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Italy – Part 2

Italy – Part 2

Rome, Amalfi Coast & Cinque Terre

 

The day before we were due to leave the east coast I realised I was a day ahead of myself and wasn’t supposed to be arriving in Rome on a Thursday, it was meant to be a Friday! Eeek! No accommodation was booked. A quick look on Airbnb and we found a perfect place halfway between the east and west coasts. On the way there Little R spied a beautiful old town out her window about 5 minutes away from our apartment. It was called Spello, we enjoyed exploring its alleyways which were so beautifully dressed with flower pots.

The following (correct) day it was off to Rome. Our friends from London flew out again to see us. They had booked an apartment about 500 meters away from the Vatican for us to stay in and Rouge (our car) got emptied out and parked on the road for a few days rest. The next day it was up early to join the queue for St Peter’s Basilica. BK and I hadn’t seen it last time we were in Rome. The queue moved very quickly and we were inside within 15 minutes. It was an amazing and very expensive looking church! Wee R was hopeful to see ‘Pope’ but it wasn’t to be. However while we were in there they opened up the basement so we saw the tombs of past popes. BK took R home, leaving our friends, C and I to climb the dome. Amazing views of the city. I purchased some postcards to send to some friends for their birthdays this month, then it was back to the apartment for a rest.

The next day we hauled ourselves out of the apartment at 7.30am to bus to the Colosseum. It was free that day (see my tip below) and evvvvvveryone was there, the queue was at least 2/3rds of the way around the base. Disheartened we decided to not go in, but to see if the Roman Forum was having a free entry day too. When our friend went to ask, she was scooted to the front of the queue, got us the 6 free tickets we wanted and managed to score us an extra special skip the line pass for the Colosseum, she’s 8 months pregnant soooo it obviously has its perks! So we happily walked back to the Colosseum where a man took our tickets and escorted us past the normal queue, past the skip the line queue and right up to security. High fives all round. We enjoyed an hour wandering around. Apparently back in its prime it used to seat 50,000–80,000 people, wow! After that it was through the Roman Forum, past the Trevi Fountain, up and down the Spanish Steps and lunch at pizzeria, a quick visit to the Pantheon, then home to our apartment for a well deserved nap! 20,000+ steps that day. After two very full days it was goodbye to our friends, we’ll see them again in London after their baby has arrived.

Top tip – if it’s a free day (first Sunday of every month) go really early or line up and see if you can get a skip the line ticket by the entrance to the Roman Forum, the ticket allows entry to both.

On the way to Naples in the rain, we had our first motorway issue. The toll machine wouldn’t give us a ticket! With the barrier arm still open from the car in front of us and traffic behind us we drove onto the motorway with no ticket so when we got off it was a bit of a drama using google translate to tell the person in the toll booth where we got on so could pay the correct toll, then he gave us a fine for €96 and directed us to ‘punto blue’ so we turned up with our fine and our google translate again trying to explain ‘YOUR MACHINE WOULDN’T GIVE US A TICKET WE SHOULDN’T BE PAYING A FINE!!!’ He understood and canceled our fine and we were on our way.

Due to us being so exhausted from the driving, the big weekend in Rome and the rain we spent the first day resting, which meant we didn’t see central Naples. The following day was perfectly blue skies and we headed off to the stunning Amalfi Coast! Wow! Wow for two reasons, the scenery which was amazing but also driving the road there which was quite the challenge, it took both mine and BK’s full attention in parts. We were glad Rouge was so little, and at one point a car got so close to us the GPS started screaming because the car were too close to the sensors on our bumper. Ugh. Anyway we got there and enjoyed a walk at one of the little villages called Maiori and pizza for lunch on the outskirts of Sorrento. A quick look at Pompei then back home to pack and start the 2000km drive north.

Our first stop heading north was Florence to meet up with my Aunty and Uncle who’d brought a few things over for us. It was lovely to see some familiar faces. Thank you Aunty and Uncle! Unfortunately while in Florence we drove into a restricted traffic zone and think we’ve got ourselves yet another fine! I’ve emailed Peugeot to tell them.

Next stop was Cinque Terre. A set of 5 beautiful seaside villages. We had arranged last year to meet up with some friends from home. We started early and went to the furthest away village of Monterosso. We had a focaccia snack while walking around. We then met our friends in Vernazza where we had another focaccia snack and all the kids found the sand and had a wonderful time. We pushed on to the next one Corniglia and had drinks before meeting with our friends again in Manarola for gelato. We were going to keep going on to the last village, Riomaggiore, but when the train stopped we couldn’t face anymore walking so we skipped it. We got back to Rouge and found we’d gotten ourselves yet another fine! We hadn’t parked in a proper car space as we’d just followed everyone else’s idea of parking on the kerb.

