Go Back   Horizons Unlimited - The HUBB > Chat Forum > The HUBB PUB
The HUBB PUB Chat forum - no useful content required!

BUT the basic rules of polite and civil conduct which everyone agreed to when signing up for the HUBB, will still apply, though moderation will be a LITTLE looser than elsewhere on the HUBB.
Photo by Igor Djokovic, camping above San Juan river, Arizona USA

I haven't been everywhere...
but it's on my list!


Photo by Igor Djokovic,
camping above San Juan river,
Arizona USA



Like Tree49Likes

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 7 Aug 2016
Registered Users
HUBB regular
 
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 33
Quit work and travel?

Ok, this is a question for those of you who spend your life traveling and don't work for a living... How do you do it??

I often find myself daydreaming about coming into enough money that I don't have to work anymore, then riding slowly around the world on a 250cc bike, staying in a different place every night, no commitments, no attachments.

... But then I pull myself back to reality. What would I do for money? My savings would run out sooner or later. I've worked hard on my career, I would be throwing that away. What about my pension for when I'm older? I don't make vast sums of money, but I make a comfortable living and am used to being able to afford to live reasonably comfortably. How would I cope with thinking "no, you ate restaurant food yesterday, you'll go over budget if you eat at a restaurant again today."

Then again, there are plenty of people living that life, so it must be possible. My question is how do you do it? A rude question I know, but are you privately wealthy? If not, do you worry about what will happen when the money runs out? Maybe you have the kinds of skills where you know you'll just be able to walk straight back into a job when you need to?

I'm just interested really. Maybe it just comes down to having the balls to put all the middle aged worries about savings, pensions and mortgages to one side and just doing it. Maybe I'll never be adventurous enough to actually do that, but I'm still interested in how people made the transition from a normal 9-5 life to a life traveling.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 7 Aug 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Montreal
Posts: 104
Quote:
Originally Posted by anotherbiker View Post
... How would I cope with thinking "no, you ate restaurant food yesterday, you'll go over budget if you eat at a restaurant again today."
Sad but true. It is the reality of long duration travels. You can't sleep every night in an hotel, or have every meal in a restaurant. You could, for sure, if you travel for a week, maybe four. But leave for several months and you just quadrupled or quintupled your budget. What do you prefer to do on the same amount of money? One month of travel, or six months?

My rules are simple. Cheap hotels when I travel late... No choice. Otherwise stop riding earlier and find a camping spot. Camping can be free and as much enjoyable as an hotel room. Of course, in some countries, the delta is much less. Two dollars for camping in Morocco (or free in the boons) vs $5 or $6 in a cheap hotel, sharing room with ticks.

People who leave for a long time are usually free spirits. Not necessarely rich people. Perhaps they don't think about their pension funds and their taxes. Life matters more. Do the riding while your body can do it. Not in 10 years. Do the riding when political conditions allow it. I should have ridden the Middle East 6 years ago. Sadly, I missed the opportunity. I should have ridden Lybia before France and The US invaded Lybia and killed Khadafi. My bad, again.

If you are young or at least healthy, now is the time. You'll get another job later, next year. I have my own race parts company. I work alone. If I decide I leave for 4 months, I have the freedom to tell my customers I will be away and to order now. I am lucky I am not missing sales as I get them back when I return from travel. I did 20,000km thru France, Spain, Morocco, Corsica, Sardania, Sicily Tunisia, Albania, Montenegro, Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, Italy, Belgium and Germany a few months ago. ;-)

My next strip is awaiting "pacification" in the Middle East. I have to go there before I die. And I am only 54... ;-)

Take whatever I wrote with a grain of salt. ;-)

Lee

PS Travelling will make you meet great people and will expand your mind. This is worth all the world's gold.



Yup. Mohamed is a Moroccan shepherd with only one leg. Got bitten by a snake. Leg had to be cut. Met him in the middle of dry nowhere. The dude was brilliant.

Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 8 Aug 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Wessex, UK
Posts: 2,136
Unless you are independently wealthy it is not possible to spend your life travelling and not work, those of us who travel a lot usually return home for periods of work or sometimes manage to find casual work where we are. The people who travel indefinitely are either digital nomads or good writers and photographers who actually work quite hard to make a living selling articles and photos and giving talks while on the road.
If you want to travel long term on a limited budget you would have to cope with not eating in a restaurant everyday or every week for that matter unless you are in a developing country where a meal is only a dollar or two.
I find having a trade fits in well with travel, I am a toolmaker and find it easy to come and go with employment as it is a job rather than a career, my employers don't care that I have been away for six months or have worked at five different places in the last ten years only that I can get on and do the job when I turn up for work.

