around the world travel blog

Archive for the 'Trip Prep' Category

What is going on at TWBR?

Monday, June 16th, 2008

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

This post will remain at the top of the blog for the next couple of weeks, but to read the most recent posts, please just scroll down.

So the site says that I am in Denver, the trucks and rest of the crew are somewhere in Angola and blogs and content are sparse. For over a month we were all stuck in the Congo, as you are well aware from the blogs, we could not get visas for Angola.  Right now we are in the process of shipping the trucks to Buenos Aries and trying to raise funds for the South American segment of the expedition.

Since we were held up for so long, I had to fly back to the states from Pointe Noire, Congo, so that I would not miss my sisters wedding. Being forced to leave from such an odd place, it cost a tremendous amount of money to get me back to Denver. Where I am currently stuck… (more…)

Travel Advisories

Friday, April 11th, 2008

The US state Department does a pretty good job of issuing travel advisories. Travel advisories provide information to US citizens traveling abroad to let them know that either the area they are in may not be particularly safe or to make would be travelers to a particular region reconsider their plans to go there in the first place. The recommendations in these advisories range from telling people to be “vigilant and alert” to recommending against all “nonessential” travel to a particular country or region all together.

At the beginning of the expedition, we were paying fairly close attention to these travel advisories. Our proposed route around the world had us going through at least a dozen or so countries where the State Department had current travel advisories in place. I guess the travel advisories serve a useful purpose, but they also seem to give you a fairly negative impression of a place, especially if you are going there. When you read that there are terrorists operating in a certain country, active abductions and hostage takings, and the general potential for something bad to happen to you, it can start a vicious cycle of negative scenarios popping up in your mind and you can find yourself walking on eggshells when you could be enjoying the experience. Eventually, for better or worse, you start to take these travel advisories with a grain of salt.

Maybe the advisories have served their purpose by placing the possibility of something bad happening in our minds and subconsciously that affects our behavior in a certain country. To date, we have been through at least half a dozen countries on our trip with active travel warnings and about half the time, we are driving through the region of a particular country that directly applies to that advisory. Fortunately, we have had no problems whatsoever. In fact, we have felt quite safe in some of the places that have been issued particularly serious advisories.

We drove through the northern part of Mali where we were led to believe that Tuareg rebels were lying in wait, ready to ambush us on the road and kill us, and we passed through the Niger River Delta region in Nigeria where we thought it would be just a matter of time before we were kidnapped and held for ransom by militants there. Maybe we have been lucky. Maybe it is because we have our own vehicles and have more control over our movements than someone traveling on public transport. Who knows. Whatever the case may be, we actually felt pretty safe there and in Nigeria, we were treated with the utmost hospitality and even more so it seemed because we were Americans.

_DSC0272

We made lots of friends in the Niger River Delta States

To the credit of the State Department, I guess some of the areas we were traveling in were dangerous. One night in Nigeria, some security forces on patrol stopped by our campsite with AK-47’s at the ready. They found out what we were doing and suggested we follow them and camp in front of their headquarters where they could “ensure our safety.” I think they were going a little bit out of their way to make sure nothing happened to us, as the potential danger was not from rebels, but from local farmers hassling us because we were camping on their land. But at the same time, this was in a part of Nigeria that had no current travel advisory in place.

_DSC0249

There are more prominent risks to your health in some places than gun-totting rebels

I can sense that I am rambling here a little bit so I will get directly to the point. I do feel the State Department has an obligation to inform its citizens traveling abroad that there is the potential for danger. At the same time, I think the language in the advisory itself can sometimes be a little strong and does people a disservice. The bottom line is, use your head. Common sense can go a long way to ensuring your safety. (Maybe the State Department feels that citizens traveling abroad are total morons)

_DSC0205

Mark and Shoppman seem more concerned with what the street food will do to them…

By reading the travel advisories, you are meant to think that the rest of the world is this terribly dangerous place where people are lurking around every corner waiting to turn your trip into a total nightmare, and by traveling to these places, it will ensure that your photo is not only on your personal blog, but on CNN as well. Yes, there are dangerous places in the world and you would serve yourself well not to go for a roadside picnic in Somalia. But at the same time, I would also be wary of pitching a tent for the night in a park in East Oakland or taking a midnight stroll in parts of St. Louis, but you do not really see advisories on these domestic places where the homicide rates exceed those of some of the “conflict zones” we have been through.