It was a stay in your PJs all day kinda day the next day. Totally exhausted from moving so fast through Italy. Laundry, school and naps 💤

So that was Italy. It’s been nice to see some different bits of the country BUT I will not miss the roads.

I also won’t miss some of the citizens who seemed to have an ‘I’m better than you, get out of my way’ attitude but the beauty and history will always bring me back. Next time it’s your lakes and islands!

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

Budget update :

Italy : $1684 under

Total budget : $2912 under

#nailingit 😎

Italy – Part 1

Italy – Part 1

Venice and San Marino

 

Last time BK and I were in Europe a highlight of ours was Venice, we visited in November on my 25th birthday. So I was looking forward to returning but didn’t want the same kind of trip repeated. At least it was going to be warmer this time!

 

We decided to stay out at an outlying beach area. Then got an all day pass on the ferries and spent a lot of time out on the water. The first day we stuck around our apartment, did a beach walk, a look at some shops, and that ever pesky school work!

 

The following day we set out on a ferry toward Murano, the island known for glass blowing, we went via Burano, the one known for lace making but didn’t stop there. We found a glass factory and got a booking time to go back and see the glass master in action. There was still a bit of time until then and lunch time was approaching so we found a park, the kids had a play and I prepared some sandwiches we’d brought along. As we sat and ate I realised this was not a park, there were bags, and classrooms…it was a school! Whoops! So it was a quick walk to somewhere else followed by lunch.

 

The glass master was amazing, he’d been an apprentice for 10 years and then a master for 30. Talk about a life career! He made a glass apple, vase and horse in front of us. The furnace was cranking at 1100 degrees! Hot! We had a lady explaining things to us, she swapped between English, Italian and French speaking all of them fluently, she later told me she also spoke a bit of Venetian too! Wow!! Of course on the way out I found a glass Christmas decoration so that’s another one to add to the collection! 😃

 

Then it was off to the main Venice island, which was a quick ferry ride via the cemetery island, we did not get off! We walked from one side of the island to St Marco’s square on the other We managed to get lost on our way to St Marco’s as we lost the signs pointing that way to go but we carried on, however trying to find your own way in Venice never works because you always seem to end up down an alleyway facing a canal with no bridge to cross. So we retraced our steps and refound the signs to carry on! Gelato helped our situation 😎

 

Making the most of our 1 day pass we chose a ferry that does a loop through the grand canal. It was good to sit on the back of the boat enjoying the sights rather than walking it, though I did walk 18k steps that day!! After that we tried to find a toilet but at a cost of €1.50 each to use it we held on till we got home!

A long but great day. We didn’t do the famous gondola ride, because at €80 for a 30 minute ride we decided ‘Nah, we’ve done one before, the kids can do it when they’re older’.

 

The following day was a rest day, no one felt like walking anywhere! So school work, laundry, supermarket and sandcastle building on the beach it was.

 

See you again Venice, I wonder if it will it be another 10 years?

 

It was then off down the east coast of Italy, can’t say much about the east coast beaches, they were pretty average. I also seemed to get us an Airbnb which was not close to anything interesting so we had lots of rest. One of the days we went for a drive an hour northwest of where were staying to a mini country called San Marino.

We went early, as we’ve learnt that’s the thing to do! We got a park by the gondola and went up into the old town. It seemed to us that it may have been tax free country as there were lots of duty free type items, and guns!?

We walked around, ate lunch at a restaurant…pizza 😄 Talked to a couple of Swiss cyclists who were having a long weekend cycling around the area, we told them what we were doing and all of a sudden we had a captive audience of everyone sitting around us (who all of a sudden could understand English 🙄) they, like 99% of people we have encountered thought it was an awesome idea and what great parents we were (ego boost ✔️ haaaa!) and lucky LUCKY kids.

I found a Christmas shop which had signs ‘no photos’ plastered everywhere and also bought my first Christmas gift. Then it was back to the apartment to work out how on earth I was going to keep the present in good condition while we finished off our 4 months left in Europe! Hmm.

