Casino Day Cruises - Casino Resort Gambling

gambling boat in tampa florida

gambling boat in tampa florida - win

Trip Report: Three months across the USA, three weeks across China/Hong Kong (Very Long/Detailed!)

Hello! Howdy! Ni hao!
I recently returned home from a 4-month journey around the USA and China/Hong Kong, and I wanted to share it with you guys! This place was a source of information, advice, and inspiration when I was planning this trip, so I'm hoping this post can provide the same to others. This was a long trip, and this will be a long post... but I'll try to organize it the best I can.

About Me

The Trip

23rd March - 14th July

Map of the route, and a map with just the USA.
Calendar of the dates.

Why?

  • I had a newfound love of travelling.
  • I've been inspired by places like this subreddit, and various YouTube videos... I wanted to make my own.
  • I'm half American and I love the USA. I wanted to see more of it.
  • I've relatively inexperienced and would feel more comfortable doing my first big trip in an English-speaking country.
  • I've got friends/family to visit in the USA.
  • I had a good amount of money sitting in the bank and had no real use for it.

In Numbers

  • 115 Days / 16.4 weeks / 3.8 months
  • 6 Countries
  • 9 US States
  • 8 Hostels
  • 7 Hotels
  • 11 Campgrounds
  • 13 Flights
  • 6 Long Distance Trains
  • 350GB of Pictures/Videos

What I Brought

My bag was an Osprey Farpoint 55L. It would be my first time living out a bag.
Here’s a list of everything I took with me.
Picture of most of it on leaving day! I bought the rest at my Dads house a couple of weeks in.

What I Wish I Brought

  • Warmer clothes. Chicago was very cold and camping in California during May is cold as hell!
  • A GoPro. Compared to my Gimbal & Waterproof case for my camera, a GoPro & Pole would have done a similar job, taking up way less space.
  • A Duffel Bag. The Farpoint 55L was great don't get me wrong but wearing It on my back was so uncomfortable. I used it as a duffel bag 90% of the time... and it was heavy. In the future I'll travel with a normal duffel bag, preferably one with wheels.

What I Regretted Bringing

  • Neck Rest. I mean... I lost it in London, before my first flight...
  • Hiking Boots. Were fantastic during my hikes, but they were large, heavy, and I wore them maybe 5 times. Next time I'll get my trainers dirty.
  • Underwater Camera Case. I was never going to not bring it… but still. Only used it 3 times, and it took up so much space.
  • Water Bottle. It got sand inside and was impossible to clean, then it broke. Buying water bottles as you go along is so much easier.
  • Jacket. Used it twice... such a waste of space!
  • Refillable Toiletry Bottles. They're great on a short trip, but on a long one, once they run out they are just taking up space.
  • First Aid Kit. Didn't use a single thing in there, and there was really no need for it with the places I was going.
  • Airport Lounge Pass. I bought a Priority Pass card, 10 Lounge visits for £131. £13 per lounge visit. £13 for free food/drinks, a nice resting area, free Wi-Fi, power outlets, and showers. Worth it, especially as I was going on 13 flights! In reality I only got to use 4. Not every airport had a lounge, and even if they did, it wasn't always in my terminal, or it wasn't open when I needed it. Even got turned away for two because they were 'full'. Big waste of money.

What I'm glad I brought

  • My Camera. Got a lot of great photos and videos, a lot better than what my phone could do. Here is a comparison. It was also so small! A GoPro does good video, but not good enough for photos.
  • Camera Gimbal. It was big and heavy but the difference it makes in videos is incredible. Example.
  • Headphones. Seemed like a waste of space, especially when I had earphones, but they were so great to have when flying and laying in bed.
  • Laptop. Used it almost daily for uploading/editing photos and booking/planning stuff.
  • Imodium. Holy crap I used this a lot! Ran out on my second day and had to buy more. Think I topped up about 5 times throughout the 4 months.
  • Packing Cubes. Very, very, very handy. Highly Recommend. Hype is real.
  • Power Bank. Only regret is not bringing two of them, a must have.
  • World Wide Adapter. From one power socket I could charge my laptop, phone, watch, camera, stabilizer, and power bank at the same time.
  • Smart Phone with a Data Connection. Would have been screwed without it. Google maps will get you anywhere!

Accommodation

I'd never stayed in a hostel before, and I was hesitant about them. I like my privacy, and I'm not the most social person... but the price difference was hard to resist, so I fit them in as much as possible. I really didn't like the experience at all. The hostels which had a privacy curtain on my bed were bearable, but the rest were just a real pain. Having to always look out for my stuff and share a bathroom wasn't fun.
Oh, and people are very loud, especially at night. Trying to sleep when people are talking/whispering is the worst. Even with earplugs. Actually, that is a lie, the worst is when your bunk make brings back a girl at 3am and has sex with her on your shared, metal barred, squeaky bed. Eventually she left, and he went to sleep, snoring so loud the bed was literally shaking. (happened at the Seaside Hawaiian Hostel in Oahu)
The good thing about the hostels is that they forced me to go out more. When I was in a hotel, I sometimes got too comfortable and stayed inside rather than going out... not an issue in hostels! Hostel staff are also normally very friendly and helpful. The staff at the previously mentioned Seaside Hawaiian Hostel were some of the loveliest people I met on the whole trip, would recommend staying there just for that!
In the future I'm going to aim for cheap hotels, and maybe try Airbnb. Will also consider small hostel dorms, but only if there's a privacy curtain.
I’m being harsh on hostels. If you're a social person and are looking to meet people, you'll love them. But that isn't me. I was there for the price tag, and I guess I got what I paid for.
Camping was really enjoyable! One of my favourite parts looking back on it. Only downside was the lack of power outlets and the re-occurring 'did I just hear a bear?' worries.

The Trip Itself

London

  • Days Spent: 3
  • Money Spent: £198
  • Per Day: £66
My trip started off in a panic, finding out all trains from my hometown up to Glasgow Central were cancelled. But by pure luck I made it there. Pretty sure I jamp into an out of commission train going in for a repair... but I made it. The train ride to London was beautiful.
My hostel was a bit out of the way. It was a 21-bed dorm, and once I got into my bed I was too scared to leave. This resulted in me not using the toilet and uhm, getting stomach problems. That lasted a few days. Made the experience interesting...
I wasn't too fussed about London, I only really went there because the flights were drastically cheaper compared to anywhere else. Going to London for a few days and then flying to Chicago was cheaper than just going from Glasgow to Chicago. But I've never been and thought I would give the city a chance.
I went to the National Gallery, walked along the Thames, went to the top of the Shard, saw the guards change at Buckingham Palace, and walked to the Tower Bridge at night. It was nice to just walk around the city, always looking for a toilet.
Will likely re-visit again one day, and I'd like to see Windsor Castle when I do. I enjoyed London more than I thought I would!
Photos from London! (there's an album at the bottom of this post with pictures from all locations if you would rather see them all at once)

Chicago

  • Days Spent: 4
  • Money Spent: £380 ($497)
  • Per Day: £95 ($124)
The flight to Chicago was with Norwegian and it was wonderful, highly recommend them.
Half the reason I went to Chicago, at this time, was to go to my first ever concert (new experiences!). It was at the All State Arena, which is next to the Airport, so I figured I would just get a hotel near the airport for 2 nights and same some hassle.
I was seeing Lorde, and it was incredible. I was a few rows from the front and had a great view, but wow it was loud. Who knew concerts would be loud? The girl next to me was also there by herself and was nice to talk to!
My time in the city was great. I did the river walk and went on a river cruise. It was so interesting hearing about all the buildings. I also went to the Field Museum which was fantastic, and went to the observatory for some skyline views. Got to try some Deep-dish Pizza and see the big old weird shiny bean thing.
Chicago is so... clean. I was comparing it to New York the whole time, and in comparison, it is so clean and smells so nice.
Photos from Chicago!

Cruise to Florida/Bahamas

  • Days Spent: 7
  • Money Spent: £12 ($16)
After Chicago I went to my Dads house, as he had invited me to go on a cruise with him and his family. Hard to say no to! Always wanted to try one.
In Florida I went to the Kennedy Space Centre which was amazing. Missed a rocket launch by one day, a shame... but the place was awe-inspiring. I also loved seeing the local wildlife. Florida is somewhere I'm dying to really see.
In the Bahamas we just laid around on beaches and went snorkelling, which was fun. Felt like I was drowning at first, but I got the hang of it. (not a great swimmer)
The cruise itself was neat, but I'm not really one for the 'relaxation' holidays, and the onboard activities didn't interest me too much. Buffet was wonderful though.
I'd like to try another cruise, but probably only with a girlfriend/group of friends.
Photos from the Cruise!

Oahu

  • Days Spent: 10
  • Money Spent: £683 ($895)
  • Per Day: £68 ($89)
Flew here via Virgin America and they were wonderful. Could order PB&J sandwiches from my seat! I paid a little bit extra to get a Layover in SFO rather than a direct flight, I feel like it was a good idea. Long flights are awful.
I never thought I'd see Hawaii... but there I was. The weather was perfect, although it did rain a bit while I was there. The rain ruined my plans to hike the stairway to heaven, but I really wasn't fit enough for that anyways.
The bus system was a breeze to use.
I hiked Diamond Head, which was a great experience, and I also hiked Koko Head, which was a killer, but still beautiful. I also went snorkelling out at Hanauma Bay, which was so fun.
The main reason I wanted to visit Hawaii is because I’m a huge Jurassic Park fan. So, I just had to visit Kualoa Ranch and go on the movie tour... seeing that place was amazing. I also went on an ATV tour through the ranch. It was raining, and I wasn't allowed to take photos, but it was so surreal. There I was, racing through Jurassic Park in a rainstorm on an ATV!!
Even more surreal, I went diving with Sharks up at the North Shore. It was with One Ocean Diving, who specialise in doing dives without any cage. Just free diving with the sharks.
We went a few miles off shore in a small boat, and then jamp in. We got to stay in the water with 8 sharks circling us for about 45 minutes. It was very windy and hard to stay afloat. When it was time to leave, I got tangled in the safety line as the sharks started getting closer and closer and I couldn't get free... that's a fun story! Highly recommend doing a dive with them if you're ever in Oahu and feeling suicidal.
Can't wait to visit again.
Photos from Oahu!

Kauai

  • Days Spent: 4
  • Money Spent: £122 ($159)
  • Per Day: £31 ($41)
Again, Jurassic Park made me come here.
I went a few days after a state of emergency was declared due to flooding, so the north part of the Island was off bounds, as was the Kalalau Trail Hike. Bummer!
Kauai is the closest place to paradise I have ever seen. Waimea Canyon and the Napali Coast should both be separate wonders of the world.
I got to go along the rim of the Canyon, fly over the island in a small plane, hike the Kalalau Lookout trail, and go on a cruise along the Napali Coast (where we were joined by a ton of Dolphins and Whales).
Photos from Kauai!

