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Walking Distance

Over 90% of households in America own at least one car. Over 10% of households own three or more vehicles. I guess we’re the minority report.

We haven’t owned a car in eight months. This month we revisited our decision to be car-less. I have to say, I don’t miss it. Between walking and the ease of public transport in Singapore, we are going to continue to be car-less.

I’ve written before about the joys of walking before. I’m often reminded of what comedian Steve Wright once said, “everywhere is within walking distance if you have the time.” We have shops, restaurants, parks, and a hospital within 10 minutes walk from our house. I can walk to work.

That doesn’t even take into consideration public transport. There are eight bus stops within 5 minutes of my house. The map below shows, in red, the parts of Singapore that I can reach from just one of those bus stops, without having to change buses.

Singapore bus routes

If you add in connections to other routes and the metro system, there aren’t many places that I can’t get to in town. If you live in Singapore and want to check this out for yourself, use the Bus Routes Explorer.

I know that we’ll probably have to buy a car when we move back to the U.S., but for now I’m enjoying the long walks and one less bill to pay each month.

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The Southernmost Point of Continental Asia, sort of

Iconic yet somewhat inaccurate

This weekend I journeyed to the southernmost point of continental Asia. At least that’s what the sign says.

I say journeyed, but the trip wasn’t very arduous. It is in fact in Singapore so I didn’t even leave the country. But I was struck by several thoughts as I stood next to the sign.

It’s a very nice sign posted on a small island just off of Palawan Beach in Sentosa. There is another sign on the island that says that this point is often described as the southernmost point of continental Asia. The sign goes on to explain that the island is connected to Sentosa island by a bridge. Sentosa island is connected to Singapore by a bridge. And Singapore is connected to Malaysia by, you guessed it, a bridge (in fact two bridges). Because of this logic, this location is described as the southernmost point . . . well, you get it.

So the first thought was that this title hangs on being connected to mainland Asia. If we discount bridges as connectors, the southernmost point of Asia is in peninsular Malaysia at  Tanjung Piai National Park.

So what is a continent and what determines what is and isn’t in Asia? This led me to remember Hank Green’s excellent Youtube post titled Continents are Dumb.

My next thought was that the sign is on the northern side of Palawan Island. Easily two-thirds of the island is further south than the sign. Furthermore, a good portion of Sentosa itself is further south than Palawan Island. The difficulty, I imagine, is that the southernmost point on Sentosa is in a private residential area.

This isn’t a secret. It’s apparent to anyone who looks at a map. So why is this point so popular? Because there’s a sign and everything. It makes for a good ‘selfie’ op. I just find it amusing. Do you know of any signs that are almost in the right spot as well?

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7 Ways to Travel as a Family in 2016

Start the New Year off right by planning a trip abroad. Here are seven ways to travel internationally as a family, from dipping your toe in with a weekender to taking the plunge on a RTW (round the world).

1. Weekender

A weekend trip can be a quick way to experience another culture cheaply, especially if you take advantage of airline ticket sales in the off-season.  Two or three days is not very much time, so you’ll want to focus on hitting the highlights of your destination.  This is not hard, since many travel books have sample itineraries based on your length of stay.  You’ll probably still be recovering from jet lag when you get home, so the first day or two back at work will be rough.  I will say, however, that “flew to Paris” is still one of my favorite answers to the question, “what did you do this weekend?”

Time is one of the greatest limiting factors on a weekend trip.  If you live on the East coast, aim for Quebec, Canada or a major European city.  Catching a Friday evening flight should put you on the ground Saturday morning (the time zones work in your favor here).  You’ll fly back early Monday morning and arrive late on Monday evening, just in time to put the kids to bed.

This kind of trip is also feasible from the Midwest, since there are dozens of international flights departing from major hubs like Chicago.  The farther west you live, however, the more likely it is that you’ll want to aim for Canada, Mexico, or the Caribbean.  Flight times to Asia make a weekend trip impractical, and Europe is only within reach if you spend the whole day Friday traveling.

2. Cruise

A cruise is one of the easiest ways to travel overseas. The cruise ship functions as a floating hotel with restaurants and shops included. The popular cruise lines all have staff dedicated to programs for kids, allowing for some time alone as a couple. You only have to unpack once.

