Thank you

Thank you everyone for your kind words in the form of comments here, on facebook, emails and messages. The response to my last post was so lovely, so overwhelming and in most cases, tear inducing!

I’m doing ok. I actually feel a bit worse than yesterday, more defeated. As I’ve said to a few people it’s not so much the loss of my phone and camera, it’s more that my skin looks and feels awful. I can’t help but think that if I had just let go of my bag, the outcome would have been the same but I wouldn’t have been so banged up.

Last night I dreamt I was robbed again. This time by a woman. She stole a red Gameboy I had as an 8-year-old?! Slowly going insane it seems!

My shins hurt the most, but they don’t look as bad in this photo as in real life.

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Excuse the gross, unflattering photo

We’ve left Taganga and are in a much more beautiful place. The water is magical.

I’m going to try hard not to let this affect the rest of the trip. I definitely do not want to go home. Especially not before we get to Mexico. I’ve been dreaming about guacamole and margaritas for far too long! Although if I could magically transport home for a day or two that would be perfect.

I’m keen to replace my GoPro asap, since we have so many water activities coming up. But GoPros are excessively expensive in stores here and I’m not sure if Amazon will ship one here, if they do I’m not sure what address to use! Problem solving, apparently not my strong point! Andrew is onto it, bless. We also have to lodge my insurance claim, but printers are few and far between.

I promise to return to regular programming after this post and you will only see beautiful photos of beaches, not ones of my grazed skin! Again, thank you so much for your messages. The online support has made such a difference, I really can’t thank you enough.

Stay safe wonderful people xx

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The other leg, again, cuts look much better than they are?!

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Getting mugged in Taganga, Colombia

Well friends, here’s post I never wanted to write. Last night, against my better judgement, I decided to walk home alone from a bar back to our hostel in the small seaside town of Taganga, Colombia. Andrew hadn’t been feeling well and had gone to bed early and other friends had been at a different party.

During the walk, a man ran up behind me and attempted to grab my bag. I was so surprised I initially thought it must have been a joke. But quickly I realised that thing that never happens to you was happening to me. I was being mugged.

Despite knowing the best response is to surrender your bag instead of fighting, instinct kicked in. So I clamped down on my bag while he pulled strongly on the strap and I just screamed “No, no, no, no, no” over and over. I don’t really remember it clearly but I ended up on the ground, being dragged along while he kicked at me trying to get me to let go. We must have fought for quite some distance, judging from where I found my shoes.

Eventually he won the handbag tug of war and ran off, scaling a wall and disappearing. I jumped up and chased him, almost managing to grab his ankle (what a stupid thing to do!) before he disappeared.

Shoeless, dress torn and completely covered in scratches, cuts and grazes I stood there dazed for a second and then a bartender I know happened to walk past. When she saw me she became hysterical and took me to another hostel, demanding to know why I was out alone and maniacally dousing my cuts in alcohol. After a while a security guard walked me home. I woke up Andrew and called my parents.

This morning I was woken by a friendly stranger, a guy called Lex who looked like an extra from a 50 Cent video, who decided to take me down to the police station to see what could be done. I have no idea why Lex decided to get involved or how he even heard what happened but he didn’t want money. He just kept saying that it was bad for the town and he was really mad at what had happened. Frankly, I was amazed that anyone cared or was surprised at what had happened. I guess my banged up arms and legs won me some sympathy.

Many trips to the police station, including a government office in a neighbouring city have yielded nothing. They did make me look at a bunch of very amateur mug shots to try to identify the mugger, which felt strange. But at least I have a police report to lodge my insurance claim.

I know I shouldn’t have been alone. I know I shouldn’t have walked home. What really frustrates me is that when we arrived in this town a week ago I immediately felt unsafe and my guard was 100 per cent up. But then nothing bad happened and I got complacent.

I lost my iPhone, my beloved GoPro camera and a tiny bit of cash. Thankfully I didn’t have any bank cards or my passport on me. Thank goodness for cloud technology, I am able to access all my iPhone photos through iCloud and only lost a few GoPro photos.