Last edited by mark manley; 8 Aug 2016 at 03:08. Reason: spelling correction
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 9 Aug 2016
Registered Users
HUBB regular
 
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 33
So there's no magic secret, and it's back to either hoping for a lottery win or take the plunge and quit my job, hoping I can find another good one when the money runs out...

Who knows, maybe someday I will. In the meantime, I'm living vicariously through this forum!
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 9 Aug 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Montreal
Posts: 104
Quote:
Originally Posted by anotherbiker View Post
So there's no magic secret, and it's back to either hoping for a lottery win or take the plunge and quit my job, hoping I can find another good one when the money runs out...

Who knows, maybe someday I will. In the meantime, I'm living vicariously through this forum!
Live simply and save your money for a year or two. When you have all your money saved, explain your employer you have this great project. Ask him if you can have your job back after the journey. Maybe he will hire you back.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 9 Aug 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: NSW Australia - but never there
Posts: 1,235
Work for 40 years and then spend 20 traveling.
__________________
Tony
Click here for Travel Photos & Travel Map
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 9 Aug 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Oxford UK
Posts: 2,105
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tony LEE View Post
Work for 40 years and then spend 20 traveling.
I think many fear it'll end up as work for 40 years and then spend 20 travelling to the local hospital and back.

If only life were simple and we could just fire up the bike and head off without money (or any other) worries. Wouldn't we all do it? Well, no, I don't think the vast majority of people would. Maybe those of us frequenting this site might be closer to doing it than most but how many here have gone off with an open ended commitment to life on the road - without any secondary consideration such as write a book, reassess my life, rite of passage / prove a point etc. Even if you've gone RTW (as a number have) you eventually end up back at your starting point (in all senses).

I suppose that as the longest trip I've done is about three months I'm not really qualified to judge anyone's desire to travel endlessly as a lifestyle choice but I've been at those junctions a few times over the last four or five decades. I could do it right now if I chose. I probably have enough money to sustain myself for years, particularly if it was out of high cost areas like the EU / US. My wife and I have looked at a number of lifestyle change alternatives that we could afford to do, with travel being one of them. The reason it probably won't happen is not for practical reasons but because when you dig a little deeper there's (for us anyway) a fundamental flaw at the heart of hedonistic travel.

You have to ask yourself why am I, or would I do this? "Because I enjoy it" isn't really good enough as an answer because what happens when you stop enjoying it - and, if you travel for long enough, you will eventually stop enjoying it. It'll become routine. The adrenaline fuelled uncertainty of some bribe laden 3rd world border will just become another depressing rip-off, the colourful locals you meet in a waterfront bar will be just another bunch of half wit chancers and the endless sun that seemed so desirable when you left the UK will start you wondering about those new brown marks on your shoulders. Paradise will turn out to have feet of clay. If a travelling lifestyle is the answer to your current situation what will you do when it, in its turn, becomes the problem.

Expanding on that will have to wait until some future point as my lifestyle today is telling me I have other things to do, deadlines to meet etc. And that of course, in a somewhat nihilistic way, () is where we came in ...
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 19 Sep 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Sep 2016
Posts: 207
Quote:
Originally Posted by anotherbiker View Post

I'm just interested really. Maybe it just comes down to having the balls to put all the middle aged worries about savings, pensions and mortgages to one side and just doing it. Maybe I'll never be adventurous enough to actually do that, but I'm still interested in how people made the transition from a normal 9-5 life to a life traveling.
Its really a difficult question and there is no real simple answer.

Being financially secure into retirement is very important given our life expectancy is well into the eighties now. What my partner and I decided is that we would build our super up and pay off the house so we can retire early with a transition to retirement from age 55. We have a food van that we do every second weekend to bring in some extra $$

By 60 we should be retired from full time work and will keep doing our food van in the holidays to bring in some more $$.

We will then rent the house out for six months and head OS which will help pay for our trips.

In the meantime we keep an eye out for cheap airfares and head OS for a few weeks every year to somewhere different. Our soft panniers are our travel luggage and we hire a bike for a week or so when we are OS. It scratches the itch.

Barring a serious illness like cancer I would hope a good 15yrs of active travel together seeing the rest of the world.

