All posts by Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

Photo: I Can Be President

LOVE this photo…

[via Jua Cali on FB]

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Travel Photo: Coco Palm Bodu Hithi Hotel in the Maldives

Coco Palm Bodu Hithi Hotel in the Maldives

Can someone whisk me away to paradise please?

[via freshome.com]

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Trinkets, Trinkets, Trinkets (aka Trash)

Seriously, I don’t understand why travelers buy trinkets. At all. Aside from burning a gigantic hole in your pocket and taking up more space in your bag, what do they do for you? Do they make you happy? Do they solve your problems?

When I see photos such as these…

…all I see in my mind is “TRASH“.

If I bought any of these trinkets, here’s what would happen:

  1. Trinkets would sit at the bottom of my backpack and take up space for the next few months, or whenever I happen to find my way back “home” to Seattle. Until I reach Seattle, I would carry them on my back wherever I go.
  2. Whenever I got home, the trinkets would be moved from the bottom of my backpack to the bottom of my closet — where they would collect dust for the several years until I get around to buying a place of my own (not happening anytime soon).
  3. Whenever I buy a permanent place of my own, the trinkets would be moved from the bottom of closet #1 to the bottom of closet #2.
  4. After collecting dust at the bottom of closet #2 for 5 years or so, they would be sent off to goodwill or the trash.

Or I can cut that 10 year cycle entirely and just not buy them in the first place.

Spend your money on experiences. I guarantee you’ll be happier for it.

Can someone explain to me why you buy this trash??

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Big’s Little Cafe: The Best English Breakfast in Pai

I’m a sucker for a great English breakfast. Hands down, the best english breakfast I’ve had in Thailand was this past week in Pai.

Big’s Little Cafe

Where? At Big’s Little Cafe, which is a short walk down the road to the right when looking at the main Pai bus drop off from the middle of the street (toward the river).

110 Baht for a massive plate of hashbrowns, eggs, sausage, beans, and tomatoes — a pretty damn good deal.

Have a few minutes to spare before your bus back to Chiang Mai? Love a great English breakfast? Big’s Little Cafe is well worth a visit!

Here are a few more photos of the breakfast in process:

getting close..

YUM

Yes, the sausage is home made

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Visa Run from Chiang Mai to Vientiane, Laos by Bus – What You Need to Know

Those of you who have been to Thailand likely already know the obvious about time durations for Thai Visas. If you fly in, you have 30 days in the country on a tourist visa. If you come in over land, you only get 15 days.

Therefore, to stay in Thailand – Visa “runs” are required. If you want more than 30 days in the country, you have to go to a Thai embassy outside of the country and obtain a tourist visa — this will allow you to stay 60 days in Thailand, and you can add another 30 on top of that by renewing at the Thai immigration office.

I embarked on my first Visa “run” from Chiang Mai a couple weeks ago to Vientiane, Laos (March 9th to be exact since I flew into Thailand from Cambodia on February 10th). Below is my personal experience — no guarantees yours will be exactly the same, but it’ll be pretty dang close if you choose to take the bus (cheapest option).

Booking

You can really book your visa run anywhere in Chiang Mai. Just look for the tourist booking agencies on every other corner. They will all sell you a bus ticket to Vientiane. I paid 1000 baht for a mini bus — it might be slightly different depending on which booking agency you use. You can likely get the ticket cheaper if you go straight to the bus station and buy a ticket there. But I chose to just book it in town and not worry about saving the extra money.

Chiang Mai to Vientiane

The bus will pick you up at your hotel around 6:00, so no need to worry about finding the bus station. The 14 hour mini bus trip began about 7:00 pm, with little leg room to stretch in all but one of the seats in a full mini van (a seat which I did not have). We stopped twice for bathroom breaks at two different 7 Eleven’s (one longer stop of about 20 minutes and a fill up). After arriving about 5 am for coffee at a small restaurant a few minutes from the border, we transferred into a larger bus for the final border crossing. That took about 45 minutes end to end to get through the border. To enter into Laos, the fee was $36 in US Dollars. On the Vientiane side of the border, we had to wait for another 45 minutes for a different bus to come pick us up and take us into town (15 minute drive). The bus dropped those of us visiting Vientiane about 2 blocks from the river in the center of town, while those going to Vang Vieng stayed on the bus for the rest of the journey.

In Vientiane

You’ll need to stay at least one night in Vientiane since you have to leave your passport at the embassy overnight, so find yourself a decent hotel. I stayed at Riverside Hotel for about $20 per night.

At the Thai Embassy In Vientiane

If you take a tuk tuk or songthaew (which I’d recommended) to the Thai Embassy, there is a really good chance they will drop you off right across the street — smack in front of a little table where someone offers to help you get your Visa paperwork correct. The man at the table offered to help me with all my paperwork and drop off my Visa at my hotel for 3,000 Baht. He told me the paperwork I had was wrong, because the back of my application form (which contains the terms) was not photocopied and that I did not have a photocopy of my Laos entry stamp. I told him no and kept asking him why I can’t just walk inside and get it done for 1,000 baht. I have to admit, he almost had me (they are really good about making it appear this is the best option) — but then I got wise and realized they were just trying to scam my money. I believe the process would have worked, provided you are willing to trade an hour or two of waiting time and not have to return to the embassy the next day to pick up your Visa for 2,000 baht (about $60), then try it. Time was on my side, so there was no need to pay $60 so I could be ultra lazy.

