As travel returns full-scale, Asian destinations in particular are keen to boost their tourism economies after the pandemic. Hong Kong has already announced plans to give away half a million airline tickets:
Hong Kong is set to give away 500,000 free airline tickets to lure back tourists
Hong Kong’s government has announced plans to give away 500,000 free airline tickets as part of efforts to revive its tourism industry and attract visitors back to the city.
Taiwan, which is planning to offer tourists $165 each to vacation there. Cash rewards will also be offered to tour groups to encourage them to visit the island.
This popular destination will pay tourists to visit | CNN
Taiwan will offer up to 500,000 visitors the equivalent of $165 if they vacation on the island. The money, to be delivered digitally, can be spent on expenses during their trip, including accommodation.
Most countries in the region have done away with Covid-19 entry restrictions or are in the process of fully reopening to foreigners. International flights are regaining frequency. And an array of stunning new hotels are opening left and right.
10 of the best new luxury hotels opening in Asia in 2023 | CNN
From a remote luxury lodge in the Himalayas to urban sanctuaries sporting ambitious designs, we’ve rounded up 10 hotels and resorts scheduled to open in 2023.
If you’re looking for something even more from your hotel, though, than infinity pools and Egyptian cotton sheets, we’ve found nine hotels in Asia-Pacific where the adventure starts before you even reach the front door.
Zipline over a waterfall? These Asia-Pacific hotels invite guests to arrive in style | CNN
From Thailand to India, Cambodia to New Zealand, we’ve hand-picked a few of the most epic hotel arrival experiences across the Asia-Pacific region for a first impression you’ll remember forever.
Sarajevo – a place that crams in so much history, beauty and heartbreak it can make your head spin. Picturesque Jajce, a small walled mountain town 100 miles from the capital, has a 22m-high waterfall at its heart. The ancient capital of the Bosnian kings, with a fort, catacombs and a multi-ethnic population, it was also the birthplace of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, formed during the second world war, and the town’s AVNOJ Museum offers a fascinating dive into 20th-century history.
‘Tourism can offer us hope’: Bosnia and Herzegovina’s staggering scenery and beautiful towns
With its wild horses, varied activities and rich history, the small Balkan country embraces a bright new future of sustainable travel
In 2023, Madrid is commemorating the 50th anniversary of Pablo Picasso’s death and the 100th anniversary of Joaquín Sorolla’s with a series of exhibitions dedicated to each artist. Also, few cities have seen such a flurry of hotel openings since the pandemic’s onset — including the Edition, the Four Seasons, the Mandarin Oriental and the Hard Rock. One thing that hasn’t changed is the city’s warm embrace of anyone wanting to join the fun. Since so few Madrileños are actually from Madrid, everyone is welcome.
36 Hours in Madrid
A renovated plaza, new hotels and major art exhibitions celebrate Pablo Picasso — just a few more reasons to revisit the Spanish capital.
If you work remotely and want to stay in a country longer than a typical 60 or 90 day stay (depending on the country), most of the time you will need either a long term visa or you will need to leave the country after the allotted time period. With some countries’ visas, rules are slightly more lax. If you reach your max amount of days, you can exit the country, get an exit stamp on your passport, head to another country for a day or so, and then return problem free.
46 Best Digital Nomad Visas in 2022
The best digital nomad visas for travelling and working remotely.
12 Private Islands You Can Rent Without Being Rich
From Maine to Belize to Italy, these private islands are surprisingly affordable.
If you think private islands are only for the billionaires and Bond Villains of the world, however, you’re wrong. You can actually rent a wide range of private islands all around the world, from tropical paradises to chilly river experiences. Even more surprising, many of these private islands can be yours for a price that’s a lot more reasonable than you might expect. Here are 12 private islands you can rent without completely draining your bank account.
Leonor Espinosa — who’d just been crowned the 2022 Best Female Chef by World’s 50 Best, an influential ranking group owned by a British media giant — suggested the sesame paste known locally as pasta de ajonjolí was one of many delicacies in the area that transcend mere taste, and soon I’d know why.
Where Even the Food Is Magic: A Treasure Hunt for the Flavors of Caribbean Colombia
In a region Gabriel García Márquez once called home, a garlic-and-coconut-infused journey guided by the culinary expertise of another local celebrity, the acclaimed chef Leonor Espinosa.
Prefer to listen? Recorded and produced by James D. Kirk
According to BuJo we must celebrate our wins–big and small–and allow ourselves to feel great when something positive manifests itself in our lives.
Last week I added action items to my Bullet Journal‘s daily log. “Find a lamp for my desk” got onto the list. So, I find an $8 old, swing arm-style lamp at one of the local thrift shops. I get home and realized the lamp failed to include the iconic, cone-shaped lamp shade. Of course, this particular resell store prohibits purchases from being returned for refund. They gladly accept re-donations, of course 😐
This lands much lower on the scale of required, must-do-now action items, than say, “forgetting the milk at the store” (and milk was the only thing on your list.) No worries. Insert a light bulb. Fake it, until you make it. Mind over matter.
NOPE!