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

Budget update will come on the next blog 😎

 

3 months on the road

3 months on the road

Must be time for a summary!
Sleeping

Number of beds slept in = 22

Best bed – Ho Chi Minh City

Worst bed – Hong Kong

 

Flying

Number of flights flown = 15

Number of airlines used = 7

Best flight – The first Emirates one out of NZ to Melbourne even though it was delayed 2 hours

Worst flight – Colombo to Dubai on FlyDubai

Best take off – Dubai to Istanbul

Worst take off – Istanbul to Athens, I don’t think we got enough speed up on the runway so had to use the bumpy bit at the end of the runway😧

Best landing – None really stand out

Worst landing – Hong Kong to KL, the pilot put us down pretty heavy on the runway, it wasn’t comfortable and the plane internals went crack!

Best staff – Swiss and Emirates. It’s all about how you treat our kids for me. Coloring books and lollies? yes they’d like that thanks! Getting to their level and having a chat with them, that’s treating them with respect, yes we like that thanks!

Worst staff – FlyDubai. To be fair they were dealing with the worst load of passengers we’ve ever experienced.

 

Ground transport

Number of different modes of transport = 11

Over ground train, underground train, tram, cable car, car, van, bus, tuktuk, motor boat, ferry, and our feet!!!

Number of versions of tuktuk = 3

Number of steps walked since leaving NZ = 836,964 (thanks for counting them fitbit, a bit lower than I expected)

Peugeot lease car = 1

After entrusting our safety to others for 3 months. We now are exploring Europe with our own 4 wheels! Her name is Rouge 🚗

 

Clothing purchased

Number of new jandals = 2

Number of new running shoes = 3

Number of new clothes for R = 1 dress

Number of new clothes for C = 1 pair of trousers

 

Sickness :

Number of fevers = 2

Number of bodies covered in welts = 1

Number of vomiting sessions = 1

Number of bouts of travellers tummy = 0 (I put this solely down to the oral vaccine we had just before we left NZ called Dukorol. It’s expensive but so very worth it and I definitely recommend it)

 

School work

Maths – going well

Writing – both kids do not want to write, about once a week I set a bribe of an ice block and get a very half hearted effort

Reading – is a task and a half

Science and Spelling – non existent

Art – Twice is ok in 3 months isn’t it? 😀

History, Geography and Exercise – excellent!

 

BK working

Co working spaces used – 3

Some places are better than others. Moving slowly works well, as does when he can find a co-working space to do a good solid chunk of work with fast reliable internet away from the fam. Having a friend in NZ monitoring our company emails helps too.

 

Favorite country or experience

This is like being asked to pick a favorite child, we liked and disliked different things about each place.

However the elephant experience in Chiang Mai still sticks out as do Singapore and Taiwan. Plus the extra cuddles, kisses and chats as a family.

 

If there’s anything you’d like to know that I haven’t covered you can put a comment below, or on Facebook comments or private message me. Happy to answer (most) questions!

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

Taipei

Taipei

Our awesome Taiwanese experience started in Vietnam, we were fortunate to be plucked out of a check in queue and directed straight to priority check in so we were processed very quickly. My backpack had done some dieting in SE Asia and luckily came in at 20.2kg. 200 grams over my allowance, it had been up to 2kg over!

 

A delayed flight from Ho Chi Minh City to Taipei was a slight blip but it was a good flight. We processed through customs in 25 minutes and found our bags were faster than us and were going round and round on the conveyer! 🙄 Money changed, SIM card purchased and we were on our way to the MRT that would take us to our apartment.

 

Unfortunately for us our Airbnb host got a bit mixed up because we headed for number 197, only to find a security person who said “no resident” via google translate. However he was so kind to us, letting us in anyway, giving us chairs and water to drink while I sent very firm emails to our host asking where the heck we were meant to be. The host was quite unhelpful and would not give us a phone number to call. The kind security guard then stated the obvious “wrong address” into his google translate. Eventually I scrolled back through our early communication with Airbnb host and he had said 179, so off I took with family with security guy tailing us to the correct place.

 

We checked in no problems, thanks to a 24 hour front desk, but then we got inside the apartment to find only one bed! 😫When booking I had had a conversation about the kids. More sharp emails to the host and we split the bed in half (it was two mattresses) found some linen, hoped it was clean, and put kids to bed!

 

The next morning I woke to a $80 refund on Airbnb, a kind gesture from the host.

 

That afternoon we met up with BK’s brother, John. He so kindly got us easy cards which meant tapping in and out of the train station was really simple and sped up the process through stations. We explored a market called Shinlin, had street food for dinner, a beef curry wrap for me, yum, then home to bed. 💤

 

The following day was a rest, laundry, supermarket kind of day. We looked for somewhere nice to eat for dinner but being Chinese New Year everything was shut. McDonald’s it was, and it was cheap!!

