*Continuous updates. Latest update in June 2021*
Travel and Work Culture
Article Contents
How to travel and work full-time? If you’re like the rest of America, you have the standard two-week vacation that isn’t enough to satisfy your travel wanderlust therefore you need solid travel and work tips that will help you maximize fun travel with a full-time career in America or anywhere with minimal vacation days.
It also doesn’t help that many Americans fall into the trap of sacrificing vacation and personal time on the path to career success. For years, Americans used up less vacation days than their European peers and in 2016, we left 662 million unused vacation days wasted on the table. A 2017 study found that even as Americans are getting better at using up days, men plan and use more vacation days than women. More on this informative study can be read at Project: Time Off.
The global pandemic and easing of lock down restrictions in the U.S. has prompted people to re-assess their working life and sacrifices, and while many workers are quitting in droves in 2021 to travel extensively, pursue passion projects, or switch to culturally fit careers, many others have to maximize travel within full-time careers and miserly vacation days.
For those playing the juggling act, here are some tips on how to travel and work full-time either as a solo traveller, couple, or family.
#How to Travel and Work Full-Time: Day Trips
I sing this from the mountain tops and I am the queen of day trips. If you reside in a town or city, explore the closest major city like a tourist and combine travel and work full-time. Hop on a tour bus, grab a map for a walking tour the way I do in Philadelphia’s Historic District or go on unique local tours run by residents of a neighbourhood. Not only do I experience a new city in Philly, it is a cheap bus ride from NYC and I spend ten fun hours before returning home.
You don’t even have to leave the state to experience another city for a day. In July 2019, my friend and I take a day trip to Rhinebeck, NY, for the Hudson Valley Balloon Festival and it is a fun day of county fair, cornhole and creams. In March 2020, I take a Friday off to Albany, NY, to experience the grandiose architecture of the NYS Capitol Building in all its majesty. It was a fun day trip and the last one before NYS and the world shut down.
Furthermore, experience a particular region in-state for day trips as I do in my pandemic Hudson Valley day trip adventures visiting picturesque and historic towns like Beacon, Cold Spring, Sleepy Hollow and many more. This has been a stress reliever for me during the pandemic and I am continuing this tradition “post-pandemic”.
Read More: Cheap Day Trip to Roosevelt Island from New York City
#How to Travel and Work Full-Time: Weekend Staycations
The same tip goes for staycations away from home but still within your city or state.
The best travel and work tip is to leave work early on a Thursday or Friday to beat rush hour or score cheap flight deals. A full weekend does wonders to the body and soul so take this time to experience rest and rejuvenation.
In May 2018, I take a solo travel trip for an overnight in Hudson, New York, and in pandemic period, I return for a weekend day trip and have a good time exploring the walkable town, buying organic and sustainable food and products, and noticing how lock down has affected the town. As much as travel took a pandemic hit in 2020/2021, there have been many travel deals to score and in fall 2020, I take advantage of Amtrak Northeast deals to Explore Alternative Washington DC away from the conventional tourist traps.
If you’re in corporate and get floating and PTO days separately, make sure to use up floating days first because when you leave, you are paid remainder PTO but not floating days. Tip from a veteran colleague. Click To Tweet
#How to Travel and Work Full-Time: Business Travel
Professions that know how to combine travel and work full-time are usually in Sales or any position that requires frequent travel and they use opportunities to stay back an extra day or weekend to experience a new city or country. For example, if you finish on Thursday, stay the weekend and leave on Sunday. Experience local culture at your leisure and maximize those vacation days with a full-time career.
#How to Travel and Work Full-Time: Departmental Retreat
The best way to travel and work full-time is by participating in employee retreats. This is an overlooked travel avenue but one that is becoming popular as lock down eases where corporate retreats keep aside a days or weekends for employee bonding and sight-seeing which is a great opportunity to spend hours exploring a new city. If this happens to be in out of state or country, count yourself lucky indeed!
#How to Travel and Work Full-Time: Break it Up!
Maximize more travel with meagre vacation days if you strategically plan it in chunks. For example, I prefer leaving on Thursday to take advantage of the weekend and return on a Sunday taking just two vacation days out of your miserly quota. Play around with travel days to get the best price regarding cost and layover duration so that you take good advantage of your PTO.
Practice these travel and work tips every quarter and by year end, you would have taken four well-rested vacations to make up for the pitiful amount we get Stateside.
Alternatively, take seven days off and travel twice a year. Of course, everyone’s work and life situation differs so do what suits you best on how to travel and work full-time in the U.S.
