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.

Have you ever traveled to a place that had personal significance to you?

Question number 5…

Have you ever traveled to a place that had personal significance to you? Like where your culture and heritage originated from? If not, would you like to? If so, how did the knowledge of your culture and heritage alter you as a person? What do you think people can learn about their own culture by visiting where it originated?

Scotland-Edinburgh-bagpipes

My mom’s side of the family is very heavily Scottish. My uncle has spent time in Scotland about 10 years ago retracing where the Macnab clan (now spelled McNabb) originated, and my sister and mom visited several years ago. I haven’t made the trip yet, though I traveled to Ireland in 2010, and spent a week in Dublin and a 4 day roadtrip to the Dingle Peninsula and Connemara. There is a bit of a story worth sharing from my trip. I was hanging out in Dublin with a friend whom I met in Santorini earlier in the summer, and some of her friends. We were trading the typical questions that begin all conversations among travelers — what’s your name, where have you been, how long you been traveling, where are you from, etc. I mentioned that “my family was from Scotland” — and they started berating me. Why? They hated the constant stream of tourists showing up in Ireland with the purpose of “reconnecting with their homeland”. Their take on it? People are from wherever they were born — NOT where their great great great grandparents were born. Remember, everyone has a different bias. That said, I definitely plan on going to Scotland and seeing where the McNabb clan lived. [you can read more about the Macnab clan here if you wish]

To wrap this question up, I think it’s different for everyone. Ultimately, I don’t know whether it’s a worthwhile experience or not since I haven’t been back to my family’s original stomping grounds.

[Photo via http://www.haven.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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How has traveling impacted your compassion and acceptance for others?

Question number 4…

How has traveling impacted your compassion and acceptance for others?

Kid in KenyaYes. When you see the way the vast majority of the world lives, it’s hard if not impossible to NOT feel more compassionate for them. It’s one thing to see a family on TV that’s struggling to make ends meet abroad, or hear about them in a magazine – and jump to the conclusion that they just aren’t working hard enough. It’s quite another thing to say hi to that same family, see their home with your own eyes, sit & have them serve you tea, and hear of their struggles with your own ears.

You’ll quickly realize they work as hard, if not harder, than you do.

They just weren’t born in America. Or the UK. Or Germany.

Instead, they were born in Sudan. Ghana. Or Bangladesh.

Where someone is born shouldn’t dictate whether they are given an opportunity to succeed in life. Yet that’s the way the world works right now, and it sucks major ass. They didn’t choose the life they were born into, but they are dealing with the cards they were dealt in life – day in, day out.

If you have experiences like this first hand while traveling, and you don’t end up more compassionate for others – I frankly don’t know what’s wrong with you.

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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Has traveling expanded your education?

Question number 3…

Has traveling expanded your education? Does it affect your thirst for knowledge? In what ways?

knowledgeAbsolutely. I’m a more intelligent human being as a result of traveling. I’m curious about how everything works by nature, and traveling has only enhanced that. It’s a big, big world — and there is no shortage of things I don’t understand. Without traveling, I wouldn’t even be aware of many of those things that I now wonder about.

It’s worth noting — education systems have a built in filter / bias; it’s from the perspective of the US (or wherever you were educated). The US has a very different view on World War II, the revolutionary war, Afghanistan than other countries in the world. Yet the US view is what you learn in the US education system. China has a different view on Tiananmen Square than much of the world. To have a really informed view on anything, you need to understand those issues from all angles.

In many ways, I think the answer to this question goes back to the prior question of being more open and tolerant of other cultures. You’re living under a rock if the only perspective you take in is that of those in your own country.

[Photo via http://www.nwlink.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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What kinds of food have you experienced?

The 2nd question from the high school research project questions

What kinds of food have you experienced?

