Halfway Around the World

Going on a huge trip requires weeks and months of careful planning – we all know that. Now imagine, after all this planning, everything suddenly changes. Our author discovered the freedom of ending up alone in a totally unknown situation, in a faraway country.

TEKSTI Bianca Beyer

KUVAT Bianca Beyer

One month of travelling is a luxury one can afford when living and working in Finland due to the generous July-holiday month where nothing really happens in offices around the country. This is a perfect time to discover the world, for example, by train, like my friend and I did this year.

All the way from Oulu you can make it down to South China without boarding a plane. Riding the Trans-Mongolian Railway to Beijing with some stops along the way takes about two weeks. After that you can continue through China for two more weeks, again only by trains.

One train to roam the world

The fact that you are on a train seeing the landscape slowly change and feeling the time zones adjust piece-by-piece gives you a real feel of the distance you are covering. Together with the locals, Russians who take the train to go home or visit their relatives, you share a compartment, 54 beds in one wagon, no walls. You hear, smell and see each other – and somehow, this is ok, even when half of the wagon buys smoked fish offered by vendors at the train station and starts eating it straight away.

Lower beds function as seats, and people generously make space for each other to play cards, eat soups and noodles prepared with the boiled water available in each wagon, and drink teas. At nights a united snoring sound fills the wagon, the lights are lowered and the conductor takes care, with her Russian friendly harshness, that no one would disturb anyone’s sleep.

We met lots of different kinds of travelers. There is a Dutch girl who simply bought a flight ticket to China, and a return ticket 5 weeks later, and left the rest open to spontaneity and improvisation. There is a British guy who was so excited about his trip, which will take him about 9 months, that he had planned every detail in a spreadsheet.

Even though it took only 14 days to reach Beijing, it felt like months of traveling. Covering three different countries, meeting dozens of interesting people and seeing so varied landscapes in such a short time can become almost overwhelming. And finally having reached Beijing was only the beginning of the real adventure, as it turned out.

Me, Myself and I

My friend got sick in Beijing and decided to cancel everything and fly home instead, seven hours prior to our next train departure. Cancelling the trip was no option for me. Instead, I adjusted the schedule slightly, rebooked some train tickets, and changed some destinations. Besides, our travel guide claimed China to be one of the safest countries for a woman to travel alone. As I stayed mostly in hostels, I was actually never quite alone.

I found out that traveling by yourself is an uprising trend. Waiting for the right person to start a world-trip with is just a waste of time – just pack your things and go!

If you are interested in sightseeing, there is always the DIY option, which is cheaper than organized tours, but booking a guided tour with your hostel ensures you to get some contacts with other guests right away. From there, you might plan the next tour as a DIY – with your new friends. And if you are a loner, who does not like to hang out with other people for too long, or who generally gets annoyed easily when staying with the same crowd for several days, this is just perfect – before you get on each other’s nerves, you are all gone to the next destination.

Alone, but not lonely

Approximately 90% of the people I got to know when I was by myself were travelling alone. The only person you need to arrange your daily plan with is you. You can go wherever you want, and eat whenever you are hungry and whatever you want. All in all, you are more attentive, no matter whether it is about tasting the food, finding the correct subway line or a viewpoint you were looking for. And being attentive is the most valuable skill when discovering foreign cultures. This is how you get the most out of it. And maybe, at the end of the day, you might have learned a thing or two about yourself that you did not really know before.

Going on such an adventure by yourself teaches you to trust yourself, rely on your guts, and be more aware. You collect a unique experience of being a silent observer, an object rather than a subject. You absorb different cultures, habits and norms while trying not to intervene but rather adjust and blend in. It is not you who is the main character here; it is the world you see. You become just an extra.

Bianca Beyer

When I don’t sit over plans to erase all evil and meet unicorns, or dream of eating cotton candy, I believe in hard facts and science, doing my PhD in Accounting at the University of Oulu. Using writing as an information transmitter, outlet for creativity or simply for mere entertainment, I believe I am totally living the dream with all my current jobs. Blog: beapproved.wordpress.com

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Life Is a (Cheap) Journey

Pack your bags, grab your camera, it’s summer! It’s time to travel. Low-budget traveling does not only save you money; it is also way more fun than a standard “hotel-beach-repeat” vacation.

