Singurul sfat pentru a finanța călătoriile cu normă întreagă

“What if I were to die tomorrow, what would you do for the rest of your life?” 

That’s what Malaysian Samantha Khoo asked her Singaporean husband Rene Sullivan in 2017, when he came home late from a long day of work.

“It was really sudden and it took me some time before I answered her,” he told CNBC via video from Langkawi, Malaysia. “I said, ‘Well, if that happens, then I just take my guitar … and then travel the world’.”

Khoo replied, “Why are we waiting for me to die for you to do this?”

Living in a sailboat together has allowed Rene Sullivan and Samantha Khoo to work on their communication skills. “In a house, if you get pissed off at each other, you can just leave … Here you can’t. You have to make up and say you’re sorry,” said Khoo.

24 Hour Travellers

“Here we are chasing these goals. Pay up your debts, get your house, do your business … We did it all. We’re at this point where we’re still like: When is it ever enough?”

The couple, now in their late 40s, were running businesses of their own back then.

“It was a change of perspective. Money can no longer be our currency because … it’s never going [to be] enough. Time became our currency — how do we spend our time doing what we want?” 

How they got started  

Discovering boat life 

In 2019, they started planning a six-month road trip to the U.K., which would have taken them through China, Mongolia, Russia and Europe. 

They were all ready to go when the Covid-19 pandemie hit. So they put their plans on hold.

Earlier this year, many countries reopened their borders to travelers, and the couple were preparing to leave.

“And then the [Russian-Ukraine] war happened. Nothing said that it was a good time to do land travel,” said Khoo. 

With their plans thwarted, the couple started dreaming about their next adventure. Khoo spent a lot of time watching videos on YouTube, and she chanced upon one about living in a tiny boat. 

“I was like, ‘Oh, I can do this,'” she said. Sullivan, however, was not so keen.

“I was skeptical of everything — [dealing with] the weather and then being in the ocean all by yourself. I’m kind of chicken that way,” he said with a laugh. 

The compromise? Sullivan agreed to test the waters of sail life before committing to buying a boat.

They spent four months at Pangkor Marina in Malaysia, where they worked for boat owners without pay to gain knowledge about boat life and maintenance.

Sullivan eventually fell in love with the lifestyle. In April this year, the couple bought a secondhand full-keel boat for $15,000.

‘Bring on another 1,000’ 

Becoming capable sailors 

Khoo and Sullivan also run a YouTube channel called 24 Hour Travellers, where they document their adventures and interview other travelers.

The couple said being round-the-clock travelers is matter of perspective. 

“It’s about … how you can change your perspective and be happy where you are,” Khoo said. 

“At Talagar Harbor, when we walk to the main gate, we pass a South African captain, a French captain, a German sailor, an Indonesian carpenter … they become your neighbors,” she added. 

“Knowing the boat owners, it’s already like traveling the world,” she said.

For now, the couple are focused on taking “baby steps” to achieve their goal — to become capable sailors and set sail to Thailand next year.

“The dream is to anchor our boat in blue water and be surrounded by islands,” Khoo said. 

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/28/from-van-life-to-boat-life-the-one-tip-to-fund-full-time-travel.html