#Off-Season
Most families travel in summer because schools are out and kids are able to tag along and this results in a lot of empty offices for at least 2 weeks. I hear that some jobs deny summer vacations if a lot of people book or it is a first-applied-first-approved situation. Tragic!
Major travel tip: If you’re without children, travel off-season when destinations are cheaper and less crowded. In most firms, January is the quietest month of the year as the big bosses are on vacation too so take advantage of this and plan a vacation.
I do this in January 2017 for a girl’s trip to Havana where beaches are devoid of tourists and we soak up the sun into our frozen NYC bodies. If your vacation days accrue at year end, it works out best because you can spend 2 weeks away.
#Unlimited Vacation Days
DO NOT FALL FOR THIS!
*Clears throat* sorry for screaming. My colleague has this and I am initially green with envy until I hear the caveat: “…at manager’s discretion.” Of course. I had visions of monthly getaways or a full travel month every quarter; that’s what “unlimited” means, no?
I prefer a raise to unlimited vacation days if I cannot utilize the “unlimited” in vacation days to its full meaning and extent.
#2-in-1 Getaway
This is my favourite travel tip to give!
The best way to maximize travel is by visiting cities close to the main city you’re booking. For example, if you have a NYC trip planned, spare a day trip to Philly or Connecticut. There are buses and trains to these states because most people live here for the affordable cost of living and commute to Manhattan.
The same strategy applies abroad too.
Every major Euro city has high-speed trains to near-by Euro cities. For example, train rides from Amsterdam to Antwerp or Copenhagen to Malmo are available and affordable and can be done in a full day.
In April 2018, I squeeze in a day trip to Malmo and Lund from Copenhagen on my inaugural solo trip to Denmark and it is an experience. The trip cost the equivalent of $34 return to and from Sweden over the Oresund bridge, made famous by the Hulu Original series, The Bridge, a Danish serial murder mystery. I’m the only one who watched it?? Oh, ok then.
Fast forward to off-peak travel in October 2018, I take my second solo trip of the year to Brussels and from there, spend two nights in Amsterdam, take a day tour to Ghent and Bruges in Belgium and a day trip to the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg! Isn’t that grand?
See how I maximize travel on this trip? I knew where I wanted to visit and even had alternative cities just in case. Yes. I am a Capricorn lol.
I promise, it wasn’t expensive as I had planned and mapped out destinations and cost before leaving NYC. Ghent/Bruges and Luxembourg were through Brussels Tour Company and the total cost for these destinations was $87.
Plan ahead and visit for a day, depending on distance, or stay overnight in affordable digs. You can squeeze in an extra city and country into your itinerary for cheap to maximize travel with meagre vacation days we get Stateside. Always make sure you know entry requirements of the city beyond the country you land in.
Read More: Amsterdam: A Cultured City Sprint in 48 hours
#Airline Perks
If you have a partner or spouse as an airline employee, you are lucky. Many airlines have generous travel perks for employees and a designated beneficiary.
Andre, a pal of mine, travels monthly because his wife is a long-time Delta employee and they’ve been everywhere because of the perks. Belize, Thailand, Mexico…name it. Sure, they have to be on standby and seating is not entirely guaranteed but they only pay taxes for all trips. What a steal!
#Volunteer Events
This is rarer for travel experiences but some volunteer sporting or NGO events enable you to see a local town or city for a tiny fee.
A colleague did a bike-a-thon from NYC to D.C. for climate change action and the group passed through Amish country where they slept in a field and met Amish families. This was a new experience for all of them and they will never forget it.
Another colleague is part of a cycling group that bikes miles into rural New Jersey, Upstate NYC and Long Island where the landscape is wide and picturesque. This can also be done abroad with a group and requires months of planning ahead.
********************************************************
I hope these travel tips inspire you to make the most of travel and work with the meagre PTO we get here in North America.
Travel doesn’t have to be international; it can be local or regional but it should be enriching. I regularly become a “tourist” in my own city by re-visiting spaces & events I haven’t been to in years or I experience new exhibitions and events New York City puts out.
Let me know what you think of these travel tips and don’t be stingy with the sharing buttons.