Most of the cruise itineraries familiar to Americans stay in the Caribbean. In a one-week cruise, you’ll visit 4-5 countries and spend one day at each port. You won’t see much of the country in a day. In fact, critics would argue that the experience you’ll get is far from authentic. Shopping for souvenirs just off the ship in Nassau or Basseterre is not the same experience as venturing to the Out Islands or Charlestown. Whether you agree or not depends on your objectives for the trip. If you’re looking for an in-depth exploration of one culture complete with language immersion, then a Caribbean cruise is not the right option. If you’re looking for an easy way to get out of the country and start traveling, it might just be the way to go.

For a longer trip farther afield, consider a transatlantic cruise, a repositioning cruise, or a Mediterranean cruise. A transatlantic cruise won’t have very many port calls, if any. A repositioning cruise will be cheaper than usual but will be scheduled on the shoulder season of the prime vacation window.

3. Business Plus

You have to go abroad for work. Why not take your family with you? Your employer is paying for the hotel and your airfare, leaving you to cover the airfare for the rest of your family. Stay out of legal trouble on this one by checking your company’s policy first. If the policy isn’t clear, or there isn’t one, make sure to get your supervisor’s approval.

It’s not all fun and games. After all, you’re there primarily for work. Add a few days at the start or the end of the trip to do things as a family. Make sure your spouse and your kids know that they’ll be on their own on the days when you’re working. They can have an adventure and tell you all about it at dinner.

4. Visit friends

Sit down and make a list of all the people that you know who live overseas. Family members. Friends from high school or college. Former co-workers. A friend of a friend. There’s a good chance that you know someone who lives abroad. Now it’s time to plan a visit.

Staying with friends might mean not having to pay for a hotel, a considerable savings in some cities. It could also mean that you have a host who knows the city and can introduce you to experiences that only locals know about.

Obviously you will need to coordinate this type of trip in advance with your host. Don’t show up unannounced. Definitely let them know how old your children are as well. It’s polite to bring them a gift, maybe something from home that they can’t get there. Depending on their work schedules and your relationship, they might give you a tour of the town or just a place to drop your luggage and sleep at night. Either way, it’s more than you would have if you stayed at a hotel. 

5. Themed Trip

Planning your trip around a theme can provide a good framework and a good start on your itinerary. If you’re a runner, schedule your trip around a race in an exotic location. Take a trip to your ancestral homeland and trace your genealogical roots. Go on a mission trip with your church or sign up with a volunteer organization and spend part of your vacation serving the community that you’re visiting.

Pick an international event and attend it. I have a friend who travels to the summer Olympics every four years. By doing this, he’s seen Sydney, Athens, Beijing and London. Another friend’s family traveled to Germany to see the Passion Play in Oberammergau, an event that only happens once a decade.

6. The Grand Vacation

Not for the faint of heart, this can be a major expense. The word grand indicates the scale of the trip. Typical examples include touring around Europe or Southeast Asia. A grand vacation usually takes place over a summer vacation. It could a few weeks to a few months to however long your wallet can tolerate. I don’t recommend this as the first overseas trip that you go on as a family. If you already have a few smaller trips under your belt and want to kick it up a notch, feel free to give it a go.

7. Round the World

Even bigger than a grand vacation, this is the classic round the world voyage. These can be done on any budget, depending on your comfort level and time available. Be forewarned though – to travel is to be changed. Some people set off on this trip hoping to check off a box on their bucket list and end up traveling permanently.

Your turn

Where will you go in 2016?

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Return to Sender

I love getting mail, but the envelope that I just pulled out of my condominium’s mailbox fills me with frustration instead of joy. I sigh as I lock my mailbox and head toward the elevator. This is the fourth envelope that I’ve received this week like this.

Some annoyances are temporary in nature. Their effect on our lives is fleeting, and we quickly dismiss them and move on. Others begin as seemingly minor affronts to our good mood. Repeated over time, their cumulative effect compounds to create a more lasting effect. This envelope symbolizes the latter. My frustration stems from the fact that it is not addressed to me but to a former tenant of my apartment. And I’ve lived here for six months.

