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Wide view over the northern Transfagarasan
The amazing Transfagarasan Road from Romania. Studying abroad can be an enriching experience

Taking classes in a foreign country has been a life-changing experience for students over the years, and technology continues to add to the flexibility of selections. For those pursuing an online degree, living and studying abroad can transform the learning experience into a cultural journey that students could never capture in the classroom. Consider one of these sometimes overlooked study abroad options to travel, explore and learn. 

West With The Night 

Earnest Hemingway praised Beryl Markham’s 1939 autobiographical classic, West With The Night, a rich account of her life growing up on her father’s coffee plantation outside of present day Nairobi, Kenya. The book is an inspirational account of a young woman growing up with adventures unthinkable in her native England. As a young adult, she became an aviatrix and flew as a bush pilot over an Africa that has largely disappeared. However, much of the wild, open stretches of east Africa have remained relatively unchanged since Markham’s time, and studying in Kenya can provide a student with a true sense of adventure and the opportunity to advance an education unlike most peers.

The Sun Also Rises

Speaking of Papa Hemmingway, taking courses while living in Pamplona, Spain, the scene of what many consider to be the controversial literary icon’s best work, has its own adventures to be had – or avoided! Located less than an hour drive from the Pyrenees Mountains, the geographic boundary between Spain and France, this historic city in northern Spain is most famous for the famed running of the bulls during the festival of San Fermin, the city’s patron saint. This annual event in July draws tens of thousands of Spaniards and tourists who “brave” running with the young bulls on their way to the bullfighting arena in the center of town. For the rest of the year, however, Pamplona offers a unique chance to study with access to world-class internet connections in a slow-paced location where the Basque and Spanish culture permeate the daily lives of the town’s residents. 

Dracula

So how do you like your steaks? Seriously, the mysterious Transylvanian setting of Bram Stoker’s (an Irishman) classic horror tale is a real place, namely a region in Romania, one of the Balkan states. Considered an extension of the Alps, the Transylvanian Alps offer more beauty than scares. Having escaped most of the violence and turmoil associated with neighboring countries in the Balkan Peninsula, a student in an overseas e-learning program can spend time on the Black Sea resort beaches during the summer months or travel to mountain destinations in the Carpathian Mountains. With a history that far predates the discovery of the Americas, learning a Romance language in this out-of-the way region of the world may take some of the chills out of your favorite vampire novel, as you can study in a tranquil setting rarely found in more common learning destinations. 

About the author: Derrick Cruise is a professional writer living in the Indianapolis area. He specializes in travel and education articles involving online degrees. In his spare time, he contributes to stand-up comedy routines and blogs for Cooks and Travel Books.

Photo via Flickr Creative Commons
I love to travel, but I am incapable of taking a trip without becoming completely insolvent. There’s something about the freedom that adventure brings that seduces the money right out of my wallet. I’m sure a lot of that also has to do with the fact that I’m not a big planner. The whole ceremony of planning wears me out, so I prefer taking care of the big stuff upfront (like selecting the destination) and just winging the rest as I go. Admittedly, my travel style is a bit on the feral side. So how do I manage to successfully travel at all AND have money for souvenirs? Mobile apps. They enable my travel style while helping me save money on gas, hotels, and restaurants.  

Here are my must have apps for road trips:

If ever there was a favorite buddy to travel with, Gas Buddy would be it. I tend to only notice that I need to look for a gas station when my car is running on just fumes. As a result, I usually get stuck settling on gas stations with the highest prices. While Gas Buddy doesn’t tell me when I need to get gas, it will tell me where the nearest gas stations are and which ones have the best gas prices. The coolest feature of Gas Buddy is that gas prices are uploaded (in real time!) by other Gas Buddy users, so you can be sure you’re getting the best deal. Gas Buddy is free and is available for download on Android, iPhone, and BlackBerry mobile devices (including Rim’s newly released BlackBerryDakota).

HotelPal


While this mobile app is free, it’s only available for download on Androidand iPhone mobile devices (sorry BlackBerry users!). I like this travel app because when I get too tired to keep driving, I can quickly search for the best price on available hotel rooms in my area. In addition to seeing a list of real time prices, the app also provides you with full screen images of hotel rooms as well as a description of the hotel’s amenities.  Let’s face it, I love a cheap room rate, but not if it means I’ll be sleeping in a room that resembles the filming location of the movie Psycho. HotelPal features chain hotels, boutique inns, and privately owned local motels.

When I start to hear my stomach grumble, that’s when I turn to Meal Ticket. This app lets you search for restaurant coupons and special deals by area. It provides you with a list of coupons as well as user submitted reviews for local eateries (sort of like a built in Yelp). The best part is that you can show the waiter the coupon right from your phone – no printer required. This app is free and currently available for download only on Android and iPhone mobile devices, but it will soon be available for all major mobile platforms, including BlackBerry and Symbian. One last thing to keep in mind…Meal Ticket is still in its infancy, so its active locations are limited (but not for long!) to Idaho, Oregon and Washington.