Happy travels! xxx
*Musings and Adventures is an Amazon Affiliate and clicking on ad links will not cost you but will help in blog overhead costs.*
81 Comments
Patricia & Miguel
April 2, 2018 at 12:55 pmWhen we were working on a 9-5 we always prioritize our time off to plan the next adventure, so we could get the maximum out of it as we only had 20 days per year of vacations! Then we realized that we loved more to travel than having a strict routine, and here we are, free from 9 to 5’s, deeply focused on traveling long term 😀
Sending all the love,
xx
Patricia & Miguel
http://www.freeoversea.com
admin
April 2, 2018 at 2:08 pmThat’s amazing! I hope to be free of the rat-race soon and enjoy my time. Sigh. Baby steps. Thanks for sharing 🙂
RJ Parker
April 16, 2018 at 10:25 pmCongrats Patricia & Miguel! Yeah, I’ve been an on & off again digital nomad since about 2014. Now I’m working part-time as a marketing director for a digital travel agency (for the perks and small income) while interning on a farm in TN. I might spend all Summer here on the farm, but my hosts get me out and about most Sundays to different parts of the state. Plus, living on a farm is a new adventure every day. I’m hoping this agency takes off to where the perks start piling up! I’ll be subbing to your blog and following along for inspiration and tips!
Danik
April 22, 2018 at 5:54 pmFantastic advice here. I hate the rat race and cant wait to get away from it all one day and travel the world…my way 🙂 We do a lot of day trips when we at home but I much prefer longer.
Maggie
April 23, 2018 at 4:04 pmGreat tips!! I actually enjoy my 9-5, but it does make traveling difficult. I have no problem using up all my 2-week quota! Also – europeans get 30 vacation days?!?!?! That explains so much haha. *Sigh*
Karen
April 24, 2018 at 7:49 amIn Australia we too get 4 weeks off each year and thank goodness we do as its a long way to travel anywhere from there. I have in the past taken my four weeks annual leave and then another month unpaid so I could backpack around Europe as going to Europe from Australia is so expensive and such a long way to go that it was more cost effective.
Bernie
April 24, 2018 at 8:19 pmThat’s all brilliant stuff! I have a big advantage now that I work for myself, and can juggle my work commitments around. But I still rely on those day trips, staycations and extending trips away for work to make the most of my travel time. There’s always a way to get to see some different places.
Martina
April 25, 2018 at 9:54 pmAmazing tips – thanks for sharing all this usefull informations! And Maggie thats true – in Austria we are getting 5-6 weeks vacation (depending on your age) plus a few bank holidays / public holidays 🙂
admin
April 29, 2018 at 4:15 amMartina, I’m practically neon green with envy here!!! 5-6 weeks??!!! Let me fantasize on dream locations…
Corinne
April 26, 2018 at 5:21 amYes, yes, and yes! Jim and I have been traveling for the last few decades while both working a full-time job, and we’ve managed to hit over 90 countries together during that time. It’s doable. I think the biggest thing is to find out what your priorities are and go from there.
Iulia (egodiary.com)
April 26, 2018 at 2:17 pmReally interesting topic for an article! Congrats! Yes, in Europe we do have many more days than in USA, but not all countries have the 30days. In Romania, the standard is 21 days, and depending on the company policy, you can get a couple of extra days.
But in any case, we that love so much to travel, have to always be smart about the annual leave days and try to fit as many trips and see as many places as we can, in the limited time that we have.
https://egodiary.com
admin
April 29, 2018 at 4:14 amOooh! 21 days is music to my ears, Lulia! I’m lucky to get a teeny bit more when I combine vacation, national and floating holidays but they’re certainly not up to 21. Sigh. Yes. We definitely have to squeeze travel in where we can! Thanks for commenting xx.
Renata Green - www.byemyself.com
April 26, 2018 at 9:12 pmYou have only two weeks vacation per year and people still don’t take all of it?! That sounds exhausting!
Due to the tax system in Europe, sometimes it’s better not to take a raise (I’m not kidding you), but rather work less. There are so many taxes deduced from your gross income that it simply doesn’t pay; at least not for me. For my work life balance, less money and more time is more convenient.
admin
April 29, 2018 at 4:12 amThis is very interesting, Renata. I know Europe is highly taxed but didn’t know about the choice of raise or more time. I would choose more time too. Yes. We get a standard 2 weeks (more if you’re long time in the company and/or an executive) and some people don’t use it all! Ridiculous, right?
Juliette S
April 28, 2018 at 4:00 amSome really great tips here. And people often forget just how much amazing stuff is within a short drive of their own house too. Day trips are wonderful. Especially if you can get out on a boat somewhere – that makes me feel like I’m on vacation. It’s all about making the most of the time you have too.
