Our latest feature on our interview series of fellow travel bloggers is Davide Vadalà from Nomad Travellers. Davide is a well-travelled individual and we are delighted that he is speaking with us today on a variety of travel related topics.
Please feel free to comment, ask questions and connect with Davide using his various social media fronts listed below.
We would like to give a special THANK YOU to Davide for taking time to interview with us!
Name: Davide Vadalà
Website: Nomad Travellers
Social Media:
- Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/NomadTravellers
- Twitter – https://twitter.com/nomtra
- Google+ – https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/104641346202971255542/+Nomadtravellers/posts
What is your favorite aspect of traveling and if you are a travel blogger, why did you decide to create your website?
What I like about traveling is experiencing new things everyday, also the unexpected. And experience for me means learning, since I believe in learning by doing. If you have a normal office job, the most enthusiastic thing it can happen is probably getting an extra free day. If you take possession of your life and you go travelling, you open a completely new range of possibilities. You feel alive every second, and you are not looking forward for weekends. Your life is a weekend.
I started my travel website to share this vision with other people, to try to inspire them and possibly to change a little bit of the world in which we live. Whatever I do, I always think that if it’s even 1% better than when I started, it means I succeeded.
How many continents have you visited?
Three
How many countries have you visited?
30+
What is your favorite destination in the world and why?
It’s probably Nepal. First of all, it came after some very stressing months in India, where I was even hospitalized for one week. I keep great memories from Nepal and its people, because they are Asian but with a stronger Western influence, so it was easier to get along with them. I found it to be a much more relaxing, spontaneous and friendly than India. But most of all I loved trekking in the Himalaya for three weeks, covering over 300 km and reaching 5500 meters of altitude, making good friends, and passing from tropical climate to alpine forest to bare rocks, while I was hiking.
If money/time was no object and you could visit anywhere in the world, where would you travel to and why?
No doubts it would be Bhutan. It’s a different world there, economics have no place in the important choices of the state, and people are happy with what they have. They develop happiness rather than their bank accounts. Nature is amazing and you can recharge your spiritual batteries just by staying there. Unfortunately to preserve their unique culture they limited the entrance of foreigners, and having access to this Himalayan country is difficult and extremely expensive.
Which of the following gadgets do you take on your travels?
Laptop, Phone, Camera and e-Reader.
What is your preferred method of transport?
Bicycle.
Complete the following, “Everywhere I go, I visit….”
Natural beauties in the surroundings and inspiring architectures, in particular Art Nouveau buildings.
Here is your chance to sell yourself and your website! Tell us some more information about yourself, what your travel philosophies & future plans are and anything else that people may find interesting to read about…
Since two years and a half, my solo travel transformed into a couple travel, since I met my better half Otilia. Of course while travelling! We were rock climbing in Hungary when we met for the fist time. Now we try to travel sustainably, moving almost exclusively by land, most of the time hitchhiking. I love cycling, but she is still not enough comfortable to travel by bike. We don’t use hotels, we always sleep couchsurfing and we eat local and vegetarian. We buy second hand clothes, and only if we need, and we try to inspire people to be more frugal. In our website, we share our travel stories, photos and plenty of tips.
I’m also really interested in photography, I’ve collaborated with international paperback magazines and our articles are always filled with nice images. Now we are waiting for an answer from the Indonesian Embassy. If we’ll be selected for a program we applied for, we’ll study local handicraft in Indonesia for one year. We can’t wait to go!
I can totally relate to wanting to travel to Bhutan! It is definitely on my list, too! We are both vegan as well, so we’re always looking for new vegetarian food while we travel! Great to read about you & your journey!
Thank you guys, maybe we’ll share a vegan meal on the way first or later 🙂
Davide and Otilia are an interesting couple. I hope they get the chance to study local handicraft in Indonesia. What a great idea.
Always wonderful to get to know another traveler via interviews. Nice work, interesting read 🙂
Thanks for providing this interview series Chris.
Nice reflections there Davide and I like your respect for frugal living. Your comments on Bhutan make it sound like the perfect place to inspire and guide others around the world. They sound like very content and morally well balanced people.
Davide and Otilia are an interesting couple with an original way of traveling around the world. I always admire people who travel around by bike! Thanks for bringing them closer to us through this interview!
Completely agree with you Gabor that anyone who has the guts to get on their two-wheeled companion and start exploring deserves a pat on the back. We both love biking but generally only in rural settings or at least where there is not much traffic, not sure I would have the guts to do this in a city setting.
Kudos to Davide and Otilia and reiterating Gabor’s thanks for featuring in our interview series!
Great interview! It’s always great to get to know other travel bloggers through the interview series on blogs 🙂
Very true Ashley and we certainly enjoy reading your series (plus excited to feature hopefully in the next few weeks!).
Nice to meet Davide!
Look forward to having another blog to read 🙂
Always great to meet new folks right! Plus you learn some interesting things that you didn’t even think was possible when you set the interview questions.