I’m very grateful that despite fighting like a complete fool, I wasn’t badly hurt. I can replace my phone and GoPro, but not myself. I do have one very swollen and purple finger though and my skin is going to look a bit rough for a while, luckily I didn’t get cuts on my face.

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You should see my legs

I wish I could fast forward a few days until I feel better, emotionally and physically. I’m trying to tell myself that these things happen all the time, that’s why insurance exists. I accept that what happened is mostly because of my own damn foolishness, so I’ve learnt a big lesson.

I still don’t believe that Colombia or anywhere in South America is inherently dangerous (bar Venezuela and guerilla territory). You just have to be careful and not take stupid risks. Like I did.

Stay safe xx

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Things I do aside from travel

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#TOURISTS

Before we embarked on this trip (over 8 months ago!) my blog featured a bit of everything from car crashes and sunrises, to absurd cheesecake recipes, to fancy balls and outback rodeos, to asking what you had for breakfast (a weirdly popular post!). Nowadays it’s mostly a travel diary in which I try to convey how amazing our trip is. I’m very conscious of not sounding like I’m writing for the kind of diary your teacher made you keep in primary school, starting with “On the weekend I…”. So I try to keep it interesting!

But obviously we aren’t exploring amazing castles or visiting beautiful beaches 24 hours a day. We do have a lot of down time in between sightseeing. The other day I was wondering what on earth we actually do when we aren’t moving from place to place or being tourists. Here’s what I came up with.

I read a lot  

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I think I’m onto my 7th book since Christmas Day! I’m always looking for a good book so please hit me up with recommendations, I’ll read pretty much anything except fantasy novels. After reading The Girl on the Train last year I’ve read quite a few thrillers, hoping to find something similar. I’ve read The Good Girl by Mary Kubica, The Good Neighbour by AJ Banner and Pretty Girls by Mary Slaughter. Pretty Girls was horrific. I’ve never read anything which such graphic violence, I just had to speed read it to get it over with.

I’ve also read Man at the Helm by Nina Stibbe which was excellent; funny, sad and very well written. I’ve read some trashy Zoe Foster chick lit novels which aren’t worth mentioning, The Mothers Group by Fiona Higgins (much more interesting than it sounds!) and all of Liane Moriarty’s books. I also very much enjoyed The Vacationers by Emma Straub and We are all completely beside ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler (DID NOT see that twist coming!).

What are you reading?

I imagine my future home

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Will it be as cute as my last house? Doubt it!

This is a really frustrating pastime. Where will I live? Where will I work? How will I get there? What kind of table will I eat at? What kind of sheets will I have? Which photos will I actually print out and put on the walls? Going home is terrifying because it means completely starting over again, but in the same way it is also hugely exciting. I don’t want to go home now and I’m not homesick, but I feel like all of the new and exciting things will probably quash the post travel blues pretty well. Imaginary decorating (with no budget!) can be pretty fun.

The worst part of Christmas was seeing everyone’s beautifully decorated homes and trees and their wonderfully set tables, knowing I would be eating god knows what off a fugly plastic plate. Have you ever heard a more obnoxious first world problem?! Oh and not seeing my family was bad too 😉

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Remember my silver centre piece on 2014’s Christmas table? Magic

I exhaust the internet

If there’s wifi, I’m on it. Endlessly scrolling through instagram, watching everyone’s Snap Chat stories, keeping up to date with facebook, cackling at fail compilation videos… It’s rare that I get bored if I have an internet connection.

I also read a lot of blogs. The ones I check religiously at the moment are A Cup of Jo, Love Taza (she’s in Australia at the moment!) and Faux Fuchsia. Plus most of the ones in my blog roll. Blog recommendations are also appreciated!

I get sad about how unfit I’ve become

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Sigh

It’s impossible to stick to a routine while travelling. Well, not impossible, but very difficult and very difficult things aren’t fun. In America at least we were hiking pretty regularly and trying to use the 7 Minute Workout app as much as possible (easier to do outdoors!). Moving around from cramped dorm room to cramped dorm room makes it hard to do those workouts, also the food here is not as fresh and amazing. There is also the trap of thinking ‘YOLO! I’m on holidays, I can eat what I want!’. But we aren’t on a holiday. This is how we’ve been living for 8 months. Put the donut down.

