Tag: a thirst for firsts

Are Insects Going to be on Your Dinner Plate?

Are Insects Going to be on Your Dinner Plate?

We’re pretty adventurous eaters and over the past year we’ve tried everything from beef tongue hot pot in Japan and cow brain soup in Turkey to – yes, INSECTS in Thailand.  And honestly we walked away from each of those three meals with a smile on 

How we learnt Yin and Yang in Peru

How we learnt Yin and Yang in Peru

Well, Father Time waits for no one. As we glance at our rear view mirror, we have some treasures from Peru we have to share. We are very inspired to share tales of our adventurous experiences in these mystic lands. We can honestly say that when 

Learning about DNA and which test to use?

Learning about DNA and which test to use?

We initially bought this book because we were both interested in learning more about genetics.  But specifically we wanted to understand which DNA test (ie.  AncestryDNA, Family Tree DNA, 23andMe) was best for Will to take.  We were hoping to learn more about about tracing your ancestry through either the father’s line (y-DNA) versus your mother’s line (mtDNA) and the pros/cons of each.

Let’s say the book didn’t help us too much. Instead we just ordered a test based on online reviews and who would ship to Turkey, which ended up being Family Tree DNA.

Stay tuned to hear about Will’s DNA Results!


River out of Eden: A Darwinian View of Life
by Richard Dawkins
Reader: Paulina & Will
Method of reading: Hardcopy
Rating: 2 out of 5

Golden nugget: Simplifying genetics isn’t easy.


The concept of the book was to create an analogy to the river of DNA.  But like we said, it’s just not that simple.

Let us know if you find a better book that explains human ancestry and how to differentiate between DNA tests!

5 BIGGEST Money Mistakes We’ve Made

5 BIGGEST Money Mistakes We’ve Made

It’s very common for many people to go into something and not think of all the things that could go wrong. But that’s okay because if you had to know all the consequences then you may not ever do a majority of the things you 

How can you grow your passion?

How can you grow your passion?

Passion grows in the pants, whoops, we mean plants …

Imagine being up in the clouds, away from civilization with no form of communication, following a nutty little man, smiling ear to ear snipping away here and there at this plant and that one, yelling “Aaaiiiiiight.” That’s what we did for a good portion of our time in Turkey. We were volunteering on a permaculture site called Cloud 9 with an assortment of animals and even larger variety of plants.  It was another Workaway opportunity.  Our hosts, and now lifelong friends, Tayip and Deborah welcomed us warmly as they drove us 9km up a rough mountain road and brought us to our new home for the next month.  We had anticipated that we would be taking care of a few animals, learning about bees, doing some labor work on the land, a lot of watering and other small projects.  We didn’t realize we’d learn so much about permaculture and gardening.

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As kids we were fascinated by the idea of something sprouting from a little seed and watching it grow over time. During our stay on Cloud 9 we were Tayip’s children and we were fascinated by his passion for the plants he grew, the fruits they sowed and the land he cultivated.  We reveled in every moment we spent following Tayip around, learning about gardening and growing as we applied those concepts to day-to-day life. Because life is like a garden, if it’s not thriving and growing, it’s dying.

Now some may find learning about gardening uninteresting and dull but trust us it’s fun!! However, what’s most interesting to us is we found an authentic, spirited character who had found his niche.  A person that does what he loves and feeds his soul.  Have you found that?  We sure haven’t and we know not everyone finds it easily.


In Indonesia we met a guy from Portugal who’s passion and work are now integrated because he draws bird illustrations for encyclopedia’s and other references but as a hobby enjoys bird watching.  How did he find his niche? Shooting down high flyers with his dad!  When they had to identify the birds they looked at them closely, listened to their song and eventually went in for the kill.  But the closer he looked and the harder he listened, the more he fell in love with his prey.  So here he is today, a full-time, passionate birdwatcher and illustrator.

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In Poland we met a woman who is also full-time working in something she enjoys and is passionate about.  She moved to Poland, married a man, had two beautiful boys, worked a high corporate position at a company, and then got fired.  Well, you can respect the shock she must have felt and the fear of the unknown.  She didn’t know what she wanted to do next but a friend suggested in the meantime to write an eBook and enter a contest, just for fun. Now she is the successful author of about 20 books, with 2.4 Million eBook pages read per month and is loving it.  She’s on a wet, romantic carpet ride and there’s more and more people grabbing towels to clean up the mess in her page turners.