Tour of the Western USA

  • Days Spent: 21
  • Money Spent: £2,987 ($4,182)
  • Per Day: £142 ($199)
The Tour I did was the Westerner 3 with TrekAmerica. It was me, a male tour guide, and 6 girls. Was a little worried about those dynamics, but they were all incredibly nice, and we were all likeminded people looking for an adventure. Being the only guy meant that I got my own tent and hotel rooms, which was very nice.
Here's the route we took.
Week 1
Big Sur was beautiful. San Francisco was beautiful. The Golden Gate Bridge was as phenomenal as I had pictured. Alcatraz was super interesting, especially with the audio tour, which was the best audio tour I've ever listened to!
Yosemite was completely breath-taking. Everything was gigantic. We hiked up to the lower falls (I think?) and it was great. Tunnel View was also amazing to see in person.
Driving to Zion took forever, but it was nice. Long drives through wasteland, listening to country music, stopping at gas stations for snacks, seeing random stupid attractions on the roadside (I've seen the world largest thermometer now!!). That is the American dream.
Week 2
Zion, specifically Angels Landing, was the most fun I've ever had hiking. The adrenaline made it so enjoyable, although I was acting stupid and probably deserved to fall and die. Narrows was less fun, but doing it right after Angels Landing probably wasn't the best idea anyways.
Bryce was neat, as was Capitol Reef.
MOAB is somewhere I'd love to stay for a week and just do stupid stuff. The best thing we did there was go to Arches NP and see the sunrise, then do some hiking. I'm in love with the sandy, rocky desert terrain. We even went up a mountain nearby and had a snowball fight (pretty odd after a day of hiking in the desert sun). There were some Cougar tracks in the snow, which was even cooler than all the dinosaur tracks we saw in the area. The only thing I like more than Dinosaurs are Cats.
Monument Valley was one of the best parts of the whole trip. We got a guide in the valley from a member of the Navajo Tribe, and we got to camp down in the valley. It was my birthday, so they gave be a 'good health' bracelet as a gift and a birthday dance/song in front of the campfire, which was awkward but appreciated. Camping under the stars was incredible, they were so bright, you just wanted to stare at them all night. This was convenient as our Navajo guide told us some very creepy stories about Skin walkers... so sleeping was out of the equation anyways.
Week 3
The Grand Canyon was as Grand as you'd imagine. We did a helicopter flight over it, and then a hike into it, which was exhausting. It didn't have the same magic as Yosemite, but I guess we had been spoilt with so many natural wonders by that point.
Vegas was fun. I've never been 'drunk’, but I got pretty close there! We mainly stuck to Freemont street as our hotel was there, and it was really lively. Went up $80 on the slots, and then 10 minutes later I was down -$30… but Vegas.
All I saw in San Diego was the Zoo, I'd say it has earned its reputation.
The whole trip was incredible. It was to be my 'meet new people' part of the trip, and it worked well, I made 6 new friends! The experiences we shared made me question if solo travel is even right for me, it was so nice to be a part of a group like that.
But it was exhausting. Up at 6am every morning, packing up tents, cooking breakfast, packing van, long drive, then setting up camp, cooking dinner, doing dishes. Plus, the daily activities, where we frequently went over 30,000 steps and 100 floors climbed.
In terms of price... yeah it was a lot. But could I have done the same trip for less on my own? I don't drive, so no. Even if I did drive, car rental prices would be a ton, and we drove over 3000 miles.
Will be looking to do another tour with them one day, maybe around Yellowstone or in Alaska.
Photos from the Trek!

Las Vegas

  • Days spent: 5
  • Money spent: £1,608 ($2,252)
  • Per day: £322 ($450)
I've always wanted to visit Vegas, but I made sure to line up the dates for my visit so that I could attend the Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC). It is a massive rave and looked extremely cool! If you've heard of Tomorrowland, think that, but entirely at night and in a desert.
EDC was more incredible than I was anticipating. I've never been to a music festival, or a rave, or a club, or even a proper party, so it blew me away. The lights were everywhere, the fireworks were insane, the music was so loud. People had crazy costumes, and everyone was so lively! But oh, so nice. I laid down for a few minutes one night as I was tired, and 3 different people asked me if I was doing okay.
I got to see my favourite artist play (Illenium) and in general just had a great time dancing the nights away. Strangest moment was when some drunk guy came up to me and was fascinated by my led flashing glasses. He asked if he could buy them for $10, and I said sure! It was the last night and I was leaving anyways. So, he pulls out his wallet and has like five $100 bills, and he just says, "Aw man this is all I have". I just gave them to him anyways, he seemed nice. Also, maybe a drug dealer looking back at it...
The downside of EDC was that I was asleep most of the day and away most of the night, so I didn't get to see much of the strip. I know there's not a whole lot to 'see' in Vegas, but I went there twice and never really got to experience it, which I'm sad about. Vegas is such a unique, interesting city. So different from everywhere else I went. Will definitely go back one day. This was also the only city that I think would have been more enjoyable going with someone else.
After EDC was finished, I spent my last night there going out into the desert and doing a sunset Horsehide with a couple of cowgirls, and then having a BBQ dinner with them. My first time on a Horse.
I did lose my phone at EDC, which was a real pain. But thankfully I had my laptop, so I was able to buy a new one and get a new sim card for a low price of £581/$761. EDC cost me £393/$515, the horse ride was £145/$190, my hotel was £67/$87 a night... see how Vegas cost me so much?! On the bright side I did win $30 gambling!
Photos from Las Vegas!

Los Angeles

  • Days spent: 5
  • Money spent: £410 ($574)
  • Per day: £82 ($115)
By this point, I was exhausted.
LA was great, but I was too tired to enjoy it in all honesty. I spent more time in my hostel bed here than I did anywhere else. The public transportation was fine despite what everyone says. One of the better subway systems I used, it gets you to all the tourist points easily. No airport link was a pain though.
Hollywood Boulevard was neat; however, it is something you can see in an hour. I did go down to Santa Monica but came back after an hour, was too tired to do anything there sadly. I went up to the observatory, and the views from there were outstanding! I'm a big GTA player so seeing all these places in person was really cool.
I went to Universal Studios, which was a fun day. The 'solo' lines were great and so fast. On the studio tour I got to see Steve Harvey and he waved to me! Wouldn't be Hollywood without bumping into a celebrity I guess.
The best thing I did was hike up to the Hollywood sign. The hike was a nice way to get away from the city, it was pretty easy, and the views were amazing. Being so close to the famous sign was great, and watching the sunset from up there was an experience I'll never forget. Even if walking back down in the dark was terrifying, always looking out for P-22. (I swear it was stalking me)
Photos from Los Angeles!

Washington DC

  • Days spent: 2.5
  • Money spent: £195 ($273)
  • Per day: £78 ($109)
My journey to DC was an exhausting one, which included another night on the airport floor. By the time I got here I was pooped. Went to my hostel and just slept. Woke up at 2am, and decided to head out, cause what else am I going to do?
I spent the next 2 nights on a bike riding around DC & the National Mall all night. It was incredibly cool; the streets were so quiet, and the monuments/memorials were all empty. Walking up the steps to the Lincoln Memorial, and entering that empty room with just me and Abe there was unforgettable.
On my last day I had some time to kill, so I went to the White House. There was some kind of event going on, and I'm sure if I waited with the news reporters for long enough I could have seen the president, but I had to leave. I also went to the Museum of American History, but could only stay for 30 minutes. Will need to go back one day to see all the Museums!
On the way back to my hostel I saw a car crash which was neat. (not a bad one)
Photos from Washington DC!

New York City

  • Days spent: 6
  • Money spent: £410 ($573)
  • Per day: £68 ($96)
NYC is my favourite city in the world and I've already been here around 5 times, but I was determined to make this the best visit yet! I went to the 9/11 Memorial and took the Staten Island Ferry. I visited the Westfield Mall, which I've somehow never seen before, and while there I went to the Shake Shack for the first time. Don't judge me, but that Shake Shack meal was the best meal I had over the entire 4 months. Easily the best.
I went to the MoMA and concluded that I don't like art museums at all. Great place but not for me.
I went up to the Top of the Rock and saw that postcard view, which is incredible. You really see the scale of the city from up there.
Other activities included walking the High Line, going to Gantry Plaza Park for sunset, and of course Times Square. Oh, I also walked across the Brooklyn Bridge, where I was a bad tourist and got myself hit by a cyclist. Got shouted at, but we were both okay (physically, I am still scarred emotionally).
The highlight was going on a Fly-Nyon doors off helicopter flight across the city. Now that was an experience. Flying right over the top of the Empire State Building and tilting to the side so you can get that perfect picture... was sure I was about to fall out!
The city was smelly, the people weren't the nicest I met, and the subway was awful. Seriously how is it that bad? I got lost every time I tried to use it. And the heat was the worst, even worse than Vegas. But for every bad part about New York, there's 10 great parts.
With all the cities I visited on this trip, nowhere beats New York. Nowhere ever will.
Photos from New York City!

Guangzhou / China

  • Days spent: 13.5
  • Money spent: £29 (¥258)
This was another trip with my Dad & his family. My step mum is Chinese, so we would be visiting her family.
The 14-hour flight was brutal, and after arriving at 7am, we went straight into a full day tour of Guangzhou. Tired doesn't even describe it.
Baiyun Mountain is very pretty! The tour guide only spoke Chinese, so I had no idea what was going on half the time, but we got to see some neat places. A highlight was going on a river cruise and seeing Canton Tower light up at night.
After that we went on the bullet train up to Chenzhou and did a 3-day tour of the Dongjiang Lake and nearby mountain ranges. Another Chinese speaking guide so again I had no idea what was going on, but the locations were spectacular.
The rest of the time was spent in my Step-Mums hometown. (It is described as a 'small town', but this is what it looks like?!)
I wish I could remember the name of the town, but it keeps slipping my mind. What I do know is that they get almost no Western Tourists. This resulted in people constantly staring at me, asking to take photos with me, and sneaking photos of me. I even make a group of school girls scream with joy just by telling them my name hahaha
The heat & humidity in China was brutal, I never stopped sweating.
Most people I met were so incredibly kind and welcoming. It's a very different culture, so you need to be accepting to new behaviours. Spitting, shoving, and staring may be considered rude in the USA however it is normal in China.
Through the tours and staying with families I got to try lots of new food... but I'm not much of a food person. It was not my favourite part of the trip. Something I ate made me sick and I had to sit out some of the hikes, which I was sad about. Very nice ramen though!
Overall it was a completely new experience, but it still felt familiar. Most countries work in the same general way, and most people in the world are good hearted. That is something I took away from this trip. Always believe in the kindness of strangers!
Can't wait to see more of the country one day. The country is developing so fast, you can see entire new cities being built. I must have saw hundreds of skyscrapers under construction.
Pictures from China!

Hong Kong

  • Days spent: 5.5
  • Money spent: £242 (HK$2,486)
  • Per Day: £32 (HK$328)
Rather than going back with my family to New York, or going straight to London, I opted to go to Hong Kong for a few days first, as I've always wanted to visit and it was so close!
I took the bullet train down, and wow they're fast. Having one fly past me in the station was genuinely terrifying. I went to Shenzhen and then walked across the border to Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is an English-speaking city, so getting around is easy. Being able to access social media again (China blocks most websites) was wonderful!
I wanted to go on some hikes, but the heat was too much. Instead I went out to see the giant Buddha, which was a real sight. Later that night I went up to the Peak to watch the sunset, and wow. Some of the best views from the whole trip came from up there.
Other activities included the Ladies Market, various shopping malls for that sweet AC, seeing the new Jurassic World movie, watching the light show, riding the world's longest escalator, and going to the Happy Valley Racecourse.
The city smelled strangely nice, and there was great food everywhere, which was a relief for my stomach!
Would love to go back one day, if not just for some hiking.
Pictures from Hong Kong!