All kinds. Truthfully, I’m not a huge foodie. I can tell the difference between crappy food and great food of course, but all the layers in between and precisely why one dish is better than another is largely unnoticed by me. I’m not a details person, and, for better or worse, that stretches into food as well. On the other hand, Jodi Ettenberg is a foodie someone who loves food / food expert (see JodiEats). That’s a big reason I just ate whatever she told me to eat in Chiang Mai (& NYC) last year — and I was never disappointed. Annie Cheng is a foodie food expert. But I am not…

What I will say — by far and away, my favorite food in the world is from Southeast Asia, with Thai food at the top of the list and Vietnamese just below it. Cashew chicken nut, and chicken pad thai specifically. Pad see ew is also amazing. I discovered pho on my trip to Vietnam in 2008, and haven’t looked back since. Outside of Asia, I love Spanish paella.

I’d say the worst food I’ve had was a dish in Ghana, which I can’t remember the exact name. It was some sort of dough that was pounded with a mallet for hours, and you dip it in hot sauce to give it some flavor. I felt terrible not eating all of it it since someone had spent hours and hours preparing it. But it was seriously gross.

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P1060744What about you? What are your favorite foods you’ve experienced traveling?

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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The Truth About Changing

The life of a traveler is a lifestyle that not everyone understands. I can relate to the quote/photo my Uncle Ron posted to Facebook yesterday…and I’m guessing many of the travelers reading this can, too.

ivechangedstoppedtheirway

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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How was traveling affected your openness to other cultures, politics and events?

I got an email recently from a senior in high school (in Newark, Illinois) doing a research project on the topic of traveling and the effect that experiencing different cultures has on a person, and I agreed to answer a few questions.

There are 7 questions, and my goal is to answer one a day for the next week. The first question:

How was traveling affected your openness to other cultures, politics and events?

Quite simply, those who haven’t traveled are living under a shell.

Hanging off truck in Africa

Prior to embarking on my first trip abroad in 2005 — I had no freaking clue how the majority of the world lived. I thought life in Sammamish (20 minutes east of Seattle) was “normal”.

Boy, was I wrong.

If you are even reading this in the first place, you are living a very privileged life. The vast majority of the world doesn’t live the way we do. Basic items such as food, shoes, television, shelter, and water are not guaranteed — they are luxuries for much of the world’s population. I’ve written a few posts along these lines HERE and HERE.

One easy example of the difference is transportation in Africa (Ghana). Hanging off the back of a truck in Ghana with 5 other people, and 15 people inside? You’d never dream of doing such a thing in the United States. Well, that’s “normal” in Ghana.

In short, I am exponentially more open to foreign cultures, politics, and events as a result of traveling.

Add any thoughts you have on this subject in the comments, por favor.

 

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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A Quote from Kiva’s Premal Shah at SOCAP

I simply love this quote from Premal Shah at Kiva.org

If everything you do, you do for yourself, then when you die it all disappears. If everything you do, you do for others, it all lives on.

You can see the entire “What is Literally Worth Dying For?” panel that took place at SOCAP 2013, embedded below:
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PS: If you’re a kiva and/or microfinance fan, we’d love to help connect you with like-minded people.

[via TriplePundit]

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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Some Thoughts from Mark Ord in Southeast Asia

Today we’re talking to Mark Ord, the founder of All Points East; with a goal of producing unusual, original and quality trips at reasonable prices with an emphasis on off the beaten track destinations and eco-tourism and a commitment to responsible travel. One of our primary goals at Oh Hey World is to connect like-minded people with each other. Being a co-founder of a tech company in the travel industry, one of my personal interests is learning more about other entrepreneurs building travel companies.

Without further adieu…

1) What do you do?

mark ordRun a tour company specialising in travel in Southeast Asia. Set up All Points East, (formerly Gecko Travel), with my sister back in 1999 and she runs the UK office and I try my best to organize things at the Southeast Asia end from my base in Chiang Mai. If we get any quiet periods I also do some free-lance travel writing and photography.

2) Why do you do what you do?

Simple really; love travel and love Southeast Asia so my job allows me to live and travel out here. Mind you the more business improves the more time I seem to spend sitting in front of a computer in an office rather than travelling however having said that the nature of the work means my ‘office’ can be anywhere with an internet and phone connection. So I get to work out of some pretty exotic temporary ‘offices’: Saigon coffee shops or Thai beach resorts for example, so not complaining!

3) What are you most excited about right now?

