Essential travel tips
Essential travel tips

5 Essential Travel Tips I Learned From A Blind Guy

I take my essential travel tips wherever I find them. I just finished reading one of the most fascinating travel biographies I have ever had the good fortune to come across. While planning my next trip as part of my documentary, a friend of mine recommended a book he described as essential reading. The book is A Sense of the World, by Jason Roberts, and I can now wholeheartedly recommend it to other travelers as well.

Essential travel tips
Take your essential travel tips wherever you find them as you traverse the world

I will warn you that this book has absolutely no information about the minutia of 21st century travel., but what can you expect when the subject of the book is a man who was born in 1786? James Holman is one of the world’s great travelers, though, and the fact there was no online booking system, no frequent flier program… hell, there wasn’t even a telegraph network when Holman first set out on his circumnavigation of the world… it hardly makes his essential travel tips any less essential, and should not dissuade you from absorbing this book into your travel planning. At the very least, make a few spare inches for it in your pack, or clear out a few megabytes on your Kindle and read it in your downtime.

You should also not let the fact that Holman was completely blind get in your way. After all, he didn’t.

If you are under any preconceptions that a blind traveler, a blind solo travelers has to be a joke, a myth or at the very least an exaggeration, the book goesto great lengths to document the fact that this was a man who not only broke down barriers, he broke them first. Holman accomplished feats as a traveler that were not duplicated by fully sighted expats until years afterward. We have to remember that in the mid nineteenth century, when Holman, blinded by what we would now call uveitis, his life had largely been considered over. His career as a naval leftenant in the Royal Navy had been cut short by the onset of his blindness, as well as almost crippling rheumatism.. This was a different era, to say the least. If we think it’s difficult to be blind today, it was remarkably difficult then. Braille had not yet been devised as a means of writing or reading. Blindness itself was still considered by many people a punishment from God for sins known and unknown. Even the invention of the long white cane did not happen until years after Holman’s death.

However, Holman had another disease that is familiar to many of us today, and I’m of course referring to the travel bug. Over the course of his life, Holman traveled unassisted, to more than 400 destinations around the world. He traveled alone through China, West Africa and Siberia, not knowing the languages of most of the regions he traveled through and having no access to anything resembling mass transit, let alone speedy travel, he was a best selling author who rode horses, navigated the jungles of  South America and once steered a sinking ship to shore.

Are there essential travel tips to learn from James Holman? Quite a bit, and the lessons apply to travelers of any age.

Essential travel tips from a blind traveler

1. Don’t let money stand in your way

This is one of those essential travel tips that should be timeless. Isn’t this the number one reason armchair travelers never leave the armchair? We want to travel in just the right way. We create meticulous budgets. We  calculate airfare and hotel room costs, exchange rates and shopping sprees. I would urge you to consider the fact James Holman’s annual salary was 84 British pounds per year. That’s roughly $12,000 a year in today’s U.S. dollars, not even what you would make with a minimum wage job. Holman, quite simply, did not have a lot of money.  What he had was an urge to travel the world

2. Figure it out as you go

Another problem that didn’t seem to bother the Blind Traveler, as Holman even called himself (it’s on his gravestone, so I’m pretty sure he was ok with it), was the details of the itinerary. I was surprised to read that when Holman set out for Russia and the Siberian interior, with the intent of crossing over to Mongolia and then China en route to the upper reaches of North America, he had no idea exactly how, or even if, he would get across the border. Balancing itinerary with random inspiration – it’s one of those essential travel tips that should always be on your mind.

Do yourself a favor – do your best to make sure you get started, and use a pencil instead of a pen for your plans. I’m not saying buying a one-way ticket or traveling without a map is always the best idea, but you don’t get a river named after you (as Holman did) by planning it in advance. Just sayin’…

3. Don’t be afraid of travel failure

That first circumnavigation attempt via Siberia? Kaput. Holman was forced by the Tsar himself to turn back. Tsar Alexander even sent one of his personal emissaries to fetch Holman and all but drag him back across Russia’s western border, thanks to efforts to conceal military activity near the eastern border in Kamchatka into what is now Alaska.  Holman’s response? In a slightly more modern vernacular, he picked himself up, dusted himself off… and figured out another way.

I’ve found over the years that the best travel stories don’t happen when everything goes right. Deadheading it across New Zealand in a driving rainstorm to catch the last ferry to the South Island all because we had to find out why central New Zealand farmers put up competing signs to sell you quality… excuse the earthiness here… pony poo? Worth it. Finding yourself in a backwoods hotel room with flickering electricity during an unexpected blizzard after you realize you left your snow chains in Astoria? It happens. Taking a bunk in a crowded Flagstaff hostel because it’s the only place with a mattress after you stroll into town late one January nigh? Well, you just might meet an Ingrid Bergman lookalike in the communal kitchen. And that’s as far as I’m going with that story, thank you very much.

4. Notice everything

I completely trust a blind guy for this advice. Holman missed every sunset, had to have every painting described to him and never read a foreign newspaper. I venture to say, though, he breathed in everything the world has to offer regardless. I wager it’s not that the other senses took over as much as he paid attention to them that much more. Holman’s books and notes are filled with references to descriptive passages of experiences so vivid, you’l be forgiven if you think they must have been experienced by someone else. How he learned to do this is something I want you to experience for yourself through reading the book.

