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How to Take Great Travel Portraits

How to take great travel portraits. Photo by Carlos Davila Cepeda on Unsplash

Useful Tips for How to Take Great Travel Portraits

This is a Guest Post from Max Therry. 

Travel portraits can be evocative. Capturing the places you’ve been and the local people you meet can seem daunting to a beginner. Armed with the hints and tips in this article and a bit of practice, you’ll soon be taking travel portraits like a pro. [Read more…]

7 Tips for Choosing the Right Backpack

7 Tips for Choosing the Right Backpack 

As every experienced traveler knows, backpacks are the best choice of travel bag for getting off the beaten track. Suitcases are fine if you are just traveling to city destinations or beach resorts, and duffels are a trendy alternative for short trips. But for serious traveling nothing beats the flexibility of a backpack.

Whether you are buying your first backpack, or you are replacing one that has worn out, here are seven tips for choosing the right backpack to ensure that it serves you well and provides value for money. [Read more…]

Five Best Kept Secret Destinations in Asia

five best kept secret destinations in asia

We love visiting destinations in Asia that are outside the main tourist trail. Part of the beauty of travel is getting off the beaten path, meeting new people, and exploring places you may never have known existed. We are excited to bring you this guest post by Ivy Oliver about five best kept secret destinations in Asia.

Have you been to any of these places? We’ve only been to #3 (so far!), and missed #5 when we were in Singapore. Looks like we’ll just have to go back! [Read more…]

5 Simple Travel Photography Tips

five simple

Taking photos during your travels is a great way to capture the feeling of a place and remember the people and things that stood out to you during your trip.

In the past I was a picture taking fiend on our travels, but my shots were not well composed or really very nice to look back at, especially for family and friends I wanted to share them with.

[Read more…]

10 Key Phrases to Save You Money

Key phrases save money

Learn these key phrases in any language to enhance your experience with locals and save money during your travels.

[Read more…]

The Not So Sexy Side of Couples Travel

Not so Sexy Side ofIt’s a common misconception that couples traveling long term are on a big romp around the globe, swinging arm in arm in romantic settings and drinking beers at sunset.

While that’s mostly true, and is definitely what most of us post on our websites and social media, we must admit to you that that’s not always the case.

Long term travel and living abroad with your partner is amazing most of the time, but there are plenty of times when it’s not.

Especially when traveling on a tight budget, our travels can end up being the exact opposite of sexy and glamorous.

Such as…

[Read more…]

Tricks to Spend Less Money While You’re Traveling

These are our top tips to make your money go further in any country.

When you’re on the road long term you begin to see patterns in your spending. Daily costs like food, transport and lodging add up, but there are always ways to cut back.

[Read more…]

Travel Couple Advice: 7 Ways to Not Kill Each Other On the Road

7 Ways to

These tools have helped us stay sane as a travel couple spending 24/7 together.

[Read more…]

Why Slow Travel is Quality Travel

Over the years we’ve learned that the more time we spend in one place the deeper our connection to it becomes.

We love seeing beautiful places, meeting people different from us, trying local foods, and getting out of our comfort zone. That’s what travel is all about!

Unfortunately, travel can be expensive and quick whirlwind trips during vacations from work often left us exhausted and out of money as we tried to squeeze in absolutely everything we could into a short period of time.

Over the years we’ve learned that slow travel is more our style. It allows us to get to know a place well, develop relationships, and try even more food! We are also able to space out the things we want to do, and do more things off the beaten path.

In tracking our expenses, we’ve also learned that slow travel saves us money.

Here are our tips on slow travel and ways you can stretch your hard-earned cash and gain a deeper cultural insight by extending your stay in one place.

Get to Know a Place More Deeply

On the sunny surface of the beaten tourism path, you are shown a packaged version of what tourism companies and sometimes even the government want you to see. Yes, still do the “must-do” activities and see the “must-sees”. They are popular for a reason! However, once those things have been checked off of your list, there is always more to learn about and explore. Get off the beaten track and check out neighborhoods not recommended in guidebooks, talk with local people, eat at street stalls (the more popular they are with locals the better), or even volunteer somewhere. These are some good ways to find out about what is really going on in a country, the good and the bad. Those unique interactions are usually what stick out most to us when we look back at our travels.