 

On Sunday we decided to visit a museum but by the time we got there and looked at the crowds we were like….nooooooo thanks! So relaxed in their gardens instead 😄

 

By this time we were over public transport and needing to meet John and his partner for dinner, so we Uber’d. Team Knowles loves Uber, apart from back in Bangkok!

 

A grand hotel buffet was the plan for dinner, we have been getting all our food cooked fresh for us for the last 7.5 weeks but thought that this flash hotel’s food would be ok, and it was. The buffet didn’t have time to have germs on it with a fast turn over. It was the best food we’ve had the entire trip!! Yum and yum and yum!

 

Monday was forecast to be a beaut day so I chose to take the fam out to the hinterland to a little village called Shifen where it’s the only place in Taiwan to set off a Chinese lantern. Being Chinese New Year it seemed fitting, however it turns out everyone else had the same idea and we stood very squashed in a few trains. Glad everyone had showered!

 

We explored Shifen, looked at a waterfall, which was nice but I can see why the Chinese LOVE New Zealand, we also have beautiful waterfalls but we lack the pile of people to squeeze past to see said waterfall!

 

The little village was all based around the railway. Lots of people were setting off their lanterns around the railway track. We hopped onto the train again and off at another village called Pingxi. We got some dinner, looked at the sunset then decided it was time to buy a lantern. We chose dark pink which apparently represents ‘happy marriage and family harmony!’

We decorated it then it was time to light it, the old man who owned the store picked up our lantern and off we marched after him to a perfect spot, not on the railway like a bunch of other people. We held it, he lit it, it filled with hot air and up it went! We watched it till it disappeared. A fantastic experience!

 

After that it was back to being packed in like sardines again for the train home. We had to transfer trains half way, I couldn’t stand anymore so R and I sat in a heap in the middle of an aisle in a carriage. You know how I said a few blogs ago people make the experience? Well let me recount that second half of the train trip for you…

 

Two ladies and a baby took us under their wing, got out their google translate and commented how beautiful R was, I translated back, “thank you it’s our first time in Taiwan” and so started this lovely conversation with the ladies all around us. A lady traveling with her two young girls joined in, she spoke English, a lady behind her joined in (found out right at the end of the trip her and her husband live in California and spoke perfect English) the old lady behind them stood and leaned over the seats to look at us. We were given a sweet rice cake to eat, the lady with two girls told me what it was when I gave her a ‘what the heck is this?!’ look, it turned out to be really nice!! R was also given a snack size pack of m&m’s to eat.

After photos were taken, more convo with Americans about what we were doing this year, we parted ways at Taipei station like old friends “Byyyyyyyyye!!!!” waving till we couldn’t see each other anymore.

 

So instead of shutting my eyes and thinking about my very sore hips and why was I sitting on the floor of a rail carriage and that I needed a hot shower and some sleep, it turned out to be a wonderful trip back to Taipei. Such a highlight.

 

I know you’re thinking, where were the boys? Well I had C with me, he was sitting on the floor behind me watching someone play their Nintendo. BK however was waaaaay down the carriage, I threw the kids on the train as soon as it stopped but he’s a bit more polite and let people board before him 😄

 

That evening there was a 5.3 earthquake, quite the experience being up 11 floors and swaying. I have since found out that if you want to build a building for business use, you build it then you have to leave it empty for an entire year before you can occupy it! Apparently this is mostly because of the amount of earthquakes Taiwan has and if after a year it’s had a good ol’ shake and it’s still standing you’ve built it well and you can use it!

 

Tuesday and Wednesday consisted of rest, laundry, supermarket, a trip IKEA on the bus (a kind lady gave our kids lollies!), schoolwork and BK working.

 

By Thursday we were ready to go again. It was a rainy day so I decided a hop on hop off bus tour would be good so we could sit and be driven around the sights of Taipei. We managed to get front row seats on the top level of a double decker bus. The kids were given a free magnet each by the kind guide on board (I don’t think she was meant to – no one else got one!!). Apart from Ruby having ants in her pants, it was a great trip and I was happy that we had seen a lot of the sights so I made a plan in my head how to execute the rest of them in the weekend.

