sub-heading

I TRAVEL. I EAT. I COOK. I PHOTOGRAPH.
And I'm here to tell you all about it.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

From New York to London; Paris and back...

In September, 2010 I had just finished my last day of training to become an airline employee.  Following the walk through of the terminal on our final day, I went home and found my friend on the internet who had recently arrived in London for an overseas graduate program.  While catching up I asked how classes were and she mentioned that they didn't start for another week.  That was all I needed to hear!  My non-rev travel bug kicked into high gear and my last words were, "see you tomorrow around 11am your time!"

"Inexperienced," I threw way more than I would need for 3 days in London into a carry-on and bolted out the door in order to return to JFK and catch the late flight out to Heathrow.  Since then, I've never looked back.

Three years later, my last trip to Europe was in Paris.  Again, visiting a friend from college, this time with the appropriate amount of clothing in just a small backpack - I spent a few days walking along The Seine and various arrondissement, just taking in the history and splendor that the city has to offer, while catching up with a few old and new friends.

This time in my life - having the ability to jet off and be captivated by a foreign culture, stunning sights, or epic journeys - is something I will forever cherish.  I wanted to give you a quick recap that would provide some insight into how fortunate an opportunity I've had over this time.

Destinations in order (single line indicates one continuous trip)
London, England
Boston Massachusetts
Washington DC
Los Angeles - San Diego
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Atlanta Georgia
Albany New York
Boston
Tokyo, Japan - Bangkok - Phuket - Krabi, Thailand
West Palm Beach Florida
Boston
Washington DC
Nice, France
Boston
Paris, France - Hamburg - Lubeck - Frankfurt, Germany
Zurich, Switzerland
Memphis Tennessee
Boston
Burlington Vermont
London - Edinburgh - Glasgow - the Highlands, UK - Maui - Honolulu Hawaii - Tokyo
New Orleans Louisiana
Brussels, Belgium - Munich - Frankfurt, Germany
Anchorage Alaska
Boston
Paris, France
Pisa - Florence - Piombino - la isola d'Elba, Italy
Barcelona - Madrid, Spain
Hong Kong, China - Tokyo, Japan - San Francisco California
San José - Guanacaste, Costa Rica
Las Vegas Nevada
Boston
Denver Colorado
Cancun, Mexico
Nice, France - Munich, Germany
Prague, Czech Republic
Boston
Rochester New York
Venice, Italy - Nice, France
Boston
Copenhagen, Denmark - Malmö, Sweden - London, England
Boston
Athens - Rhodes - Kos, Greece
Tokyo, Japan - Hong Kong - Hangzhou - Shanghai, China
Liberia - Guanacaste, Costa Rica
Munich, Germany
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
Tokyo, Japan - Bangkok - Chiang Mai, Thailand - Tokyo, Japan
Atlanta
Los Angeles
Boston
Los Angles
Boston
Incheon - Seoul - Daegu, South Korea
Akron-Canton Ohio - Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
Atlanta
Buffalo New York
San Francisco
Detroit Michigan - Akron Canton Ohio - Las Vegas Nevada -  Los Angeles California
Anchorage - Fairbanks Alaska
Washington DC
Paris, France
. . . .


192 flights in total
350,000+ miles flown
valued at over $330,000 USD

And I'm sure I missed a few


If you want to travel and see the world, DO IT.  If you have the means to do this and only this, do it.  If you don't, and you need to bounce back and forth from home to a faraway destination, then get a job with an airline because its the only way to go!

The beginning - London 2010

Paris, 2013







Thursday, August 29, 2013

BEST JOB AROUND THE WORLD

Hey all my fellow travelers! If you haven't seen it yet, Jauntaroo has posted a job listing for The Best Job Around The World!  It's a 52 week commitment traveling around the world from populated cities to some of the most remote areas you can think of.  It also happens to provide a $100,000 USD salary!

They're selecting the best 50 candidates based on these videos we all post to their site!  From that point they select candidates based on qualities they're looking for, as well as travel history, capabilities to complete a demanding year of travel, and other various criteria.  I think if I can make it into the top 50, I'll have a great shot at getting recognized!

Please take 5 seconds to click LIKE on this page after it opens.  It can actually be done ONCE a day every day through September 15th.  I'll love you forever if you do that!

Think of the amazing amount of posts I'll have for you to keep reading if I got a JOB traveling the world for a year!

LIKE 1x a day!

http://www.bestjobaroundtheworld.com/submissions/view/11431

THANK YOU!

<3
Joseph M.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

The Scottish Highlands: A road trip of epic culinary and scenic proportions

I want to take you with me back in time to one of my most favorite trips, two years ago in July 2011.  Since working in the airline industry makes it so easy to hop on a plane and fly from place to place, this road trip kept me grounded in a country that has far more natural beauty than most might expect.

I flew into London's Heathrow airport and took the Heathrow Express to Paddington station where I connected on a long rail journey to Glasgow, Scotland.  The trip was pleasant enough, but with not a whole lot to see and jetlag setting in I swiftly fell asleep to ready me for the exciting adventures to come.

Svenja, whom I was meeting in Glasgow, used to live there, and still has friends there, so I got a bit of a locals tour of the city.  In exploring around we did a little shopping and both got some kickass new shoes at 'Schuh' - I had my first experience at the british based chain noodle bar 'Wagamama', which, for a chain restaurant, had good quality noodles and curries.

Wagamama
Scottish Shoes!




















