Showing posts with label Lomma Beach-Sweden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lomma Beach-Sweden. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

What You'll Learn Traveling Alone + Tips on Solo Travel

Traveling alone isn't always easy. 


If you're a beginner traveler, traveling alone probably sounds like your worst nightmare. You've seen too many movies like Taken and know that the best policy is to travel safe. And it is very important to travel with caution and safety, especially as a female in countries that have different views than what you're used to!

But are you traveling with friends because it's safe or because it's comfortable?

Because life begins at the end of your comfort zone!

I'm gonna let you in on a secret that some people will go their entire lives not knowing; you can travel alone and be safe. "Whhhaaaa??" you might ask, as your brain explodes from the awesomeness that I just told you. But it's very, very true. Some of my best memories were places when I hit the road alone to Santorini, GreeceLomma, Sweden and Mabul, Malaysia and I did it with me, myself and my backpack.

Oh the open road!

Being a woman I was always jealous of my guy friends who said they were backpacking Europe or Asia or somewhere. "No fair!" I said, "if I was a guy I could do that!" What I really meant was, "If I wasn't afraid I could do that!" I had to face the fear and learn along the way.


Traveling is great, it's amazing. 
You will learn so much about yourself.
But you don't really know who you are and what you can do until you've traveled alone.

It can be small, a trip just to a city close to where you are living or studying. It can be going a few days before your friends, some alone time until you eventually meet up with them. Or it can be long, its all up to you and how comfortable you feel.

Alone can be 'Just What the Doctor Ordered'!

Traveling can certainly take its toll on friendships and travel partners. So when you are getting irritated with "whats er name" book a side trip alone. Tell them you need alone time. Odds are they find you equally annoying!

Expect the best, be prepared for the worst, screw what others think & do your own thing!

Treat yourself to a little date! Dress up, pick a restaurant or book a spa day! Take your journal or book if you don't want to look like too much of a loser. Is there something you like that your friends don't? Order the white wine instead of red or ask the waiter whats good-odds are you'll make the friendly conversation you've been craving after a few hours to yourself and try something you wouldn't have!

Find clarity in being you! Our friends can define us so much, they can even be cruel when we try something we aren't "known" for. Traveling is about learning and sometimes that provokes change. Be who you want! No one is looking!

Be spontaneous! Really, what do you want to do? There's no checking with anyone else to decide the days' events. It's an early morning swim in Da Nang, Vietnam, it's a naked Sopranos marathon in Kota Kinablu, Malaysia, its joining a volcano tour in Santorini, Greece. It's yours.

You are never REALLY alone!

I would say I am most comfortable when I am alone reading or pretending to be dead, a recluse, really.

But when you travel alone you realize that travelers are everywhere! Book the dorm at the Hostel and watch yourself become like the popular girl on prom night. Read a book in the lobby or start up a conversation with the hostel workers, you won't be alone for long! Lone travelers have a sixth sense for their own, you'll quickly be asked to dinner with a group or activities to fill the next day. Even long-term travel partners are met this way. 

Ever notice you don't meet many new people when traveling with a pack? You'll find yourself approachable and open to meeting new people and having more experiences when you don't have friends clutching your arm!

You Might Break Down

Whether it's after an attempted post office quest in Prague or at a beach in Lomma, you will breakdown somewhere, sometime.

You'll break down because you'll realize that you've never done something like this before. When you have yourself to count on and sometimes no one else. It can be scary and overwhelming but that's O.K, that's why we travel. If it was easy, everyone would do it.

 You have accomplished what many many people haven't. You've been brave enough to be vulnerable. In the short term you'll cry, like me when my roommate found me on the dorm floor in bursts of tears and boogers sobbing after skyping my bank. Or my friend when she took a solo trip to Spain and sat alone on a bench on her birthday. But in the long term, this experience has unreal benefits.

You know what it's like to be vulnerable, you'll know what it's like to be alone and you'll know how to do it and won't be afraid of it! Moreover, you'll know what you want and who you are despite your friends.

When something bad happens you have three choices. You can either let it define you. Let it destroy you, or you can let it strengthen you.


But People Will Help

Whether it's crashing two motorbikes in one day or losing a credit card and being money less for a week, someone will help. I promise you. People who travel are often the nicest people when emergencies arise. They know what it's like to have shit happen and they jump when they see someone in a similar situation.