Pictures

Here's a combined album of all the above pictures!
I'm too lazy to add a description for all of these, as I already did it in the individual albums for each location. If you want to know a specific place you could check them, or just ask!
I've also got a ton of videos. Here's a fun one to see what EDC was like...
I'm planning on making a sort of montage video at some point and I'll be sure to post that video here when it is done.
Semi-related, I printed out most of the above album and got a physical photo album for all the photos. Here's what is looks like.
I like it as it is a fun way to look back at everything, and it's easier to show people than flipping through photos on my phone. Would recommend it! Best of all, I've got back ups, so if I lose it a new one will only cost around £20. Considering doing a photo album like this for all my future trips… only issue is that most trips aren't long enough to produce 200 good photos.

Money

Category Spent USD Spent Percentage of Total Spend
Accommodation £1,948 $2,552 17%
Food £1,126 $1,475 10%
Transport £2,643 $3,463 24%
Activities £2,170 $2,843 20%
Pre-Trip Purchases £1,978 $2,591 18%
Everything Else (Toiletries, Souvenirs, ect) £1,186 $1,554 11%
Total £11,051 $14,477
Per Day £97 $126

Detailed Summary

I've got a whole spreadsheet with more information in it. Here is an album of the screenshots! I recorded all prices in GBP for some reason. Constantly Googling the exchange rate before entering it into my expense tracker was effort.
My 'Per Day' average is a bit off as I spent around a third of the trip with my family having very little expenses. If you remove those days, the new average is £154 ($202) per day. If you cut out my long-distance transportation costs and my Pre-Trip purchases, and just look at what I actually spent in each location on accommodation, food, activities, local transport, toiletries and everything else, then the average is £106 ($139) per day.
I definitely could have done it cheaper. Cut out the new camera, lounge pass, comfort hotels, and the expensive activities, and I'd save thousands. But the best part about travelling for me is the activities/experiences. The occasional comfort was nice, and I enjoy photography... so i've got no ragrets!
I know you're thinking 'how did you afford this??'
I'd say about 30% of the money came from the last year of work and making money from my PC. I live a very boring life, so outside of giving my Step Dad rent money, I don't have any large expenses. I don't drive, drink, smoke, or socialize much... so I save a lot!
The other 70% was from inheritance money I received a few years ago after my Mum passed away. Had no real use for it (no interest in driving, free university, not enough for a house without a mortgage), and the pound is crashing, so why not spend it on an incredible journey?
I know that if I ever die and leave my children some money, I'd want them to use it to celebrate life and do something like this. I know my Mum would have wanted me to do something like this with it.
I spent less on food than I anticipated, but I did drink more than I thought I would. I budgeted £0 for alcohol (I don't drink remember!) and spent around $150 on the stuff.
My original budget for the trip was £11,000 ($14,400), so I was pretty much spot on.
To come up with my budget, I followed this plan:
  1. Decide everywhere I wanted to go and how long I would like to spend there.
  2. Decide what route I would take and specific travel dates.
  3. Price out all the flights/trains and make a note of the likely prices.
  4. Look into the accommodation, see how much an average hostel or hotel will cost per night. Make a note of this for each location.
  5. Look into all the paid activities which I wanted to do, including any tours. Get prices for them all.
  6. Add £20 a day for food
  7. Add £10 a day for 'other' costs (toiletries, souvenirs, whatever)
  8. Look at how much a transport pass for the local subway costs, or in general see how much people spend on local transport while in each location.
  9. Make a list of everything I need to buy beforehand and the prices. Included clothes, camera, insurance, ect.
  10. Add £500 just in case of an emergency.
Then you add it up: Flights/Trains + Pre-Trip Purchases + £500 Emergency Cash + the cost of each location.
For the cost of each location it would be: Activity Costs + Local Transport Pass + (days in location * (20 Food + 10 Other + Nightly Accommodation Cost)
That gave me a total cost, and then I just worked on cutting stuff out and changing dates until It was at the right level. (Had to remove Miami, Boston, New Orleans, and Alaska :( )
I also kept increasing my budget… which I guess is nice if you can do so. I originally wanted to do this trip on £3000 ($4000). Ha...
If you want to be spontaneous, obviously the above wouldn't work for you. Expect to pay more for last minute bookings. But, that is an exciting way to travel and I wouldn't discourage it. I just like to plan in advance.

Favourite Memories (with pictures!)

What Went Wrong

  • Lost my phone at EDC Vegas and had to buy a new one. (+ sim card)
  • Lost my wallet in Washington DC. Thankfully it was returned at a later date.
  • Lost my neck rest & my cooling towel.
  • Got very sick in China and never got to enjoy much of the hiking.
  • Getting homesick bad around the 3-month mark. Stuck with me the rest of the trip.
  • Being too exhausted to really enjoy LA or DC. Should have stayed in Vegas a bit longer to relax.
  • Ending the 3-week tour and saying goodbye to the people on it. You spend 3 weeks with these people, all day every day, doing the most incredible things, and then you leave, and you'll probably never see them again. That was hard.
  • Wearing one pair of shoes so much that they started to smell horrendous. Had to hose them down with 'Stink Stopper' constantly.
  • Accidently deleting nearly every photo/video I took during the first week of my TrekAmerica trip. Included Santa Barbra, Big Sur, San Francisco, and Yosemite. :(
  • Watching Liverpool FC lose the Champions League Final. I'm a big fan. Amazing to get there don't get me wrong... but that game was tough. -The journey home from Hong Kong took 55 hours, with multiple flights and trains. Poor planning.

What I Would Have Done Differently Looking Back

  • Got a credit card with no foreign transaction fees and use it to book the whole trip. Could have gathered a lot of points...
  • Had an extra 3-4 days in Vegas to rest.
  • Tried more local food.
  • Tried to be more social.
  • Saw more of DC during the day.
  • Left the hiking boots behind.

Tips

Running out of space here, so I'll include all my tips in comment to this post!

Summary

This whole trip was incredible and at times surreal. The USA is such a diverse and beautiful country! There's nowhere else like it and I'm so grateful that I got to see all these places in person. China and Hong Kong were also incredible in their own right. China has so much more to see and I can't wait to go back.
Despite how much I spent, it was definitely worth it. All the experiences were... wow. Did I really do all that?? EDC Vegas? Shark Diving? Helicopter flights? I barely even leave my bedroom; how did I do all that?!?
Not sure if I would say it changed my life, but it has made me more confident in myself. Made some new friends and have some great memories/stories to hold on to. Overall it was just… fun. Such a good time!
There were some bad parts, however they were few and far between.
It was everything I expected and more.
Thanks again to this subreddit for the help/inspiration! I originally asked for some advice here. The trip ended up quite different looking back at it!

What's next?

University for 4 years, so no long trips. Not that I could afford one anyways.
I'll try to go to some places around Europe, taking advantage of the cheap flights. Current ideas are Rome/Venice, Paris, Vienna, Liverpool, and Belfast. Also want to see more of my own country, spend some time in Edinburgh and check out Orkney/Shetland!
I have plans to get a motorbike next year, and the Scottish Highlands are on my doorstep, so I'll have some nice trips to go on with that.
Next time I'm at my Dads house, I may take a train to DC or Boston. Potentially fly to Florida if it is affordable. I've seen most of where I want to see in the USA, but Alaska, Yellowstone, New Orleans, Boston, and Miami/Tampa are still on my list!
I loved EDC so much that I want to go back, however it won't be possible with how the dates line up with University. Instead I've started a savings pot to go to Tomorrowland. Hopefully in Summer 2020!
But the dream is to save up as much as possible for when I graduate. My target is £25,000 ($32,000). Then go on a trip around the planet, for 12 months, which will put this one to shame. After that, the next dream is to get a motorbike and go across North America. But I’m worried I may have a 'family' and 'commitments' by that point...
Thanks to anyone who read this novel, have a good day!! Feel free to ask any questions!
submitted by The-Smelliest-Cat to solotravel [link] [comments]

