One thing we’ve found about a 100-day trip is how daunting and exhausting it is planning and booking such a trip. When you plan for a 1-2 week trip, you might look up 1-2 countries for things like voltage; what type of plugs; what type of money; do they have Uber (or how to get around); what are the tipping policies for the country; what prescription meds can you bring into the country; do you need a visa, etc. It might be an hour or two of research on the internet. But when you are researching 21 different countries, well, it’s 22 times thatβ€”a lot of work!

This is all on top of trying to figure out what an itinerary is for a 100-day trip. We have discovered that we do better when we have a plan in place of what we want to do, see, experience, etc. than if we just “wing it.” This doesn’t mean that we’re “locked in” to a plan, but instead that we have all the options and relevant information to choose from. That means we can just follow the plan if there’s no reason not to, but also allows us to remain very flexible (as you may know from our Portugal trip last December). But when we get up in the morning each day, we know what is generally on the agenda. That way we don’t waste an hour (or many) stressing out about figuring out what we want to do that day, etc. For this trip, especially, we decided we didn’t want to spend valuable time on our trip planning out the latter part of the trip (our original plan was to keep the last 20ish days unscheduled). We are planning on having “zero days” on our trip, but we went to spend those days on getting supplies, doing laundry, talking to friends/family (more on that later)…and not on trip planning. So, we knew that for a 100-day trip to 21 different countries, we need a general plan and have stuff pre-booked. (And we have travel insurance if we need it!)

With all this as a background, for the last 2 months, Jen has been busy researching what countries we’ll go to, what we want to do in the country, and what an itinerary might look like. Then, she’s been busy booking flights, hotels, and tours; and then starting to look up all the smaller details for each country. In the meantime, Scott has been researching what cameras we need for our trip, what prescriptions we can bring into the various countries, where we should campervan in Australia, and, most importantly, getting this website/blog up and running so we’ll be able to tell you all about all facets of our trip!

We’re both pretty tired already with the trip-planning. But we’ve done this enough to know that the time spent now planning and figuring out all these aspects of our trip leads to a much more fun, relaxed, and amazing trip later!