The kindest acts I've seen have been when I am abroad. From people who know what its like to struggle in a new environment and be scared of the unknown.
It's not a big bad cruel world, see for yourself!


and You Will Be Stronger Than Ever

We all have those friends, maybe we were these people, the ones that can't seem to do anything by themselves. Can't find peace in silence? Shutter when they have to do something by themselves or talk to someone they don't know? Not open to new experiences unless they have someone next to them?

When you travel alone you'll realize that speaking up is not the scariest thing in the world, that taking selfies is no longer embarrassing, that you can navigate a city on your own, you know who you are and you can tackle anything, anytime.You will no longer fear the unknown, you'll embrace it. It's an adventure, defined by you!


Tips for Solo Travel:

1. Know where you are
Sounds pretty simple right? But seriously! Check blogs and websites that talk about the safety of the area for lone travelers. Is there some part of town you should steer clear of at night? Look that up and change your dinner plans. Important, let someone else know where you are and check in with them every other day or week.

2. Safety is more important than money
We are budget travelers but I draw the line at my safety. Yeah, I could save money if I walked the 25 minute walk to the hostel but if I don't feel safe I'll just take the taxi. If you need to stay in a nicer place in a better part of town. Feeling safe is worth the extra dollar. 

3. Put yourself out there
Go for the dorm room, sign up for a free tour or a guided excursion you will meet people that way! Check couchsurfing.com or expat blogs for local events. Especially around holidays when no one should be alone! It's easy to make friends when you are experiencing new things. Try diving or sign up for a kitesurfing course, the instructors and other travelers are easy to engage!

"If you are not willing to look stupid, nothing great is ever going to happen to you." 


Don't trust me? 
Follow solo female travel enthusiasts like Adventurous Kate, she knows what's up.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Celebrating American Independence Day in Sweden




A view from The American Store!


Although, I missed spending the holiday at home wearing insanely bright colors and listening to the "oohh's" and "ahh's" as the fireworks explode above Moon Dune beach at Tahoe, CA, I have gained a great deal of pride for America's ('Murica!) nationalism and really got into the spirit when my two American coworkers and I decided to celebrate American independence at the beach house!

I got to spend the morning walking around Malmo, Sweden (post later) to find an American Store where they sell everything America ('Murica!). We loaded up on Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, A&W Root Beer, packaged brownies and some napkins to go along with our theme. We were going to celebrate Freedom Day at the Beach House! We devoted the entire day to America by loudly walking around Swedish cities and boasting our pride like the annoying, self-centered and ignorant Americans that we are (and proud of it)! We blasted country music and ate corn on the cob, pork and watermelon for dinner and then devoured root beer floats and brownies around the beach bonfire. We ended the night with the national anthem and I believe everyone; Americans, Swedes and French went home with a new perspective of American pride.

I myself have never been the kind of person who boasts where I am from. But I think it's incredibly unique this American Pride, something that really I've never seen any other country have (unless it's EuroCup Season). I really am proud of where I am from and I'm so glad I got to show others our traditions and culture for a change!


Our shopping cart-all things I've been missing!

Try American chips hahaha!

I'm so happy, my eyes won't open!

This was my contribution. Skane local strawberries and American made marshmallows!

Swede's love America!

Yum!!

Best desert ever! Although the French girls thought root beer tasted like medicine and practically begged us not to make them drink it!

Who built that incredible beach bonfire you ask? Oh, that was me! :]



Ending the night with the National Anthem!

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Midsummer Celebration

What would a Swedish vacation be without an awesome party? If you're like me you probably have never heard of Midsummer before this moment and are still scratching you're head wondering why some parts of the world get to engage in the biggest annual party while to others (like the US) it's just another June 22nd. Wikipedia says: Midsummer day simply refers to the period of time centered upon the summer solstice, but more often refers to specific European celebrations that accompany the actual solstice, or that take place on a day between June 21 and June 24, and the preceding evening. To some European countries (like Sweden) it's the biggest holiday after Christmas. But, I didn't just get to join in on the fun, I got to help plan the party! 


In preparation for the party we watched this video:

YOU WILL NOT UNDERSTAND MIDSUMMER UNTIL YOU WATCH IT!


So we had a Midsummer party at the Beach House complete with Elderflower syrup/cordial (fläderblomssaft), strawberry cake and drunken dancing! Words can't describe such a beautiful night, enjoy the pictures!

