Warning: call_user_func_array() expects parameter 1 to be a valid callback, class 'collapsArch' does not have a method 'enqueue_scripts' in C:\inetpub\vhosts\globitrotter.com\httpdocs\blog\wp-includes\class-wp-hook.php on line 307

Enjoying research

I like to be prepared when I travel. I don’t like fixed plans but I do like knowing what the possibilities are before I get there. For this trip which will be very long and going through several countries I will not be able to read about everything before we go. I will have to do research on the way as well. Good thing though is that we have already been to most countries on the list and know more or less what we want to do. Then it is always exciting to see what really will happen once we are out there. Plans are made to be changed, no?

This time is the best time of year in Phoenix when it is warm but not too hot to be outside. I take advantage of this and enjoy the pool and a fixed place to stay before we are off on our year long camping trip. A better place to do some reading is hard to find.

Getting in shape

While planning for a year long hiking and climbing trip I felt the need to get in the best possible physical shape in the little time we have left before we go. Last year before our 4 week long tour of Colorado and Utah we completed 60 days of Insanity! (very insane interval training) and it turned out it was really worth it. We had no problems hiking 10 14ers (mountains higher than 14000 feet or 4250 m) in 10 days. Maybe we will not do that the first week of our trip but I do think we will benefit from being in shape from the very start.

So, I have worked out a great plan. This time it will be difficult to follow the Insanity schedule, which is 6 days a week, because we also have to do some climbing. Just adding that to Insanity would be too stressy and not very healthy since I am still working full time. Instead, the plan looks something like this:

Monday – indoor climbing

Tuesday – Insanity

Wednesday – indoor climbing

Thursday – Insanity

Friday – rest

Saturday – longer hike (at least half day) or Insanity

Sunday – indoor or outdoor climbing

I am not a professional but I think this could get us ready for what we want to do. Now comes just the problem of actually doing it. Work has a tendency of getting in the way sometimes but I am hoping for the best. At least I have now communicated my plan which makes it harder not to follow it. 🙂

No return – full time travelling, hiking, climbing

I made a decision and now there is no return. I recently quit my job so that Andy and I can live a dream and go travel for a year or so. The main activities will be hiking and climbing. It has always been a dream of mine to do such a trip but it is not easy to find someone who wants to come along for the ride. A few years ago I met Andy who has the same interests and is willing to live cheap and out of a car for a long time. Although it sounds fantastic to not work and just play I realize that it will also be tough not to have a home and always have to live out of a suitcase (or backpack in this case). But what I am looking forward to and what was the main purpose of this kind of trip is to not have any responsibilities except to yourself, no work to go back to, not having to do anything if I don’t want to. Imaging the freedom of doing today what you feel like and not what you have to. Maybe that is not the correct way to express it, I guess we have all chosen our lives and even if it feels like we have to do things we have put ourselves in the situation where we have to do certain things to be able to maintain a lifestyle or care for other people. I did that too in a way. Before I worked a lot for some time to then take time off and go travel, dive and hike. The trips I made were quite expensive and although my job allowed me to take longer holidays on several occasions there was always a time when I had to go back. This time I have chosen to quit my job entirely and live on little money but instead be able to stay on the road for a long time. What will limit our trip is money or if we simply don’t feel like travelling anymore. I think the second one will happen first.

Andy and I have been talking about making a long trip basically since we met but it was never certain exactly when we would do it. Now seemed to be a good time for several reasons. So tickets has been booked and the route is USA-Canada-Hawaii-New Zealand-Australia-Hong Kong-Stockholm. The plan is to return to Sweden in July 2013 and spend the summer in Stockholm. After that we’ll see what happens. We might stay or move to Switzerland which is Andy’s home country. If we have not decided something else on the way that is.

The 23 May we will be returning to Stockholm from Phoenix, were we have lived since Jan 2011, and my last working day will be 31 May. 4 June is the day when it all begins. Then we are going back to Phoenix to pick up our car which we bought here a year ago. It is a Toyota FJ Cruiser which is prepared for camping and will be our home in USA and Canada for the summer.

Our home in Needles, Canyonlands, Utah

You will be able to follow our trip on this blog. I hope you will and that you enjoy it.