What you DO need:

  • Your passport
  • 1000 baht (2000 baht for a double entry)
  • A photocopy of your passport
  • Photocopy of your Laos entry stamp from your passport (I didn’t realize this, but there is a photocopier upstairs at the embassy for 5 baht per copy)
  • Completed Visa application

The actual process:

  1. Get a number — you need to either walk up to the office door (to the left of the service windwos) and knock to get them to give you one, or just cut to the front of the line of people submitting their paperwork and ask for a number.
  2. Wait for them to call your number. If you wait forever and don’t hear your number, just walk up and stand in line. Their numbering system doesn’t work so well for some (like me) — I sat there an hour before I realized that people who arrived after me had got called and I hadn’t.
  3. Submit all your required paperwork
  4. Go to the next building and pay your fee
  5. Return the next day between 1 and 3 in the afternoon to pick up your Passport/Visa

Note that the embassy is closed on the weekends, so you do not want to drop your passport off on Friday unless you are okay sticking around Vientiane all weekend and picking your passport up Monday. Related to this, realize you are going to be stuck with a few extra days of hotel costs if you leave Chiang Mai on a Friday (like I did) since that means you arrive Saturday morning and can’t drop off the passport until Monday.

The Journey Back to Chiang Mai

For a “VIP” bus trip back to Chaing Mai, the cost was 1200 Thai baht from the tourist shop I booked at. My “VIP” bus trip to Chiang Mai begun at 3:00 with a small songtheaw picking me up from my hotel. It proceeded to drop me off at the Vientiane bus station, where I waited for 40 minutes for the next international bus to take us across the border into Thailand. Note that you’re going to have to pay a 9000 Lao Kip as an exit fee.

That international bus took a mixed group of us all the way to the Thai city of Udon Thani, where we were to transfer to buses to take us to our final destination. When we arrived at that station there, they told me to “sit down” and someone would help me find the bus to Chiang Mai. “Someone helping me” turned out to be a tuk tuk driver who drove me across the entire city (15 minute ride) to the bus station on the far side of town to catch my double decker VIP bus to Chiang Mai.

The VIP bus was great — free snacks, water, AC, a seat at the very front with tons of legroom. But then it stopped being great when it broke down at about 3:00 in the morning. We were stuck on the side of the room for 2 hours until two replacement mini buses got there to pick us up and finish the journey to Chiang Mai.

So I paid an extra 300 baht for a VIP bus — for all of about 3 hours of actual bus time. That’s Thailand for you I guess.

I think that about covers it. Good luck with your visa run!

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Croatia Time Lapse

Watch this.

All I have to say is — sign me up for a Croatia trip.

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Travel Photos: Waterfall at the Flight of the Gibbon Outside of Chiang Mai

Waterfall Ahead – you don’t say?

Yup, it was ahead all right. And gorgeous!

These photos taken during a day trip with Flight of the Gibbon (Chiang Mai location).

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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Laundry from the Road

Doing laundry while on the travel trail isn’t quite the same as doing it at home back in the states. At home, the process is as follows:

  1. Gather dirty laundry
  2. Shove dirty mound of clothes into washer, dump some detergent in, and click start
  3. Wait 25 minutes
  4. Move clean mound of clothes from washer to dryer and click start
  5. 60 minutes later, your laundry is done and ready to be worn again.

That’s less than 2 hours end to end. Laundry on the travel trail is generally a bit longer process. Depending on where you are of course; Europe is considerably more westernized than the rest of the world. In Chiang Mai, my laundry takes two days end to end. I drop it off at the laundromat downstairs in the morning, then come back and get it around 5 or 6 pm the next day — assuming the next day is not Wednesday as the laundromat are closed on Wednesdays. The problem with that is that I generally like to do ALL my laundry at once — and when you’re living from a backpack with a very minimal selection of clothes — that means sporting a swimsuit for 2 days and not washing 1 of my 5 shirts with that round of laundry (making it really stinky by the next time I do laundry).

Enter the Scrubba Wash Bag

YouTube Preview Image

Based on the video, the scrubba wash bag seems like a piece of travel gear I’d use. And that hunch stems from my firm belief that clean clothes are a good thing – and I’d rather not have to wait 2 days to get them clean.

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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What Type of Traveler Are You? Feedback Wanted

If you have 3 minutes — and I know you do — I’d really appreciate it if you could provide some feedback on what type of traveler you are and how you think about budgeting your trips.

Thanks in advance..

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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One of the Best Overheard Quotes Ever

Not even sure what to say to this one…

Put us in touch with the non robotic blow job guy

– Anonymous traveler

Drew Meyers

Drew Meyers is the co-founder of Horizon & Oh Hey World. He worked for Zillow from September of 2005 to January of 2010 on the marketing team managing Zillow’s API program and various online partnerships. Founder of Geek Estate Blog, a multi-author blog focused on real estate technology for real estate professionals, and myKRO.org, a blog devoted to exploring the world of microfinance. As passionate as you get about travel.

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