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Six months of travel – how this all came together – Part II

Planning for India

With Japan sorted out and planned on paper, I started looking at India as that was where our third cruise would end, in the fabulous city of Mumbai.  Our passage from Japan to India was taken care of through cruises, however once we arrived in India, we would need to do something.  

Planning for Southern India

I looked at a number of tour operators and then reached out for some quotes.  The first one, from a reputable Canadian firm was 15k for three weeks for the two of us – land portion only.  I thought India was supposed to be a bit cheaper than that!  Hotels in Mumbai and other places were reasonably priced, so I started putting my own plan together.

After a short time I asked myself “what are you thinking?”.  I was not able to speak the language and there would be a huge culture shock.  I looked around and found an Indian-based tour company and told them roughly what I wanted to do and they put together a package, very similar to the 15k one for 5.5k (all values in CDN).  This tour was for us only, included trains, airfare in India, private guides and drivers, accommodation at upscale places. I did a ton of research on this tour company, read countless reviews, searched some more and then booked the tour.

Starting in Mumbai, will travel to Goa, then on Bangalore, Ooty, Bandipore, Mysore, Munnar, Kochi and a few other places.  A lot of travel but so much to see!

While we were thinking about India, we noticed another cruise that hit some AMAZING places.  The sort of places that immediately make you think exotic destinations, like “wow” these are bucket list places.  These ports of call included the Seychelles, Zanzibar, Madagascar and others.  

We booked that cruise – the start of which coincided with the end of our three-week Indian tour.  The only add on was that we needed to get to Qatar, but as flights are easy to book, we managed to solve that.

Planning for Northern India

From the planning lens, we now found ourselves in Mauritius near the end of January with no plan. We decided that we should head back to India to see the northern part, or more accurately the “Golden Triangle”. I looked at some tours and through reading countless travel blogs, decided we could do this ourselves.  The tours certainly offer convenience, and a level of comfort, however if you’re willing to do the leg work and book things yourself, you can save a lot of money. I don’t think we would have tried this on our own without having visited India for three weeks the previous month and we always have the option of booking a tour, although that is unlikely as we have booked all of our hotels.

On to Nepal

After our two weeks touring Delhi and the Golden Triangle, we thought where to next?  Nepal.  It is a fascinating place, from what I’ve read and of course Mt Everest is there (no I will not be climbing it, nor will I be going to base camp).  However, the history, culture, people and more are amazing.  It’s a $100 flight from Delhi to Kathmandu, and an extra $8 to select a seat.  We’re each sitting in a window seat on the port side of the aircraft, that’s what will give you the views of the Himalaya mountains as you fly into Kathmandu.  We’ll spend two weeks touring and then we were going to go to Bali, or so we thought.

Let’s add Malaysia!

As I was trying to book our flight from Kathmandu to Bali, I looked at Air Malaysia and they were running a promotion.  If you booked a through flight from one international destination to another, through Malaysia, in our case Nepal to Bali, you could get a stopover in Malaysia including airfare to another part of the country for free.  Having never been to Malaysia, I quickly read up on it and we decided why not spend a week in Penang.  Our airfare from Kuala Lumpur to and from Penang was free, so we added another stop.  While this shortened our time in Bali, we thought it was a great idea to see something else.

From Malaysia, we would be heading to Bali where we would end our trip.  Our activities in Bali have not been planned, however it is still five months out and that is the low season, so coming up with a plan should be doable. From Bali we will fly home.

If you’ve made it this far, thanks for reading.  It has taken a lot of planning and it continues to evolve.  We’ll update things as we tweak our plans. 

We are ROAMing, RELAXing and REPEATing.

Six months of travel – how this came together (Part I)

As we are on yet another sea day (there are nine in total going to Japan), we thought we would put together some of our thought process and outline where we decided to go. This trip has been a while in the making and the planning has taken a number of turns.  We are often asked “how did you decide where to go?” or “how long did this take to plan?” or “did you plan this yourself?”

Below is a map of the main places we’re visiting.  There will be more detailed maps of certain countries where we are spending more time.

The initial plan

The initial plan was to go to Japan for a few weeks.  I (Cam) had the opportunity to work in Japan for six months as part of military deployment, and I can honestly say it was one of the most rewarding and enriching periods of either of my professional careers (I’ll talk about that in a later post).  I was in Japan at the height of COVID and Meg was not able to visit.  Entrance regulations were pretty tight and there was no way for her to come over, despite both of us wanting to be together.

After my return to Canada in the spring of 2022, we started looking at what we wanted to do beyond 2023 when Meg retired; not to miss out, Japan was number one on her list.  We started planning as time permitted as we were both still working. We decided on going to Japan for three weeks and then maybe somewhere else.  In June of 2022, we saw a sale on a cruise from Vancouver to Japan – a 15-day transpacific crossing that was not a lot more expensive than airfare.  We decided why not travel that way and arrive without jetlag.  When we booked the cruise, the travel agent mentioned she had a few more cruises on sale. A Japan to Singapore cruise as well as a Singapore to India voyage.  I’ll talk about those cruises and destinations in a later post.

We decided the deals were too good to pass up, so we booked two more cruises.  There would be seven weeks between the cruise that took us to Japan and the one that would take us to Singapore.  As we had planned to spend three weeks in Japan, we debated flying home for a month and priced out flights.  The cost to spend an extra month in Japan was not a lot more than the return flight to Tokyo. So we decided to spend the entire seven weeks in Japan.  Most tours of Japan are 7 – 10 days but, as anyone who knows me will attest, I never do anything half-hearted. I simply replaced days with weeks and decided I would REALLY SEE Japan.

Less is more…

I went to work on an itinerary: looking at commercial tours, guidebooks, travel blogs and countless videos, I thumbnailed a tour for us.  I sat on it for a while, deciding how we could do all the things I hoped to do most efficiently in terms of cost and time.  Despite Japan being much smaller than Canada, it is still a large place with large distances. The order of activities would be key to seeing as much as possible while still enjoying ourselves.  Sometimes less is more. In all, we’re in Japan for 49 days. Some places will be three day stops while the larger places will be for seven days.  We’ll visit Tokyo twice, each time for seven days.  

If you’ve made it this far, thanks for reading.  The entire trip has taken a lot of planning, not just Japan, and it continues to evolve.  I will be doing another post to outline how we planned the remainder of our trip. We’ll also update things as we tweak our plans. 

We are ROAMing, RELAXing and REPEATing.

Our ship and home for the Transpacific crossing

The Celebrity Millennium, shown docked in Victoria on Sept 16, 2023, will be our home as we start our trip. Not a scheduled stop, but Victoria is a great city and we were able to see and do a number of things in this great city.

We are on deck seven, about 1/3 of the way back from the bow. This is proving to be a great position as the gym and buffet are on deck 10 and the theatre is on deck four so we really are centrally located.

Our website is now live

We are on our way, starting a journey of travel and exploring. We are hoping to do so many things; exploring, learning, laughing, sharing, growing and appreciating everything we have.

Our webpage is new and it’s the first time we have developed one. We won’t lie, things are a bit rough. We’ve read many “how to” sites and there are questions we have and things that are not covered, but we’ll manage. Thank you for your patience as we continue to develop.