So I often get sad about the state of my poor body, especially my knees, which without constant spin classes have become weak and wobbly and at constant risk of dislocation.

There are also self esteem implications with not exercising. I won’t go too far into this but rest assured most of the photos of me on this trip have either been deleted or heavily scrutinised before being made public. Lame I know.

I never thought I’d be craving spin classes…

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More active times in Utah!

So that’s pretty much it! I tried to think of everything, but really most days we are sightseeing or walking around or on the beach or meeting new people or doing stuff.

What do you do when you’re not doing what you mostly do (working, travelling, parenting etc)?

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Brazil: 20 observations  

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Here’s a list of 20 things I observed in Brazil, things that surprised, intrigued, struck me, were told to me or caught my attention. Not necessarily good or bad, just observations.

1 English isn’t common

Pretty much no one (outside hostels and tour guides) speaks English and Portugese is a very difficult language to pick up and pronounce. This makes for some hilarious charades and miming. Spending time in a Portugese speaking country has definitely made me appreciate how much Spanish I’ve picked up!

2 But the English speakers will go out of their way to help you 

While getting a wee bit flustered trying to figure out why our bus from Florianopolis to São Paulo had not appeared a lovely woman came up to me, asked if I spoke English and then explained the situation. So nice! Similarly, a lovely man in Rio helped us find a taxi.

3 The subway in São Paulo is amazing

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No falling off the platform here! The train has to perfectly line up with those doors.


The subway line we were on was probably the best and cheapest I’ve ever experienced in the world. I’m guessing the subway had a major refurb for the World Cup in 2014. It was so modern and clean and easy to use. Also at some stations you exit from one side of the train while people enter from the other side. Genius!

4 Parts of the major cities are very American

In São Paulo we stumbled across a mall with Outback Steakhouse, Sephora, Applebee’s and two Starbucks cafes. I’ve never seen Applebee’s outside America!

5 Other parts are very South American

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Train transactions

People here clearly still have the individual entrepreneurial spirit common in South America. For example the man selling phone battery packs on the train, the woman selling sunglasses on the beach and the guy selling individual Twix bars from a jumbo box to hungry commuters.

6 Beach culture similar to Australia 

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The beach and surfing culture reminds me a lot of Australia. Especially people still swimming in bad weather, or maybe that’s just a Victorian thing?!

7 Brazilians told us ‘Australia is Brazil done right’ 

This really surprised me. I love how in Brazil you can walk along the street, drinking a can of beer without being arrested. Or ride a bike without a helmet and not be fined. Australia is such a nanny state! But Brazilians we met in hostels who had been to Australia said that Aus has the beaches and other great parts of Brazil without the corruption. One guy told us about his brutal run in with the cops, another lamented about the high taxes but dismal hospital system. Then I felt bad about hating on Australia so much.

8 The beaches are crowded

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I’ve been spoilt with Western Australia’s pristine, practically empty beaches. It’s almost impossible to find the space to roll out your towel on the beaches  here. They are packed with not only beach goers but people selling bikinis, dresses, caipirinhas, churros, sun glasses, you name it!

9 Music is LOUD

Doesn’t matter if you’re in a completely empty bar or bus station, the music will be turned up to a ridiculous degree. Oh you wanted to have a conversation? Too bad!

10 Women are super stylish and wear a lot of colour 

Particularly in São Paulo. I loved seeing all the immaculate outfits, meticulously planned so the belt, handbag and shoes match perfectly. Brazilian women have serious style. But it’s not all black dresses and skinny jeans. I’ve never seen so much yellow, pink and green and in such a well put together outfits!

11 The sushi is amazing 

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Sushi on our first night in Sao Paulo. YUM.


There is a large (1.4-1.5 million according to Wikipedia) population of people of Japanese descent in Brazil. The delicious result? Excellent sushi testy arranges everywhere! We had sushi two nights in a row in São Paulo.

