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11 votes
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Nick Offerman’s annual family trip was always to the same lake in Minnesota, where he was taught things that really matter
25 votes -
Where Heaven and Earth come closer
2 votes -
When Leo Babler was born with a deadly genetic disorder his parents built an adventure van, and made sure their son experienced the most beautiful wild places in the country during the time they had
4 votes -
Closed for maintenance – how the Faroe Islands shook up the voluntourism game
4 votes -
Why a gang of Spanish grannies covered an entire street in woolly blankets
4 votes -
Overnight in the most remote camp on Earth
4 votes -
For those living in a different country than they grew up in, what's it like?
In the discussion "Does the internet feel American centric to you?", various people mentioned living in different countries. In particular @Adys mentioned living in 5 different European countries...
In the discussion "Does the internet feel American centric to you?", various people mentioned living in different countries. In particular @Adys mentioned living in 5 different European countries and offered to give advice to those who are interested in moving to another country. I'd love to hear what the challenges are, and in particular how you get the courage to speak to native speakers in a language you don't speak very well.
For me, my spouse and I are considering (someday) buying property in Greece. Her family is of Greek descent, though she was born and grew up in the states. We're both learning Greek now and hope that in the future we can get back there and possibly even have a vacation home there one day. She has relatives who have homes there and in the states.
16 votes -
Midway in the journey of our life I found myself moving to Spain
Gee
22 votes -
Farewell, millennial lifestyle subsidy
19 votes -
Silent whale watching on Iceland's first electric boat tour – a carbon-neutral tour off Húsavík makes for a greener, more peaceful experience for visitors and sea creatures
10 votes -
I'm moving between apartments soon. Do you have any advice or protips on the logistics of moving?
I've moved plenty of times before, but I've been in my current place for 4 years, which is fairly long for me - most of my adult life I've moved every 1 or 2 years. As a result, I'm sure I've...
I've moved plenty of times before, but I've been in my current place for 4 years, which is fairly long for me - most of my adult life I've moved every 1 or 2 years. As a result, I'm sure I've forgotten a lot of the "small but important things" about moving, and I've also gotten more settled into this apartment than any previous one I've lived in.
Details, if they matter:
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This is a relatively short move (within the same city, about a 15 minute drive)
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I'm going to be doing all the packing myself, moving small and/or fragile stuff myself, then hiring a moving company for the big stuff (couch, bed, TV, etc) because I don't want to put any of my friends in the position of feeling obligated to come help me move during a pandemic.
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I've hired movers before, but only for a cross-country move. This will be my first time having a moving company for just an in-town move
I found a previous thread about moving, but it was about adjusting to life in a cross-country move. I'm more interested in the logistics of how to make the move itself go smoothly.
22 votes -
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What a songbird lost at sea taught me about survival
7 votes -
Where would you live if you had no ties to where you are now?
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a...
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a year like we've just had.
For me, the difficulty has always been figuring out where to go: politics/climate/healthcare/lifestyle/language are a delicate balancing act, and I don't think anywhere's a slam dunk. Everyone's going to have their own take on what perfect looks like, and what compromises to make mapping that to the real world!
So let's assume you're packed and ready to go, nothing holding you back. You've still got to navigate inbound immigration, handle the language, find a job, all that good stuff - but the world is your oyster. Where would you choose to go?
16 votes -
Do any other US citizens think of emigrating?
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past...
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past year and a half.
What factors motivate you to move?
What would be an ideal location for you?
What timeline would are you looking at?One of the main motivators I seek to emmigrate is climate change. As the world continues to progress and evolve I do not think the United States will be able to equitabbly address the changing landscape and ways of life. As for when I would want to move, I'm not sure; currently it seems like a far off probability, but I know it's a choice I will have to make in my own lifetime.
33 votes -
Millions of jobs probably aren’t coming back, even after the pandemic ends
16 votes -
Christmas in danger as Santa's Lapland home feels pandemic chill – flocks of tourists who usually start to make merry in Rovaniemi at this time of year cannot enter the country
5 votes -
I’m moving across the country in a few days
I’m moving from the Midwest to California on Tuesday to start graduate school (I’ve been in an post-baccalaureate research position for the last two years). I’ve been so busy packing and making...
