Lights,” but after seeing Seoul, Paris just doesn’t compare. With night time, Seoul comes alive in a way you will never come across in Paris. Entire river banks become lit with neon and fluorescent lights, shopping malls stay open 24 hours, buildings become animated with entire tv screens and LEDs, street vendors hawk their items to you into the early hours of the morning, and most importantly food carts stay running well past midnight. It was a truly amazing experience that just simply can not be put into words.

The initial hesitation I had with regards to Seoul and South Korea vanished especially during a late night showing of a South Korean football (soccer) match at a Korean fried chicken restaurant (not that KFC!). Not only was the fried chicken to die for, but the beer was ice cold and the locals were exceedingly friendly (almost annoyingly, especially as one man kept asking me questions in very broken English as I tried to eat and focus on the match!). I didn’t have to venture far outside of my hotel before I was completely immersed in Korean culture and nightlife. It was hard to find my way back to my hotel any time much earlier than 2am since everyone stays out so late in Seoul. Unfortunately, I had no one to show me around and give me a local tour, except that didn’t matter too much. Just getting lost in a city and finding your way back can sometimes teach you quite a lot about a city and its people.

Halfway through my journey, I found myself with little to do in Seoul other than take the normal touristy “Bus Tours” of the city. For me, this was a NO GO! I needed to find something a little more interesting - something which could satisfy my inner historian more than a boring audio track played on repeat as you circle the city in a double decker bus. I eventually came across a Korean Demilitarized Zone tour which would take me to deep into the DMZ and slightly inside the border of North Korea for around $150. This was too much to possibly turn down. I had to do it and booked a tour for the next day (unsurprisingly, these tours book up weeks in advance and it still amazes me that I was somehow able to find myself onto one of these tours).

The initial tour of the DMZ was quite cool. We saw guard outposts, North Korean infiltration tunnels dug 75 meters below ground through solid granite, and minefields. It was only after our traditional meal of Korean Beef (it may very well have been Korean Dog, but still very good!) called bibimbap, that our tour started to get REALLY interesting. Unlike half the people on the tour, I had booked the full day DMZ + Panmunjeom or Joint Security Area tour. It was this second half which really got me going. We were taken to the United Nations command center where we were issued ID cards and legal forms to sign. I started to question what I was getting myself into. What came next was truly incredible. We made our way outside to the Joint Security Area shared by the North Koreans, Americans and South Koreans. This is the commonly photographed, but seldom seen area where the two Koreas stand face to face only meters apart. The entire time we were watched and filmed by North Korean guards on the other side, anxiously waiting for something to happen. The eeriness of being watched through binoculars while being filmed was certainly unsettling.

We found our way into the United Nations meeting room where the two Koreas come together for talks every so often. Upon walking around the table with the UN flag in the middle, we suddenly found ourselves a few yards inside North Korean territory. We were accompanied at all times by upward of 5 South Korean (ROK) and US troops so that the North Koreans wouldn’t attempt to kidnap us at any point (I thought they were originally joking when they told us this but I guess it has happened repeated times). Once we stepped back outside we were taken to a vista where we could look over the scene of 1976 North Korean Axe Murder Incident in which two US officers were brutally murdered while cutting down a poplar tree. To the north about a kilometer stood Propaganda Village, an uninhabited village made to look prosperous for the purpose of “attracting” South Koreans to the North. Here also stood the world’s tallest flagpole at a monstrous 160 meters, fixed on top with a 600 lb. North Korean flag which would tear under its own weight if it wasn’t for the constant gales passing through the DMZ.

As we stood there looking over the DMZ and Propaganda Village, the extremely creepy sound of North Korean music began to trickle to our ears from loud speakers almost a mile away. According to our US Army escort, the music is seldom played but he believed the North Koreans were watching us from a distance and decided to give us a little background soundtrack to go with our tour. For me, this was just too much. I had never been on such a frightening yet exhilarating tour in my life. Having stepped in North Korea and heard their funky beats, I was ready to return to Seoul and capitalism. I can not describe the emotion of gratitude that swept over me upon seeing Seoul light up later that night. As I wandered around Seoul on my final night in Korea, I couldn’t stop thinking of the discrepancies between North Korea and South Korea - democracy and capitalism versus authoritarianism and communism. While it had never truly occurred to me during my life, it was made very clear in South Korea that I LOVE CAPITALISM!!!

^^^^About a yard inside North Korea^^^^

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4 days and 3 nights in Tokyo

Coming off the plane from Singapore to Tokyo, I found myself lost in an airport full of Japanese Kanji writing with no mention of an exit sign. It took me about 15 minutes to find the exit, but once I did, my friend Syu was waiting for me on the otherside. From here on out, the only difficulty I had was navigating the culture rather than language. With my personal translator and great friend to show me around, Tokyo went from being a city I was frightened of, to being a city which I thoroughly enjoyed.