New Timeline

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

For those of you that like to keep tabs on us and where we are, the timeline is now updated.  It should be generally accurate for the next couple of months and we will keep changing it as our schedule changes.  Click the link below to check it out.

Timeline

Help From the Home Front

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Planning our route through Africa has been quite an ordeal. We are pretty much always on the move so it is hard to keep tabs on what is going on in Africa, whether or not to pay any attention to what is going on in Africa and what sort of things we can expect to encounter and strive to avoid. The research - from border crossings to which roads are not mined to how much of a pain visas are… all of the information needed to successfully navigate our way south with as little problem as possible is a huge task. Unfortunately, we are not in a position to do as much research as we would like given our location and access to reliable internet, but luckily, we have some amazing people helping us out back home. I would like to send out a huge thank you specifically to Doug Tucker for all of his help in researching Africa. Doug not only researched the necessary things to help us better plan our route and to help us stay safe, but he also provided a lot of information about all the the fun and interesting things to see along the way. Based on the amount of information Doug compiled for us, I imagine he spent quite a few hours scouring the internet and other sources for things that can help us out. These are hours that we did not have, so thanks Doug for helping to give us a clearer picture of over-landing through Africa!

africa_map_detail

Goodbye Blue Tarp

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

As most of you are all aware, someone broke into the Sequoia in Kazakhstan and robbed us and in the process of the robbery, the rear passenger window was completely shattered. Since the break-in, we have been using a blue plastic tarp as a make-shift window and have been dealing with the added cold, noise and inconvenience of discovering new, tiny shards of glass pretty much on a daily basis. Having a tarp for a window also poses a little bit of a security concern and it has definitely contributed to some added stress levels from time to time. We have tried unsuccessfully on a couple occasions to get the window replaced but we did not have our hopes up too high knowing that finding replacement parts for a vehicle that is not sold or manufactured anywhere near where we were was going to be a long shot. We came close to finding a new window surprisingly enough in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, but alas it did not pan out. We tried again at the main Toyota dealership in Istanbul but again, most people at the dealership had not even heard of a Sequoia let alone seen one. Another option was to get a replacement window shipped out from the states, but since we are pretty much on the move all the time, we were finding it difficult to coordinate just exactly where to ship the window, who to ship it to and how to do it without spending a fortune.

Finally, two months after Little Pepe’s window was smashed out we were able to get it replaced. Our friend Lori laid the groundwork for us at a Toyota dealership in Prague, Czech Republic and when we arrived three days before Christmas, the boys at the dealership were waiting with a brand new, rear passenger window that even had the same color tint. It was quite an event at the dealership because according to the manager, they only see about two Sequoias per year and this was the first that was in the middle of an around the world expedition. The staff at the dealership were very helpful and within a few hours everything was fixed and fixed for a lot less than we had anticipated. So, many thanks to Robert and everyone else at Toyota in Prague… having a new window is a relief and now Swinger has an entourage.

PC210409

Toyota said they could help with the window but the mess and the smell is our problem

PC210419

You guys want this tarp back?

PC210424

Swinger’s new Toyota posse

PC210421

Group photo at Toyota Prague

world travel photography
America obviously has no influence here in Beijing

America obviously has no influence here in Beijing


around the world expedition
SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER

Check out the rough route plan.

Find out more about sponsoring the trip.



Please make sure to use these browsers and plugins to view our site.

Get Firefox!

Macromedia Flash Player


The World By Road - Around the World Travel Expedition is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).