But back to the passion’s of our nature-loving Turkish friend, Tayip.  Since six years old Tayip could be found with a pair of shears in his back pocket.  He is the youngest gardener we’ve ever known of and he was learning everything he knew through experiencing it.  You could describe him as a mad scientist, experimenting with his plants on Cloud 9 but Tayip was also able to turn his fig passion, borderline obsession, into supplemental income by selling the cuttings from his trees.  Day-to-day all he has to do is give his trees some trimming and water, and later can see the fruits of his labor when he turns one branch into multiple saleable cuttings.  Now that’s an integrated life!
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So here is some of the techniques we learned on Cloud 9 specifically about the fruit trees:

Graftingtaking the tissue of a bud or branch from one tree (has to be from the same family ie. apples and pears) and touching the tissue of another root tree.

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Ground layeringwhen a low hanging branch or a damaged branch is encouraged to create new roots in the soil while its still attached to the original tree.  This can be done by weighting the branch with some heavy rocks so that it is now under the soil. Once the roots have grown, the branch can be cut from the parent tree and replanted!

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This was Paulina’s favorite method and she can’t wait to experiment at home.

Air layeringsimilar to ground layering, the plant is encouraged to create new roots while its still attached to the original tree.  The difference is that it is done above the ground, in the air, in a bag that creates a moist growing environment for the roots. Once the roots have grown, the branch can be cut from the parent tree and replanted!

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Although Tayip does so much with his wife at Cloud 9, they enjoy the company of helping hands … and paws .. and chickens, turkeys, peacocks, quail, and hedgies!
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But after a long day of gardening and growing, we all need to take a rest to regenerate so we can grow some more tomorrow.

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Will was the one who introduced the phrase “If you’re not growing, you’re dying” and since we’ve let it be a guiding light in our lives. Growing doesn’t necessarily mean physically growing but it means growing your brain. So as long as you’re on your continuous path for learning you are growing, this could be learning new recipes, taking a language course, training a dog, reading books, learning a new skill, etc.  Just like when we were children and we were rapidly growing, developing and learning, continue to be curious like a child in your adult life and learn something new.

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How to be a modern day wizard?

How to be a modern day wizard?

We want to see if we can write blogs in random places. Now it’s no problem to find random places seeing that we are often in random houses, cities, parks, camping in the middle of nowhere, and finding little gems of a spot while exploring. 

Bangkok Baby 

Bangkok Baby 

Paulina hates being video taped. PERIOD!  Here is a little compilation Will put together of her trying to avoid the camera in the streets of Bangkok. Let’s say she’s starting from the bottom and hopefully by the end of the trip she’ll be a little 

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 5)

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 5)

Day 5: Doi Inthanon – Siriphum & Sirithan Waterfall- Chom Thong – Mae Ya Waterfall

There was nowhere to cook breakfast and it was our last day so we left bright and early to make the most of it. We checked out Siriphum waterfall and the garden near town then headed on Hwy 1009 to find more waterfalls to swim in and a place to cook breakfast. Both Siriphum and Sirithan waterfalls were big and beautiful but you couldn’t swim in them so we didn’t spend much time at each. Leaving Sirithan waterfall is where we realized our rear tire was completely flat and the integrity was gone!

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IMG_9872With no cellphone on us to call the scooter rental place we headed about 5-6km back uphill to Doi Inthanon park. Luckily a local Thai man from Chom Thong village picked us up in his truck and loaded the scooter. He dropped us off at a place to fix the tire which ended up being overpriced at 970 THB and took about 2 hours. We gave the kind Thai man 220 THB; he was so grateful and insisted on only taking 100 THB but we wouldn’t let him.


From there we went to Mae Ya Waterfall which was a short hike and very beautiful. We swam and enjoyed our time there before heading back to Chiang Mai. When we showed the damaged tire and receipts to the scooter rental company she did not want to refund us any portion because our contract said that popped tires were the responsibility of the customer. After a little debate she returned 400 THB to us which we were satisfied with considering what we had put that poor scooter through. Although most of our kilometres were spent on highways, the majority of our time was spent dirt biking on back roads with this scooter. We definitely learned from this short adventure that we’ll need a different bike for our next scooter adventure!

Expenses: 960 THB = $35 CAD
Distance: 96 km (does not include the kilometres we were towed)

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TOTAL EXPENSES for the trip: 5310 THB = $197 CAD
TOTAL DISTANCE for the trip: 825 km

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 4)

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 4)

Day 4: Pang Ung – Mae Hong Son – Maeaukoluang Waterfall – Doi Inthanon This was our kilometre day, we had a lot of ground to cover. We were headed to Surin waterfall but along the way stopped in Mae Hong Song off Hwy 108 to 

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 3)

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 3)

Day 3: Pai Viewpoint – Pai Canyon – Susu Waterfall – Pha Suea Waterfall – Pang Ung We both agreed that going to sleep with the sun and waking with it felt amazing. But we also realized that our minimalistic camping was almost too minimalistic. 

