getting organised for this trip hasn't been as easy as i expected. mainly because i didn't know what to expect. meaning i hadn't really thought about it. i bought my trip in the kensington olympia branch of STA on my first trip to the branch. i had a rough idea of what i wanted to do, which was to go everywhere in the world. my lack of planning was apparent as i went through my itinerary with Ben from STA. after nearly 3 hours of chatting a mixture of impossible routes, pandas and maps we came up with a trip which actually looked realistic. Ben removed Madagascar, New Zealand, Japan, Fiji, Cancun and North America from my trip. these are all small places where very little happens so i'm fine with that. i bought a place on the inca trail, some travel insurance and an australian visa. it all came to around £2200. i put it on my credit card, Ben gave me about 12 sheets of A4 paper, and that was that. spending money is far too easy. Ben basically designed my trip for me and for that i will be eternally grateful. unless it goes massively wrong, then i know where he works.
picking up visas for China, Mongolia and India were all different experiences, all had their hiccups, but neither was a real pain in the arse. i waited at the indian visa centre for 1 hour before deciding to sample the delights of the local Victoria greasy spoon cafe to kill some time. true to form i re-entered the visa centre to discover i'd missed my place in the queue. the extremely kind woman on the front door let me push in, thus ill-tempering many frustrated indians. 3 days later it was ready for collection.
by far the most interesting of the visa centres i visited was the Mongolian embassy. one man sat behind a desk in an underground living room. i expected to be able to fill in an application form in the centre, like in the Indian and Chinese centres, but this is Mongolia, everything is online in Mongolia. Bill Gates is Mongolian. after filling the form in a local internet cafe i returned to hand it in. the man behind the desk didn't remember me. i'm fairly sure i was the only person in the embassy that day.
injections have been the real pain in the arse. I've left everything too late, therefore I'm heading off without an immunity to hepatitis b, rabies and some sort of Japanese disease. all should be fine, as long as i avoid any temptation to play with needles and dogs frothing at the mouth. that's about as medical as i get. you can get most of the injections on the NHS, but i decided it would be better to spend over £150 in a private centre. so that's nice.
finally, all i need to do now is sort things out like money, clothes, accessories and the like. all of this will be done in good time, or possibly not at all. all that's important is that i get on a plane to Mumbai on September 1st. then the adventures begin. i'm planning on doing something different and something good on every day of my trip. we'll see how that pans out.
Wednesday, 13 August 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
You are a total fruit loop! I can't even believe how soon it is til you go - I'm going to miss you sooo much! See you in a few days any how and we'l have a cheeky few farewell drinks! xx
Post a Comment