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<abbr>Polish beer´s last blog post..Beer News @ All Beer Blog</abbr>
<abbr>Fly Girl´s last blog post..Afro Cuban Azucar (CD/DVD Giveaway)</abbr>
Costa Rica, for example. There are many places - 'must-see' places - that you did not get to (Corcovado, Pavones (for surfing), Arenal, Tortuguerro, etc, etc, etc).
Then, each place - each village or pointbreak or jungle - they each have a rhythym of their own. They change hourly with the tides, daily with the weather, and seasonally with the climate. There are weekends and workdays, holidays and festivals to attend - there are peak swell seasons...
Given unlimited resources - I would barely be able to see a fraction of what the world has to offer... and that is the euphoria of traveling (or tragedy - depending on your viewpoint).
And if you're 'novelty-threshhold' is no longer satisfied after a couple weeks - befriend more local people, chase more waves - every one of both of those are unique!
So, I hope that this doesn't sound like a lecture - I am appreciating reading about your travels while I program away... and save up for my turn to escape...
I'm a different type of traveler I guess, and the old me would agree to what you said - the excitement and freshness of that first encounter with a city/country would always be IT. It would never get more exciting than that first time.
But no I was wrong, revisiting Amsterdam, going back to the coffeeshop I'd fallen in love with the first time, discovering a new ice-skating rink and seeing the city from a different perspective. It felt like a rendezvous with an old lover - even feisty than the first time.
<abbr>Bens Backpacking Travel Blog´s last blog post..Brooklyn Bridge , Walk, Eat Pizza and Ice Cream</abbr>
Nice post. And the accompanying photo is really good, too! ^_^
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The idea of going to Costa Rica doesn't excite me but the idea of volunteering on a sustainable farm does. Peru seems like an interesting place and obviously has Machu Picchu but what really interests me is the opportunity to work witha group striving to rebuild Pisco, bit by bit. Northern Nicaragua and El Salvador seem interesting enough... but how much better would it be doing the journey north on shitty bikes with a crazy friend of mine?
So when the excitement of travel for the sake of travel runs out and all of your dream destinations have been tapped, be creative, look for the 'do' rather than the 'where' and that's when things will really start to get interesting.
<abbr>mauie´s last blog post..Might Not Be Too Late for Bora (or winning a 1000-peso gift voucher to your fave resto)</abbr>
Go deeper, stay longer. Just because you are a little more familiar with a place, does not mean you "know" it. Some travelers return to places they love over and over and over. Just like sex, it is not always best, the very first time. Sometimes the luxury of time adds an element to travel that compares to how true love over time is far superior in value to a quick infatuation.
As you say yourself you've "burned through" many places & as sumdumsurfer mentions you did not even see many of the must see's in Costa Rica. Countries are not places to just cross off ones list, but always ripe for deeper and deeper explorations time and time again.(Not that there is necessarily anything wrong with burning through or missing places, but just trying to show a different perspective.)
There are always new things to explore and learn, even with places that we know well. I am always amazed at what incredible and delightful discoveries I have made in areas where I have lived for years. No place is ever "done".
I can not tell you how many times over the last 30 years that I have been to Paris and London, yet, I never go without discovering brand new things. On one level I know them well, yet in others, I do not know them at all. These last times, I have introduced them to my young daughter, which gave them a whole new meaning.
We are into our 3rd year of our world tour and have traveled to 4 continents, 29 countries & over 76,000 miles ( mostly over land and mostly in Europe). We have added another year on because there is just so much to see. I could spend decades just in Spain and not see it all!
We have spent more time in Spain than any other country since we have wintered in the same tiny 15th century village for that last 3 years. We certainly know Spain better than most travelers will ever know it ( including regions like Galicia & Asturias which most American's never see). We have seen more than most Spaniards. But I do not feel "done" with Spain, or Andlalusia or even my small village.
I could spend decades just exploring all the fabulous nooks, crannies, villages and beaches of Andalusia and not see or know it all. This was our 3rd year of participating in many of the festivals and I continue to delight in seeing them in new ways.
The more we travel, the more we see, the bigger I find the world. It feels frustrating to me that we can not see all of Europe. That there is no way in a lifetime that we could see it all. I have traveled for 6 months around the U.S & been to almost every state and feel the same about America. I have been all over the former USSR ( way more than most will ever see) and feel the same there too.
Every winter when we come back to "our village" it is new. We have changed and it has changed during the time apart. No, we will never have that "virginal" first sight, but so what, it is still exciting and new in a different way.
No, the world is not shrinking, you are growing, shifting, changing. Fear not, that will continue and the world will always be oh so much bigger.
<abbr>Soultravelers3´s last blog post..Family Travel Photo-Happy Earth Day!</abbr>
The first day you enter a new city is frightening and thrilling all at the same time. All the stories of being robbed, how beautiful the architecture is and how exciting it is to truly know nothing except what you read from a book are all thoughts that fight to crowd your mind. Given a few days, you start to feel like this is a new home, the people are now less alien and you know by heart the exchange rate.
Most of Eva and my trips feel like a whirlwind and having a year to travel seems actually even more hectic, like we are trying to pack as much of the world into our year as we can, without a day to relax. Its a sort of panic of gluttony to live. This I think is connected to what you said about the "quality problem." We either fear we will never get this chance again, to busy and broke, or dreaming I can find a way to never stop but fearing it will never be the same.
Somehow though, I think I am just scratching the surface of each local. Like some kind of fear of relationship, we run before we really get to know what is there. Even a month in Mexico does not make me a mexican. I have met people who have traveled their whole lives and have never run out of space so maybe I can stick it out a little longer in the future and see where this relationship is going.
<abbr>Jeremy Rees´s last blog post..The Road We More Or Less Traveled In Mexico</abbr>
Don't despair about running out of places. It can be exciting to go back to a place and see how it has changed or see it from a different point in your life. "No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man."
Unfortunately, shrinking world is also evident in the rapid spread of the swine flu infection... :(
I'm celebrating 100th post in in my travel blog though it's much lesser than I would have planned. Feel free to drop by and comment on your link to travel Feeder. Cheers!
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