A half-breed Indian who made his tribe a multi-millionaire. Jim Hookipa

Seminoles have lived in Florida since ancient times. For more than 40 years, they fought for their freedom in countless skirmishes and 3 bloody wars. But the forces were unequal, and in 1858, after the Third Seminole War, almost the entire tribe was evicted from their native lands to distant Oklahoma. Only about 200 Indians escaped the General sad fate and disappeared into the vast tropical swamps of the Everglades, where they engaged in cattle breeding, somehow making ends meet, because there were few pastures, more swamps. There, under the protection of Panthers, alligators, and malaria, they felt comparatively safe.
In early 1944, in Florida, a Seminole Agnes Billy of the Bird clan had a boy born out of wedlock. My father was an Irishman, a cadet at the naval aviation school that was based near the reservation. In 1943, he went to war without even knowing about his girlfriend's pregnancy. Mother called son Chukie, which means "the one who was taken."The shamans of the tribe did not recognize the half-breed baby and decided to get rid of it, sentencing it to death. The boy was saved from death by his mother's friend, Potaki, who was also a half-breed.
The women raised a terrible cry, the neighbors ran, and Potaki publicly vowed that she would inform the police if anyone touched the baby.
Jim Hukipi and his mother lived very poorly, and when he was 9 years old, she died. The first orphan was sheltered by his mother's parents, but soon became them, and Hokie homeless. But his rescuer Potaki, who felt responsible for the teenager, took care of him and kicked him to school. Over time, it became difficult to cope with the boy and he was sent to the Haskell boarding school in Kansas, a special school where they tried to teach the Indians how to become white. A few years later, with grief in half, Jim received a school diploma and returned.
Strong, cunning, agile, tough, and a natural leader, he was created to become a Ranger for the U.S. army. The Vietnam war was breaking out, and that was where he belonged. The jungle was like the Everglades, but without alligators,and the war was like hunting. Jim distinguished himself very soon, he was promoted to Sergeant, appointed commander of the Department, and began to give tasks more and more complex. Capture languages, raids behind enemy lines, reconnaissance and other activities of the Rangers he liked. His group often went on a knife edge, but always returned without loss. The blood of his brave ancestors played a role, and Jim could feel ambushes, traps, mines, and poisonous snakes on his skin. It seemed that luck would never leave him, and his companions were ready to follow him into the fire and water.
After serving a full term in the Inferno, he had every right to go back, but signed up for another term. Ranger didn't want to leave his comrades, but he liked the risk. Again, RAID after RAID, task after task, and success after success. Jim soon became a master Sergeant and Deputy platoon commander. He would have been sent to officer courses, but he did not show any desire. After another successful RAID in 1968, he was given the highest award of a soldier, a vacation home. When Jim returned, he learned the terrible news that the platoon's luck had run out without him. Friends went on another task, but with them there was no "one who was taken away", and there was no one to smell the danger in time. The platoon was ambushed and only its name remained.
Something broke inside, and Jim blamed himself for the deaths of his comrades. "What am I fighting for? he thought, and couldn't find an answer. The fight was abruptly stopped, and the depression started in my head swarmed dark thoughts. After completing his term, he left the army and returned to the reservation. The boy Hukipi matured, matured, and adult beyond his years, he felt pain for his tribe, which
looked at new look. Beggars, reduced to despair and alcohol, living on handouts, without prospects and hope, and yet... such relatives. Jim remembered his skills as a Builder and started building Chiki, traditional Seminole homes. Hollywood did its job and the Indian theme became popular. Chukie decided on this play, saying: "This Chica can build only a true Indian. Everything else is nothing more than a fake."Very soon his Chicks appeared in parks, private clubs, and in the yards of the rich. Business quickly grew and he became one of the most successful members of the tribe (although the entire tribe was less than 1.5 thousand people).
Now it was possible to deal with public Affairs. The problem was obvious, the reservation was chosen by drug couriers as a transit point. Seaplanes loaded with cocaine from Central America regularly landed in the swamps, and from there the poison spread further. The former special forces officer decided: "we need to eliminate the root cause."He loaded a revolver, took a Winchester in the boat, and persuaded a couple of friends, also veterans of the Vietnam war, to go with him. Then from the marshes began to hear gunfire and explosions, but Hookie always came out unscathed. Very soon, the drug traffic through the reservation disappeared forever.
Hokie admired, began to be afraid, his voice on the tribal Council became very important and in 1979-m to year Hokie became the Supreme leader. Jim announced, " it's time for a change. We are Seminoles, we are a great tribe, and it is time for us to regain our greatness."
The chief received the tribe in a very deplorable state. But Hokie was a clear plan:"we Should open on the RES hall to play Bingo. If it goes well, we'll open a casino."He considered the situation and realized that he needed serious help. A friend told him about an old man-a pensioner who can help. This grandfather's name was Mayer Lansky.
Mayer Lansky was a well-known figure in the underworld. He was the brain of a huge underground Empire that controlled the Jewish and Italian mafia.
Hokie got a meeting with an old gangster.
Old Mayer was sitting at a table. He looked tired and listless.
"So I know why you came to me. Why do you need money? Lansky asked.
"I want to open a case."started Hookipa.
"You want to start a business and get rich."- with a grin said the pensioner.
The Indian understood that full frankness was needed with Meyer. Something leaped in his chest and he spoke, breaking into a low cry:
"Yes, I want to be rich, I won't deny it. Everyone wants it. But more than that, I want to finally get my tribe out of the shit we've been living in for more than 120 years. Do you know what it's like to live on a reservation? Live outside the line like animals? When people look down on you with disdain? I grew up on a chimpanzee farm, and I remember that tourists looked at me and the monkeys as curiosities. We live in bestiality, we have a beggar sitting on a beggar and driving beggars, and everyone is trying to somehow feed themselves. Land, freedom, and pride were taken from us, and in return they gave us alcohol and meager handouts. We have almost lost our language and our faith. From day to day, from year to year, from decade to decade, it's the same thing. We will soon stop being ourselves. You will not believe it, but many of us almost can not read and write. I am not the prophet Moses who brought you out of Egypt, but I love my little people. And I want, I really want to make it prosperous. And I will do it, no matter what it takes. I could, of course, succeed for myself by going somewhere else, but is it worthy of a man? If I am not for myself, who is for me? But if I am only for myself, then why am I? And if not now, then? Do you understand me, Mr. Lansky???"
Mayer was no longer sprawled out. His hands were clenched into fists, his eyes glittered, and his face was tight with muscle. It seemed that the old bandit remembered something, something long forgotten, but painfully native. Hokie paused, and Lansky looked at him, breathing hard.
"I heard you. I understand you. the old man dropped it slowly. "I used to be myself... however, let's not talk about it.. Lansky sighed heavily.
"And how will you perform this miracle?"
"I want to open a bingo hall where people can play big. If it goes well, then open a casino. I think there will be a lot of demand."the chief replied.
"My boy, I understand you. Casinos in Florida. This is a pipe dream of my life. There are thousands of problems and pitfalls on the way, but the main ones are two. The first is this Catholic Church and Archbishop McCarthy himself, the head of the Catholic Church in Florida. The priests hold the "bingo for charity" market firmly in their tenacious hands. These bigots with a mind so Holy, and in fact, much worse than the gangsters from the East side, so I do know. They fill their pockets, buy real estate and jewelry, and if they allocated at least one percent of what they have for good deeds, they could feed all the world's hungry for 10 years. The second difficulty is that the bureaucrats will never be allowed to open a casino in Florida. It's easier to negotiate with the wall. If you knew how much money, time, and effort my friends and I spent on these stupid and stubborn donkeys in Tallahassee (the capital of Florida). These fools can't see past their noses. Oh, if I could open a casino in Florida, do you think I'd be interested in opening casinos in Las Vegas, Cuba, and the Bahamas? No, son, I really want to help you, but it's not possible."Mayer said sadly.
"Mr. Lansky, I know what you're capable of. If there is a wizard in the world, it is you. I understand that you didn't succeed, but I will open a bingo hall and a casino."
"My dear fellow, as soon as you open the doors, the police will come and close the shop. And you will lose in court."
"You see, I have two trumps that you and your friends didn't have. Listen."
And, carefully looking around, Hokie whispered something almost in my ear Lansky. Old Mayer's mouth dropped open in surprise.
"It can't be. My boy, are you sure? Is this really true?"what is it?" he asked.
- "Certainly. Why else would I come to you? However, your lawyers will be able to verify my words."Yes," said the chief.
- "Amusingly. Here is the deal, this is on our way. Yes... it's going to be a nice job, we'll RUB the nose of these bureaucrats."
Lansky had a mischievous smile on his face.
"So you will give money?"asked Hokie.
"Where did I get the money? I live on a modest pension. But I have a good friend, Jack Cooper, I think if I ask him very much, he will not refuse the loan. Perhaps I can persuade some of my friends to politely ask the Archbishop not to interfere with us. I also know a couple of lawyers who will agree to help us for a nominal amount. By the way, you will need a good adviser on a regular basis. I would suggest an old friend of mine, Stephen Wilden. He is a reliable man, by the way, also served two terms in Vietnam."- almost accidentally showed his awareness of the gangster.
"And to manage the casino itself, I have in mind a guy from a very good family, his name is James Weissman. A very competent young man, and his brother, Eugene, can also help with various minor difficulties. You're not going to object if the order will be watching very responsible and decent people? Lansky half-asked, half-pointed, and stared at Hukipi.
"Of course I won't! Agreed. I am very happy."the chief replied, and they shook hands.
Cooper did lend money to the Indians without complaint, and Wilden began to spend a surprising amount of time on the reservation. And the Weissman brothers gave up all their business altogether and began to focus solely on helping the Seminoles. And very soon a new building with a major bingo game opened on the reservation. And the amazing thing is that Archbishop McCarthy has not objected to bingo on the reservation and even good luck to Jim.
As Lansky predicted, the police showed up on the first day and arrested employees and managers. And of course the Seminoles sued, claiming they had every right to do anything on their land.
"This is not acceptable. What kind of arbitrariness? Your Honor, we must close this receptacle of Vice and sin."- officials groaned.
- "Really. The only place where gambling is allowed in the United States is Nevada. Do you have any arguments in your favor?"
"We have two, Your Honor."don't be embarrassed," said Jim Billy and his lawyers.
"First, look at the precedent. Russell and Elena Bryan, from the Chippewa tribe, lived quietly on a reservation in Minnesota. All of a sudden, the state sends them a property tax bill that they've never paid before. They challenged it, the case went to the Highest Court, and he decided that:
a) the state does not have the right to collect taxes on business or property on the reservation
b) the state has no right to regulate the business of Indians on their land. And the bingo hall is just the business on our land.
And second and foremost, Your Honor, we are not part of the United States at all. All Indian tribes surrendered to the U.S. government. Some earlier, some later, but all signed peace agreements and in fact admitted defeat. Everyone but us. We are the only tribe that has never surrendered to the palefaces. Our ancestors went to the Everglades, but they didn't give up. We are still at war with you. Since when does anyone have the right to dictate terms and indicate what to do to an undefeated opponent on their land?"
After hearing such arguments, the judge was forced to make a fair decision: - " the Seminoles should be left alone. Let them do what they want on their land, even play bingo, even open a casino. And neither the state nor the feds have the right to take a cent from their income."
And the money flowed to the reservation. Soon Jim opened a casino and the flow of money increased. The tribe paid its debts to Cooper ahead of time, though all the people recommended by Lansky remained in charge of the business. However, is it a pity some 47% of profits for good and honest people, especially if they are so good at helping business development. Moreover, they advised how to correctly open other casinos.
For example, in Tampa, they decided to build a large Parking lot, but it turned out that this place is an ancient burial of Seminoles.
"I will not allow the pale-faces to defile the graves of our ancestors. Or have you forgotten that we are still officially at war with you? If so, I'll remind you. We'll give You the fourth Seminole War. We lit the fires of combat and beat Tom-Toms" - shouted angrily Hokie.
- "Oops. We didn't even know. Forgive us. What do you want?"- the mayor's office asked, confused.
"Okay, so be it, build your Parking lot."- was replaced by anger at the mercy Hokie.
"Just give us a piece of land to bury our ancestors in another place, but still not far from the city."
"Ufff. That's all. You are welcome. This is a great place, right next to the highway and not far from the city. Just do everything culturally and organize a Museum. We will study you."- happily breathed out officials.
- "Perfectly. Agreed."grinned the leader .... the Seminoles built a second casino.
"Er, that's not what we agreed to."no!" yelled the bureaucrats.
- "So we are about the world, too, did not agree and the Tomahawks we are not buried" - wisely said Jukie.
"Where's the Museum??? Where is he? Keep your word!"
"Where? Yes, inside the casino. Come and take a look. the chief laughed.
And the stream of money became a full-flowing river. There was so much money that the Seminoles even bought a stake in a casino on St. Martin and started building more casinos in Florida. True, there were dirty rumors that almost disinterested Seminole assistants were taking cash out of hundreds of boxes in private planes to various offshore locations, but all curious people were shown documents that clearly said they were taking food for the needy, and ridiculous rumors were a shame to believe.
The leader gained strength and developed a stormy activity. Electric companies that laid their networks, gas companies that stretched their pipes, garbage processing companies that buried waste, and other companies that rented land from the Seminoles for a penny, received an unpleasant surprise.
"That's it, the freebie is over."said Hokie.
"Now you will pay a fair rent. Otherwise, you will all go away."
Jim knew perfectly well that companies that had buried pipes and networks worth tens of millions would not go anywhere and would accept all his terms. And the flow of money has become even greater.
For almost 22 years, Hukipi led his small tribe with an iron hand. He became the highest-paid employee in Florida. Hukipi established a system of dividends for each Seminole, created a special Fund that provides any absolutely free medical care to all members of the tribe, and established schools on the reservation where learning the native language and traditions was mandatory. Moreover, every Indian can now get an education at any University in the United States and does not have to pay a penny for it.
Money was invested in real estate, energy, tourism, securities, and of course ... in the new casino. Money brought money and the tribe grew rich before our eyes. The Indians had beautiful new homes and expensive cars. But everything ends sooner or later, the chief noticed that the Council of chiefs began to spend a lot of money on themselves. Each of the leaders spent unaccountable millions and did not even think to answer to the tribe. And when Hokie was outraged and decided to investigate, he was dismissed from the post of the Supreme leader.
As usual, the official reason was accusations of sexual harassment of a subordinate. Then he was accused of corruption and abuse of power. But the former chief sued and... won. As a result, the tribe paid him more than $600,000. He retired, started building his Chiki again, and lived happily ever after. But the tribe is mired in corruption and scandals, because big money brings big problems. And in 2011, Hukipi was elected chief again.
Hukipi broke up corrupt officials, stopped the vicious practice of paying minors ' money to parents who might have squandered it, put things in order in reporting, and invested in new projects. Surprisingly, without corruption, there was again extra money, which turned into additional dividends for the Indians. Now every adult Seminole, in addition to free medicine and education, receives $128,000 a year. And the money of minors now goes to a special trust so that every member of the tribe reaches the age of 18 is already a multi-millionaire.
In 2016, the year once again, the Council leaders decided to shift Jucie. It is visible it strongly interfered with a free life. Now Jim Hookipa on the deserved rest. He is only 73 years old and still full of strength and energy. Who knows, maybe the Seminoles will need a strong hand and wise advice again, and then "the one who was taken" will again become a leader and lead his tribe to new heights. It is not for nothing that the popular wisdom says: "a Herd of rams led by a lion is much stronger than a flock of lions led by a RAM."
More https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmYpavSD9aALIt_lhde2Ewg?view_as=subscriber
submitted by chapikla to u/chapikla [link] [comments]

"Trying Not To Be An Edgelord" 1st Round Only Draft.