Just my 2c and of course not everyones cup of tea.

cheers and have fun
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 19 Sep 2016
Registered Users
Veteran HUBBer
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Brisbane Australia
Posts: 193
There is a comprehensive thread about this here.



http://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hub...-lifestyle-458
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 Registered Users and/or Members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
2015 - Heading east from Europe, add your itinerary / plans kim Travellers Seeking Travellers 190 5 Mar 2016 07:38
Do long term travellers keep up travel insurance? zedsdead The HUBB PUB 42 30 Sep 2015 20:20
Azerbaijan Travel Warning - Bribe stops fritzsampson Northern and Central Asia 8 2 Jun 2014 07:23
Seasonal work opportunity - save money and travel dob90210 The HUBB PUB 1 8 Jan 2012 00:04
Global Giving Field visitor as you travel jcravens Make a Difference 0 11 Nov 2011 20:53

 
 

Announcements

Thinking about traveling? Not sure about the whole thing? Watch the HU Achievable Dream Video Trailers and then get ALL the information you need to get inspired and learn how to travel anywhere in the world!

Have YOU ever wondered who has ridden around the world? We did too - and now here's the list of Circumnavigators!
Check it out now
, and add your information if we didn't find you.

Next HU Eventscalendar

HU Event and other updates on the HUBB Forum "Traveller's Advisories" thread.
ALL Dates subject to change.

2024:

Add yourself to the Updates List for each event!

Questions about an event? Ask here

HUBBUK: info

See all event details

 
World's most listened to Adventure Motorbike Show!
Check the RAW segments; Grant, your HU host is on every month!
Episodes below to listen to while you, err, pretend to do something or other...

2020 Edition of Chris Scott's Adventure Motorcycling Handbook.

2020 Edition of Chris Scott's Adventure Motorcycling Handbook.

"Ultimate global guide for red-blooded bikers planning overseas exploration. Covers choice & preparation of best bike, shipping overseas, baggage design, riding techniques, travel health, visas, documentation, safety and useful addresses." Recommended. (Grant)



Ripcord Rescue Travel Insurance.

Ripcord Rescue Travel Insurance™ combines into a single integrated program the best evacuation and rescue with the premier travel insurance coverages designed for adventurers.

Led by special operations veterans, Stanford Medicine affiliated physicians, paramedics and other travel experts, Ripcord is perfect for adventure seekers, climbers, skiers, sports enthusiasts, hunters, international travelers, humanitarian efforts, expeditions and more.

Ripcord travel protection is now available for ALL nationalities, and travel is covered on motorcycles of all sizes!


 

What others say about HU...

"This site is the BIBLE for international bike travelers." Greg, Australia

"Thank you! The web site, The travels, The insight, The inspiration, Everything, just thanks." Colin, UK

"My friend and I are planning a trip from Singapore to England... We found (the HU) site invaluable as an aid to planning and have based a lot of our purchases (bikes, riding gear, etc.) on what we have learned from this site." Phil, Australia

"I for one always had an adventurous spirit, but you and Susan lit the fire for my trip and I'll be forever grateful for what you two do to inspire others to just do it." Brent, USA

"Your website is a mecca of valuable information and the (video) series is informative, entertaining, and inspiring!" Jennifer, Canada

"Your worldwide organisation and events are the Go To places to for all serious touring and aspiring touring bikers." Trevor, South Africa

"This is the answer to all my questions." Haydn, Australia

"Keep going the excellent work you are doing for Horizons Unlimited - I love it!" Thomas, Germany

Lots more comments here!



Five books by Graham Field!

Diaries of a compulsive traveller
by Graham Field
Book, eBook, Audiobook

"A compelling, honest, inspiring and entertaining writing style with a built-in feel-good factor" Get them NOW from the authors' website and Amazon.com, Amazon.ca, Amazon.co.uk.



Back Road Map Books and Backroad GPS Maps for all of Canada - a must have!

New to Horizons Unlimited?

New to motorcycle travelling? New to the HU site? Confused? Too many options? It's really very simple - just 4 easy steps!

Horizons Unlimited was founded in 1997 by Grant and Susan Johnson following their journey around the world on a BMW R80G/S.

Susan and Grant Johnson Read more about Grant & Susan's story

Membership - help keep us going!

Horizons Unlimited is not a big multi-national company, just two people who love motorcycle travel and have grown what started as a hobby in 1997 into a full time job (usually 8-10 hours per day and 7 days a week) and a labour of love. To keep it going and a roof over our heads, we run events all over the world with the help of volunteers; we sell inspirational and informative DVDs; we have a few selected advertisers; and we make a small amount from memberships.

You don't have to be a Member to come to an HU meeting, access the website, or ask questions on the HUBB. What you get for your membership contribution is our sincere gratitude, good karma and knowing that you're helping to keep the motorcycle travel dream alive. Contributing Members and Gold Members do get additional features on the HUBB. Here's a list of all the Member benefits on the HUBB.




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:28.