I’m moving from the Midwest to California on Tuesday to start graduate school (I’ve been in an post-baccalaureate research position for the last two years). I’ve been so busy packing and making sure I see friends that I think it hasn’t truly hit me yet. I’ve lived around Chicago my whole life, even during college, so I suppose I’m a bit nervous about the change of location and being so far from friends and family. I’m incredibly excited of course to begin this new phase, but nervous nonetheless.
Have any of you all ever had big moves in the past? Any advice for settling in a new locale?
14 votes -
Swedes have long embraced their version of staycations: hemester – Covid-19 travel restrictions and remote working are reshaping the tradition
6 votes -
Let's window shop for French fairytale homes
9 votes -
How New Zealand became an apocalypse escape destination for Americans
8 votes -
One woman, four men bound for the remote Arctic archipelago of Svalbard on a four-month expedition that covered more than 4,500 miles
5 votes -
Check in but never leave: Taiwan offers fake flights for travel-starved tourists
5 votes -
Thirteen virtual festivals and events this summer
5 votes -
Inside the nightmare voyage of the Diamond Princess
6 votes -
Control your Faroe Islands tour guide – the country is attaching cameras to tour guides and letting the internet control where they go
8 votes -
Quarantined by coronavirus, cruise ship passengers make 'life-long friends'
10 votes -
Moving out tips
I'm moving out: in the coming weeks I'll move to an apartment in Ankara, Turkey. This is the first time I'll have a home of my own, and the first time I live in an apartment as opposed to our...
I'm moving out: in the coming weeks I'll move to an apartment in Ankara, Turkey. This is the first time I'll have a home of my own, and the first time I live in an apartment as opposed to our detached family home. I wonder if any of you have tips for a 25yo master's student moving out and changing city!
31 votes -
The fall of Prague: ‘Drunk tourists are acting like they’ve conquered our city’
15 votes -
Wonderful Copenhagen was set up to bring more tourists to the Danish capital – now it's under fire for doing too little to stop them coming
5 votes -
Over-tourism and photo-seekers have been damaging the world's most beautiful places, and even causing some to close to visitors entirely
11 votes -
Murder in the Moroccan mountains: The fragility of the adventure travel economy and what happens when a small tourist hub is shocked by violence
7 votes -
Wherever you are, there’s a state park nearby
13 votes -
‘It’s getting like Disneyland’: Bruges pulls up drawbridge on tourists
13 votes -
I'm the only Australian living in North Korea. Let me tell you about it
12 votes -
How Airbnb took over the world
6 votes -
Who killed Tulum, Mexico? Greed, gringos, diesel, drugs, shamans, seaweed, and a disco ball in the jungle
7 votes -
Machu Picchu now wheelchair accessible
9 votes -
The backlash against overtourism
13 votes -
What are five small things you'd want to know about a place before moving there?
Obviously there are huge things to think about, like cost of living, housing, healthcare, job market, traffic, segregation, weather, pollution, internet speed etc. etc. etc., but what kind of...
Obviously there are huge things to think about, like cost of living, housing, healthcare, job market, traffic, segregation, weather, pollution, internet speed etc. etc. etc., but what kind of small details would pop up in your head when considering living in an unfamiliar place? With so much of our lives taking place online, what do you actually want out of the physical space around you?
I think for me it'd be something like this:
- What kinds of third places are used? I'm not big on bars/drinking, so I'd want to know if there was an active coffee shop scene, or public space that's actually used, etc. Bonus points if dogs are present.
- Are there a variety of grocery stores/markets? This is one of the things that keeps me from considering moving back to a small town after living in a city for a while. I love to cook, and being able to buy things outside of big box grocery norm (without going to Amazon for everything) is important to me.
- Are there locally owned book stores? Definitely not a must have, but browsing a book store (especially one that has used books and has that old book smell is therapeutic to me.
- What kinds of local produce can be grown? Will I get good stuff at the farmer's market, or will there be good local cider? Pretty much everywhere except Las Vegas can grow something, I'd just want to know what specifically is grown there.
- What kinds of public events are held there? Conventions, market days, book/art festivals, etc. While I might only go to a small subset of these, those events speak a lot to the character of a place.
22 votes -
The humans of Palestine
6 votes -
Traveling the world on a third world passport
4 votes -
Overtourism: A growing global problem
21 votes -
The untold story of Otto Warmbier, American hostage
3 votes -
Cruises are so uncool they are cool
6 votes -
A warning to those visiting Auschwitz
8 votes -
Inside the world's largest (5.5M m², 7km long) wholesale market in Yiwu, China
4 votes