  1. Cardinals. Kyler Murray. QB. Oklahoma
  2. Giants (trade up w/ SF ) Dwayne Haskins. QB. Ohio State
  3. Washington Football (trade up w/ NYJ) Drew Lock. QB. Mizzou
  4. Raiders. Nick Bosa. EDGE. Ohio State
  5. Lions (trade w/ Tampa Bay) Josh Allen. EDGE. Kentucky
  6. 49ers (trade w/ Giants) Greedy Williams. CB. LSU
  7. Jaguars. Jonah Williams. OT. Alabama
  8. Buccaneers (from Detroit). Byron Murphy. CB. Washington
  9. Bills. Dalton Risner. OT. KSU
  10. Broncos. Quinnen Williams. DL. Alabama
  11. Bengals. Devin White. LB. LSU.
  12. Packers. TJ Hockensen. TE. Iowa.
  13. Cardinals. (from Miami) Cody Ford. OL. Oklahoma.
  14. Falcons. Brian Burns. EDGE. FSU.
  15. Jets (trade w/ WASH) Jachai Polite. EDGE. Florida.
  16. Panthers. Montez Sweat. EDGE. Mississippi St.
  17. Browns. DK Metcalf. WR. Ole Miss.
  18. Vikings. Jawaan Taylor. OL. Florida.
  19. Raiders (trade w/ TEN) Devin Bush. LB. Michigan
  20. Steelers. JoeJuan Williams. DB. Vanderbilt.
  21. Seahawks. Ed Oliver. DT. Houston.
  22. Ravens. Rashan Gary. DL. Michigan.
  23. Texans. DeAndre Baker. CB. Georgia.
  24. Titans (trade w/ Raiders). Charles Omenihu. EDGE. Texas.
  25. Eagles. Chris Lindstrom. OL. Boston College.
  26. Colts. Jeffrey Simmons. DL. Mississippi St.
  27. Raiders. Greg Little. OL. Ole Miss
  28. Chargers. Christian Wilkins. DL. Clemson.
  29. Chiefs. Garrett Bradbury. OL. NC State
  30. Packers. Julian Love. DB. Notre Dame.
  31. Rams. Delonte Thompson. DB. Alabama.
  32. Patriots. Dexter Lawrence. DL. Clemson.
Notes : Josh Rosen is traded to Miami in exchange for a 1st and 3rd round pick.
I don’t think that Rosen is made for Big XII football. I also think that behind the scenes, Rosen has expressed that he’s not in love with the idea of playing for the Cardinals. It’s Steve Young in Tampa 2.0. Chad O’Shea is a very in demand coach and I don’t think that he traveled to Miami to wait a year for the QB of the Future and work w/ Tannehill. Rumors have circulated that the Patriots coaching staff was fond of Rosen, so Miami taking him could prevent Belichick from making a play for him down the road. The idea that Miami is interested in next year’s class almost feels like a smoke screen. The team has too much talent to be a bottom 3 team. And even then, I’m not sold that either QB in the 2020 class is near an Andrew Luck conversation.
  1. Cardinals. Kyler Murray. Oklahoma. I think he fits the reason why you would take a risk on Kingsbury and try to get the Arizona fanbase excited about football for the first time in a decade.
  2. Giants. Dwayne Haskins. Ohio St. Giants don’t even hesitate to trade up and get their replacement for Eli.
  3. Washington Football. Drew Lock. MIzzou. I think that Washington signs Bridgewater to a 1 year deal & ownership forces a trade for Lock hours before the draft. It might not be that bad of an idea either, as gambling on an injury prone veteran QB has left Washington in a very scary place cap wise.
  4. Raiders. Nick Bosa. Ohio St. Bosa competes against his brother in the same division. Raiders get a perfect centerpiece in a new city.
  5. Lions. Josh Allen. Kentucky. Patricia needs more pass rushing talent to compliment a solid showing by his secondary last season.
  6. 49ers. Greedy Williams. LSU. 2 teams in your division are consistently in the playoffs and the other team has switched to Air Raid. Time to get loaded at corner.
  7. Jaguars. Jonah Williams. Bama. The Jaguars acquire Nick Foles in the offseason and focus on creating a dominant OLine.
  8. Buccaneers. Byron Murphy. UW. I could see Murphy going Top 5 after the combine. Washington creates athletic freaks.
  9. Bills. Dalton Risner. K-State. He continues to rise up the charts. Similar to Kolton Miller last year, his technique and reaction speed is going to get him drafted pretty highly.
  10. Broncos. Quinnen Williams. Bama.. John Elway does a pretty good job by just picking BPA. Williams helps the Broncos become Ravens West.
  11. Bengals. Devin White. LSU. I think the Bengals will look to trade up for Haskins or Lock but they might not be willing to trade enough to get either. White gets the defense charged up post Marvin Lewis.
  12. Packers. TJ Hockensen. Iowa. At the end of the day, I think Hockensen will catch more TDs and gain more yards than any WR in this draft. Rodgers needs reliability down the stretch. This is his Dallas Clark.
  13. Cardinals ( from Miami trade). Cody Ford. Oklahoma. If people complain how Murray will see over an offensive line in the NFL, why not bring in his LT from Oklahoma.
  14. Falcons. Brian Burns. FSU. Burns is a defensive captain in Year 1 for any team he goes to. Falcons need a leader on D.
  15. Jets. Jachai Polite. Florida. Polite has the capability to become a clone of another Florida based player to play in New York - JPP.
  16. Panthers. Montez Sweat. Mississippi St. Run on Edge Rushers ends with Sweat. Fits the Ron Rivera model of dominance.
  17. Browns. DK Metcalf. Ole Miss. I don’t think the Browns front office will overthink giving Baker weapons in the next few year. The Steelers won’t give them AB, why not take the best WR in the draft?
  18. Vikings. Jawaan Taylor. Florida.Vikings need talent on O-Line to give Cousins a shot to get them back to their expectations.
  19. Raiders. Devin Bush. Michigan. Bush slips to where he should probably be drafted. Raiders front office stockpiles on players that will have 10 year careers in the NFL.
  20. Steelers. JoeJuan Williams. Vanderbilt. Another fast riser in this year’s draft. Williams has a bit of Nnamdi Asomugha in him.
  21. Seahawks. Ed Oliver. Houston. I’m on the boat that Oliver is going to be this year’s falling Courtney Upshaw. I think the Seahawks are the right team for Ed Oliver. He’s a bit of a round peg in squarish NFL defenses, but Pistol Pete will get the most juice out of him.
  22. Ravens. Rashan Gary. Michigan. Another situation where you have a highlight maker in college that you can’t define a position for in the NFL. Like the Seahawks, the Ravens will find use for Gary.
  23. Texans. DeAndre Baker. Georgia. Depth at corner might seem like a good idea after we see how the Colts spent their money in the offseason.
  24. Titans. Charles Omenihu. Texas. Solid player out of Texas with nice wingspan. Might need some time to develop.
  25. Eagles. Chris Lindstrom. BC. Perhaps the star of the Oline at the Senior Bowl workouts. He could be a top 15 pick if he has a good combine. Eagles get decent protection from Wentz, potential replacement for Kelce.
  26. Colts. Jeffrey Simmons. Mississippi St. An extra force added to one of the best young defensive units in the league.
  27. Raiders. Greg Little. Ole Miss. Keep hearing that Little is slipping on draft boards. John is more of a tape guy than combine guy. I could see him completing a solid draft w/ Little heading to Vegas w/ Bosa and White.
  28. Chargers. Christian Wilkins. Clemson. If Rosen trade rumors begin to heat up, I could see the Chargers becoming interested. For now, I think Wilkins is another Derwin-esque home run for the team.
  29. Chiefs. Garret Bradbury NC State. Converted TE turn All American Center. Allows Patty-cakes to run tempo even faster next season.
  30. Packers. Julian Love. Notre Dame. I grew up in an era where Notre Dame made every player over-rated. Now I think that Love is a bit overlooked because Notre Dame doesn’t have a history of creating solid corners.
  31. Rams. Delonte Thompson. Bama. Rams get a hard hitting safety that can replace LaMarcus Joyner.
  32. Patriots. Dexter Lawrence. Clemson. The last player that I see dropping. Lawrence adds blue chip talent to a Patriots roster that is already Super Bowl caliber.
MISC - - I think that, for better or worse, WRs will underwhelm GMs by the time the draft starts. Most teams will strategize to take them on Day 2 lett he potential Day 1 WRs drop.
- First round QB’s contracts are too friendly to not try to get one if you don’t have one already - The Super Bowl causes copycats. I think that teams are going to try to find players that fit the profile of a Pro Bowler like the Rams or try to trade back like the Patriots. Players that require development will drop 2-3 rounds. Health will matter more.
submitted by CollectandRun to NFL_Draft [link] [comments]

Trip Report: Three months across the USA, three weeks across China/Hong Kong (Very Long/Detailed!)

Hello! Howdy! Ni hao!
I recently returned home from a 4-month journey around the USA and China/Hong Kong, and I wanted to share it with you guys! This place was a source of information, advice, and inspiration when I was planning this trip, so I'm hoping this post can provide the same to others. This was a long trip, and this will be a long post... but I'll try to organize it the best I can.

About Me

The Trip

23rd March - 14th July

Map of the route, and a map with just the USA.
Calendar of the dates.

Why?

  • I had a newfound love of travelling.
  • I've been inspired by places like this subreddit, and various YouTube videos... I wanted to make my own.
  • I'm half American and I love the USA. I wanted to see more of it.
  • I've relatively inexperienced and would feel more comfortable doing my first big trip in an English-speaking country.
  • I've got friends/family to visit in the USA.
  • I had a good amount of money sitting in the bank and had no real use for it.

In Numbers

  • 115 Days / 16.4 weeks / 3.8 months
  • 6 Countries
  • 9 US States
  • 8 Hostels
  • 7 Hotels
  • 11 Campgrounds
  • 13 Flights
  • 6 Long Distance Trains
  • 350GB of Pictures/Videos

What I Brought

My bag was an Osprey Farpoint 55L. It would be my first time living out a bag.
Here’s a list of everything I took with me.
Picture of most of it on leaving day! I bought the rest at my Dads house a couple of weeks in.

What I Wish I Brought

  • Warmer clothes. Chicago was very cold and camping in California during May is cold as hell!
  • A GoPro. Compared to my Gimbal & Waterproof case for my camera, a GoPro & Pole would have done a similar job, taking up way less space.
  • A Duffel Bag. The Farpoint 55L was great don't get me wrong but wearing It on my back was so uncomfortable. I used it as a duffel bag 90% of the time... and it was heavy. In the future I'll travel with a normal duffel bag, preferably one with wheels.