5. Don’t let anyone say you can’t

Of all the essential travel tips that apply to the spirit of adventure, this is the biggie. It saddens me that the one consistency in Holman’s life, and it’s one of the few similarities between Holman’s time and our own, was a steady stream of people who told him he could not, should not, must not attempt his travels. however, I find it even more encouraging that there were a great many of his friends, colleagues and admirers who essentially said, “why not?” I think this is the one truism of any age, whether it’s the 19th or the 21st century. The people who say you can’t are usually the same people who say they wouldn’t. We travelers are the ones who say that we’re going to get up and get out.

Two weeks before writing this post, I had no idea who James Holma was. Today, he’s one of my great inspirations.

I invite you to read the book about Holman’s travels, and also to check out my web series to find out why I’m so inspired by Holman’s example.

Passport_Australia-1024x810
Renewing a passport

Renewing A Passport: How To Renew An Expired Passport Fast

Renewing a passport after its already expired, or renewing a passport on an expedited basis, is something I have an unfortunate amount of experience with.

Renewing a passport
It took some doing to get to the point where this stamp became part of my passport.

I would like to think of myself as a a very organized traveler. I would also like to think that blueberry Pop Tarts are a health food. However, as I found myself preparing for a production shoot in Australia and New Zealand as part of The Palette Project, I realized at the last minute, or very close to it, that my passport was not expiring in 2017, as I had thought, but had already expired a few months back. At that point, figuring out how to renew a passport as quickly as possible moved tot he from of the line on my to-do list.

Well, shame on me.

Thankfully, renewing passport is not difficult, even on an expedited basis. Yes I found myself having to deal with the twin troubles of Continue reading “Renewing A Passport: How To Renew An Expired Passport Fast”

Not a Router in Sight

Phoning it In, Part III: Using Wifi to Make Calls

Using wifi for making calls
We explored the outback for the route, not the routers. Good thing, too, because the wifi was in short supply.

When it comes to using your cell phone while traveling abroad, it’s hard to escape the feeling that you can’t win, that the cellular deck is stacked against you. Somewhere along the way, no matter what your strategy is, you’re going to face some sort of fee that makes you scratch your  head in wonder, amazement or just plain irritation. Is it the $18.95 per megabyte fee for international data? Is it the $4.99 per minute for international calls? Is it the one country not on your international calling plan that just happens to be the country to where you’re traveling? I’m looking at you Fiji. When I consider the machinations of international calling, I can’t help thinking of Joshua, the computer in the 1983 movie “Wargames.” “The only winning move is not to play.”

That’s not really an option. If you’re going to travel internationally, you are almost certainly Continue reading “Phoning it In, Part III: Using Wifi to Make Calls”

SIM City

Phoning It In, Part II: Using Cell Phones When Traveling Abroad

Using cell phones when traveling abroad
Using cell phones when traveling abroad… it starts with your SIM card.

I love my phone number, but using cell phones when traveling abroad tests my loyalty. I’ve had it since I moved to San Francisco five years ago, and much like the pride some New Yorkers have when it comes to their beloved 212 numbers, I was embarrassingly proud to snag one of the few remaining 415 area codes when I moved here. It is, to date, my longest running relationship.  Now that this area code is officially filled up and there are no more 415 area codes to grab, I can go to sleep at night, secure in the knowledge that my treasured 415 is mine, all mine. I plan to will it to my children.)

So when traveling overseas, the idea of not having that phone number as my point of access is somewhat jarring. However, using cell phones when traveling abroad is not negotiable, and budget is a major factorWhile shooting in Australia and New Zealand, I took my 415 with me, and it served me well. However, there were good reasons not to use this number, or even use my regular phone. When heading overseas, you as a traveler need to think about when the best option is not to use your own phone or your own number. Insisting on using your own phone in all circumstances can cost you hundreds or even thousands of dollars. In the prior post, I made the case for when to use your own phone… and now it’s time to talk about the flip side.

What this often means in terms of using cell phones when traveling abroad, of course, is Continue reading “Phoning It In, Part II: Using Cell Phones When Traveling Abroad”

Using Cellphones Overseas
Yes on Spectacular Scenery, No on Cellphone Service

Using Cell Phones Overseas: Phoning It In, Part I

Using cell phones overseas is much more complicated than it seems. The production itinerary for our current documentary

calls for us to be shooting in a total of six countries outside the United States. This is, by far, the most ambitious schedule I’ve ever put together. As of this writing, we’ve completed production in two of those countries – Australia and New Zealand – and I can tell you the most volatile line item on our budget was the cost of using cell phones overseas. However, I can also tell you this volatility did not have to be the case. Two  examples immediately spring to mind when it came to mistakes I made.

Using cell phones overseas
Choosing whether or not you will be using cell phones overseas, especially if it will be your own phone, is a big decision.

 

The first stumbling block hit us in the Australian outback at our hotel near King’s Canyon. If you’re heading into this part of the Northern Territory, you should be aware that Continue reading “Using Cell Phones Overseas: Phoning It In, Part I”