I decided to use some heavy cardboard and fashion my own lampshade. How hard could this possibly be? Do you happen to know what the actual flat shape of a cone is? Yeah, I didn’t either.
So, I hit the search engine to learn how to actually make a cone and found this great site, Templatemaker.nl. It provided accurate, customizable templates allowing me to make a “rustic” and rudimentary shade. Fit the shade into place, secured by heavy duty primate tape, inserted an LED bulb, and plugged into my smart outlet.
Now, I have an operational desk lamp, that looks weird and quirky, but has a story behind it.
More important, I remember in my reading that it’s okay to celebrate BuJo style, regardless of how big or small the win. I walked out of my office feeling great about that little experience. I didn’t understand why, completely, but I still felt great!
Prefer to listen? Recorded and produced by James D. Kirk.
I feel it’s safe to say people generally want to be more organized in their lives. They desire to have increased productivity to help them do more and get what they want from life. In this article, we discuss how and why one might desire combining a Rocketbook & the Bullet Journal Method.
Journaling is popular. Checking Reddit we see a decent following. Post after post reveals some of the most beautiful, artistic spreads announcing and welcoming the new month or season. The way some users hoard precious, new, clean, “don’t touch my journal” journals astounds me on a regular basis. The artistic creativity of some folks shines bright through the canvas of the wide variety of journals, inks, and other materials.
Nearly two years ago, my best friend sent me an email. It seemed to me to have been auto-generated by a bit of software. It also had a PDF attached to it. I’m not 100% sure, but I don’t remember Gmail automatically displaying the content of the attached document via inline thumbnail. It certainly does that now.
Generally, I try not to open attachments. Unless, of course they are from my buddy in Nigeria who needs some sort of financial transaction aid (s/). With the help of thumbnails, one can easily determine if opening and reading/viewing an attachment is worth the effort.
Pop Pop!
Turns out the email arrived as the result of a scan of a document found inside a binder sold by Rocketbook (RB). With that model you write on the pages, then, you popped that sucker into the nearest microwave oven. In less time than it took to make popcorn, you had, essentially, a brand new, blank-paged Rocketbook journal.
Today, in addition to the “Wave”, one can choose from many other models. My friend told me he liked his RB so much, he was going to purchase a smaller, “mobile friendly” pad. Sweet!
I still have that email he sent back in December of 2018. In geek speak, appeared the “Hello World” message written on the page, scanned with the app, and delivered via email (as seen above.)
Using a Rocketbook & the Bullet Journal Method, by Ryder Carroll
Right around this same time frame, he also shared with me this new organizational scheme known as the “Bullet Journal Method,” or BuJo for short.
I, of course, completely ignored both of these recommendations and went about my business. Fast-forward to this past July and I am searching online for better ways to organize with the hopes of being more productive in my life. Nothing new. I’ve probably done this half a dozen times over the past few years.
This site was starting to stress us out. We wanted to be doing so much with it. Plus, I just needed to get my life on track in order to focus on making BoldlyGoing.com something more than a fancy domain placeholder.
Googling to Learn About Rocketbook, Bullet Journal and More
And Google responded by introducing me to BuJo. Or rather “re-introduced” me. I found it ironic to realize my friend had turned me on to the method nearly a year and a half earlier after sending me the scan from his Rocketbook app.
To prepare, I created a destination folder in my Gmail account. After successfully sending my first page scan it wound up next to that original message from 20 months ago!
This was one of those times which required a literal LOL. So, I laughed out loud!
After thoroughly reading and doing my best to absorb the theory and philosophy behind Ryder Carroll’s “The Bullet Journal Method,” I recalled a chat conversation back in mid-July with my friend. His warning to me was that employing BuJo would “take lots of paper. Perhaps consider using a Rocketbook & Bullet Journal, instead.”
Of course I reverted to my old ways. I informed him of my “yellow pad guy” status. Deep inside, however, I felt change coming.
And for nearly another two weeks I poked around. Finished a couple of books on my list and finally dived into the BuJoMeth book. That date was August 5th. Before lights out, I placed the order for my first RB Core.
While it took the USPS nearly twice as long to deliver as it normally would, I was able to fill my time with the RB PDF template they offer. I downloaded the document, printed it out, and acted as if I had an RB to scan into the app and upload to any and/or all of 7 different storage places online.
Sweet!
My friend was brilliant! And I realized I had zero desire to pay good money to buy physical, hard-bound paper journals, over and over again. And I really did not want to pay rent to store, potentially, hundreds of them.
The specs on that Core included an 8 1/2″ x 11″ sheet size with “32 pages.” I put that in quotes because once I received my RB, I learned 32 pages meant the front and back of 16 pages. Not the front and back of 32 pages. More on this in a moment.
How Has My Experience Been Thus Far?
As with most shiny, new toys, the initial interest levels and excitement to learn and explore have been sky high. Given I had to wait much longer for the USPS to deliver over the summer, I chomped at the bit to get into the guts of this thing.
Because of those downloadable templates, one doesn’t even need to spend the money to use a Rocketbook and Bullet Journal–just download the template pages (there are several different types,) fill them up, scan into the app. Print more blank pages.