The second day we walked the whole center of the city and lunched at Jamie Oliver's, Jamie's Italian.  It was my first time at a JO restaurant and I thoroughly enjoyed the mix of italian cuisine with UK pub fare and a modern cafeteria atmosphere.  At our table we tested out a massive stacked burger with a side of 'posh chips' tossed with parmesan cheese and truffle oil, fried zucchini flower, a prosciutto and pear salad, and wild mushroom panzarotti.  Everything was delicious, particularly the fiori di zucca!

Panzarotti

Burger & Posh chips

Fior di zucca

Prosciutto salad

Onward on our journey we stop in Edinburgh for a day to meet friends and explore.  Popping in at The Elephant House for a quick nosh of shortbread and hot cocoa, it was my second visit (both to Edinburgh, and to this particular cafe).  The Elephant House was made famous by the story of how JK Rowling would sit all day, nursing a cup of coffee, while writing the first passages of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, gathering inspiration for Hogwarts by looking out the windows upon George Heriot's school for orphaned children.  The millionaire's shortbread was well.... shortbread - good. Caramel - good. Chocolate - gooooood!

Hot Cocoa at The Elephant House

Millionaire's Shortbread

Our final and most outstanding culinary exploit in Edinburgh was at one of the best seafood restaurants I've ever had the pleasure of dining, known as Fisher's in Leith.  A multi-course seafood extravaganza unfolded before us starting with a ceviche of Queenie scallops from West Loch Tarbert topped with a broad bean and red onion salsa.  Followed by my favorite dish of the trip, a fillet of wild sea trout and a spinach, ricotta, and pine nut stuffed leek over a red pepper and basil sauce. Our main comes out, split for two persons, and it is a shellfish bonanza.  Lobster, langoustines, clams, oysters, prawns, and more. A friend had the mussels, and for dessert we all had a bite of the sticky toffee pudding.  It IS sticky, its not toffee or pudding, but I promise you it's one of the most amazing things you'll ever eat.  Svenja's friend, wee Carla (she's tiny!) was generous enough to pass along her grandmothers' recipe to me and I have since made my own - I must say it came out amazingly, I only hope I did her family recipe justice.


Scallop ceviche

Sea Trout

shellfish shellfish shellfish

Mussels

Sticky Toffee Pudding!

A slice of my version of sticky toffee pudding from Carla's family recipe!

yellow = outbound, red = return
Here's where we begin the real road trip: the goal is to go where the wind takes our little Vauxhall, but in the direction of the Northernmost tip of the island to experience the true beauty and solitude of the Highlands.  As we head out, the scenic landscape gets more and more sparse of homes and people and denser with mountains, lakes, and sheep.  We pass ruins of castles 600 years old and unbelievably some that are still intact.  Cemeteries pop up seemingly out of nowhere and old churches whose rooves rotted or burnt out long ago, dot the countryside.

When we reach the northernmost parts of the highlands, looking back on the 'lowlands,' is a thing of beauty.  Mountains stretch across the landscape a hundred miles south of us as we stand at the edge of the ocean.  With the North Atlantic to the West, the distant Faroe Islands and Norwegian Sea to the North, and the North Sea to the East, it feels as if we're at the end of the Earth.  Along the way, bed and breakfasts served our respite from the lengthy drives between destination points.  We stayed at lovely B&B's in Dingwall, Ullapool, and Durness.  I can find the names and contact information of the proprietors for anyone interested, they were wonderful hosts!


Svenja and I at castle ruins
Loch something or other =)

http://rooftopphotoshop.smugmug.com
(to see this and more of my photography from around the world in full resolution)
Scottish castle

View from one of the northernmost points of Scotland

View south, back over the highlands

Cute town in the highlands

So we plan to return back to Edinburgh for one last night before I have to catch a plane. With the beauty and the splendor of the country and seaside at our backs, we head south on a single-track road (for those of you city folk, thats just one lane, not one in each direction, but just ONE shared lane) between a mountain on our left and a lake to our right.  Driving a stick shift with my left hand in a right-side-drive car going around a leftward curve, I hit a sharp rock that juts out to the edge of the roadway.  Thirty miles from any semblance of civilization, completely out of cell phone range, and I pop not one, but TWO tires on the left side of our car.  A single-track road is tricky because when you want to pass someone, you can't, and its difficult to get around oncoming traffic.  The good thing about a single-track road when you have two flat tires, is that the first person who comes upon you MUST help you, because they can't go anywhere until you're out of the way!  I swapped the front left tire for the spare and by the time I was done a father and son team from the south came to our rescue. They took us 45 minutes away to the nearest garage (it's in a town called Tongue - honest, respectable and fast service! I don't know the name, but I swear its the only one around) bringing one of the damaged tires with us.  When we arrived in Tongue I dealt with the garage owner and Svenja handled the rental insurance company.  After the garage guys took their lunch break, the new tire situation got sorted, and waited for the repair to be complete, we were back on the road in about 7 hours after 'the incident' -- It could've taken 2 days if we had to wait for new tires to be brought in, so I was rather impressed!

The culprit

Sad face =( 

In just enough time to get a tiny bit of sleep, we made it to the airport for my flight out.  I flew from Edinburgh to Paris, Paris to Salt Lake City, Salt Lake to Los Angeles, and LA to Maui to meet my friend Erin for a week of beaching, surfing and fish tacos. Then, "on the way" home we decided instead to go from Maui to Honolulu, and Honolulu to Tokyo to spend two days or so in Japan - instead, we got caught in an Earthquake in the middle of the night and cut our trip short, flying directly back to New York!

Remember how I said this road trip kept me grounded?  I lied.