12 Haviana thongs/flip flops are sold everywhere 

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Havies in the supermarket

Havianas are sold at all the supermarkets here, even the tiny grocers. They have way more crazy patterns and designs, from what I’ve seen anyway. The plain, classic style are $5 (AUD) a pair. Pretty sure I paid $25 for my black pair in Aus! The patterned ones are $10-15.

13 Long distance buses are excruciatingly slow

I was expecting the worst buses in South America to be in Bolivia, but it turns out Brazil wins that title! Each bus we took was arrived a painful 2 hours later than scheduled. The buses within the city of Rio on the other hand, hurtled along at break neck speed. It was great!

14 The streets are very colourful

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Even more so than the rest of South America.

15 Groceries are super cheap

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$1 pineapple

Accommodation and eating out in Brazil is pretty expensive for South America. But conveniently, groceries are extremely cheap. We did a lot of cooking and $7 (Australian) was plenty for two people for dinner.

16 The wealth gap is bigger and more obvious than I anticipated

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We visited the Rocinha favela (slum) and given the fact that tourists have been going there for 20 years, I was surprised at the lack of infrastructure there. Wandering down the narrow, claustrophobic paths between houses and witnessing (smelling) the sanitation problem was fairly confronting. It was the damp, darkness that really got me. Rocinha is wedged between two very affluent neighbourhoods and the contrast is immense. 100,000 people live there on the hillside and the government does helpful things like provide brightly coloured paint so at least the dwellings look good from the outside.

17 You can buy açaí everywhere and it is delicious

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I’ve only seen acai in super trendy Australian cafes and on wanky #fitspo Instagram accounts. In Brazil it’s everywhere and just a few dollars for a small cup. It’s basically frozen acai berries blended into a very thick smoothie-like consistency. And it’s super delicious.

18 Churrascarias (Brazilian BBQ) are definitely worth the hype and the money

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Men brandishing stakes of meat come around to your table and slice of piece after piece until you can’t eat any more. What’s not to love?! I had probably the best lamb of my life and the beef was amazing. Also ribs, chicken and sausages. And a salad bar (I didn’t waste room on salad though).

19 Cashiers hate it when you don’t have the exact change

Especially check-out people, they seem to regard it as a personal slight if you provide the wrong change when paying. If you pull out a 50 real note for a 36 real purchase, expect a death stare. Even though they always have plenty of cash to give you change?!

20 It’s a really, really beautiful country

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This wasn’t a surprise, but a pleasant reinforcement of what I expected to be true. From the lush green jungle to the clear aqua water at the beaches to the wonderfully friendly people, Brazil is a seriously beautiful place.

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Paraty, Brazil 

For people travelling to Brazil, the tiny costal town of Paraty is a must. Located on the Costa Verde (green cost) in Rio de Janeiro state, it’s got the perfect mix of beautiful beaches and islands as well as amazing Portugese colonial architecture and a rich history.

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There are no cars in the historical district, presumably to help preserve the extremely cobbled cobblestones. It’s a nice place to wander around but you really have to watch your footing.

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The streets open out to the bay, which was an important port during the gold rush in the 17th century.

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Dotted along the jetty are hundreds of colourful boats waiting for tourists to take to the nearby islands.

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Tourists like us!

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Just to look even more like a tourist, I bought a Panama hat and wore it everywhere. Travelling with a Panama hat is difficult. Any tips?

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For about $50 each we got our own private vessel for two hours. We were taken to two beaches and two snorkelling spots.

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Our mighty ship

The further out we got the more insane the colour of the water got.

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We got to the creatively named Blue Lagoon and went snorkelling.

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Looks more green to me

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Plenty of fish

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Our time was up and we made our way back to dry land.

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So pretty

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The next day I wore my Panama hat again. That’s pretty much the only thing worth mentioning.

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Oh and we ate a delicious pineapple, which is definitely worth mentioning.

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The day after that we got the bus to Trinidade to check out the beach there. Even though I’m pretty much allergic to going to the beach in cloudy weather I gave it a go.