After doing a little hacking around, and subsequent online searching, I discovered numerouslegitimateRocketbookhacks out there allowing users to create and capture many interesting things in their lives.
I developed nearly two dozen different BuJo pages on those template printouts. So easy: print, use the page, scan, and back up in the cloud. Fold the pages over for scrap use. Wash, rinse, repeat.
Useful advice: Don’t use graph paper from a forgotten project. The non-repro blue graph will show when/if you get the app to scan the page. Plus it looks really bad, so just, no.
Even with all of this activity while awaiting my delivery to arrive, it never occurred to me to order a second journal. I opened that tough plastic shipping envelope, dived right into the RB and began thinking about how to best integrate it with BuJo. Also, how few “16” pages actually seemed now.
After setting up those pages and running with BuJo, I realized that I wanted (needed?) more. So, I did what any normal, sane person would do. I ordered another notebook (and again, waited much longer than normal,) disassembled both, and combined all 32 pages into one spiral binding.
Worked like a champ!
Once we are able to get back out there and start traveling again, I will have a journal, with infinite capacity, but much lighter than most comparable full-page sized books. I fill it, scan it, wipe it. Good to go.
As I developed my various “standard” pages during that first month, I learned a ton–both about how to best make BuJo work for me, and fine tuning the collaboration of journal and method.
The Monarch Butterfly Effect
Now the experiment got interesting. BuJo-ers (is that a thing?) will understand what I mean when I say the word migration.
When using standard, paper journals, one can tend to go much longer before needing to crack open a new book. However, when that time comes, (and often at the end of months, or perhaps busy weeks) the user must migrate bits and pieces of information from the old journal to the new, from last month to this, etc.
Did I mention that the special pages of the Rocketbook require cleaning at least every 30 days? Sort of makes it convenient for starting anew when the first rolls around. If one fails to clean properly, challenges and issues lie dead ahead.
Being the intrepid explorer, I soon found myself subscribed to several subreddits relating to journals, journaling, BuJo, bullet journaling, Rocketbook (official), notebooks, and it would not surprise me (and shouldn’t you either) that I am a member of one or two on pens, inks, and who knows what else.
The results of all that input? I am now the proud owner of a gazillion Frixion pens, markers, and highlighters. 1mm, 0.7mm and 0.5mm tips. Colors galore. I use my plastic drafting rules and a variety of drafting templates to get groovy little shapes onto the page.
Don’t forget the special watercolor brushes, filled just with H2O for making on the spot corrections! Don’t judge me!
Be good to yourself and buy your favorite color/style of pen with plenty of backup. Research long and hard to find the sweetest deal on bulk buys. I have no less than 10 cartridges in red, blue, and black ink with four pen barrels of each color as well.
My Recommendations To Get the Most Out of Your Rocketbook & Bullet Journal
Am I still learning? Absolutely! I suspect it will be several months before I have a fine-tuned, well-oiled process. I find joy in discovering how to best make this investment pay dividends.
While we are smack in the middle (hopefully, closer to the end?) of the Covid-19 pandemic, travel is going to come back–sooner or later. Heck, I just noticed the good folks over at Atlas Obscura are now offering Private Trips with their top notch guides along with their many exciting “Experiences“.
If you are going to travel nomad-style, consider going the Rocketbook route. Even if you decide BuJo is not for you, the RB just makes financial and ecological sense. Plus, it’s rather cool!
While there was about a week and a half or so when I really didn’t open my RB, the cause for that had nothing to do with my Rocketbook and Bullet Journal or the systems.
Back to it now. Full force.
Immediately feeling I am able to get more done, faster, with better focus. Using BuJo’s “tracker” capabilities provides quick and easy visuals on how I’m doing with the various habits and projects I wish to make regular progress at.
Yes, my Fitbit app provides me a place for entering food and calorie counts as well as water consumption. And I wouldn’t want to muddy up my journal with all that information when the data is more usable via that application.
Did I bother to make the effort today to actually input all the food (and coffee–so much coffee. Must cut back on coffee. Tomorrow.) Whether I gulped all 72 ounces of water or not, did I at least input whatever I was able to swallow?
Put a Tick √ In the Column
Did I get my stretching routine in? √
Complete at least one Spanish lesson on Duolingo? √
Attend class for voiceover training? √
All those checks are easy to track on the monthly spread and give me quick insight to trends with respect to what I’m getting better at accomplishing and why I am only recording in my Gratitude log every third or fourth day (I’m grateful to you, dear reader for being here and making it this far. Check! √)
I know my sample size of usage with the RB+BuJo is too short for any sort of conclusive results. My goal (I need to add this to the Goals log: page 6-7) is to continue using and refining my process. Additionally, as new and interesting things crop up, I’ll be sure to add an edit to this post in order to keep you well informed.
With confidence, however, I certainly recommend the combination of Rocketbook and Bullet Journal for all the best reasons we talked about above. And all the reasons we have yet to discover. Might BuJo change your way of thinking? If it does, as it has for me, and seemingly, thousands of others, I have faith productivity will increase to the point of making us both unstoppable!