One of the biggest advantages of having a daily life in Finland is the existence of the ultimate holiday month – July. Sticking around your working place that month would make little sense because no one else will be there but you. And even if workaholics block the doorway in your office to prevent your escape, you won’t be able to reach any of your customers.
Because in July, Finnish people pack their necessities and move to a cottage in the woods, far away from civilization, the Internet and phones. Sure, if you are a student, you might need to earn some money doing a summer job, but we claim there’s always some leverage in July.
What if there is time, but no money, you ask? Worry not, our second promise for an awesome experience is based on the assumption that low-budget holidays offer more fun, experience, wisdom and great times than “normal” vacations, anyways!
The options are numerous. You don’t need to fly thousands of kilometers in order to see something new. A good way to travel is for instance by train. If you are under 26, you get special prices for Interrailing.

Through Europe by Train: Interrail

If you want to see more than two countries and have some extra cents to spend, it makes sense to book a “global” pass for up to 30 countries. To keep costs low, you could for example focus on Eastern Europe – this is how Laura Riuttanen and Jere Väisänen did it on their Interrail trip. They visited Poland, Slovakia, Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia and Czech, and the living costs were “nothing compared to Finland”.

“Choose restaurants that are not touristic – if they don’t have an English menu, for example, it’s a good sign you will get cheaper and more original meals,” explains Riuttanen.

Unlike Riuttanen and Väisänen did, who flew to Poland first, Maria Vilas Trias is traveling with her friends now starting directly from Finland. They have 22 travel days and will spend a bit over a month in total, and so far they paid 300 euros each – for train tickets, ferries, and hostels.

If you like trains, there are also options outside Europe. Santiago Osorio, for instance, will go with four other friends by Trans-Siberian express from Moscow to Beijing. That trip takes about two weeks with some stops, and is only slightly more expensive than an Interrail trip. The good thing: the train contains beds already, so while moving forward, you spare costs for a hotel. And in Mongolia, when visiting Ulan Bator, they will stay at a couchsurfer’s place instead of a hostel – low cost, high cultural interaction.

Work & Travel

If this has not convinced you, or you don’t like trains, have you thought of doing something good while being abroad? With AIESEC, for example, in the scope of the Global Citizen Project, you can help in a developing (or any other) country for board and lodge, and you only need to pay for your transportation.
Or if you have Erasmus-friends, how about paying them a visit? Finally, if you are really broke and cannot go anywhere, you could offer your own place for couchsurfers and get to know people from all around the world without moving an inch. You’ll be surprised what a popular destination Oulu is!

Be prepared

The better you prepare, the more you will have from your trip. Eventual visas, vaccinations, what to pack – find information online in blogs or in books. For the Interrail, for example, Laura Riuttanen recommends Europe on a Shoestring.

Don’t be naïve – the world is a little bit less safe outside Finland. Take a lock with you, and don’t leave any valuables ever behind, not even in a hostel. Don’t keep all your belongings in the same place and try to carry important things close to your body. Pack light because half of the clothes you take you won’t need.

Plan variety – after the 7th capital, even the biggest city fan gets tired of hot pavements. Some nature, a lake, some beach in between will keep you interested and relaxed. And don’t ever try to save money on necessary essentials like accommodation or food – you will be thankful for a good night of rest after days or weeks on busy trains.

Just do it

While all this might seem to you like an unfair teaser to show you what other people can afford and you can’t – don’t get us wrong. While we cannot stress often enough how important traveling is, we also continuously show how easily achievable it is. It will improve your knowledge, your language skills, but most important, it will help you to be open minded, tolerant, patient and experienced – great soft skills on a CV, by the way.

No one can take away what you learn in your trip from you: the people you meet, and the cultures you explore. If you are thinking of buying a new TV or of asking your parents for a new phone – rather invest this amount of money in traveling. Especially now, as a student, or as an employee in Finland with mentioned July-sabbatical, you have a chance to experience something great.
And even though this phrase sounds corny: you might regret not taking the chances, later when circumstances change. You never know how drastically it might change your life. Gilberto Oliveira Neto, on his 4th volunteer placement for AIESEC, landed in Oulu – and has been staying here for two years now studying in a whole new program, just because he fell in love with the country.

Life is a journey, so go travel it!

Bianca Beyer

When I don’t sit over plans to erase all evil and meet unicorns, or dream of eating cotton candy, I believe in hard facts and science, doing my PhD in Accounting at the University of Oulu. Using writing as an information transmitter, outlet for creativity or simply for mere entertainment, I believe I am totally living the dream with all my current jobs. Blog: beapproved.wordpress.com

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