Factory workers in Kampong Speu, Cambodia

We gained a new perspective on the lives of factory workers in rural Cambodia after meeting some women workers in the village where we lived for two months. We saw them go off to work every morning, standing in trucks all the way to their jobs, sometimes over an hour away. Most factory workers in Cambodia do 12+ hour shifts six days a week.

Have Unique Experiences

Traveling slowly has given us the opportunity to form relationships with local people and expats that we probably could not have done if we were only in a place for a few days. We have been invited to weddings, funerals, local festivals, and people’s homes to share meals. These are some of the most outstanding memories of our travels, and we feel so fortunate to have had these cultural experiences with new friends.

Cambodian wedding in the countryside

We were asked to be in our friend Chhorvy’s (center) wedding in the Cambodian countryside. We first met her when we were volunteering there as English teachers.

Eat Better Food, Usually for Cheaper

The longer you stay in one place and get to know the locals or long term expats there, the more tips and tricks you learn. One of the best things you can find out is where to eat delicious, inexpensive meals. When we breeze through a place in just a few days, it can be hard to figure this out. We have found we can cut our food budget down by a quarter or even half once we know where to find the good, cheap grub in town.

$4 fried rice (above) vs. $2 fried rice (below). Same stuff, just at local prices!

$4 fried rice (above) vs. $2 fried rice (below). Same stuff, just at local prices!

2014-05-15 11.01.34

Save On Drinking Water

We are water guzzling fiends! ABH-Always Be Hydrating is one of our many mottos. In a lot of Asian countries tap water isn’t safe to drink and the cost of bottled water quickly adds up. Instead, we buy big jugs. Water jugs that is! We either ask someone at our guesthouse for assistance or just walk around the neighborhood to find a store that sells them. Then we bring the jug to our room and refill our bottles as needed. This trick has saved us hundreds of dollars over the course of our travels and stopped us from accumulating so many plastic bottles.

Big jug-o-water!

This 18 liter jug cost $2.50 vs. $1 per 1-liter bottle. It’s a no brainer!

Save On Accommodation

When you first arrive at a place, it’s hard to know where to stay or if you’re getting a good rate. After a day or two staying in one area, we make sure to have a second look around at other accommodation options. Once we’ve found where we want to ‘set up camp’, we get to bargaining. A majority of hostels are willing to negotiate a lower rate the longer you plan to stay. We were able to get our beachfront guestroom in Otres Beach, Cambodia down from $12/night to $8/night because we planned to stay for a week. We ended up staying for nearly three! That savings really cut down on our living expenses for the month. If you plan to be in a place for a week or longer you can also look into renting an apartment.  Airbnb.com is a good place to start.

Wake up to the ocean

Not a bad view for $8/night.

Save on Activities and Transportation

During the first couple of days  in a new place we like to explore on foot. We take long walks around town, meet people, and get ideas on what there is to see and do. If we have specific ideas in mind for a place we want to go or activity we want to do, we try to gather information on different ways to make it happen. If we can avoid an overpriced tourist bus to somewhere by figuring out how to take local transport or renting a motorbike and going on our own we’ll try that out instead. This has saved us from being overcharged on numerous occasions and has lead to some interesting transportation experiences.

Taking a local share van out to the countryside in Cambodia cost $2.50 vs. $20 for a tuk tuk to the same place.

Taking a local share van out to the countryside in Cambodia. Cost: $2.50 vs. $20 for a tuk tuk to the same place.

Not only does slow travel end up saving us money, but by making a place our temporary home we get to know it more intimately. Don’t get us wrong, getting out and traveling for any length of time is fantastic! However, we’ve found over time that a slower traveling pace suits us.

Do you agree that slower travel leads to better experiences, or are shorter trips just as memorable?

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Stevo@twocantravel.com

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