This post is directed toward Geoffrey Mountbatten, formerly of Australia. That is not his real name, of course. My annoyance with Mssr. Mountbatten has not moved me to violate his privacy in a public forum.

At last count, I’ve moved at least seventeen times in my life. Moving so frequently gives me sympathy for misdirected mail. Though it is possible to leave a forwarding address, it may not catch all letters. I understand that the initial month or so in a new apartment might include re-directing letters addressed to a former tenant. What I don’t understand is how this can continue for six months on an almost daily basis.

To be clear, these are not mass mailing. They are not addressed to Geoffrey or Current Resident. They appear to be bank statements, notices from a college, etc. I say appear to be because I have not opened a single letter. My response to each has been to scrawl a terse message on the front, “return to sender, addressee unknown,” and drop it back in the mail.

I thought that this patient repetition on my part would cause these misdirected missives to cease after a short time. It has not. Given the time that this apartment sat vacant before I arrived, it’s been almost a year since the Mountbattens called this place home. Geoffrey, in the unlikely event that you are reading this, please transmit the particulars of your new residence to any and all corporations, banks, and official institutions with which you regularly correspond. Thank you.

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Circumnavigation – Just Once Around the World

The last week of December usually puts one in an introspective mood. Annual lists are composed, citing the best and worst that the preceding year had to offer. Some travelers, especially those predisposed towards achieving frequent flier status, pause to tally up their mileage over the last year. I’m not normally inclined to keep score in this manner, but this morning curiosity got the best of me. It didn’t take long to figure out that my family had journeyed once around the world in 2015.

This journey was not a circumnavigation in the traditional sense of the word. Such an achievement usually requires one to travel around the world in one direction. A further requirement often stipulates that one cross at least one set of antipodes, thus ensuring the travel both crosses the equator and is a sufficient distance. Some might even take issue with labelling such a journey as an achievement. In ages past it certainly was, when traveling beyond one’s city or province was itself an adventure. A circumnavigation was an arduous undertaking that would consume months or even years. By contrast, in the modern era such a trip could be completed in the span of a weekend given sufficient monetary resources.

Our family traveled the equivalent of a circumnavigation and then some. The circumference of the Earth at the equator is a mere 24,902 miles. Our major trips this year totaled over 27,100 miles. This year saw us flying, as a family, over 23,500 miles. We endured a further 3,160 miles by car. Endure is the appropriate verb, I assure you, for road trips involving two children and innumerable stops to visit friends and family. To add variety to our itineraries, we traveled an additional 440 miles by train. Other modes of travel, too short to bother tallying, included ferries, tuk tuks, canoes, buses, and on foot.

Though family travel was the focus of our leisure time, my personal tally included the equivalent of another two trips around the earth on business related travel.

Looking at the calendar for 2016, we plan to go even further. Where will your travels take you in 2016?

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The Library – A “secret” bar in Singapore

When Scooby and Shaggy are old enough to have a drink, they’ll appreciate a place like The Library. On Keong Saik Road in  Singapore’s Chinatown district, this “hidden” bar is not a well kept secret but it is a great place to check out when you’re in town.

Start next door, at a restaurant called The Study. The decor suggests a studious mind and the menu is very English. You can eat here without any issue.  Alternatively, you can ask for the secret password and walk next door. The “front” for the Library changes every month or two. Sometimes it’s a working tailor shop. Other times it’s an art gallery or a wine dealer. Give the attendants there the password, and they’ll open the secret door to The Library.

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Chicken Rice – Singapore’s national dish

Singapore is justifiably famous for it’s food, especially the tasty treats concocted at hawker stands across the country. There are over 100 hawker food centers in Singapore, serving cheap eats at all hours of the day. But the best dish of all, in my opinion, is chicken rice.

On the surface, this is a very simple dish. Steamed chicken (sometimes roasted), served with a side of fragrant rice. It’s served with a broth soup, some spicy chili sauce, and maybe some veggies. But it is soooo good!

If you pay more than $4 for it, you’re eating in the wrong hawker stand. Here are a few of my favorite locations.

