Our flight to Cincinnati landed 10 minutes early – this kind of sums up our trip! We couldn’t have asked for more as we saw virtually every item we set out to see three months ago!
Thanks to the 125+ of you who signed up to follow our blog (who viewed our content over 8000 times!) We know that many more read via Facebook links and stopping by the site itself. We hope that something we posted along the way was enjoyable and interesting. If not maybe we provided you a nice distraction from time to time!!
We are headed back to work tomorrow (yes, tomorrow!) so it is time to rejoin the real world!
This will be the last blog post. We plan to keep the blog up for the foreseeable future in case there is something interesting you might want to reference. This blog is also our personal journal of what we saw and did for the day we don’t remember anymore! 😉
People always ask what your favorites of the trip were and what it was like to be outside the US for almost three months. Here are our thoughts:
Trip Stats:
-Days Traveled: 89 (including international date line days for you travel geeks out there :))
-Flights delayed: 30 minutes over 22 flights!
-Countries Visited: 20
-Miles Flown: 37,500
-Miles Driven: 8,316
-Unique Hotels Visited: 54 (Maybe I shouldn’t have counted that one!)
-Trip Cost vs Budget: Over by $2 (stupid expensive Cincinnati taxis! Thanks to Emily the forecaster ;))
What it is like to continuously travel?
-The first two weeks you feel like you are on vacation.
-Then, you start to realize that this is your life for 3 months…you must take time to monitor the normal aspects of life like your bills as well as do dreaded laundry!
-Slowly, you have no idea what day of the week it is, but you do know the date (otherwise you might miss a flight!). You start to say things like “I know that today is Sept. 1, but I have no clue what day of the week it is. A few days ago was Tuesday, right? So, today must be in the Thursday-Monday range.” We had breakfast with one of Ryan’s coworkers in Geneva and did this. We felt like retirees!
-Now this feels like our day to day life. That means going back to work will likely be an adjustment!!
Best practices:
-Plan, plan, plan! We are crazy planners and had a 126 page itinerary. Ok, that is probably not for you, but the more you can plan ahead of time the less decisions you have to make on the fly. Changes early in a trip of this length can snowball into later scheduling disasters. Minimizing surprises is key when possible.
Full Disclosure: Given our crazy nature we did plan in free time 🙂
In the end we had virtually no issues over 90 days which was our goal!
-Do your own research: Only you know what you like so don’t always trust the top 10 lists sight unseen. Some of the top 10 lists have some uninteresting sites (to us at least!)
-Make restaurant reservations: People think we’re crazy, but we almost always got to eat at places known to be really good. Getting recos from other people and hotels can be dicey. Also, we noticed that in many places people don’t make as many reservations so being an international diner with reservations often resulted in the best table in the house.
-Register all your stops with the US State Department: There is a program called STEP. Hopefully you don’t need any help, but we appreciated the emails we got for any activity in the country. We also wanted to make sure the government knows where we were in case something happened to us or something went awry in the country!
Our Favorite Stops:
-Bora Bora (Natural beauty and relaxation)
-Japan (Historical sites, Amazing customer service)
-France (Paris: Food and museums, Brittany: Natural beauty and food, South France/Monaco: Luxury and natural beauty)
-Swiss Alps (Natural Beauty)
-Australia (Perth and Sydney)
-New Zealand (Natural beauty)
-Bolivia (Better understand how developing nations live and how we can help)
That’s all for now! Thanks for being part of our journey!
Ryan & Emily


























































































































































































































































