Apr 282014
 

When I planned this trip a few months ago, it was because I had United miles I wanted to use before they were devalued. The dates chosen were completely random, and seem to have worked out, because in less than a week I’m on my way.

It’s actually been a sign to me that something is different – I’m different. I just flung dates into the wind, found connections that looked reasonable and available, and booked. No planning, just doing, trusting that my instincts from now 155 countries visited would serve me well.

So, with the trip less than a week away now, I find myself feeling a bit strange about it. Why, I’m not entirely certain, but something about this feels different from all the trips I’ve taken in the past. I could be a long of things, from major ones, to trivial ones:

1)  Am I getting so close to “every country” that each new trip brings a feeling of completion?
2) This will be my first continent “completed” so is that a mile marker?
3) Is it that I’m flying so far away, but all in the same day with no overnights?
4) Is it the excitement to be somewhere Spanish-speaking again, knowing I’ll be forced to practice?
5) Is it that it’s my first time in South America solo? Without it being with friends/significant others/work?
6) Is it the excitement of new airlines and a complicated itinerary?

Regardless, it’s different…and that’s exciting. After this many countries, travel can still bring a sense of wonder: new places, new people, new experiences. Even after I’ve made it to every country, there will still be exciting experiences each time I visit a new place…be it Des Moines, Iowa, or Turkmenbashi, Turkmenistan.

It’s a big world out there…explore it!

Apr 232014
 

I’d been thinking about this trip for a long time. For about a year, I’ve had only two countries remaining to visit in South America, Bolivia and Ecuador. I’d always planned on doing it with American, but earlier this year when United seriously devalued miles I wanted to burn every last one. I started looking for weeks I could get away, and possible routings. Getting into La Paz and out of Quito were pretty easy, but getting between them was harder.

I could have done the easy thing and just buy it, but I had some more miles left, and United was giving me all sorts of exotic routings that would allow 23 hour connections in cities I hadn’t been to before. In the end, I decided on Medellin as it sounded the most interesting and exotic. I’ll admit, I didn’t do much research when putting this together. I had over 500,000 United miles to burn, and under a week to get things done, so I planned the in and out flights…and left the middle to chance a bit. That said, I leave in barely a week and still don’t have everything booked. It’ll all come together I suspect.

…any last minute “musts” or advice are certainly welcome.

The planned itinerary, and rough plans for this report:

Part I: Washington DC to La Paz, Bolivia on US Airways and Avianca (via Charlotte, Miami, Bogota)
Part II: La Paz, Bolivia
Part III: La Paz to Uyuni, Bolivia and the Hotel Luna Salada
Part IV: Salar de Uyuni – the Salt Flats
Part V: Uyuni to La Paz, and daytrip to Lake Titicaca
Part VI: La Paz to Medellin, Colombia on TACA Peru (via Lima)
Part VII: Short Stay in Medellin
Part VIII: Medellin to Quito, Ecuador on Aero Republica and COPA (via Panama)
Part IX: Quito, Ecuador
Part X: Quito to Washington DC on COPA and US Airways (via Panama, Cancun, and Philadelphia)

Routing:

map

I promise this won’t be one of those post and run trip reports….it’ll go live in just over a week with the first update! I also can’t resist sharing, as a teaser, the BIG trip I’m planning in October/November. Suiffice to say with a trip report name like “From Bula to Shalom!” I hope it will be epic…four weeks in the south pacific, a couple days in DC for laundry, and then Israel and Palestine.