Nicola Hilditch-Short
April 28, 2018 at 9:54 amGreat tips, though we did eventually quit out jobs to travel full time we also travelled a lot before that whilst working full time. It was be hard but with good planning it is very possible to see lots of amazing places and of course having that job means you have more money to make the most out of that time too.
Backpacking Series
July 19, 2018 at 5:48 amMany travel lovers always struggle to strike a right balance to fulfil their travel quest along with full time work. These are some amazing tips to manage both. Tow-in-one getaway and off season travel sound so good. Especially off season, as if planned well, not only does it help save costs, its a good time as not too many other members might be taking off from work at that time.
admin
July 19, 2018 at 6:03 amExactly! I’m even thinking of that right now to travel in September when travel is cheaper and peak tourist season is over.
Nayna Kanabar
July 19, 2018 at 10:59 pmThis is a really detailed report covering every aspect of travel. It’s got lots of great ideas to maximise your vacation time.
Adessa Marie Young
July 20, 2018 at 7:25 amI prefer the weekend staycation or the break it up type of using my available work leaves. It is difficult to obtain longer days of leaves in our country depending on the company, so we plan our vacations usually fri-mon so it will be 4 days vacation.
admin
July 20, 2018 at 2:57 pmYeah. Sigh. I understand you. Crazy having to move days and dates just to enjoy some rest time.
Simple Indian Mom
July 20, 2018 at 9:02 amIt’s really a great article. Detailing is done really good. I just hope I can plan it out well on my first attempt.
admin
July 20, 2018 at 2:56 pmDo whatever works for ya. A day trip might be less expensive than a costly international trip.
Monidipa Dutta
July 20, 2018 at 12:37 pmI am not an American but even for me 2 weeks off for travelling is a no no. But it was a great one. I liked your approaching way of writing.
admin
July 20, 2018 at 2:50 pmThanks! Yeah. The 2 weeks is just crazy and many people don’t even use it all at the end of the year. Tragic.
Jennifer Prince
July 20, 2018 at 2:25 pmI love the tip of traveling in the offseason. There will be fewer lines and such so you can max your time. Great tip!
admin
July 20, 2018 at 2:49 pmExactly! All about saving those coins!!
Everything on a plate
July 21, 2018 at 3:12 pmLove how you put things it perspective! How we wish we could get away from the rat race!
admin
July 22, 2018 at 9:02 pmSigh! Might have to start playing the lottery so that we can afford to be digital nomads. Lol.
Easter Babe
July 22, 2018 at 8:29 amThese are some great trips. I love the idea of weekend staycations and day trips. Anyhing away from home is great. Everyone needs a little break every now and then.
admin
July 22, 2018 at 9:01 pmDon’t we all! The rat race is crazy and we all need a break from our hustling.
Easter Babe
August 16, 2018 at 7:03 amEuropeans get 30 days? How nice! I love your tips on how to maximize your vacation time. I love going on vacations during season for a few reasons. It’s more relaxing as it’s usually adults since kids are in school. Plus it’s cheaper too! Staycations are always a great way to escape for a couple of days.
Cyndi Buchanan
December 13, 2018 at 4:23 amGreat ideas! I love traveling for any reason for any amount of time.
admin
December 13, 2018 at 5:20 amI agree. No tangible reason needed to travel. Just go.
Leah
December 13, 2018 at 5:10 amI am the queen of weekend staycations and day trips!! You’re making me start to think about my next trip! 🙂 lol Love your blog! Inspirational for an up and coming travel blogger like myself!
admin
December 13, 2018 at 5:19 amThank you so much, Leah!! Glad it’s inspiring you and let me see you begin your travel blog in 2019! I’m always thinking of my next trip. Always in fantasy land lol.
Konstantina
December 13, 2018 at 10:52 amThis is actually an amazing post!! Last summer me and my boyfriend(he works a 9-5, I don’t) visited 2 countries and 11 cities in 12 days. It definitely takes a lot of patients and its not for everyone but I DEFINITELY recommend it.
admin
December 13, 2018 at 7:00 pmNice!! That was great to take advantage of.
Diana
December 13, 2018 at 7:39 pmMy husband gets paid vacation days. We also try to travel around holidays since he gets those days off as well, so we get some extra days in there. Apparently, if he works there long enough, it switches to unlimited vacation days. I’m not sure if it’s the same deal as your friends. His work is pretty lenient, but he does like to let them know a few weeks in advance.
admin
December 13, 2018 at 8:16 pmLucky! Yeah. He better find out the perks of “unlimited vacation” to know the deal.