  • Empress Mall
  • Zion Riverside Food Centre
  • Toa Payoh Food Centre
  • Chinatown Complex
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To the Top – The Highest Point in Ohio

To say that I was out of breath would be a vast overstatement. On a whim, I decided to summit the highest point in Ohio.

There are travelers who collect high points, seeking to visit the highest elevation in each of the 50 U.S. States. The Highpointers Club, for example. The County Highpointers Association takes it a step further, visiting the highest elevation in each county in the U.S. That would take some time, since there are over 3,000 counties.

While the second goal would take quite a while, reaching the summits of the 50 states is a very achievable goal. Twenty-nine of them are less than a mile above sea level, thirty if you count Washington, D.C. Many can be driven to, or at least most of the way up. Only four are higher than 14,000 feet. Mount McKinley in Alaska requires special training and favorable weather conditions. By contrast, I was starting small.

Campbell Hill, Ohio is located within the city of Bellefontaine, the county seat of Logan County. Take a short detour from Interstate 71 or 75 down U.S. Route 33 to reach this small town, where the first concrete road in America was built in 1891. Campbell Hill is located within the Ohio Hi-Point Career Center campus. It’s a short climb to the top.Still, it was  a fun achievement. I don’t know if I’m going to attempt the rest of the state high points, but it was nice to visit one. Only 49 to go.

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Big Move to Singapore

I guess this post starts with an apology. It’s been about a month since I posted anything. That’s because I was in transition to my new home in Singapore. I was trying to build a consistent routine for 3-4 months of blogging, as recommended by Nikki at The Pin The Map Project. But my relocation got the best of me and a hiatus ensued. It’s much easier not to post after you’ve missed a couple days. I’ve rallied though. Now that I’m settled in my new home, I will strive for more consistency. I haven’t explored too much of the Lion City yet, but below are some weird things that I’ve found so far in my apartment.

Top 3 Weird Things About My Apartment in Singapore

Weird is maybe a strong word. Different than I’m used to, let’s say.  There’ll be a lot of adjusting in the days and weeks ahead. For now, just a few things that are different. And unexpected. I’m not going to waste time commenting on things that are different but expected. A rice cooker is a standard appliance here instead of a luxury item, which is not surprising. The fact that the thermostat is in Celsius instead of Fahrenheit is also to be expected. I wasn’t thrown off by the different electrical plug shape either, because I’ve traveled here before. But in the past, it was always to stay in a hotel. I’ve discovered that there are some unusual differences between my apartment and homes in the U.S.

IMG_1281

1. The bathroom light switch is outside the bathroom. See that light switch just outside the bathroom? That’s the light switch for the bathroom. For some reason, the lights for bathrooms here are outside. That’s just weird. Maybe it’s because I grew up with siblings, but I want control of the lights while I’m in the shower. I mean, if there’s one room where I don’t want someone to be able to turn off the light on me, this would be it. And it’s not just in the apartment. I was in a public space in the apartment building yesterday and noticed that the light switch for that public restroom was in the hallway.

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2. Some rooms have steps. Not a normal 7-8 inch step up, but a 1 inch lip. Just enough to smash your toe on as you step in instead of up. Which I’ve done several times already. It’s not in every room either. Just the bathrooms and kitchen. I could understand if one had to step up as you left the kitchen, as a sort of flooding prevention measure. This is just the opposite, however.

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3. Different levels of dry on the dryer. Did you know that there are different levels of dry? I’m used to different setting for various fabrics. I guess if I thought about it, dryers in the U.S. sometimes have settings like “quick dry.” But I didn’t know that there was a difference between cupboard dry and mix cupboard dry.

I’m sure there’ll be more surprises as I adjust. And I’ll post stories from my great American road trip that I took just before moving here as well.

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Ordinary Traveler – Candice

This week’s ordinary traveler is my friend Candice.

1.  What makes you want to travel?  My traveling began rather early in life. I am sure I picked it up from my parents, who trekked across the country each year with my brother and I.  They provided me with a map and my mind began to wonder.  Wanderlust is alive and well with me, so traveling is just a natural reaction to this draw to constantly move.  My job keeps me busy, and travel allows me to get out, leave the cell phone behind, and listen to nature.  Additionally, I’m naturally curious about new places, people and the experience of learning.  Travel helps me to find myself, especially out in the woods.