While I am cetainly no big seafood fan, I have to admit that Tokyo helped change my perception of it. I found myself eating a wide variety of seafood that I would have never considered before arriving at Narita airport- from sea urchin to eel, from fatty tuna to squid, I ate as many different types of sushi that I could possibly gorge myself with. Not once did I see a menu with the typical Chicken Teryaki I had become so accustomed to in my unwillingness to eat Japanese seafood while in America. Though I had had the occasional California Roll in California, once I was in Japan, I was eating unagi and all other types of fish without thinking twice. Funnily enough, it never bothered me once! There is something about testing new dishes which seems to be the norm whenever you travel. Eating local food seems to be the greatest single way to experience a side of a culture you may have otherwise never come across.

Other than seafood, it was Tokyo’s architecture which fascinated me the most. If one has been to Berlin, imagine all the dark and drab buildings of the Eastern portion mixed with the bright lights of Manhattan. Other than likening Tokyo to the Gotham City of the old Batman comics, this Berlin-New York combo is possibly the only way for me to describe Tokyo’s scenery. I didn’t spend too much time doing the typical touristy things, but instead I found myself getting lost in the city for the fun of finding your way back and experiencing Japanese culture first hand. This was certainly helped by the fact I had my friend Syu with me at almost all times! I couldn’t imagine trying to get around without a Japanese speaker.

On my last morning in Tokyo, the only thing I found myself regretting was the fact that I had yet to see Mt. Fuji. Twenty seconds later, the smog lifted from the hills in the distance and Voila! Mt. Fuji appeared for a few seconds from my hotel window. I thought to myself, “I have finally seen Japan!” — Far from it however. I realized almost immediately that there was so much more to this island nation which I would love to see in the future. I can only hope that I find myself back there in the future!

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Finca Rio Perla Video!

I’m currently off the farm and in the tourist-ridden town of Manuel Antonio, where I suddenly found myself in some alternate version of America. We’re still working on the final details of the listings on Vayable (there will likely be four different options depending on how long you want to stay), but here’s the video I put together of my experience! 

Believe me, after being in a super touristy part of Costa Rica, this is truly a unique experience that you can’t get from your typical guidebook! 

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Out on the Farm in Costa Rica: An Introduction

Hey there, Vayablog followers, this is June checking in from the eco-farm in Costa Rica. I’m staying here for a week to volunteer, but you can visit the farm as a guest as well! Yesterday I took a bus through the cloud forests from San José, Costa Rica to Siquirres, a very small city. The farm is about 30 minutes away into the mountains through really bumpy unpaved roads. There are a ton of animal sounds everywhere from all sorts of birds, to insects, to howler monkeys, to geckos (they chirp!).

It turns out that this is an upstart farm, which is really exciting! Right now, the family that lives there produces enough milk, eggs, and herbs for themselves and their guests to eat. They produce some vegetables but want to start harvesting at a production scale so they can be self-sustainable and provide produce for a Thai restaurant in Puerto Viejo. Everything is organic, and Rick, the guy who runs operations, wants to design the entire place using permaculture principles. His passion for the earth, love for animals, and belief in natural systems really shows through as he explains the way things work around the farm and in nature like a walking encyclopedia. Well, more like a walking version of Bill Mollison’s Permaculture - A Designer’s Manual.

Today I saw the chickens, horses, and goats. We fed the chickens and worked on the herb garden that they are planning to grow in the front yard. We also hiked to a waterfall that was on the property, where I went cliff jumping down a 25-foot high ledge! The waters were crystal clear, and the entire area is great because it’s completely unspoiled by pollution or tourism yet so beautiful and completely livable at the same time. Like a secret. Vivian, from the local family that lives on the farm, made us a delicious Costa Rican lunch and breakfast, and we cooked dinner together at night. Her family is so nice, and everyone is really Zen out here, it seems. The negativity and cynicism that plague people who live in cities just melt away as you acclimate to a slower pace and enjoy just being with nature.

You can experience it for yourself here!
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Reclaiming the magic of travel at Finca Rio Perla in Costa Rica

Our ambassador of community, June Lin, will be embarking on a weeklong adventure staying with a local family and helping out on an all-natural, communal farm in Costa Rica. The farm is located in the Caribbean highlands, high up on the slope of the mountains and smack dab in the middle of the rainforest. This adventure will be a great opportunity to learn about using traditional practices along with cutting edge technologies to nurture the environment while harvesting from it!

Many artists have come here for inspiration and many environmentalists have come here to learn about sustainable agriculture, but we are opening this unique experience up to you so that you can see how we travel, the Vayable way. Come along on this adventure with us as we reclaim the magic of travel!

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A VAYAble Idea

Grab a buddy, purchase swampland on a small island in Panama and get a few dozen of your closest friends to spend 1-3 months down there building you a house in exchange for room, board and an unforgettable experience in Central America.

Why not?! My friends did!  AND they will always be reminded of my hard work when they look at at that huge hole in their living room. #DryWallMistake #MyBad ! 

 

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