 

Friday we went out for lunch at a local sandwich place and then it was off to see a temple, but when we got there, there was a service going so we had a look but felt like we were imposing so we left and walked to what I think would be C’s highlight, a restaurant called ‘Modern Toilet’ and yes, you guessed it, we sat on toilets, the menu was the shape of a toilet seat, the food came in mini toilets and the sprite came in a mini urinal, the garlic bread even looked like a pile of poop! 💩

Hilarious. Apparently it’s quite a popular Japanese chain. Following that delightful experience we decided to walk the streets to the main station and came across quite a nice modern market.

 

Saturday it was up early and off to the zoo. It was NZ$2.60 each to get in and R was free, so I didn’t have overly high hopes, but it was amazing, obviously not Singapore standard but just as good as the Auckland & Wellington Zoos. A highlight there was a panda coming to sit right in front of us to eat. Amazing. Lots and lots of animals in good enclosures and obviously well looked after. I walked 17k steps, so little R must have done 20k plus with her tiny legs, she gave up walking after a while and it was walk 5 minutes, carry 5 minutes for the last hour.

Unfortunately our plans were rained out on our last full day so it was a quiet rest day and dinner with BK’s bro at his house. That evening, well, 2 o’clock in the following morning, we were woken by sirens through our apartment block, then they stopped, then a few minutes later they started, then they stopped, then a few minutes later another earthquake! Cant quite decide if its related, I took video of the noise and words it was saying, so I am working on trying to get it translated!!

 

Taiwan, you’ve been wonderful, your people are so very very kind and generous. We can certainly see ourselves coming back, maybe we’ll tag on Philippines/Japan/China while we’re at it.

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

Budget update :

Taiwan – $53 over

Total budget – $246 under

It was a shock to leave cheap SE Asia and find normal prices again, had to work hard at the budget this week as our accommodation was 80% of our daily budget! We were helped a lot by all the things BK’s generous brother gave us!

Siem Reap

Siem Reap

So after our adventure getting to Siem Reap (see last Facebook post) we took Wednesday to recover. Swimming and screen time and rest. We had a 30 minute orientation drive around in the late afternoon which was nice. We liked the size of Siem Reap instantly. A quick google told us it was a similar size to our home town.

 

The following day BK did some work so the kids and I headed out to a butterfly park/sanctuary. Very educational, our kids both know the life cycle very well from their Montessori preschool covering it extensively. The afternoon was spent in the pool.

 

Friday I didn’t feel too flash so spent most of the day in bed. BK took the kids to play arcade games and they had a ball (all 3 of them!) they came back to get me and we all went into the Main Street in town for dinner (pizza – this girl is a little over rice!)

 

On Saturday we decided to do a sunset tour of the Pre Rup temple. If we bought tickets for the temples for following day after 4.30pm we could get free entry into the temples for that evening. So from 4.30pm it was a rush to: buy the tickets, race out to the temple, climb it and then sit and watch the sky turn fire engine red!!! Amazing. It was also fun to have a quick look around to see what we were in for the following day.

 

We were up at 6am (most people are up at 5am to do the sunrise but not us 💤 )

It was chilly (18 degrees) so R and I wore our jackets. We decided to see the temples the opposite way to the norm to avoid some of the crowds. This was the best decision of the day. We arrived at our first temple 4 minutes after it opened. Beautiful, peaceful and cold! We clambered around for a whole hour before moving on to the next one, and the day continued like that….

 

We saw:

Ta Prohm (if you’ve seen the movie Tomb Raider….that one with the tree growing through it)

Bantesy Kdei

Ta Nei

Chau Say Tevoda

Thomanom

Terrace of the Elephants

Bayon

Angkor Wat

 

By 2pm we’d had enough. The sun was hot and our legs weren’t wanting to go any further. The trusty Fitbit told me I’d walked 15km. No wonder R was refusing to walk by the end of it.

 

Unfortunately the pool had turned a green colour by the time we got back to our villa so no one was going in there to cool off. Sitting under the air con had to suffice, of course it did when there were screens to look at!

 

Monday was spent doing errands around town such as, checking out where the bus to our next location leaves from and having some of the best ice cream in town. And also errands online like paying GST and having email conversations with the kids’ school. Yes, life at home carries on, got to keep up!

 

So thanks Siem Reap for a great time. The week whizzed past so quickly. I would have liked to do the floating markets/village but we ran out of time. I guess we will have to come back!