What I Regretted Bringing

  • Neck Rest. I mean... I lost it in London, before my first flight...
  • Hiking Boots. Were fantastic during my hikes, but they were large, heavy, and I wore them maybe 5 times. Next time I'll get my trainers dirty.
  • Underwater Camera Case. I was never going to not bring it… but still. Only used it 3 times, and it took up so much space.
  • Water Bottle. It got sand inside and was impossible to clean, then it broke. Buying water bottles as you go along is so much easier.
  • Jacket. Used it twice... such a waste of space!
  • Refillable Toiletry Bottles. They're great on a short trip, but on a long one, once they run out they are just taking up space.
  • First Aid Kit. Didn't use a single thing in there, and there was really no need for it with the places I was going.
  • Airport Lounge Pass. I bought a Priority Pass card, 10 Lounge visits for £131. £13 per lounge visit. £13 for free food/drinks, a nice resting area, free Wi-Fi, power outlets, and showers. Worth it, especially as I was going on 13 flights! In reality I only got to use 4. Not every airport had a lounge, and even if they did, it wasn't always in my terminal, or it wasn't open when I needed it. Even got turned away for two because they were 'full'. Big waste of money.

What I'm glad I brought

  • My Camera. Got a lot of great photos and videos, a lot better than what my phone could do. Here is a comparison. It was also so small! A GoPro does good video, but not good enough for photos.
  • Camera Gimbal. It was big and heavy but the difference it makes in videos is incredible. Example.
  • Headphones. Seemed like a waste of space, especially when I had earphones, but they were so great to have when flying and laying in bed.
  • Laptop. Used it almost daily for uploading/editing photos and booking/planning stuff.
  • Imodium. Holy crap I used this a lot! Ran out on my second day and had to buy more. Think I topped up about 5 times throughout the 4 months.
  • Packing Cubes. Very, very, very handy. Highly Recommend. Hype is real.
  • Power Bank. Only regret is not bringing two of them, a must have.
  • World Wide Adapter. From one power socket I could charge my laptop, phone, watch, camera, stabilizer, and power bank at the same time.
  • Smart Phone with a Data Connection. Would have been screwed without it. Google maps will get you anywhere!

Accommodation

I'd never stayed in a hostel before, and I was hesitant about them. I like my privacy, and I'm not the most social person... but the price difference was hard to resist, so I fit them in as much as possible. I really didn't like the experience at all. The hostels which had a privacy curtain on my bed were bearable, but the rest were just a real pain. Having to always look out for my stuff and share a bathroom wasn't fun.
Oh, and people are very loud, especially at night. Trying to sleep when people are talking/whispering is the worst. Even with earplugs. Actually, that is a lie, the worst is when your bunk make brings back a girl at 3am and has sex with her on your shared, metal barred, squeaky bed. Eventually she left, and he went to sleep, snoring so loud the bed was literally shaking. (happened at the Seaside Hawaiian Hostel in Oahu)
The good thing about the hostels is that they forced me to go out more. When I was in a hotel, I sometimes got too comfortable and stayed inside rather than going out... not an issue in hostels! Hostel staff are also normally very friendly and helpful. The staff at the previously mentioned Seaside Hawaiian Hostel were some of the loveliest people I met on the whole trip, would recommend staying there just for that!
In the future I'm going to aim for cheap hotels, and maybe try Airbnb. Will also consider small hostel dorms, but only if there's a privacy curtain.
I’m being harsh on hostels. If you're a social person and are looking to meet people, you'll love them. But that isn't me. I was there for the price tag, and I guess I got what I paid for.
Camping was really enjoyable! One of my favourite parts looking back on it. Only downside was the lack of power outlets and the re-occurring 'did I just hear a bear?' worries.

The Trip Itself

London

  • Days Spent: 3
  • Money Spent: £198
  • Per Day: £66
My trip started off in a panic, finding out all trains from my hometown up to Glasgow Central were cancelled. But by pure luck I made it there. Pretty sure I jamp into an out of commission train going in for a repair... but I made it. The train ride to London was beautiful.
My hostel was a bit out of the way. It was a 21-bed dorm, and once I got into my bed I was too scared to leave. This resulted in me not using the toilet and uhm, getting stomach problems. That lasted a few days. Made the experience interesting...
I wasn't too fussed about London, I only really went there because the flights were drastically cheaper compared to anywhere else. Going to London for a few days and then flying to Chicago was cheaper than just going from Glasgow to Chicago. But I've never been and thought I would give the city a chance.
I went to the National Gallery, walked along the Thames, went to the top of the Shard, saw the guards change at Buckingham Palace, and walked to the Tower Bridge at night. It was nice to just walk around the city, always looking for a toilet.
Will likely re-visit again one day, and I'd like to see Windsor Castle when I do. I enjoyed London more than I thought I would!
Photos from London! (there's an album at the bottom of this post with pictures from all locations if you would rather see them all at once)

Chicago

  • Days Spent: 4
  • Money Spent: £380 ($497)
  • Per Day: £95 ($124)
The flight to Chicago was with Norwegian and it was wonderful, highly recommend them.
Half the reason I went to Chicago, at this time, was to go to my first ever concert (new experiences!). It was at the All State Arena, which is next to the Airport, so I figured I would just get a hotel near the airport for 2 nights and same some hassle.
I was seeing Lorde, and it was incredible. I was a few rows from the front and had a great view, but wow it was loud. Who knew concerts would be loud? The girl next to me was also there by herself and was nice to talk to!
My time in the city was great. I did the river walk and went on a river cruise. It was so interesting hearing about all the buildings. I also went to the Field Museum which was fantastic, and went to the observatory for some skyline views. Got to try some Deep-dish Pizza and see the big old weird shiny bean thing.
Chicago is so... clean. I was comparing it to New York the whole time, and in comparison, it is so clean and smells so nice.
Photos from Chicago!

Cruise to Florida/Bahamas

  • Days Spent: 7
  • Money Spent: £12 ($16)
After Chicago I went to my Dads house, as he had invited me to go on a cruise with him and his family. Hard to say no to! Always wanted to try one.
In Florida I went to the Kennedy Space Centre which was amazing. Missed a rocket launch by one day, a shame... but the place was awe-inspiring. I also loved seeing the local wildlife. Florida is somewhere I'm dying to really see.
In the Bahamas we just laid around on beaches and went snorkelling, which was fun. Felt like I was drowning at first, but I got the hang of it. (not a great swimmer)
The cruise itself was neat, but I'm not really one for the 'relaxation' holidays, and the onboard activities didn't interest me too much. Buffet was wonderful though.
I'd like to try another cruise, but probably only with a girlfriend/group of friends.
Photos from the Cruise!

Oahu

  • Days Spent: 10
  • Money Spent: £683 ($895)
  • Per Day: £68 ($89)
Flew here via Virgin America and they were wonderful. Could order PB&J sandwiches from my seat! I paid a little bit extra to get a Layover in SFO rather than a direct flight, I feel like it was a good idea. Long flights are awful.
I never thought I'd see Hawaii... but there I was. The weather was perfect, although it did rain a bit while I was there. The rain ruined my plans to hike the stairway to heaven, but I really wasn't fit enough for that anyways.
The bus system was a breeze to use.
I hiked Diamond Head, which was a great experience, and I also hiked Koko Head, which was a killer, but still beautiful. I also went snorkelling out at Hanauma Bay, which was so fun.
The main reason I wanted to visit Hawaii is because I’m a huge Jurassic Park fan. So, I just had to visit Kualoa Ranch and go on the movie tour... seeing that place was amazing. I also went on an ATV tour through the ranch. It was raining, and I wasn't allowed to take photos, but it was so surreal. There I was, racing through Jurassic Park in a rainstorm on an ATV!!
Even more surreal, I went diving with Sharks up at the North Shore. It was with One Ocean Diving, who specialise in doing dives without any cage. Just free diving with the sharks.
We went a few miles off shore in a small boat, and then jamp in. We got to stay in the water with 8 sharks circling us for about 45 minutes. It was very windy and hard to stay afloat. When it was time to leave, I got tangled in the safety line as the sharks started getting closer and closer and I couldn't get free... that's a fun story! Highly recommend doing a dive with them if you're ever in Oahu and feeling suicidal.
Can't wait to visit again.
Photos from Oahu!

Kauai

  • Days Spent: 4
  • Money Spent: £122 ($159)
  • Per Day: £31 ($41)
Again, Jurassic Park made me come here.
I went a few days after a state of emergency was declared due to flooding, so the north part of the Island was off bounds, as was the Kalalau Trail Hike. Bummer!
Kauai is the closest place to paradise I have ever seen. Waimea Canyon and the Napali Coast should both be separate wonders of the world.
I got to go along the rim of the Canyon, fly over the island in a small plane, hike the Kalalau Lookout trail, and go on a cruise along the Napali Coast (where we were joined by a ton of Dolphins and Whales).
Photos from Kauai!

Tour of the Western USA

  • Days Spent: 21
  • Money Spent: £2,987 ($4,182)
  • Per Day: £142 ($199)
The Tour I did was the Westerner 3 with TrekAmerica. It was me, a male tour guide, and 6 girls. Was a little worried about those dynamics, but they were all incredibly nice, and we were all likeminded people looking for an adventure. Being the only guy meant that I got my own tent and hotel rooms, which was very nice.
Here's the route we took.
Week 1
Big Sur was beautiful. San Francisco was beautiful. The Golden Gate Bridge was as phenomenal as I had pictured. Alcatraz was super interesting, especially with the audio tour, which was the best audio tour I've ever listened to!
Yosemite was completely breath-taking. Everything was gigantic. We hiked up to the lower falls (I think?) and it was great. Tunnel View was also amazing to see in person.
Driving to Zion took forever, but it was nice. Long drives through wasteland, listening to country music, stopping at gas stations for snacks, seeing random stupid attractions on the roadside (I've seen the world largest thermometer now!!). That is the American dream.
Week 2
Zion, specifically Angels Landing, was the most fun I've ever had hiking. The adrenaline made it so enjoyable, although I was acting stupid and probably deserved to fall and die. Narrows was less fun, but doing it right after Angels Landing probably wasn't the best idea anyways.
Bryce was neat, as was Capitol Reef.
MOAB is somewhere I'd love to stay for a week and just do stupid stuff. The best thing we did there was go to Arches NP and see the sunrise, then do some hiking. I'm in love with the sandy, rocky desert terrain. We even went up a mountain nearby and had a snowball fight (pretty odd after a day of hiking in the desert sun). There were some Cougar tracks in the snow, which was even cooler than all the dinosaur tracks we saw in the area. The only thing I like more than Dinosaurs are Cats.
Monument Valley was one of the best parts of the whole trip. We got a guide in the valley from a member of the Navajo Tribe, and we got to camp down in the valley. It was my birthday, so they gave be a 'good health' bracelet as a gift and a birthday dance/song in front of the campfire, which was awkward but appreciated. Camping under the stars was incredible, they were so bright, you just wanted to stare at them all night. This was convenient as our Navajo guide told us some very creepy stories about Skin walkers... so sleeping was out of the equation anyways.
Week 3
The Grand Canyon was as Grand as you'd imagine. We did a helicopter flight over it, and then a hike into it, which was exhausting. It didn't have the same magic as Yosemite, but I guess we had been spoilt with so many natural wonders by that point.
Vegas was fun. I've never been 'drunk’, but I got pretty close there! We mainly stuck to Freemont street as our hotel was there, and it was really lively. Went up $80 on the slots, and then 10 minutes later I was down -$30… but Vegas.
All I saw in San Diego was the Zoo, I'd say it has earned its reputation.
The whole trip was incredible. It was to be my 'meet new people' part of the trip, and it worked well, I made 6 new friends! The experiences we shared made me question if solo travel is even right for me, it was so nice to be a part of a group like that.
But it was exhausting. Up at 6am every morning, packing up tents, cooking breakfast, packing van, long drive, then setting up camp, cooking dinner, doing dishes. Plus, the daily activities, where we frequently went over 30,000 steps and 100 floors climbed.
In terms of price... yeah it was a lot. But could I have done the same trip for less on my own? I don't drive, so no. Even if I did drive, car rental prices would be a ton, and we drove over 3000 miles.
Will be looking to do another tour with them one day, maybe around Yellowstone or in Alaska.
Photos from the Trek!