Annemarie LeBlanc
December 14, 2018 at 12:24 amGreat tips! Whether we work a 9-5 job or a 24 hour job (SAHM), it is a must that we find time to relax and unwinde with a little vacation. Weekend staycations sound nice!
Karen Monica
December 14, 2018 at 2:02 amGreat tips. I believe no matter how busy we are, we must always take some time off for a vacation. It’s always nice to relax and see new places.
Live Learn Better
December 14, 2018 at 2:31 amGreat tips especially about exploring nearby cities or even staying a day or two extra if on a work trip. A lot of us don’t even think about it.
Azlin Bloor
December 14, 2018 at 9:45 amThese are all such great ideas! I especially love the idea of the days trips and weekend staycations. When time is short, make the most of what you have, right? As a homeschooling family, we are so used to doing things during off season, that when we groan every time we have to meet up with visiting relatives during holidays!
aisasami
December 16, 2018 at 3:34 pmWhat a great post! I do weekend trips (if I have a three day weekend), a staycation, or visit another prefecture (whenever we have a vacation week).
Chef sous chef
December 18, 2018 at 3:41 pmGreat tips. It’s hard to get away with a regular 9-5 and you have provided some great ideas for me. Thanks!
Gill Trotman
December 18, 2018 at 11:23 pmAs always, great post! My wife and I own our own business so when we finally find time to travel it is continuously in the off months. We have actually come to enjoy this because there are never any other tourists so the attractions are empty and we have the place to ourselves.
admin
December 22, 2018 at 3:19 amOff-peak travel is the best for peace and quiet.
Sippin Gypsy
February 6, 2019 at 10:01 pmTruly great advice. We really can get out there and see more if we plan and use our weekends and vacation time the right way! There are so many great day trips or overnight trips to do in any city it’s worth getting out there whenever possible!!
Arunima Dey
February 7, 2019 at 5:25 pmMaking the most out of business trips is the best advice ever!!! I travel for academic conferences which are normally fully paid for (yay funding), and they given arrange some activities for you. Now is not the time for me, but I do plan on taking volunteer vacations. Most probably go back to South America and teach English there. Great advise, hilariously delivered, like always.
admin
February 8, 2019 at 5:16 amThanks luv! xx I wish I could travel somewhere fun for work! Alas, just within my city and that I can do on my own. Weekend breaks are the best to do in your city.
Elizabeth
February 7, 2019 at 9:39 pmExploring your own city is SO amazing! We hadn’t done this until we spent an entire summer traveling when our boys were 2 and came home and we were BORED. So we started discovering our own city and fell in love!!
admin
February 8, 2019 at 5:13 amYup. Living n a large and popular city does help because there are new things to do literally daily.
alison
February 8, 2019 at 10:38 pmI seriously need to win the lottery, the thought of 2 weeks and not giving time off in summer due to too many people using vaca infuriates me. People need breaks! Oh and that thing about women taking less, I can’t even go there, please get me off my soap box. Great tips though very useful info to maximize your little time.
admin
February 9, 2019 at 12:26 amLol…we’re all on our soapbox here and women taking less vacay days stunned me too but really, I was not surprised. In 2019 and not in 1970s smh. I have no qualms in booking my days at all. We’re being denied a measly 2 weeks???
Alex Trembath
February 9, 2019 at 8:06 amThis is something we have been trying to do ourselves, since we got back from a long travel trip last year and my wife went back into a 9-5 office job. We’ve found a pretty good balance by taking frequent trips over weekends (like you suggest), and making use of annual leave. Another thing we try to do is ‘travel at home’ – we try to make time to explore our own city as much as we can. We never did that before travelling. Very interesting topic anyway and it was cool to read your article and get some new ideas!
admin
February 10, 2019 at 2:35 amSo glad you got new ideas! Yes. That’s pretty much what most of us across the pond do – travel at home – with the miserly vacation days we get, IF you’re even lucky to. Sigh.
The Travel Bunny
February 20, 2019 at 8:25 amI had no idea you guys have fewer paid days off. In Romania we get kind of like 21. I had 22, plus another day added after 5 years in the working field, with another added at 10 years.. My fiance had like over a week more than me in France. On the other hand, in Romania we don’t have bridges when a national holiday falls in a different day than Friday or Monday, so we take from the days off to connect them.
admin
February 21, 2019 at 2:01 amLuck you guys! We have much more fewer and some folks have 0 paid days off! You want a holiday, take it on your own time with no pay. It’s crazy here.
fashionandstylepolice
February 22, 2019 at 6:44 pmWe usually have more holidays in the UK than in the US. But since I started working for myself, I can take holidays anytime I want provided the kids are on holiday.
admin
February 23, 2019 at 4:33 amSo lucky. Being an entrepreneur is a great feeling.