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 2)

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 2)

Day 2: Pong Dueat – Tha Pai Hot Spring – Pai – Pembok Waterfall – Pai Viewpoint
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We woke up as the sun was rising because we were anxious all night, waking up many times to the sound of engines or people … and rightfully so, since a man in camouflage was peering in the window as we were packing up. As it turns out he was a guard, so we let him know we were leaving right away. We were told that the national parks in Thailand are all manned by the military because they are King’s land.

On our way to Pai we stopped at a scenic pullout, made a campfire for breakfast and had red rice with Campbell’s cream of mushroom and chicken. Today was our first experience building a fire in such high moisture and humidity. It was very difficult and took a lot of patience since we didn’t have any fire starter or dry kindling but eventually we did it! Although the road to Pai is windy and beautiful, oddly this scenic pullout wasn’t very scenic at all and unfortunately had a lot of garbage everywhere. We are firm believers that you should leave a campsite cleaner then when you got there, so we tidied up the place before continuing on.

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Next we were onto Tha Pai (aka Pong Ron) hot spring which charged 300 THB/person and was a let down because it was under maintenance and we couldn’t go in the hot spring. Luckily the park attendant returned our money since we decided we weren’t going to stay there and camp after all. So we headed to Pai to find a coffee shop, charge the phone and walk around. Pai is a unique and enjoyable little town with many boutique shops and tourists. It would have been fun to spend a few days there but we decided we were going to keep moving on and find more nature. IMG_1230IMG_1239

Pembok waterfall was our next chase. We were excited to feel refreshed and swim again and even more excited when we could do some small cliff jumps about 10-12ft. From Pembok there was a sign that said 7km to Pai Viewpoint so we thought why the heck not. Turned out this was a crazy road made for off-road scooters or dirt bikes versus the one we rented and when we finished the 7km we came to a sign that said another 3km. These 10km took us well over an hour to do and some of the inclinations were so high that Paulina got off the scooter and walked, and eventually we both got off the scooter and just hiked the last kilometre to the top.
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We were ecstatic to finally be at the top and immediately decide we would camp there because the scenery was beautiful and facilities were great! Pai is at an elevation of approximately 480 MSL while the viewpoint is 1624 MSL, so we climbed over 1100 meters on a little 125cc scooter … The villagers seemed impressed with our tenacity. We camped there for free and were blessed to have help from locals to start the fire since yet again there was no dry kindling or wood. The villagers used pieces of wood that seemed to be naturally saturated with a lot of sap. We later found it for sale in the markets at 6 THB per bundle. We cuddled up by the fire, got mesmerized by the flames and soon after sunset headed to sleep.

Expenses: 160 THB = $6 CAD
Distance: 85.8 km

Click here for DAY 3 …

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Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 1)

Chasin’ Waterfalls (Day 1)

“Don’t go chasin’ waterfalls Please stick to the rivers and the lakes that you’re used to I know that you’re gonna have it your way or nothing at all But I think you’re moving too fast” TLC – Waterfalls Actually, DO go chasing waterfalls! Especially 

Our First “Workaway”

Our First “Workaway”

About three months into our trip, we were starting to get bored of being tourists, feeling unproductive and lacking genuine purpose each day. We’d often wake up in the late morning and wonder “What now?” We’d heard many great reviews from people we’ve met travelling 

How one man’s trash can be another man’s … lunch!

How one man’s trash can be another man’s … lunch!

Today, on the topic of dumpster diving, we’ll be discussing the German man from the Vipassana meditation center that we met. We are going to endeavor into this conversation about our meeting with Max Maximus and the noticeable garbage and waste we see in the world. Max was a young, 20 something-year-old, that joined us in the meditation course and Will had the privilege of meeting on the first day. He was quite interesting with a small frame, long dreadlocks and baggy flower-patterned pants. As we started to peel away the layers of the onion, you could see Max was at war with what we call garbage. He believes in not wasting food and has taken a stand by making the example of living off less then $10 a day, and some days nothing at all, for the last three years. He wants to prove that it can be done and this world is so plentiful that you have everything you need right here and now.

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We would have never guessed from how Max carried himself that he was a homeless drifter. If we knew about Max’s story prior, we would have expected him to smell bad which we were surprised to notice he didn’t. He was self-educated and held high values for the global environment plus cared for hungry people deeply.