Do you have some tech savvy ways to save money on travel? Share them with us in the comments section!

About the Author: Lyndsey Rabon is a freelance writer for the Prepaid Reviews site, a site that provides information about prepaid phones coupled with over 17,000 consumer reviews of 30+ service providers such as Straight Talk. She is a technology enthusiast with a special interest in mobile apps.
Have you read  Tourists vs. Travelers. Inspiration For The 21st Century Traveler (Part 1) and The Ups & Downs Of Travel. Inspiration For The 21st Century Traveler (Part 2) yet?

Have you thought about traveling to get away from it all? Don't! It's the wrong reason. Plus, it's been tried before and, believe me, it never works. It might pour balsam on fresh wounds, but the effect of this remedy doesn't last long. As the bumper sticker says, "Wherever you go, there you are." Travel fails as escape but it succeeds as confrontation - confrontation with our old selves that, deprived of their usual confirmatory surroundings, may yield to a new one.

But travel has it's own price. And I am not talking only about money here. There will be sacrifices in terms of human relations. Not everybody understands the traveler. I know my parents don't. They believe we are here to leave something behind, something material, palpable. I don't share their opinions. I'm sorry if being myself means failing them. This can bring a bitter-sweet taste to any trip. But then there are people who sold everything they owned and embarked on a life of adventure. Indefinitely! No regrets there, and they are an inspiration for so many of us! In life, you can buy things or you can buy experiences. What makes you happier?

Shooter

However, taking into consideration that you might have a limited budget and you might not want to sell all your earthly possessions to live location independent for the rest of your days, taking the right trip is infinitely important. Not only go for cheap holidays abroad but also choose a place that is good for your soul. Meet the locals, learn about their culture and about yourself, let go of your inhibitions and habits, start feeling alive, dust off your high school Spanish or French or German, stop texting, try new foods, and bring to life the crystallized parts of yourself that have gone dead from routine, fear, stress and worry.

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines, sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” – Mark Twain

In a society where depression is transforming into an epidemic, travel becomes imperative; because travelers not only discover themselves and the world anew, they often go the extra mile that gives them a special status; because they get to do something their friends back home never did, and that sets them apart in a good way.

Miscou, New Brunswick, Canada / Île Miscou, Nouveau-Brunswick, Canada

We live in a donkey with a carrot world. Today's Western society gives us little means to fill those huge shoes it has prepared for us. But traveling is a creative solution, a great strategy to cope with this damn demanding society that asks from us to be winners without really giving us the opportunity to get in the race in the first place. Travel raises the self-esteem, boosts our creativity and confirms our worth, while helping us understand our place in the universe.

So, please don't just stay there waiting for the depression to catch up with you. Go conquer something, do something you can be proud of, get a sense of purpose and live a trail behind you. Others will come to build the highway, don't worry about that.

There is only one warning: travel may be addictive for you. One trip may not be enough. You risk to get back home one day just to realize that your comfort zone has slightly shifted. And you may want to have a lifetime of explorations. Bon voyage!

What are the reasons you travel for?

Photos via Flickr Creative Commons
Have you read Tourists vs. Travelers. Inspiration For The 21st Century Traveler (Part 1) yet?

Not so long ago, evolutionary psychologists reached the conclusion that our distant ancestors avoided outsiders as they might have carried diseases. And we have to admit they were smart to do so. I mean, just remember the history lessons about the first contact between the Europeans and the indigenous people of the Americas. In a way, this evolutionary fear of foreigners is still with us today, though in the meantime, the reasons we invoke are not so much health related but have more to do with our economy and security.

But to be accurate, we, the moderns, always take safety precautions before going to less developed countries. We vaccinate to protect ourselves from them, but who protects them from us? Their is no vaccine to protect them against the tourists or travelers as a matter of fact. And I know from personal experience this is not fair. I caught the nastiest virus in the middle of the Spanish summer from an English tourist. I never felt as miserable. It was steaming hot outside and I suffered for two weeks in bed covered up till my neck. And that was just a flu virus I, the local, got from somebody just two Western countries away.

Sabtang

In spite of all the fears and threats travel presents for people, we still travel. Though we are generally rooted, we find pleasure in escaping from time to time. Why? Because travel is a learning experience, we get to see for ourselves, form our own impressions. Travel makes us porous to new customs, beauties, ideas, and dreams. Travel not only invites us to see the world anew, it gives us an unaccustomed look at who is doing the seeing.

