kdonnel
DVC-BCV
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2001
- Messages
- 7,192
My son graduated from college in May and is now "backpacking" through Europe for the next 40 days. It started out as him saying he was going to Europe for two weeks with a friend but those two weeks grew and grew into 40 days.
He is not backpacking per se, he has a regular suitcase, but is spending the majority of time in hostels with a few Airbnb sprinkled in toward the end of the trip where it turned out to be cheaper than a hostel for the group size. He is getting from country to country sometimes by plane, sometimes by train, sometimes by bus, and sometimes by ferry.
He flew into Amsterdam, caught a connecting flight to Austria and finally a bus to Slovakia to start the trip. Over the next 40 days he will travel from there to Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Sweden, and Norway, spending 4+ days in each country with day trips to other countries like today to Czechia.
For 95% of the trip he will be with one other friend and for some portions of the trip there will be more friends that meet up with the two of them for short segments of the trip.
We have traveled as a family but this was actually his first flight alone as the friend he is traveling with was already in France with his family to start the trip so they met up in Bratislava, Slovakia. It was a little nerve wracking dropping him at the airport knowing he now needed to navigate his first ever solo flight as an international connecting flight that was followed up by a walk to a train station, a short train ride, a transfer to a bus, and finally a walk to his hostel, all alone.
When we have traveled internationally we always had a non stop flight to our destination. no need to connect to anywhere else. So the process of connecting from international to schengen area was totally new and not something he had observed me navigate the family through.
I would never have had the guts to take such an adventurous trip when I was his age, I am a little jealous.
He worked throughout college, saving his money for this trip. The goal is to keep the cost at what works out to $100 a day or an all in of $4000 for the 40 days.
That first day alone in Bratislava, Slovakia he ventured out into the city with people he met at the hostel as I try to imagine him having a Euro Trip style adventure rather than a Taken style horror story.
Has anyone, or their kids, done anything similar?
He is not backpacking per se, he has a regular suitcase, but is spending the majority of time in hostels with a few Airbnb sprinkled in toward the end of the trip where it turned out to be cheaper than a hostel for the group size. He is getting from country to country sometimes by plane, sometimes by train, sometimes by bus, and sometimes by ferry.
He flew into Amsterdam, caught a connecting flight to Austria and finally a bus to Slovakia to start the trip. Over the next 40 days he will travel from there to Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Sweden, and Norway, spending 4+ days in each country with day trips to other countries like today to Czechia.
For 95% of the trip he will be with one other friend and for some portions of the trip there will be more friends that meet up with the two of them for short segments of the trip.
We have traveled as a family but this was actually his first flight alone as the friend he is traveling with was already in France with his family to start the trip so they met up in Bratislava, Slovakia. It was a little nerve wracking dropping him at the airport knowing he now needed to navigate his first ever solo flight as an international connecting flight that was followed up by a walk to a train station, a short train ride, a transfer to a bus, and finally a walk to his hostel, all alone.
When we have traveled internationally we always had a non stop flight to our destination. no need to connect to anywhere else. So the process of connecting from international to schengen area was totally new and not something he had observed me navigate the family through.
I would never have had the guts to take such an adventurous trip when I was his age, I am a little jealous.
He worked throughout college, saving his money for this trip. The goal is to keep the cost at what works out to $100 a day or an all in of $4000 for the 40 days.
That first day alone in Bratislava, Slovakia he ventured out into the city with people he met at the hostel as I try to imagine him having a Euro Trip style adventure rather than a Taken style horror story.
Has anyone, or their kids, done anything similar?