Yoshiko Flora
April 11, 2019 at 7:34 amI find it cool when you said that a person can take a break from their 9-to-5 job by exploring the next major city and hop on a bus while following a map around to see the famous sights. Aside from that, one can also opt to check in at a self-catering hotel to rest in between these trips. Doing this will help a person feel like they are living in luxury while getting enough energy to continue going on tours like this.
admin
April 11, 2019 at 3:55 pmSelf-catering hotel?? Interesting! I’ll look out for that because exploring a city is very tiring business to do with little rest in-between lol. Thanks for reading and enjoying.
pooja Malkani
January 27, 2020 at 4:49 pmSomehow, I was never into a 9-5 job and I love to travel so managing both has been a challenge. I always made sure not to work on weekends and spend time with my family. My weekends are planned almost one month ahead. For a long vacation, i tend to consume all my sick leaves together.
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:37 amNice! With a family, you definitely have to plan weekends in advance for ease. In America, not everyone is lucky to have paid vacation or even vacation at all…so those of us that get enough vacay days use it up before they expire at the end of the year.
Natasha Delort
January 27, 2020 at 6:14 pmFirstly I love your website. It’s so pretty and easy to navigate. Okay now I recently stopped working 9-5 but my husband is always complaining about there’s no time for vacations or time to get away. Now I can show him this and say okay here’s all the ways we can even with a baby
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:35 amThanks you so much, Natasha! Really appreciate the compliment. Yes! He;s got no excuse for you all not to travel. A day trip to a family friendly town or even a staycation to give you two some rest and have someone else cook and clean for 2 nights. It doesn’t have to be international travel at all.
Komal
January 27, 2020 at 10:06 pmWow! I’m really not surprised we left so many vacation days on the table. I am a huge fan of mini staycations in your city. Used to do it all the time when I lived in Vegas.
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:33 amNice! Vegas is one place I’ve never been to. I love day trips and staycations too to escape a monotonous routine.
Marjie Mare
January 28, 2020 at 4:26 amMy goal for this year is to travel and enjoy the world. Last year, I did not do much, your post inspires me to go for my goal.
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:32 amAmen! It doesn’t even have to be abroad. Just escaping to warm FL or LA from the freezing Northeast is a treat lol. I hope to travel a bit more too this year and really take advantage of my PTO.
Michael
January 28, 2020 at 7:21 amI’ve seen many friends do volunteer to help in events that does travel. It is a nice way to move and break your routine. Great tips BTW!
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:31 amThanks Mike. I’ve never done that myself but that is really an interesting way to travel and give back at the same time.
Viano Dee
January 28, 2020 at 12:01 pmThis is a must for people who have 9-5 jobs. I mean how can one work all round and not have time to rejuvenate, to visit places and people? These are great ideas, I must say.
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:30 amAbsolutely! Alas, in the U.S., many people barely take vacation (when they have it) because they want to impress the boss and all that nonsense. Meanwhile, boss person is taking 2 weeks off to rest and you’re slaving away. Nah.
Autumn
January 28, 2020 at 2:42 pmI am always looking for ways to fit more travel locations in my life. My husband and I believe that travel is the best educational experience for our children.
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:29 amAbsolutely! The world is now a global village and there are so many families that have taken their kids out of school for a year of travel and learning that comes with it.
Cherrie Bautista
January 28, 2020 at 7:37 pmStaycations are my favorite. Don’t have to go through the stress of packing and unpacking plus I get to rest! That’s one thing I have to do after a trip – taking a vacation from vacation, lol.
admin
January 29, 2020 at 1:27 amSo true!! Lol. I’m so tired after a vacation, I need another vacation to just relax and not do anything. I love day trips too. No need for luggage and all that stress.
Ewuzie Kingsley
January 29, 2020 at 3:32 amA traveler i admire, this is inspiring.. since i started reading travel blogs like yours, it has changed the way i travel, i don’t stay and wait for a big budget travel All thanks to tips like this, i have turned out to be a tourist in my own city and community.
admin
January 30, 2020 at 3:22 pmThanks a mil for these inspiring words, Kingsley! I’m so glad you’ve gleaned tips on how to be a tourist in your own city…and I’ve also learnt so much from you too regarding natural and cultural sites in the east I didn’t even know existed! Thank you so much again. xxx