 

A really cute moment was when C decided that when he is older he had to bring his best friend back to Cambodia to show him the temples he was having such a great time clambering over. Maybe his Mum and I could tag along…

 

Till next time,

 

Claire

 

 

Budget update :

Siem Reap – $136 under

Total Budget – $399 under

Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai

I had heard a lot about this being a place visitors love. Well sign me up to that list! It’s been great. The temperature has been manageable, some nights we’ve even slept with the air con off. One morning was a cool 17 degrees!

 

The flight up here from Krabi was great. Followed by a quick Uber to our apartment and falling straight into bed as I did not feel well. A fever and dehydration took me a couple of days to recover from, I couldn’t eat much but sculled the rehydration sachets my doctor had so kindly given me before we left home.

 

On Friday I finally felt well enough to Uber into the central town to see a monument and grab dinner. Hawaiian pizza was all I could manage.

 

On Saturday we went to a mall, which was ginormous as seems to be the norm here. By then I had worked out the little boy had lost the spacer to his asthma inhaler and spent my time at the mall pacing the pharmacies looking for one, with a picture of it on my phone in one hand and the inhaler in the other hand!! I failed unfortunately and will have to keep looking, but his asthma has been under control without the inhaler thank goodness.

 

That afternoon we decided to go up a mountain to visit a temple called Doi Sa Tep for sunset. You have to fill a red truck with 10 people before they’ll take you any where. So we sat, a German girl arrived, yay half way! Then 2 Korean girls arrived, that’s 7, we sat, we waited, we looked at our watches, sunset was getting closer…..Finally one Korean girl and I negotiated with the driver a 20 baht discount for each person and he would wait for us until 7pm so we could see the sunset. Winning. It would have been a lovely view if Chiang Mai got its pollution under control! But there was beautiful sunset light reflecting on the temple.

 

The next morning, we were up early with great anticipation, it was time to spend the day with elephants! I had researched extensively. I knew we did not want to ride and didn’t want any nasty hooks, we were not going to support any abuse to the animals at all. I knew I wasn’t keen to go where there was heeeeeaps of people. So I had found a place online and had been into their offices on Friday to book, pay and run all my requests past them. They passed with flying colours. Elephant Nature park here we come. Except we weren’t going to the actual park we went on a ‘saddle off’ tour.

 

The van arrived to collect us at 8.30am, and when the van door opened I was stoked to see only 4 other people! Plus our driver and a guide. We were off to a great start. We drove 1.5 hours south, then transferred to a ute for another 20 minute drive. We had finally arrived. As we changed into the clothes that were provided, 2 beautiful elephants came down the paddock towards us and as they got closer we noticed a baby was with them also!

 

We learnt that these animals, all female, had only been freed from riding camps 3 months ago. The adults were 38 and the baby was 4. One adult was pregnant, she’d been pregnant for a year….with another year expected to go! It was time to give them some love, so we got straight into feeding them sugar cane, then we were given bags full of mini bananas to carry and took them for a bush walk with their handlers ‘mahouts’. They sure knew what was in those bags! Elephant trunks came nosying around, looking for food if you weren’t paying close attention!

 

After our lunch we made them rice balls and left them to set while we took the elephants to the mud pit and smeared mud all over them! Then it was time for a play and wash off in the waterfall for everyone!!

 

The kids were amazing. Mr 8 was all guns blazing, his new BFF was the guide, he sucked out any detail he possibly could, if you know our boy you’ll know he will chat your ear off if you let him!! He was in his element!

 

Little Miss 6 went between excitement and fear. She almost had a few mishaps like when she almost fell in the water, and almost got squashed when an elephant backing up and she didn’t realise or when she held onto the banana too long and the elephant got too close to her and she didn’t like it (sometimes she did like it🙄) but with 2 parents, a guide, a driver, 4 tour buddies and 3 mahouts looking out for her when she made frightened noises somebody scooped her up! Needless to say, once we transferred back to the van she used her Daddy’s arm as a pillow and slept all the way home!

 

A truly memorable day with plenty of photos and GoPro footage taken for everyone to remember it by.

Budget update :

Chiang Mai – $82 under
Total budget – $260 under

Malaysia

Malaysia

Crossing the causeway from Singapore to Johor, Malaysia was a cheap and easy experience, only NZ$11 for all of us.

We arrived at our lovely Airbnb which was an apartment in a tower above a big mall.

We were directed to a hawker centre with great food for dinner. The following day we had a quiet day which was spent at the pool, doing laundry, buying BK some jandals and generally resting after a very full on time in Singapore.

