The Route

See you in February...

It's been a long time coming but finally I've made a commitment to take in more of the world. From August 2014 until February 2015 I am visiting some of our planet's well known and lesser known places - and all just before I reach the big three zero.

Having been something I always did hope to do 'in my twenties' - and with time running out - I've been lucky enough to agree a sabbatical as Senior Transport Planner at Paul Basham Associates.

So, I'm putting my life in Fareham on hold for 5 months. I'm leaving behind an excellent new team at work and putting the brilliant new Panjazz International Samba group in the capable hands of my project friends. I will be saying bye for now to my parents, family and friends - all for the unknown and in the name of life experience.

For the first 3 months I am joining up with my brother Chris who lives in Lesotho, southern Africa, to volunteer with youth development project Kick4Life. I know I'm not going to save the world and I won't find this an easy experience. But hopefully I can only mainly help around the place, applying skills picked up over the past few years as I assist in the office and also help co-ordinate two tour groups from the UK.

From December 1st I'll be spending 2 weeks hopefully helping Panjazz International with its efforts in South Africa. From here I'll be heading for India (via Dubai) which will include the lagoons of Kerala, Christmas day at the Taj Mahal and a view out to The Himilayas in Nepal.

After I look at Everest I'll become a Malaysian Airlines passenger and hopefully reach Hong Kong before hitting the rails to Shanghai and Beijing. After a couple of weeks it's off to the US, taking in the east coast from Washington to Boston.

Finally, all fingers and toes crossed, I will be reaching Iceland, spending a few days taking in life as a twenty-something while looking up at the northern lights...

Well, that's the plan. Flights are booked. Blogging about this experience has been a dilemma. I doubt it will be too frequent and is unlikely to reveal my inner most thoughts. At the least (mum) there is a helpful map so you can see where I am! Of course I'll be in touch anyway...

I hope to come back a more decisive, assertive and patient person. Hopefully I'll see more good, more often, in more people. I hope I'll be more relaxed but slightly less a soft touch, maybe. I hope to feel good about 'Development' and have only mainly helped and not hindered those involved. I hope to survive India in one piece, successfully get through China and still have some money left by the time I get to the US. I hope during the last 3 days in Iceland I can look back on what was a good decision. Having completed 30 stops altogether, I hope to hit Heathrow ready to rejoin a great workforce with thriving graduates, a music project with a large Samba band and committed leaders, a busy steel band, and my family and friends.

Hopefully I'll come back ready to knuckle down with life in the UK. Who knows, by the time I'm 30 I may even think about settling down...

Thank you to everyone who has helped make this dream a reality for me and putting up with any of the frustrations that it's caused. I will miss you.

Andy




Wednesday 27 August 2014

Prep Done - I really could do with an Ice Bucket!

Ever since the decision was made to talk to my boss about the possibility of travelling, life has taken quite an exciting, unpredictable and humbling direction. I guess that's exactly what I was looking for. Squeezing the last remaining items in to what will be my life for the next 5 months, tonight the final bag packing has completed months of decision making, researching, purchases and goodbyes - all before I've even got to Gatwick Airport. 

The questions in conversation have started to become familiar; how are you feeling? Where are you going? Aren't you scared doing this on your own? Advice has been valuable; Don't eat meat in India, buy a water filter - you can survive on naan bread but not without water. Stick to street food in China. Keep in touch, have fun, try and follow your heart more, take every opportunity, don't miss experiences (put it on the credit card). Some hostels are good, some not so. Become more cynical, travel light, don't drop the ball, plan carefully and turn up on time. Don't forget your passport. Or your phone. Or your wallet. And comments have been reassuring; You seem more relaxed these days. This is definitely a good idea - and before you have any real commitments.


As I reel off the itinerary, acknowledging that it's a bit of a whistlestop tour and that I haven't got a clue what to expect, I strangely do actually find myself looking forward to coming back already and getting stuck back into life here...finding a place of my own probably back in Portsmouth, re-joining the music project and work colleagues, buying a new bike and cycling to work often, maybe taking up canoeing (!), focusing on the career more and also taking more frequent but smaller trips abroad. 

Feeling like this, I think, has been possible especially because of the experiences over the past few weeks and months with those people who were part of this, including workmates and boss, friends in the music project, housemates at 2 The Heights, old uni course and house mates and old group of Portchester mates. 

So a process which started with some emails to STA and buying a Lonely Planet India book and then went on to confirming an Itinerary, booking flights, breaking the news at work, taking injections, organising the Indian visa, budgeting, putting together a first aid kit, finding an MP3 player, moving out, storing my life in the back of my car, buying travel insurance, and a last minute rush today for new footwear and a water filter (while visiting nan in her new Southsea care home, talking to a chirpy grandad on the phone, stopping by the music project co-ordinators' house and having my last meal with mum and dad)...has nearly finished. 


Me and 'PBA Bear' knocked out at
The Heights 'Sausage & Sangria' Leaving Party due
to all the travel prep...and Sangria.  
The decision making and spending will no doubt continue. Apart from that I don't know what to expect; excited on the plane, yes. Nervous about meeting the new people in Lesotho, yes. But definitely inspired by the organisations new website as they now move to become the world's first Football Club designed for bringing about social change and sustainable livelihoods. Then there's the small matter of South Africa, Dubai, India, Hong Kong, China, USA, Iceland (where I hope to meet up with my old uni housemates for the last leg)...

Next time I write I will hopefully have arrived safe and well in Lesotho. Take care everyone and please keep in touch via email, skype or mobile (as I try to stay off Facebook where possible - will the Ice bucket challenge still be going in February?!).


My Contribution to the 'Ice Bucket Challenge'
 (just for my own looking back purposes later on...)

Thank you for all the support, advice and friendship felt especially over the last few months. It's a been an experience - now lets get the travelling bit started! 

Andy