Travel magazines

Every time I travel I buy travelmagazines. Often I fall for the glossy ones with luxurious sparesorts on the front page. It looks so wonderful I can not help but buying one or two and dream away for a little while. But because they only write about resortswhere it would cost a small fortune to spend only a weekend I end uprather depressed instead of anxious to go on my next holiday. Every time. I knowthat the length of my holidays does not go together with these hotelsand when I think about it normally not what I like to do on myholidays either.

Recently, during a long lay over atLAX, it was time for a new purchase. This time I think I foundsomething better. A not so glossy front page with a rick shaw bikedriver from Cuba caught my eye. This magazine, Afar, focused more on activitieslike surfing and rock climbing rather than spa and picture perfectbeach resorts. I felt much better. All of a sudden I had an urge to find that little island in the Caribbean that was so hard to getto or go climbing in Cuba. It was refreshing that they focused more on what to do and experience than where to sleep, shop or drink exclusive drinks. These things usually fall into place anyway once you know where you want to go and what to do. I am more looking for inspiration and not a list of hotels and shops when I read about travel and this suited me just perfectly.

The vision that became reality

This winter the Phoenix Art Museum has an exhibition about Frank Lloyd Wright, the well known architect who lived and worked partly in Phoenix. He was active in the beginning of the century and made some very famous buildings and homes, the most famous probably Falling Water and the Guggenheim Museum in New York.

The most fascinating thing about this exhibition was that I understood more about Phoenix and where the inspiration for the city structure had come from. A lot of Frank Lloyd Wright’s work has an art deco style which I am very fond of. It is somehow both old and futuristic. I can not help thinking about Fritz Lang’s Metropolis when I see art deco architecture. But the interesting thing I learned at this exhibition was that Lloyd Wright also created a plan for the perfect city, Broadacre City. It was the beginning of the century,cars were not very common but there was a dream of wealth and technically advanced future. Naturally his plan evolved around cars and the idea that everyone should have an acre of land. To make this work the city became very spread out and in order to get around quickly a network of roads were a central part of the planning. Looking at his sketches makes you realize that this is exactly what Phoenix looks like today. This futuristic city that has become reality is as functional and lifeless as the drawings show.
East Phoenix Metro Area from Superstition Ridge
The thought of giving everyone a fair piece of property close to everything they need is of course very nice. But therefore it also lacks the atmosphere that so many other cities do have and make them worth visiting. There is no city center where people spontaneously meet and where you can go shopping, catch a movie, a theater, visit markets, have coffee or dinner with friends and stroll around and do some people watching, all in the same place. Honestly, I have a very hard time to say why anyone should visit Phoenix as a tourist. It is a comfortable city to live in but does not offer a lot to the visitor. Unless the city structure itself makes you want to come and see it with your own eyes. The thing many people visit Phoenix for is the weather, to play golf or other sports when it is too cold in other places. Many baseball teams for example has their spring training in Phoenix which attracts a lot of tourists. Fair enough, the winters here are very comfortable and also my favorite thing about Phoenix.
Coming from a place where public transport is the best way of getting around and having a car is actually more of a hassle than useful, it is difficult to get used to Phoenix. People who grew up here seem to love it though. Many would just get nervous in a city where I feel very comfortable. I guess this is a good thing though, everyone is not the same and there is a place for everybody.

Phoenix downtown escape

A couple of months ago now we decided to givePhoenix Downtown another chance and treat ourselves to a stay at anice hotel. I could already see it in front of me; after strollingaround town we would come back to the hotel in the afternoon withtired feet and legs. The champagne would be already chilled and Andywould run a hot bath were we would enjoy the bubbles. I spent some time looking for a hoteland finally chose the Westin on Van Buren and 1st Street. 
View from the Westin pool area.
The location was perfect since it is just a couple of blocks from ourfavourite restaurant, Sens. It is a quite small Japanese tapas stylerestaurant and definately worth a visit. The reason I picked theWestin was that they have a small suite with a bathroom in the cornerof the building with floor to ceiling windows where you can look outover the city while having a bath. The fact that they had a bar wherewe felt just at home was a bonus. It was quite empty but stillboosted some interesting people watching.
Just what I needed. 🙂
Downtown Phoenix is really not too bad except for the fact that there are no people there. To be a multi million city it feels deserted. If you look closely there are some nice cafés, bars and restaurants but the atmosphere is missing. Sadly.
Nice café behind the Phoenix Art Museum. But where are the guests?
But we did have a good time and got what we expected.