It was then time to fly up to Kuala Lumpur, remember those flights I mentioned in an earlier blog that were only NZ$3 each? This was that flight! It left 10 minutes late but arrived 7 minutes early! I was lazy and booked a transfer which scooped us up from the airport and drove us most of an hour into central KL to our next Airbnb which was another apartment in a tall tower. We arrived in the early evening and were greeted by an amazing view of the KL tower.

Out exploring the next day we saw the Petronas towers, the kids had a play at the park right beside them and then we had a good wander around the mall which is under them. That evening we had our first google fail leading us (or not in this case) somewhere to eat. Not good when hot and hungry. Eventually we found an average place in yet another mall and quickly ubered home to bed.

BK worked in a coworking space the next day so it was time for Kidzania for the kids and I. If you aren’t familiar with Kidzania, it’s a mini town where kids do jobs and earn ‘kidso’ money then they can spend it on getting things like their driver’s license and driving a car or getting nails done or buying things at the store. There are several of them around the world. It’s all about the kids, so the parents aren’t allowed to interact/help with the ‘work’ so I just ended up being the bag lady and standing with a bunch of other mums trying to peer through the windows at your cute kids. It wasn’t cheap but it was totally worth it, our kids had a ball!

This was followed by another mall food court for dinner. There are a lot of malls here in KL!

We had heard Batu Caves were an interesting place to visit so it was up early the next day to get there before the heat really set in for the day. The 272 steps to climb while watching out for monkeys was a challenge but it was interesting in the caves. We were back at our apartment before 10am for a rest and more mall visiting for lunch and dinner!

In front of our apartment block was a monorail station, having never been on one before we chose another mall to visit for lunch that was one stop down the line. At NZ$3 for all of us return it seemed like a great idea! It wasn’t as smooth as proper rail but fun all the same. The mall and lunch were great too!

Two days of rest followed that with quite a lot of lazing round our apartment. More mall food courts for lunches and dinners, yep that’s getting old already. We did manage a visit to the next door hotel’s pool, since we could see how awesome it looked from our balcony we invited ourselves over, well the kids and I did, BK stayed home as he was horrified!! Ha!!! Oh we also dug out the maths books, first 6 pages ✔️

So Malaysia, you’ve been interesting, I can see you are trying and wanting to be like your beautiful little sister Singapore to the south. Your food has been amazing, so cheap yet so yum, my favorite – coconut steam bun for 59 cents.

I’ve enjoyed the slower pace of life, I probably could have packed our week full but it was nice to relax.

See you again Malaysia on our way out to Sri Lanka in a few months time.

 

Till next time!

 

Claire

 

 

Budget update

Malaysia $90 under!

That is amazing as it includes $65 for some new glasses for Connor since his got lost somewhere between leaving my parents place and Auckland airport. 🙄😩

 

Total budget update : $75 under.

100 days till fly out!!

100 days till fly out!!

September update

So we’re getting asked, a LOT, where are you actually going???

So to be vague and keep our family safe… but not too vague for all you curious people the trip looks like this…

 

Disclaimer : We ask for those select few that know our exact cities and dates to please keep them to yourselves.

 

December 

New Zealand, Australia, Singapore

January 

Malaysia, Thailand

February 

Vietnam, Cambodia, Taiwan,

Hong Kong (+China & Macau)

March

Sri Lanka

Greece, Croatia

April

Bosnia, Slovenia, Montenegro

May

Italy (+San Marino & Vatican)

Austria, Czech Republic, Poland, Germany

June

Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands, Belgium,

Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, Switzerland

July

France (+Monaco & Andorra)

Spain, England (+Wales)

August

Ireland (+Northern Ireland), Iceland, Canada

September/October/November 

America, The Bahamas, Mexico, Canada, New Zealand

 

Some countries we’ll be there just long enough to have lunch! Some we’ll be there for weeks or a month or some monthS 😃

Some countries we’ll revisit or go over the end of one month and start of another but you don’t need that much detail!

 

Till next time! (which will probably be next month – there’s more to say now so blogs will come out faster I think!)

Claire

May update

May update

“You are so LUCKY!!!!” “You are going to have the best time ever!” “You will learn so much!” are things our children hear frequently when they or we tell someone about our trip. It’s highly amusing because until the last couple of months they had nooooooo idea what they were in for! (And still don’t really!)