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The Panama hat came too!

The beach was amazing; thick green jungle leading right onto the sand, massive granite boulders and wild rough surf.

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Then the sun came out! Which totally justified wearing the hat. It actually provides decent coverage from the sun, which is good.

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Bae Watch

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What would I do without me Kindle?

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The next day we got the bus to Rio de Janeiro city. It was the only bus we took in Brazil that didn’t run overtime by 2 hours! Much excite.

Be good.

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11 glorious days on the beach in Florianopolis, Brazil

Here’s a boring, obvious statement; travelling is tiring. That’s why, as amazing as it is to travel, it’s sometimes also amazing to stand still for a while. And that is how our intended two nights in Florianopolis blew out to 11.

Florianopolis is the main city on the Santa Catarina Island, but we actually stayed in the small fishing village of Barra de Lagoa. There is a large lagoon (lagoa) on the island and the village is situated where the channel flows into the ocean.

The place is so picturesque, it almost doesn’t look real. It’s like a film set for the Brazilian version of Dawson’s Creek or something:

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I took these photos on my iPhone, no filters or editing!

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We spent the entire Christmas/New Year period in Barra de Lagoa doing not much at all. We went to the beach, swam every day and read lots of books.

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The main beach was absolutely packed every day. With families, people lounging at beach restaurants, women in thong bikinis (turns out that particular stereotype is absolutely true!), surfers, portable bars and people selling anything and everything you could possibly ever need. It was a bit like Bali in that sense.

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Oh and check out the view from our private hostel room!

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See how packed it is?

We spent 4 glorious nights in the private room with that view. Then we had to move to a dorm; the perils of not booking ahead.

One day we attempted a hike to a supposed private beach. It was doomed from the beginning. It was sweltering hot, I managed to cut my arm on a barbed wire fence, then I fell on a steep path and cut open my elbow and burst into tears. We abandoned the hike after that.

Turns out the path was to a busy beach that can be reached by cars and buses. Glad we gave up! This view was pretty nice though:

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Right before I fell over

We found a nice, smaller beach to hang out at.

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I tried to take an innocent photo of my watermelon slice and ended up getting this lady’s butt in the frame:

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lol

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On one day we gave stand up paddle boarding a spin.

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It is so popular, we’ve seen it everywhere along this trip and had been wanting to give it a try.

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It was actually easier than I expected! Except for paddling against the wind.

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Taking a break

The best part was actually falling off. It made an otherwise slow activity a bit more exciting.

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Getting back on

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Afterwards we treated ourselves to acai cups. They are everywhere in Brazil and on #fitspo instagram accounts, being such a buzz health food and all. Acai is a fruit and the cups contain a frozen puree of the berries, plus extras like fruit and condensed milk (not so healthy!). They are pretty delicious and if you believe the hype, good for you too.

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The aforementioned nice, smaller beach:

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Shame about the powerline

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We were sad to leave. Thanks Flori x

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10 things you should know about moving to Kalgoorlie-Boulder

10 things you should know about moving to kb

If you’ve read my blog for a while (or read the About page!) you might know that before I embarked on this amazing adventure I used to live in a small regional city in the West Australian Goldfields called Kalgoorlie-Boulder.

KB was my home for three and a half years and I fiercely loved the place. I’ve blogged a lot about all the amazing times I had there and have even outright gushed about the place before.

A little while ago I was asked if I would like to help spread my love of the Goldfields by contributing to the We Love KB blog and of course I jumped at the offer. We Love KB is an online and physical directory aimed at helping people discover the best of the city. My good friend, amazing graphic designer and all-round legend Paula Fletcher is one of the brains behind it. She created the image above, love it!

My first blog post for We Love KB went live yesterday and I have been absolutely blown away by the response. It’s reached tens of thousands of people, a few hundred people have shared the post and I’ve seen many comments (some agreeing, some disagreeing of course!) on the post. The overwhelming response has been so positive and lovely. It’s not always easy living somewhere that has a dated reputation for mining and topless barmaids, so a lot of people were happy to see a real reflection of their home. And I was happy to provide that reflection!

