My best friend is cool. I know a lot of people probably think that about their best friends (which is likely why they choose to be friends with them) but mine is unarguably really, really cool. In addition to being pretty cool, she also happens to be one of my favorite writers and story tellers, so today I thought I would introduce you to Beth of Fresh Air.
Two years ago, Beth quit her job as the Director of Alumni Relations at her alma mater to travel New Zealand. If you’re thinking this sounds like something only a rich girl can do… Beth will prove you wrong. She isn’t rich. She doesn’t come from old family money. She’s never worn a designer label. She is still paying off student loans. But one day, she woke up and realized she didn’t want the life she was living, so she made the decision to change it. She saved up her pennies and bought a ticket to New Zealand. After arriving she bought a car with the little money she had left and spent the next 6 months driving around New Zealand (the whole island) trading work for food and board through a program called Help Exchange. Some weeks peanut butter was a luxury, others she found herself surrounded by million dollar views. Her blog is full of fantastic stories about the experiences she had over there: sheering sheep, building mountain bike trails, even being asked to help someone poison bunnies (she cried).
She wanted to go… To experience a completely different culture. To work with her hands. To live fully. So she found a way to make it happen. After coming back to the states she took a retail job for another 6 months before taking off on a second adventure, again trading work for room and board across the United States.
Last week I spent Wanderland Wednesday writing about the semi-extravagant honeymoon that we are about to take (in less than one month!!), so today I wanted to feature a post she wrote recently about my favorite type of travel: budget traveling. I’m featuring the post here, but for anyone who wants to read more travel stories by one of my favorite chaco-wearing, backpack-sporting, ball cap covered, logophiles check Beth of Fresh Air.
On my drive from Moab, UT to Estes Park, CO, I saw a sign for Vail. I had seen photos of this town and had heard about the famous people who frequent it; I almost expected “Vail” to be written in diamonds on the road sign. I bipped my blinker and decided to use a fancy lodge’s restroom instead of a gas station’s.
Vail is nicely surrounded by huge mountains and they were covered in snow, pleasing the skiers zipping down. I drove past lodge after fancy lodge after extravagant lodge. I felt very less than. I felt dirty, like I hadn’t showered in days. I hadn’t brushed my hair in at least a week, because my brush was in my broken down car for the week in Grand Junction. I was wearing the same boots that hiked over forty miles in the desert and they were filthy. I got out of the car and scooped up some snow to put in my cooler so I wouldn’t have to buy a bag of 99 cent ice to cool down my V8s.
In this moment, I was struck with how different my way of traveling was from the family crossing the street with their skis and Louis Vuitton bags. I wondered how much a week at a lodge here would cost, so once to Estes Park, I looked it up:
5-star hotel averages $330
3-star hotel averages $230
To stay one week at a 3-star hotel in Vail, CO, it would cost $1610. Of course, you’d have to add the cost of activities like touring castles and riding in horse-drawn carriages and ice skating and skiing; and then food and beverages. I imagine it’d easily be between $3000-5000 for a week long trip, depending on taste in wine and frequency of room service matched with said wine.
The adventures I’ve taken, New Zealand and this US road trip, have been much different. I learned about help exchange and working a few hours a day for food and lodging, and it opened up a whole new outlook on traveling for me. I can make $2,000 last well over three months (with gas for 11,000 miles, the occasional local amber ale, the not-just-occasional Americano, and a meal out every once in a while). I know not everybody can spend months away from their homes and jobs. I chose to leave my job and I moved out of my apartment, so it has become a lifestyle instead of a vacation. If you are not thrilled with your current situation, I encourage you to look into help exchange here.
Here are pros and cons of help exchange for three months vs. one week in Vail, in my humble opinion:
Help exchange/staying with friends and family and friends of friends or family
PROS
Free housing.
Free food. And it’s so nice to try new things and expand your “go to” food list, like roasted beets with rosemary or pickled mussels.
More destinations. (This four month trip has taken me from FL to NC, OK, NM, AZ, CA, OR, WA, Orcas Island, ID, MT, UT, and CO!)
An extended adventure! So many possibilities. New people to meet. New mountains to climb.
Satisfaction of earning your keep for a few hours of work a day.
An average of a 15 hour work week instead of a 40 hour work week.
Variety. This is a huge bonus for me. Mondays are all different and that is thrilling.
Learning new skills. I never knew how to poach an egg! Or use an electric drill.
Sometimes you’re staying in a really stunning place, on a mountaintop or with a view like this:
Staying with local people perhaps provides more of a “genuine” experience while exploring a new town.
You get to stay a while and enjoy and not feel bad about taking a nap if you’re exhausted. You’re not wasting $230, you’re resting after working hard for three hours.
CONS
Sometimes you don’t want to pull weeds or clean gutters.
Living out of a suitcase for months at a time.
Being on somebody’s else schedule for part of the day (this can actually be a good thing as well).
Your $2000 will be gone in three months and you will most likely not be saving for retirement as you go. I have a couple part time jobs I can do on the road, but I am definitely not contributing to a 401(k) like I should.
Sometimes you’re staying in a place called “The Gorilla Hut” and the septic tank overflows:
Staying a week at a 3-star lodge in Vail
PROS
Being able to leave your shampoo and soap in the shower. Seriously, packing everything up after every shower is almost worth the $230.
Nice, comfortable things like bath robes.
Extravagance is downright extravagant.
Control. Freedom. A completely open itinerary.
CONS
It’s only one week.
You no longer have $2,000. (or $3,000…or $4,000… or………)
It’s only one week.
Days are most likely packed and you might be exhausted when you return home from “vacation”.
It’s only one week.
You only see Vail.
In 2013, I quit my job and bought a one-way ticket to Thailand. After four months of backpacking I returned to the States and fell in love with a guy whose job sent us straight back to Asia. Nothing has gone according to plan... and it's been absolutely magical.
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yay for New Zealand!! I love staying in hostels, I like the price and the social aspect! Since we have had kids we have done less of that (although when I took Eden to Seoul last year we went for a hostel, she loved it!) instead we opt for AirBnB (or similar) properties where we can rent a house/apartment for so much cheaper than a hotel yet, in our opinions we get so much more! I am also itching to try WWOOFERing!
I haven’t even heard of WWOOFER… must go check that out!
Great post! Your best friend does sound cool! I lived in NZ for a year on a backpacker budget and had the best time. Budget travelling is the best! :)
When traveling we always debate whether to stay in a hotel or friends/family/hostel like place. We’ve done both and it’s always seemed that staying at a hotel has one over the other. We like the convenience of unpacking and having an open schedule.
That’s how we are too… We go back and forth. If we are going on vacation- hotels FOR SURE. Long term traveling, we tend to go the budget route and find hostels. I’ve never done Help Exchange, but Beth has met so many cool people that I am interested in trying it someday.