We decided that maybe we should do something ourselves to get their excitement rolling. After tossing around a few ideas we settled on each week looking up two cities we hoped to visit. When we do this we look on our world map to see where in the world this city is, look up which country it is in in the kids Lonely Planet Travel Book and then find a tourism clip on YouTube about it (the latter being the most looked forward to by our children), it’s fun to see what the ‘Top 10’ things to do in each place are. So far we have done: Derby, Dublin, Siem Reap, London, Kuala Lumpur, Copenhagen, New Orleans, Bacharach, Portland, Split, Kampala, Bangkok, Singapore, Dubai, New York, Prague, Galway, Venice, and Chiang Mai. The kids love the special time with us and are starting to pipe up with “Can we do that?” “Are we doing that?” When they see activities they want to do. I’m also working out which exact things are, not to be missed, what would be good to do if the budget can stretch, and what I’m not going to suggest we do!

In terms of prepping ourselves…we are lining up the ducks! As I said a few blogs back, BK and I have done this thing! It was actually our honeymoon. 20 countries in nine months. Yep put our partnership to the test pretty early on! From missing flights to French train strikes to getting ripped off in Mallorca and Zambia…..we’ve done it all!
This time it’s taking a bit more prep, the obvious question in the front of every decision….Are we ok putting our kids in that situation? Other questions are:
Is that going to be too much for the kids?
What can we do to enrich their education and/or experience? and, Does that accommodation have a pool for our water babies!!??

BK is lining work up that will fit with the travel life. He’s been very blessed by having an old boss already offer to top up any lull in work to 100% if he needs it.

I have booked one flight, a 50 minute flight for $3.98 each, it was on a ‘mega sale’ so I couldn’t really pass that up…it doesn’t include seat selection or food, hopefully we can use the toilet onboard if we need to! Ha! It also didn’t include checked luggage. The children will be ‘carry on’ luggage only but BK and I will have a full size pack each that we’ll have to pay for.
I also have booked some accommodation in SE Asia via Airbnb, Agoda and booking.com, three great booking engines with some great deals if you have the patience to scroll them all.
BUT no flight out of New Zealand yet. It’s not real until I’ve booked that I tell myself! Flights to Asia sales from a few companies are coming up soon so hopefully I will rectify that. I’m hoping for a Qantas flight to Singapore via Melbourne or Sydney, but an AirNZ or Singapore Airlines direct flight would be all good too!

Saving is going strongly and we should get to the expected amount before we leave. The pile of things i have acquired to take with us that I wrote about in the last blog continues to get larger. Stationery for the children has been added. I’m also compiling a list of things to buy the kids for Christmas so they have some surprises at least.

So that’s about the update from us.
Our jobs for the next couple of months include sell some more stuff!

Till next time,

Claire

February Update

February Update

10 months to go!

The January tasks have been ticked off. We’ve had a lovely summer including some day trips out to Waitomo Caves and up to the top of Coromandel to go on a railway. We camped down the east coast at Ohiwa and did plenty of walks whether it be in the bush or up/around Mount Maunganui.

I also ticked off the other task of finding a job. 

We visited the doctor…spent $80NZD to find out my family needs $2100 NZD of travel vaccinations and that’s not including 2 very expensive ones that I’m on the fence about.

February came and we got into school routines and I started work.

We spent a few days decluttering our house/garage/garden shed and now have a ginormous pile heading to the rubbish dump! As we decluttered I found items that weren’t going to get chucked, sold or packed with the house stuff but these items actually may just make it into our luggage! So a pile begun….just to keep them safe, so I know where they are! 

I also splurged at Kathmandu in their Christmas sale! 

Packing cubes – These are for my pack. They fit perfectly. 1 for Little Miss, 2 for me. 

Stuffer sacks – The boys will be sharing a pack, it’s a different shape to mine.

Sunlight soap – not sure the whole box is coming but one bar will be.

Snap lock bags x2 sizes – I just feel these will come in very very handy.

Headphone splitter – for those times the kids watch the same movie but can wear their own headphones!! 

Travel clothesline – got to dry those clothes I washed with the soap somehow!

Connect 4 game – the compact version! Other games will come too but they are in normal use currently. Thinking ‘uno’ card game and ‘spot it’ card game.

Paper work – Peugeot euro lease for Europe transport, world vision application form to visit our sponsor child, Watoto application to volunteer there.

Notebooks – sketching or writing, they’ll be used for something.

Quick dry towels x2 – will need to buy 2 more.

Vaccination records – a must have! 

USB hub – for charging devices all at once! 

Camera wrist strap – not sure if this will make the final cut but it could be handy! 

March/April tasks 

Fill in paper work for Watoto and World Vision.

Till next time! 

Claire