Click here to see the post.

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How to get the money to quit work and travel

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“How do you afford to travel?”

This is by far the question I get asked the most, in real life, on the internet, politely and not so politely. We have been travelling for just shy of eight months: four and a half in the US and Canada and three in South America. We don’t aim to go home before July 2016. So it’s a valid question, but with a very boring answer. So let’s get started.

All my prices are in Australian dollars unless otherwise specified.

BEFORE YOU GO

Coming up with a budget 

It was really difficult to figure out how much money we would need because; we didn’t know exactly how long we would be gone for and because we are travelling to multiple countries of varying expense. When researching how much we would need, Andrew frequently read that $100 (about $73 American when we left, sadly the Aussie dollar is worth less now) a day would be adequate. So that’s what we aimed to raise each, knowing that some places we would spend less and some days more.

Not having an end date made budgeting hard. So I really just aimed to save as much money as I possibly could. At one point I managed to save about $10,000 in 2.5 months, which I was proud of.

In the end I saved $35, 000. Add the cost of my flight to LA, 3 other domestic flights, visa costs, the yellow fever vaccine and the Inca Trail trek cost on top of that.

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We paid for the Inca Trail 6 months before we left home, so it felt free!

Saving money

First up, make travelling your priority. If you’re not prepared to stop upgrading your iPhone and television, or buying clothes on a whim then maybe long term travelling isn’t for you.

I got completely addicted to saving money. I put a chart on my cubicle at work with a big ‘$30,000’ at the top and loved adding to the tally whenever I could. I used to transfer about half of my pay into my savings account the day I got paid. And then at the end of my two week pay period I would transfer whatever was left in my everyday account over to savings as well.

I have a high interest savings account with a different bank to my everyday bank. That means that it takes about 3 days to move money from one to the other. Three days is annoying but it’s more than enough to stop impulse transactions for impulse purchases. I could never be on a night out, or out shopping and think ‘I’ll just transfer $100 out of savings for this, it won’t hurt!’.

So I went out less, stopped buying clothes, makeup, coffees. I housesat at the beach for three weeks for free instead of taking a holiday or going home at Christmas. Really when you have a goal it’s easy to say no to things.

Selling everything

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I literally sold everything that I wasn’t planning to take with me, except for some boxes Mum is kindly storing for me. Selling and purging stuff also became addictive.

I sold clothes, furniture, accessories and lots of random stuff. It’s kind of amazing what people will buy. I had someone buy two old bottles of perfume from me for $10. My biggest sale was my car for $3700. I sold things on facebook, at a market and at a consignment store and I wrote a blog post all about it called 5 tips for successfully selling your old stuff.

WHEN YOU GET THERE

Transport

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First and foremost, we are extremely fortunate that Andrew’s grandfather leant us his car for our USA/Canada road trip. There is no way we would have been able to cover 10,000 miles in a hire car due to the cost. I know people sometimes buy cars for their road trip but aside from the obvious cost of the car itself, there are probably added costs of insurance and registration and the chance of ending up with a dud. We are extremely grateful.

Fuel was usually around $US40 when we fill up.

Over 3 months in South America we’ve only taken 3 flights and the cost of each of those was comparable to a bus ticket. We’ve taken many buses, including overnight buses which are horrible (I can never sleep) but they mean you save a night’s accommodation as well. Within cities we walk everywhere and take the occasional taxis which are pretty cheap anyway.

Accommodation

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Our trusty borrowed tent

Part of the reason for travelling to America was to visit Andrew’s family and again, we are so lucky and grateful that we have been able to stay with them and that they have been so very generous. It’s safe to say we wouldn’t have been staying on the Malibu beachfront otherwise. Thanks Eric and Adrienne!

Other than staying with family and friends wherever possible, we have camped and stayed in motels and hostels. Not a single hotel.

The most expensive night we’ve had was $US85 for a motel in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. The cheapest we’ve had was a $US6 campsite. Speaking of campsites, we camped 50 nights out of 103 during the first leg of our USA road trip. Fifty. With the average campsite costing $25. That is insanely cheap.