“One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.” – Henry Miller

None of the benefits of travel compares to the oblique glance it allows us of our selves. By placing us outside ourselves, travel provides us with the distance required to see what it is we are habitually doing and the anonymity to risk new ways of being in the world. There seems to be nothing like immersing in another culture for staving off the mind's tendency to calcification. We travel to grow up, wake up, and stay on our toes.

Travel breaks stereotypes and allows us to see freshly. I can't think of a better vaccine against dogmatism. Travel is like truth serum. As we struggle to reconcile what we're experiencing with what we take for granted, we strip away what's arbitrary in cultural practice and approach what is universal.

Silhouette ~ Explored ~

When we travel, we are perpetually off-balance and on guard. And sometimes it is precisely this fear what makes travel so enlivening and revelatory. Other times it is the pleasure of seeing familiar things with new eyes. And eventually it is the miracle of seeing the world in different shades of light. Do we get to yearn for the mindlessness of familiar routines? Of course we do! But that just makes old pleasures much sweeter when we return home.

“Traveling is a brutality. It forces you to trust strangers and to lose sight of all that familiar comfort of home and friends. You are constantly off balance. Nothing is yours except the essential things – air, sleep, dreams, the sea, the sky – all things tending towards the eternal or what we imagine of it.” – Cesare Pavese

Travel can be the ultimate zen activity. You are in the now - reacting to new stimuli - and not anchored in the past or future. You can be yourself. You can breathe in and out in a free way, unconstricted and restricted by habit. Because you are living outside your habits, away from routine.

Continue reading The Reasons We Travel For. Inspiration For The 21st Century Traveler (Part 3)

Photos via Flickr Creative Commons

Definitely taking a nap:-)
The sandy beach is where the tourist goes

"The traveler sees what he sees, the tourist sees what he has come to see." - G. K. Chesterton

There is a huge difference between tourists and travelers as stereotypes. The tourist is a person who chooses a sunny destination, because all he wants is to relax, disconnect and switch off his senses, feel as comfortable as home and eat his favorite food even on the other side of the world. The tourist expects everybody to speak his language (because he's on a vacation to relax, not to wreck out his brains communicating with the locals, you know?) and goes back home a week later with nothing else but a new tan and some cheap and meaningless souvenirs for the family and friends, if possible picked up at the airport, because during his vacation he was busy toasting on the beach.

The traveler on the other hand, doesn't mind the weather, and is not shy when it comes to going off the beaten path. The traveler has all the senses alert, looks forward to meet new people, have new experiences, make new memories, try new recipes, stays as much on the road as possible and when finally gets back home, he is even more tired than he was when he left. And this is what makes the traveler happy. Now the question is, what do you want to be, a tourist or a traveler?

“Travel is more than the seeing of sights; it is a change that goes on, deep and permanent, in the ideas of living.” - Miriam Beard 

For the economy of this series of articles, I will concentrate only on the traveler type. There's nothing wrong with being a tourist from time to time, it's just that getting more value for my money appeals to me more. This doesn't mean I didn't climb the Eiffel Tower just because it's "touristy". I have no problem with touristy places. In fact I love them because they are usually culture packed. What I have a problem with is going places without learning anything from the experience, without being moved by what you see, and going back home with the feeling that your culture is far "superior" and "civilized" than the one you've just visited. To be honest, what's the purpose of spending your earnings going to remote places just to sleep on the beach when you could do it so much cheaper and comfortable in your own bed? To be clear, toasting on the beach is perfectly fine, just not when you completely forget to check out the main square.

"The traveler was active; he went strenuously in search of people, of adventure, of experience. The tourist is passive; he expects interesting things to happen to him. He goes "sight-seeing"."  - Daniel J. Boorstin

I had the honor more than once to engage in enriching heart-to-heart talks with grannies and grandpas. They reached into their mental scrapbooks and turned to the pages of their lives that brought them happy memories. To my surprise, they didn't talk about money, nor career advancements, but all of them spoke about the places they've been to and experienced firsthand. When they went flipping through their best moments, the ones that stuck out were the trips they took. And I was brought to believe that what stays with us in the end are the people we've met and the places we've explored; that's what stands out, not the domestic chores we do on autopilot, nor the daily struggles.

“Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away” - Unknown author

On the other hand, I don't believe travelers and tourists really exist in a pure form. Sometimes we are more tourists than travelers, other times we are more travelers than tourists. It all depends on our very subjective needs. Travel and tourism are just the end points of a spectrum and as usual when talking about spectrums, the ending points are rarely met in reality, as they most of the time are pure theoretical notions.

What appeals to you more? Being a traveler or a tourists?

Continue reading The Ups & Downs Of Travel. Inspiration For The 21st Century Traveler (Part 2) and The Reasons We Travel For. Inspiration For The 21st Century Traveler (Part 3)

Photos via Flickr Creative Commons