Firstly the opening up of new areas of Southeast Asia to travel. New roads are allowing access to previously remote areas and border restrictions are being relaxed. Burma’s opening up fast for instance. Also excited and heartened to see some continued improvements in eco awareness and what appear to be genuine efforts at protecting the natural environment in various countries in the region. There’s obviously a long way to go but recent efforts in Borneo/Malaysia, Indonesia and Cambodia for example seem to be heading in the right direction. Maybe I’m over optimistic but there does seem to be an increased awareness of the long term value of protecting natural areas over short term gain of logging or say oil plantations plus it’s easy to do the maths and look at the cost incurred from natural disasters such as flooding caused by deforestation.

4) What’s next for you?

I’m checking out some trekking routes in new areas of Burma’s Shan State since the Burmese have recently opened up several land crossings for visitors plus researching northern Cambodia where new road construction has opened up huge swathes of the country with masses of previously little known ancient temple sites.

5) What’s a cause you’re passionate about and why?

Environmental protection, though at the end of the day, that is very closely tied in with my business anyway as is development in the poorer countries of the region such as Burma, Laos and Cambodia. Causes close to me heart tend to be Southeast Asian issues since this is where I lived for some 15 years and travel is such a wide subject that inevitably any political, environmental, social and economic developments in the area have an implication of some kind for travel and tourism.

If you’re keen to connect with Mark further, you can find his current location on his OHW profileA big thanks to Mark for sharing his motivations and current projects. If you’d like to connect on social media with Valentin:

Mark on Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook

We’ll be featuring a number of other travel entrepreneurs in the coming weeks. If you are an entrepreneur in the travel vertical, and want to be profiled, please sign up for an OHW account and add “travel entrepreneurs” as an interest on your profile — then shoot me an email (drew at ohheyworld).

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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My (Lack of) Study Abroad Experience

Many of my friends studied abroad in college. My best friend from high school studied in Spain. Several of my close college friends went to Costa Rica. Another close college friend went to London. A bunch of guys from Sigeps (a few thoughts on their migration to Balanced Man program) scattered themselves throughout the world.

Me?

I stayed in Seattle at University of Washington. When people find out that I didn’t study abroad, they are all beyond shocked — given how much of a travel addict I am now.

Looking back on it, I really have no idea why — though I can take a few guesses as to my reasoning. I had never traveled abroad before. I was “comfortable” where I was, with my friends. Staying put was the easy road. I was scared of the unknown.

When I first talked to Martin earlier this year, who has been helping us out a bit and already written on the topic of study abroad, I asked him what the study abroad community at Kalamazoo was like. To my surprise, he said something to the tune of…

Everyone studies abroad at Kalamazoo. If you attend this school, you’ve already made the decision that you want to study abroad.

How cool is that? Everyone studies in foreign countries? We need more schools with that mindset, and more kids who decide studying abroad is something worth doing.

I think it goes without saying, I recommend everyone study abroad if you have the opportunity. You’ll be exponentially better off over the course of your life if you experience other cultures with your own two eyes rather than just through the lens of the media.

And if you already missed that opportunity (like I did), there is never a better time to start traveling than NOW.

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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The Best Job Ever?

$100,000 and a year of paid travel around the world?

YouTube Preview Image

Best job ever?

Yes, I’d say so. (details here)

World MapAs you would expect, there are a huge number of video submissions for a chance at the job. I’ve watched a wide range of them (but certainly not all) over the past week or so. And I keep thinking back to the post I wrote about “How to make money while traveling.”

Why? Because the vast vast majority of these people seem to just have dollar signs in their eyes. Everything is me, me, me. Oh, did I mention why this job would be so great for me? I’m qualified to travel because X, Y, and Z.

I mean, who WOULDN’T want to travel the world and earn $100,000? Everyone on the planet wants that job. But that doesn’t help Jauntaroo build their brand, get other people to book vacations, and actually HELP people have better travel experiences. They need someone with the right motives — and that doesn’t include the big huge dollar signs I see flashing in the eyes of many of those who submitted videos.

The ideal person?

That just happens to be Annie Cheng. Take a look at her submission here. I’m biased on this since I’ve known her for more than 10 years now. That said, I can tell you without a doubt that IF I had 100K right now, I’d absolutely hire her in a heartbeat.

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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