We probably spent about $US100 on camping equipment like a stove, air mattress, chairs etc from Walmart. Our tent and esky/cooler were borrowed. Commercial campsites in America are very easy to come by on the west coast and have excellent facilities such as wifi, showers, laundry and sometimes even pools. Campsites in the National Parks often only have toilets, but are fine. We also camped in the backyard of a hostel to save money. It can be done!

In South America we’ve mostly stayed in dorm rooms at hostels, which are really cheap. Occasionally we splurge on a private room to get away from other people.

Entertainment

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Walking up to look out points will be your favourite new pastime

Our major source of entertainment in the US and Canada was visiting National Parks and hiking. We bought a $US80 National Parks Pass and have made our money back on it several times over having been to 12 National Parks in the US!

Really the only major thing we forked out money for in the US was our rafting trip in Stanley, Idaho, which was a big budget blowout at $US200. But that was also when we had a $US6 campsite.

Our other sources of entertainment include walking around cities checking out the parks and architecture, seeing the odd movie, sitting in a cafe for far too long people watching, reading by lakes and beaches.

In South America we’ve done many ‘pay what you want’ walking tours and spent a lot of time on beaches, next to lakes and doing other free stuff. We’ve also done some paid tours such as the Salt Flats and Bolivian Amazon tours, but these have worked out to be less than $100 per day with meals and everything included. Our biggest expense was the Inca Trail trek, which we paid for before we left. The camper van trip across Chile wasn’t very cheap but it was our transport and accommodation for two weeks. Plus we cooked all our own meals over this time.

Food & drinks

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Delicious, cheap street meat

Food is such an important part of travelling to me, it’s the way I like to experience different cultures and I could never spend 8 months living on baked beans just to save money. That said, we’ve had far more homemade meals than bought ones.

In America/Canada:

Breakfast most mornings in the US was a bowl of oats, half a banana, some almonds and milk. Lunch was a roll with cheese, ham & tomato (or pastrami and sauerkraut when I finally cracked and couldn’t take cheese and ham anymore). Dinner is often a tofu sausage (those things are packed with protein, make you really full and are less gross than cheap meat sausages) and salad or vegetables. We’ve also made spaghetti bolognese, stir fries and chilli.  Sriracha goes on everything. Snacks are mostly fruit and muesli bars.

We often find a $US40 grocery shop lasts four days. That’s $US10 per day or $5US each for food. Yes it is a complete pain in the arse to maintain the esky/cooler, to keep buying ice and emptying the water and more than a few things have died in there. But the savings are well worth it.

When we do decide to splash out we take advantage of happy hour prices for food and drinks, we buy delicious food from food trucks and we use Yelp to find cheap restaurants.

In South America:

Cook your own food at the hostel! Or seek out cheap street food and market food, in La Paz we managed to eat for $5 a day. In Peru we had two course market lunches for $2.50. Even in the more expensive South American countries (Chile and Argentina), the supermarkets and street food is pretty damn cheap. Get used to eating empanadas everywhere!

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Homemade lunch at Malibu beach

CONSIDER THIS

Say in the US we filled up the car for $US40, camped for the night $US25, made our own meals $US10 and grabbed a treat like coffees or frozen yoghurts for $US15. That’s a total of $US85 (or 120 Australian dollars at the current exchange rate) for both of us and on a petrol day.

When you travel like this it’s actually cheaper than being at home paying rent, electricity/water/gas/phone bills, car repayments, insurance etc. Andrew has calculated that in a week living in Kalgoorlie he would spend over $300 a week on living costs, not including drinking (the pastime of choice in Kal) or eating out.

SPLURGING 

We have definitely splurged while we’ve been away. Tickets to see Taylor Swift (my birthday present, thanks Andrew!), the Argentine Experience, the camper-vanning in Chile, most of our meals in New Orleans etc. It’s fine to occasionally splash out and if you’ve been really tight with your money its affordable.

RECAP

Save as much money as you can before you go, stay in hostel dorm rooms/camp where possible, make your own meals as much as you can. The boring truth.