Las Vegas

  • Days spent: 5
  • Money spent: £1,608 ($2,252)
  • Per day: £322 ($450)
I've always wanted to visit Vegas, but I made sure to line up the dates for my visit so that I could attend the Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC). It is a massive rave and looked extremely cool! If you've heard of Tomorrowland, think that, but entirely at night and in a desert.
EDC was more incredible than I was anticipating. I've never been to a music festival, or a rave, or a club, or even a proper party, so it blew me away. The lights were everywhere, the fireworks were insane, the music was so loud. People had crazy costumes, and everyone was so lively! But oh, so nice. I laid down for a few minutes one night as I was tired, and 3 different people asked me if I was doing okay.
I got to see my favourite artist play (Illenium) and in general just had a great time dancing the nights away. Strangest moment was when some drunk guy came up to me and was fascinated by my led flashing glasses. He asked if he could buy them for $10, and I said sure! It was the last night and I was leaving anyways. So, he pulls out his wallet and has like five $100 bills, and he just says, "Aw man this is all I have". I just gave them to him anyways, he seemed nice. Also, maybe a drug dealer looking back at it...
The downside of EDC was that I was asleep most of the day and away most of the night, so I didn't get to see much of the strip. I know there's not a whole lot to 'see' in Vegas, but I went there twice and never really got to experience it, which I'm sad about. Vegas is such a unique, interesting city. So different from everywhere else I went. Will definitely go back one day. This was also the only city that I think would have been more enjoyable going with someone else.
After EDC was finished, I spent my last night there going out into the desert and doing a sunset Horsehide with a couple of cowgirls, and then having a BBQ dinner with them. My first time on a Horse.
I did lose my phone at EDC, which was a real pain. But thankfully I had my laptop, so I was able to buy a new one and get a new sim card for a low price of £581/$761. EDC cost me £393/$515, the horse ride was £145/$190, my hotel was £67/$87 a night... see how Vegas cost me so much?! On the bright side I did win $30 gambling!
Photos from Las Vegas!

Los Angeles

  • Days spent: 5
  • Money spent: £410 ($574)
  • Per day: £82 ($115)
By this point, I was exhausted.
LA was great, but I was too tired to enjoy it in all honesty. I spent more time in my hostel bed here than I did anywhere else. The public transportation was fine despite what everyone says. One of the better subway systems I used, it gets you to all the tourist points easily. No airport link was a pain though.
Hollywood Boulevard was neat; however, it is something you can see in an hour. I did go down to Santa Monica but came back after an hour, was too tired to do anything there sadly. I went up to the observatory, and the views from there were outstanding! I'm a big GTA player so seeing all these places in person was really cool.
I went to Universal Studios, which was a fun day. The 'solo' lines were great and so fast. On the studio tour I got to see Steve Harvey and he waved to me! Wouldn't be Hollywood without bumping into a celebrity I guess.
The best thing I did was hike up to the Hollywood sign. The hike was a nice way to get away from the city, it was pretty easy, and the views were amazing. Being so close to the famous sign was great, and watching the sunset from up there was an experience I'll never forget. Even if walking back down in the dark was terrifying, always looking out for P-22. (I swear it was stalking me)
Photos from Los Angeles!

Washington DC

  • Days spent: 2.5
  • Money spent: £195 ($273)
  • Per day: £78 ($109)
My journey to DC was an exhausting one, which included another night on the airport floor. By the time I got here I was pooped. Went to my hostel and just slept. Woke up at 2am, and decided to head out, cause what else am I going to do?
I spent the next 2 nights on a bike riding around DC & the National Mall all night. It was incredibly cool; the streets were so quiet, and the monuments/memorials were all empty. Walking up the steps to the Lincoln Memorial, and entering that empty room with just me and Abe there was unforgettable.
On my last day I had some time to kill, so I went to the White House. There was some kind of event going on, and I'm sure if I waited with the news reporters for long enough I could have seen the president, but I had to leave. I also went to the Museum of American History, but could only stay for 30 minutes. Will need to go back one day to see all the Museums!
On the way back to my hostel I saw a car crash which was neat. (not a bad one)
Photos from Washington DC!

New York City

  • Days spent: 6
  • Money spent: £410 ($573)
  • Per day: £68 ($96)
NYC is my favourite city in the world and I've already been here around 5 times, but I was determined to make this the best visit yet! I went to the 9/11 Memorial and took the Staten Island Ferry. I visited the Westfield Mall, which I've somehow never seen before, and while there I went to the Shake Shack for the first time. Don't judge me, but that Shake Shack meal was the best meal I had over the entire 4 months. Easily the best.
I went to the MoMA and concluded that I don't like art museums at all. Great place but not for me.
I went up to the Top of the Rock and saw that postcard view, which is incredible. You really see the scale of the city from up there.
Other activities included walking the High Line, going to Gantry Plaza Park for sunset, and of course Times Square. Oh, I also walked across the Brooklyn Bridge, where I was a bad tourist and got myself hit by a cyclist. Got shouted at, but we were both okay (physically, I am still scarred emotionally).
The highlight was going on a Fly-Nyon doors off helicopter flight across the city. Now that was an experience. Flying right over the top of the Empire State Building and tilting to the side so you can get that perfect picture... was sure I was about to fall out!
The city was smelly, the people weren't the nicest I met, and the subway was awful. Seriously how is it that bad? I got lost every time I tried to use it. And the heat was the worst, even worse than Vegas. But for every bad part about New York, there's 10 great parts.
With all the cities I visited on this trip, nowhere beats New York. Nowhere ever will.
Photos from New York City!

Guangzhou / China

  • Days spent: 13.5
  • Money spent: £29 (¥258)
This was another trip with my Dad & his family. My step mum is Chinese, so we would be visiting her family.
The 14-hour flight was brutal, and after arriving at 7am, we went straight into a full day tour of Guangzhou. Tired doesn't even describe it.
Baiyun Mountain is very pretty! The tour guide only spoke Chinese, so I had no idea what was going on half the time, but we got to see some neat places. A highlight was going on a river cruise and seeing Canton Tower light up at night.
After that we went on the bullet train up to Chenzhou and did a 3-day tour of the Dongjiang Lake and nearby mountain ranges. Another Chinese speaking guide so again I had no idea what was going on, but the locations were spectacular.
The rest of the time was spent in my Step-Mums hometown. (It is described as a 'small town', but this is what it looks like?!)
I wish I could remember the name of the town, but it keeps slipping my mind. What I do know is that they get almost no Western Tourists. This resulted in people constantly staring at me, asking to take photos with me, and sneaking photos of me. I even make a group of school girls scream with joy just by telling them my name hahaha
The heat & humidity in China was brutal, I never stopped sweating.
Most people I met were so incredibly kind and welcoming. It's a very different culture, so you need to be accepting to new behaviours. Spitting, shoving, and staring may be considered rude in the USA however it is normal in China.
Through the tours and staying with families I got to try lots of new food... but I'm not much of a food person. It was not my favourite part of the trip. Something I ate made me sick and I had to sit out some of the hikes, which I was sad about. Very nice ramen though!
Overall it was a completely new experience, but it still felt familiar. Most countries work in the same general way, and most people in the world are good hearted. That is something I took away from this trip. Always believe in the kindness of strangers!
Can't wait to see more of the country one day. The country is developing so fast, you can see entire new cities being built. I must have saw hundreds of skyscrapers under construction.
Pictures from China!

Hong Kong

  • Days spent: 5.5
  • Money spent: £242 (HK$2,486)
  • Per Day: £32 (HK$328)
Rather than going back with my family to New York, or going straight to London, I opted to go to Hong Kong for a few days first, as I've always wanted to visit and it was so close!
I took the bullet train down, and wow they're fast. Having one fly past me in the station was genuinely terrifying. I went to Shenzhen and then walked across the border to Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is an English-speaking city, so getting around is easy. Being able to access social media again (China blocks most websites) was wonderful!
I wanted to go on some hikes, but the heat was too much. Instead I went out to see the giant Buddha, which was a real sight. Later that night I went up to the Peak to watch the sunset, and wow. Some of the best views from the whole trip came from up there.
Other activities included the Ladies Market, various shopping malls for that sweet AC, seeing the new Jurassic World movie, watching the light show, riding the world's longest escalator, and going to the Happy Valley Racecourse.
The city smelled strangely nice, and there was great food everywhere, which was a relief for my stomach!
Would love to go back one day, if not just for some hiking.
Pictures from Hong Kong!

Pictures

Here's a combined album of all the above pictures!
I'm too lazy to add a description for all of these, as I already did it in the individual albums for each location. If you want to know a specific place you could check them, or just ask!
I've also got a ton of videos. Here's a fun one to see what EDC was like...
I'm planning on making a sort of montage video at some point and I'll be sure to post that video here when it is done.
Semi-related, I printed out most of the above album and got a physical photo album for all the photos. Here's what is looks like.
I like it as it is a fun way to look back at everything, and it's easier to show people than flipping through photos on my phone. Would recommend it! Best of all, I've got back ups, so if I lose it a new one will only cost around £20. Considering doing a photo album like this for all my future trips… only issue is that most trips aren't long enough to produce 200 good photos.