A couple days before hand I picked hundreds of Elderflowers to make fläderblomssaft which is elderflowers, lemons, sugar and water or snapps! To be served during the party, it was so sweet but very good!
  

We started the day be setting up for the party and then making our head garlands from flowers and leaves we found around the beach house!
Didn't they turn out great?!
For lunch we had pickled herring, baby potatoes and a shot of alcohol after every song!

Needless to say, the alcohol provided us with an unproductive afternoon-here are the boys  getting the Maypole up.

And Tahdah! It is up, a little bare but still pretty! Time for dancing and singing around the Maypole!
Now for that strawberry cake! 

Dinner consisted of delicious barbecued chicken and of course more shenanigans! 



and more dancing!!


The party from the hill, there's that traditional Midsummer rain! But it won't stop us!


Such a fun and awesome day!

Watching the sunset over the Baltic Sea

I was in charge of the bonfire, it was difficult because everything was wet from the rain!

Midnight stand-up paddle boarding anyone? Yes!

And the sun set on the luckiest girl in the world.

Soaking Up Sweden

It doesn't feel like I have been here for two weeks. It feels like I come here every summer to return to the beach with my friends waiting with open arms. Between the kitesurfing community and the unbelievable staff at the Lomma Beach House, where I now work, I am overwhelmed with a feeling of bliss for this new found home. I get many people who ask me where I am from and how I got to Sweden, and as my last post will tell you, I have no idea. It is just more proof of how a positive attitude will put you in the right place. So let me tell you more about this right place:


I am living in Lund, Sweden which is in the Southern part of Sweden in Skåne County (Skåne län), also known as Scania County in English. This part of Sweden is gorgeous and I have seen a lot as I have gotten in the habit of riding the 7 kilometers to Lomma, Sweden where I work (mostly) everyday.  Lomma Beach is well known for it's winds and on a good day you see everything from kitesurfers to windsurfers to wave surfers all fighting over the beach. My day is often packed with an abundance of water sports as well as some soaking up of that gorgeous Swedish sun. 




Getting ready for SUP (Stand up Paddle-boarding)

                         



I am gonna be a long boarding professional by the end of this!
Me in my kitesurfing gear!
                                    
                                  I also do other not so glamorous things like undo kitesuring knots and organize gear!
                                         

Here we are out on the deck, I've been reading a lot! Three books in two weeks, take that summer reading list!!


Swedish Sunsets
I have never seen such beautiful sunsets, here are some of my favorite...so far!

I love the clouds here! The colors are gorgeous

Entering Lomma, Sweden
On my bike ride to home

This is Malmo at night, the view from Lomma Beach


See the kitesurfers out there?

The best sunset of all was on Midsummer's Eve so keep reading!!

Sunday, June 10, 2012

She's Where?

I know it came to many of you as a surprise that I am not on a flight back home and instead am sitting in a dorm room at Lund University about to head to my new job in Lomma Beach in Sweden. Honestly, it happened so fast that even I am adjusting to the fact that I won't see home for another month. Before my mom came to Prague a couple weeks ago I wrote that I felt I was ready to come home, ready to see my family, friends and my doggy Sugar. It's not that I've stopped missing home. It's more the reassurance that I have a home that will always be there for me. Whether it's June or July, I'll be home back into the same old habits, and perhaps that scares me. I have learned and gained so much while abroad and I don't want those things to change when I get back home. So I decided I needed a little more time over the pond to let all these changes sink in and to reflect on my trip abroad. PLUS it gives me a gigantic excuse to see a part of Europe I really wanted to!

 I've started working at Lomma Beach House which serves ice cream and beach snacks but mostly concentrates on Kite Surfing lessons and the giant community that flocks to Lomma's renown beaches that offer some of the best winds in the world! The beach is absolutely unbelievable. On a clear day you can see Malmo as well as the bridge that connects Sweden to Denmark!! Where else could you see something so spectacular? So you'll be hearing from me about the beautiful city of Lund and Lomma Beach in the next few weeks. Hopefully I'll get to Copenhagen and maybe Stockholm on my days off!

Here's some info on the baby 10 year old Kite Surfing sport, rumors are that it will be included in the 2016 Rio Olympics:



                                   I am learning myself and can't wait to really get some air!




Kite Surfing lesson

Malmo, Sweden from the beach

See the bridge, incredible huh?

Beach House!