Some people aim to work while they’re away or volunteer but we haven’t done that yet. I have just started some freelance blogging though.

Happy travels! Are you planning a trip?

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Iguazu Falls, which side is better?

Brazil or Argentina? Argentina or Brazil?

Iguazu Falls (Iguazú Falls, Iguassu Falls, or Iguaçu Falls) is a collection of waterfalls from the Iguazu river on the Argentinian/Brazil border. The river flows mostly through Brazil, but the majority of the falls are in Argentina. You can view the falls from both sides, which begs the question; which side is better? Let’s take a look.

The Argentinian side:

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From the Argentinian side you can walk to many of the smaller individual falls and get up close to the raging waters.

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The biggest drawcard on this side is Paseo Garganta del Diablo, the Devil’s Throat, which is the highest and deepest part of the falls.

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There is a one kilometre walkway that takes you right to the edge of the falls. You can look over the edge as the water thunders dramatically around you. You can’t see to the bottom because of the mist.

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You can see rainbows though

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Impossible not to get other people in the shot

In another area of the park (which you get to with a frustratingly slow and infrequent train) there is the Bossetti Falls, where people go to get drenched by the falls.

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On the way to Bossetti Falls

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First glimpse

From the viewing platform people were completely drenched in seconds. An activity I opted out of.

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Andrew decided to get involved.

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Soaked.

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No pots of gold around here

Cut to the Brazilian side:

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I liked how on this side you could approach the falls from much further back and get the full perspective. Whereas on the Argentine side you couldn’t see the whole thing at once.

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More rainbows

It was a panoramic view and you could see just how massive the area is.

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The Brazilian side uses open air double decker buses as transport between the various areas in the park. Much more efficient than the Argentine side.

You can also get drenched on the Brazilian side:

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This area is near the bottom of the Devil’s Throat

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Trying to stay dry

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Conclusion: I preferred the Brazilian side, Andrew the Argentinian side. Try to do both if you can!

It was at Iguazu Falls that we crossed over into Brazil. We organised our visas on the Argentinian side at the Brazilian consulate, which takes 24 hours. Make sure you have a passport photo, the print out of your internet registration, a copy of your exit flight and bank balance.

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2015 – The year of travel

I’d be lying if I said 2015 was just another year. I quit my job, sold everything I own, said goodbye to my friends and family and home of three and a half years and took off on an adventure with my boyfriend of one year.

We took a leap into the unknown and so far, we have been duly rewarded.

I couldn’t name a highlight of the year, or even settle on 12. We’ve had so many amazing experiences, seen so many wonders. So here’s a photo from each glorious month. Happy New Year x

January

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Kangaroos on the beach at Lucky Bay in Esperance, Western Australia

February

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Sculpture on Lake Ballard, a salt lake in the West Australian Goldfields near where we lived.

March

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Visiting Perth to get our USA visas! Saw Sculptures by the Sea at Cottesloe Beach.

April

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My one year anniversary flowers from Andrew on April 2. We set off on our travels later that month.

May

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Our first stop on the big trip: Los Angeles

June

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Hiking near Mt Hood in Oregon

July

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Swimming in Revelstoke, Canada

August

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Among the giant buttes in Monument Valley, Utah/Arizona

September

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Enjoying beignets at Cafe du Monde in New Orleans

October

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Looking out over Machu Picchu having hiked the Inca Trail in Peru

November

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Hanging out on the Salt Flats in Bolivia

December

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Getting drenched on the Brazilian side of Igauzu Falls 

It was so difficult to stick to one photo per month. These barely scratch the surface of what has been achieved this year!

A big thanks to all the amazing people we’ve met on the road, friends and family back home whom we miss terribly and to you, for reading this. Having lovely people read my blog and leave comments makes my day. It makes my battles against lacklustre wifi connections totally worth it.

I hope 2016 is amazing for you. Now to go celebrate! It’s tradition in Brazil to ring in the New Year on the beach, wearing white and to jump over 7 waves for good luck. That’s where you’ll find me tonight.

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