When the meditation course was all said and done, we had a more in-depth discussion with Max. He opened up about his passion for psychedelics and some comical stories of him trying to get his parents onboard with it. For the last couple years he has been emailing his mom long letters detailing specifics of his “trips” … oddly she has never once responded.  On the other side, Max’s father was invited by Max and his siblings to join on a family bonding trip in the Australian desert … where Max and his brothers tried to convince him to try some psychadelics.  Their father denied and was paranoid the entire trip that his sons were trying to drug him which ruined their family bonding time.

Max also mentioned that while on his mission he met a German girl in Australia who shared the same mindset as himself. This enlightened us that either there are many people out there who truly realize garbage as a problem, or the Germans are weird.  But no, Max is justifiable. He is actually a pioneer in the garbage warrior arena and how he plans to reach the fight of this arena is to dig deep and understand where are all the places uneaten food lay to rest. So Max accomplishes this by penetrating into the steel containers we call dumpsters to retrieve his treats for the day.

Check out this quick four minute Canadian video:  Dumpster Diving 101

We piled into the back of a truck with Max and some others to get transported to our next destinations. The conversations started to flow and spiraled into very entertaining topics … See, having more heads than one to ask Max questions about his life was perfect. We found out Max does busking and juggling in major city centers to support his low budget lifestyle.  That he met his girlfriend dumpster diving for food as well and it’s a game they like to play. We learned about his circle tattoos and that they are a representation of all matter around us.  And we learned that Max has his life set up in a way that is slower paced then the ones we know for ourselves.

One awe-inspiring topic that came up (at least to us) was about how Max hunts in the urban jungle food court. Like a stalking predator he lingers and watches people from afar as they order their food, how they go about eating and the general health/hygenic conditions of the person.

It’s something I think we’ve all had come across our minds when we are in food courts, “Are they going to finish eating that? Because I totally will!” Unfortunately, most of us are too embarrassed and don’t want to raise any social radars of being gross so we stay quiet. But we didn’t stay quiet, we started telling people we met about our dumpster diving friend, Max.  We were inspired by him to be less wasteful and decided that this was one mission we had to test on our trip.

A few weeks passed by, we found ourselves in the expensive city of Singapore at the Zoo with empty stomachs. But there was a shiny golden halo hovering over a box of half eaten KFC left for dust and our minds shifted into hunter mode. We noticed that people around us would be in the general area for about 6-8 minutes then a new batch of observers would come to check out the monkeys habitats. So we perched ourselves beside the “could have been wasted garbage” KFC and as soon as we notice there was new crowd of people around we grabbed the treat as if it always belonged to us.  We were so excited to be eating soggy fries and a crispy skin drum sick. We can honestly say that this scavenging gave us a rush. It’s not something you’d normally do and it really is like your trying to be a food ninja making the least amount of moves until you are in a checkmate scenario with your prey.

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We had our thrill and felt like we would now try for bigger game in our travels when the time was right. The second and most exciting experience was in Phuket in a shopping center. We just happened to see two of the most gorgeous, half eaten gourmet sandwiches just laying there with no owner! We had to move fast because there were table cleaning demons who were moving at a ferocious rate. So we huddled up and game planned it to be a solo suicide mission. Will was the hunter for the tray prey while Paulina took watch … We really wish we videoed but maybe next time! Now sitting in front of us were these two amazing, rich, thick, fresh slabs of rye bread, we knew we hit the jackpot of garbage wars. Our hunt was different this time, the first time was about the flow of people but this time we didn’t have fast moving traffic, we had people that tend to be focused on their own worlds while they eat and don’t necessarily pay much attention to what’s happening around them. (Quick two minute video test to check your sense of attention: Attention Test.)  So Will swooped in to linger for a moment, with full confidence that this had been our sandwich all along, and departed quickly with two fists full of greatness and another thrilling meal.

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So although on man’s trash is another man’s treasure, it has been our lunch.  Our foodcourt scavenging experiences have fit the budget and been entertaining, it has also made us open our eyes to notice when we’re walking around how much food does go to waste.  It’s funny, it’s who happens to you in your life that will inspire you to experiment with how you’re living your life.  Whether its a significant or small influence, it all counts toward you being curious, open-minded and further educating yourself.  That’s why sharing these experiences with everyone is great because it also allows you, the reader, some time for reflection and gives examples that you may choose to emulate in your life. I bet there is something inside of you who would totally do the same and grab those fries off someone’s table or finish up the tasty pasta dish that is barely eaten. We will report with more experimental learnings along the way and we want to impress upon you that you can always have a thirst for firsts … so save on waste and try it out! Until next time our fellow friends of the world.

Stay tuned for Germany in August … maybe you’ll find us feasting out of supermarket dumpsters. There’s no better way to learn than experiencing first-hand some of the things we hear about which will also help to maintain an authentic, organic, fun life ahead of us.