Redwood National Forest

2. How do you afford to travel?  Each month I apportion off a bit of what’s left in my bank account from checking into savings.  This helps build a budget to spend on a couple of trips each year.  Uncle Sam also helps out, in that, my state taxes, from Iowa, are returned to me in one lump sum.  That also kicks in for another great trip each year.

Winslow, Arizona

3. Do you prefer to travel alone or in a group? There are times when I really enjoy having several people accompany me on the journey and then others when I find travel best experienced solo.  I like group travel in foreign countries or with someone from the location.  In the United States, my best trips are conducted in the car – just journeying from one location to the next.

Tombstone, Arizona

4. What is the most memorable experience you’ve had and why? My most memorable moment during one trip to the North Shore of Oahu occurred right before I went to Bosnia.  My friend recommended that we hit Haleiwa Beach Park because the waves were really pounding.  We paddled out in the middle of a break in a small rainstorm and just savored some pretty big waves.  While we were out there, gigantic turtles popped up next to us, just to get a quick breath before diving down again.  Then a pod of dolphins swam up to us.  To top it all off, this massive rainbow appeared in the distance.  It was truly a blessing to have complete serenity out in the ocean before traveling to the other side of the world.

A turtle checks us out in Hawaii.

5. What has been your favorite destination and why? I’m a National Parks junkie.  One of the best things our nation ever did was to protect portions of this country for future generations to enjoy.  The Grand Canyon is the ultimate in destinations to see in one’s lifetime.  I would say the best trip I’ve ever experienced was traveling to Salzburg, Austria from Rome, taking the train.  After college, I took a trip over Europe and found that ride in the Alps is one of the best views I’ve seen in my entire life.

The Grandest Canyon

6. Where have you been that you’d like to live for at least a year? I’ve had the good fortune to live in some excellent locations in the United States due to the Army.  Spending several years in Hawaii, Arizona, and New York were just dreams of mine when I grew up in Iowa.  After having traveled for almost four decades, I’d say a year in Northern California or Colorado are two places I haven’t lived that I’d like to try on for size.

7. What’s the one thing that you have to bring home as a souvenir? Every time I travel, I tend to bring home a piece of art.  In San Francisco, I found a great painting of a trolley car in bright orange, red and purple.  While traversing New Mexico, I persuaded the owner of a small hole-in-the-wall restaurant to sell me a cow head covered in turquoise.  My last trip to Mexico City resulted in a bag full of brightly colored paintings.

Mexico City

8. What’s the strangest custom that you’ve seen or experienced? That’s a bit difficult, as there are some customs in the Middle East completely foreign to my way of thinking.  One of the strangest things I’d ever seen was in Afghanistan, when our convoy passed a bus packed with people.  Looking through the windows as we passed, the entire vehicle was jam packed in the back with women in burkas, in front of them we saw livestock, then boys and then amply spaced out men.  It just took me back at how people are treated differently across the world.

9. What do you always pack? The “must” pack is my camera.  Photographs are the best pieces that I always bring back.  They can capture a scene and the essence of travel itself.  Photos from my journeys cover my walls in my house and remind me that the next adventure awaits.

Chiricahua National Park

10. What’s the best travel advice you’ve learned? Pack once, unload everything, and then pack again, taking out half of what you packed the first time.  You can get along with less in your bag if you think multifunctionally and pack light.  The best advice on the road I ever received was to constantly ask locals where the best hidden spots are.  Most recently, I had someone tell me the best places to eat, if you’re looking for a hole in the wall, is where there are lots of motorcycles parked outside.  If bikers approve then it’s gotta be good.  This definitely applies to Arizona.

11. Where are you going on your next trip? My next adventure takes me to Montana.  I’ve never been there, and both Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks are the next in my series to visit.  Friends in Missoula and Helena are helping me find some of the local attractions in the area as well.   In the upcoming year my goal is to prepare for the Register’s Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa (RAGBRAI) and get to finish the ride in 2016.  It’s something I’ve wanted to do since the early 1990s. I might just have the time and motivation in 2016.

Morning hike in the Huachuca Mountains

All photos provided by Candice.