Eating Buenos Aires: My Favourite Vegetarian Food Capital of The World.

A foodie’s guide to the ten best vegetarian restaurants in Argentina’s capital. It’s no secret that Buenos Aires is my ciudad preferido. As soon as the taxi from the airport made its way to my accommodation, it became instantly apparent to me that this city looks like Paris, if Paris was clean. Hot, clean, fullContinue reading “Eating Buenos Aires: My Favourite Vegetarian Food Capital of The World.”

Double Your Money: Everything You Need to Know About Argentina’s Blue Dollar.

After hitch-hiking across the Chilean border in three different vehicles, including a police car, during the tail-end of the pandemic, with none of the correct paperwork (besides my passport), I arrived in Mendoza, Argentina expecting to be in a world much more reasonable than the expensive Chile I had just escaped. Everyone I had spokenContinue reading “Double Your Money: Everything You Need to Know About Argentina’s Blue Dollar.”

The Ultimate Guide to Picking a Great Hostel. Hint: It Involves a Little Research.

– A little note to start, if you like my blog and would like to support me you can check out my Affiliate Links page. Aptly, as this is a hostel orientated post, I’d love it if you used my Hostel World link to make any future bookings. Thank you! To put this bluntly, IContinue reading “The Ultimate Guide to Picking a Great Hostel. Hint: It Involves a Little Research.”

Lockdown Part 1: L’île (very) Intense – 63 Days in Isolation on La Réunion

As I was somewhat marooned in the middle of the Ocean Indienne, the wildfire that plagued the news, Covid-19, seemed a problem for everyone else, but not really for us: the residents of La Réunion. I remember watching the headlines flash up on my phone and having concern for everyone else, but literally none forContinue reading “Lockdown Part 1: L’île (very) Intense – 63 Days in Isolation on La Réunion”

Musings from Patagonia.

A small collection of poems and prose that I wrote whilst in Patagonia. Gaucho Magic. As the steep hills gave way to a forest as ancient as time, with reaching giants for trees, and faces in the moss, through the emerald undergrowth trotted a gaucho on his white horse; following the path of the Patagonian,Continue reading “Musings from Patagonia.”

Freedom, growth, and independence: why solo travel is the best!

or my first proper blog post it seems appropriate to discuss what solo travel is to me, why it’s fundamentally important to my silly little brain, and what the ingredients are that keep me hungry to keep exploring this random little planet that we call home.