Money

Category Spent USD Spent Percentage of Total Spend
Accommodation £1,948 $2,552 17%
Food £1,126 $1,475 10%
Transport £2,643 $3,463 24%
Activities £2,170 $2,843 20%
Pre-Trip Purchases £1,978 $2,591 18%
Everything Else (Toiletries, Souvenirs, ect) £1,186 $1,554 11%
Total £11,051 $14,477
Per Day £97 $126

Detailed Summary

I've got a whole spreadsheet with more information in it. Here is an album of the screenshots! I recorded all prices in GBP for some reason. Constantly Googling the exchange rate before entering it into my expense tracker was effort.
My 'Per Day' average is a bit off as I spent around a third of the trip with my family having very little expenses. If you remove those days, the new average is £154 ($202) per day. If you cut out my long-distance transportation costs and my Pre-Trip purchases, and just look at what I actually spent in each location on accommodation, food, activities, local transport, toiletries and everything else, then the average is £106 ($139) per day.
I definitely could have done it cheaper. Cut out the new camera, lounge pass, comfort hotels, and the expensive activities, and I'd save thousands. But the best part about travelling for me is the activities/experiences. The occasional comfort was nice, and I enjoy photography... so i've got no ragrets!
I know you're thinking 'how did you afford this??'
I'd say about 30% of the money came from the last year of work and making money from my PC. I live a very boring life, so outside of giving my Step Dad rent money, I don't have any large expenses. I don't drive, drink, smoke, or socialize much... so I save a lot!
The other 70% was from inheritance money I received a few years ago after my Mum passed away. Had no real use for it (no interest in driving, free university, not enough for a house without a mortgage), and the pound is crashing, so why not spend it on an incredible journey?
I know that if I ever die and leave my children some money, I'd want them to use it to celebrate life and do something like this. I know my Mum would have wanted me to do something like this with it.
I spent less on food than I anticipated, but I did drink more than I thought I would. I budgeted £0 for alcohol (I don't drink remember!) and spent around $150 on the stuff.
My original budget for the trip was £11,000 ($14,400), so I was pretty much spot on.
To come up with my budget, I followed this plan:
  1. Decide everywhere I wanted to go and how long I would like to spend there.
  2. Decide what route I would take and specific travel dates.
  3. Price out all the flights/trains and make a note of the likely prices.
  4. Look into the accommodation, see how much an average hostel or hotel will cost per night. Make a note of this for each location.
  5. Look into all the paid activities which I wanted to do, including any tours. Get prices for them all.
  6. Add £20 a day for food
  7. Add £10 a day for 'other' costs (toiletries, souvenirs, whatever)
  8. Look at how much a transport pass for the local subway costs, or in general see how much people spend on local transport while in each location.
  9. Make a list of everything I need to buy beforehand and the prices. Included clothes, camera, insurance, ect.
  10. Add £500 just in case of an emergency.
Then you add it up: Flights/Trains + Pre-Trip Purchases + £500 Emergency Cash + the cost of each location.
For the cost of each location it would be: Activity Costs + Local Transport Pass + (days in location * (20 Food + 10 Other + Nightly Accommodation Cost)
That gave me a total cost, and then I just worked on cutting stuff out and changing dates until It was at the right level. (Had to remove Miami, Boston, New Orleans, and Alaska :( )
I also kept increasing my budget… which I guess is nice if you can do so. I originally wanted to do this trip on £3000 ($4000). Ha...
If you want to be spontaneous, obviously the above wouldn't work for you. Expect to pay more for last minute bookings. But, that is an exciting way to travel and I wouldn't discourage it. I just like to plan in advance.

Favourite Memories (with pictures!)

What Went Wrong

  • Lost my phone at EDC Vegas and had to buy a new one. (+ sim card)
  • Lost my wallet in Washington DC. Thankfully it was returned at a later date.
  • Lost my neck rest & my cooling towel.
  • Got very sick in China and never got to enjoy much of the hiking.
  • Getting homesick bad around the 3-month mark. Stuck with me the rest of the trip.
  • Being too exhausted to really enjoy LA or DC. Should have stayed in Vegas a bit longer to relax.
  • Ending the 3-week tour and saying goodbye to the people on it. You spend 3 weeks with these people, all day every day, doing the most incredible things, and then you leave, and you'll probably never see them again. That was hard.
  • Wearing one pair of shoes so much that they started to smell horrendous. Had to hose them down with 'Stink Stopper' constantly.
  • Accidently deleting nearly every photo/video I took during the first week of my TrekAmerica trip. Included Santa Barbra, Big Sur, San Francisco, and Yosemite. :(
  • Watching Liverpool FC lose the Champions League Final. I'm a big fan. Amazing to get there don't get me wrong... but that game was tough. -The journey home from Hong Kong took 55 hours, with multiple flights and trains. Poor planning.

What I Would Have Done Differently Looking Back

  • Got a credit card with no foreign transaction fees and use it to book the whole trip. Could have gathered a lot of points...
  • Had an extra 3-4 days in Vegas to rest.
  • Tried more local food.
  • Tried to be more social.
  • Saw more of DC during the day.
  • Left the hiking boots behind.

Tips

Running out of space here, so I'll include all my tips in comment to this post!

Summary

This whole trip was incredible and at times surreal. The USA is such a diverse and beautiful country! There's nowhere else like it and I'm so grateful that I got to see all these places in person. China and Hong Kong were also incredible in their own right. China has so much more to see and I can't wait to go back.
Despite how much I spent, it was definitely worth it. All the experiences were... wow. Did I really do all that?? EDC Vegas? Shark Diving? Helicopter flights? I barely even leave my bedroom; how did I do all that?!?
Not sure if I would say it changed my life, but it has made me more confident in myself. Made some new friends and have some great memories/stories to hold on to. Overall it was just… fun. Such a good time!
There were some bad parts, however they were few and far between.
It was everything I expected and more.
Thanks again to this subreddit for the help/inspiration! I originally asked for some advice here. The trip ended up quite different looking back at it!

What's next?

University for 4 years, so no long trips. Not that I could afford one anyways.
I'll try to go to some places around Europe, taking advantage of the cheap flights. Current ideas are Rome/Venice, Paris, Vienna, Liverpool, and Belfast. Also want to see more of my own country, spend some time in Edinburgh and check out Orkney/Shetland!
I have plans to get a motorbike next year, and the Scottish Highlands are on my doorstep, so I'll have some nice trips to go on with that.
Next time I'm at my Dads house, I may take a train to DC or Boston. Potentially fly to Florida if it is affordable. I've seen most of where I want to see in the USA, but Alaska, Yellowstone, New Orleans, Boston, and Miami/Tampa are still on my list!
I loved EDC so much that I want to go back, however it won't be possible with how the dates line up with University. Instead I've started a savings pot to go to Tomorrowland. Hopefully in Summer 2020!
But the dream is to save up as much as possible for when I graduate. My target is £25,000 ($32,000). Then go on a trip around the planet, for 12 months, which will put this one to shame. After that, the next dream is to get a motorbike and go across North America. But I’m worried I may have a 'family' and 'commitments' by that point...
Thanks to anyone who read this novel, have a good day!! Feel free to ask any questions!
submitted by The-Smelliest-Cat to travel [link] [comments]

gambling boat in tampa florida video

Hillsborough County Sinkhole - UPDATE Florida woman loses $14 million on slots in Seminole ... Catching Invasive Pythons in the Florida Everglades! - YouTube Hurricane Dorian Approaching Florida  Boats at Haulover ... CREEK Fishing in a TUNNEL for ANYTHING That Will Bite ... Victory Casino Cruises Real Walk Thru of the Ship 2019 ... Dirty Harry Pinball Promo Video Dramatic Video Shows Passengers Jumping from Flaming Burning Shuttle Casino Boat Joanna Jedrzejczyk vs Michelle Waterson Full Fight ... Gamble Rogers Campground at Flagler Beach, Florida - YouTube

From Business: Professionally guided fishing charters and boat tours in Tampa Bay, Clearwater, and St. Petersburg florida. 21. Freedom Boat Club. Boat Rental & Charter Yachts & Yacht Operation. Website (727) 940-3408. 5200 W Tyson Ave. Tampa, FL 33611. 22. Dennick Fruitsource. Boat Tours Sightseeing Tours Juices. Website (813) 884-4552. 11339 Countryway Blvd. Tampa, FL 33626. 23. Olde World SIGN UP FOR PROMOTIONS AND UPCOMING EVENTS. Join Now. About Us; Gaming; Events; Victory Card; Groups; Transportation Spiritual Journeys Cruise Retreat Tampa Florida. Cruises (813) 765-4220. Po Box 82395. Tampa, FL 33682. 24. High Five Dragon Boat. Boat Rental & Charter. 9. YEARS IN BUSINESS. Website (813) 426-3544. 908 E 131st Avenue, Unit B. Tampa, FL 33612. 25. Fishing Charters FL Tampa, Key West & Miami. Cruises Boat Tours Fishing Guides. 11. YEARS IN BUSINESS. Website (727) 851-6204. 8710 W Hillsborough Gambling Boat In Tampa Florida. Miccosukee Resort and Gaming Center. Address: 500 SW 177th Ave, Miami, FL 33194; Hours: ·8am–2am; Phone: 305-222-4600; Website: www.mrg.miccosukee.com; Miccosukee Resort and Gaming Center has nearly 70,000 square feet of casino game space. This includes nearly 2,000 slots. In addition to casino games, they also have high-stakes bingo. Seminole Casino Brighton Gamblers got good news in Florida on Thursday as one casino in the state reopened following the coronavirus closure. The Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tampa opened its doors at 7 p.m. &#821… Enjoyed a beautiful day aboard the casino boat! We went out last Sunday and had a great time. Really enjoyed playing blackjack. $5.00 min, it was enjoyable not being forced to play $25 a hand like at Hard Rock in Tampa. Staff was pleasurable. Its not a glamorous casino, so don’t expect it to be. We paid $8 to go and includes a free drink, how can you go wrong. Its clean, not to smoky Gambling Boat Tampa Fl; Casino Boat In Tampa Florida; People walk past boats on the beach in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Eta, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020, in Gulfport, Fla. Eta dumped torrents of blustery rain on Florida's west coast as it slogged. Tampa: Bay Downs: Tampa: Kennel Club: West Palm Beach: Do you like to Cook? Check out our free 5 star rated food recipes. SunCruz Casino Cruise - Port Richey - Florida. SunCruz Port Richey casino cruise ship has a 13,000 square foot casino with 325 slots, 13 table games including craps and roulette. High speed shuttle takes you to the mother ship anchored two miles off shore, so you can stay Like most gambling cruises, blackjack, craps, roulette and a plethora of slots. SunCruz Casinos. Head about 20 miles north of Clearwater to Port Richey and hop aboard the SunCruz Casino boat. On the three-level, 12,000-square-foot ship, try your luck at Vegas-style table. Victory Casino Cruises in Florida. Dawn Henthorn. Dawn Henthorn is a Casino gambling cruise ships offer short trips into international waters for gambling. The casinos feature all the popular table gambling games and slot machines. This is a great way to enjoy the luxury of a cruise ship for minimal cost or no cost.

gambling boat in tampa florida top

[index] [5871] [1333] [1364] [1157] [5950] [1212] [816] [7918] [1554] [7361]

Hillsborough County Sinkhole - UPDATE

A female passenger has died hours after a casino boat caught fire off Florida's Gulf Coast, forcing her and about 50 other passengers and crew to jump into the chilly waters to escape. This week we visited Gamble Rogers Campground at Flagler Beach which is just north of Daytona Beach in Florida. This campground is beautiful and is divided ... Hurricane Dorian Approaching Florida Boats at Haulover InletHurricane Dorian tropical strong force winds are beginning to approach the Florida coastline. T... I went creek fishing in a TUNNEL for anything that would bite! This was my first time ever fishing this spot. I found this tunnel on Google maps and decided ... Joanna Jedrzejczyk vs Michelle Waterson takes place in the main event of UFC fight night 161 on espn+ 19 Tampa this weekend. This is my full fight prediction... Burmese pythons are an invasive species in Florida, causing harm to the ecosystem and native wildlife. Not only do pythons compete with native species for fo... After watching this news report, how could anyone associated with the Seminole casino in Tampa not have known this woman was a gambling addict? It is impossi... By commenting in this forum, you give Hillsborough County (and the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System) the right to reproduce, distribute, publish, display, edit, modify, and create ... Join us for a full Victory #Casino Cruises from Cape Canaveral Port Florida USA real walkthrough 2019. #victorycruises Starting with the bus at Florida Mall ... #1321 Atari SPACE DUEL Arcade Video Game-Williams POLICE FORCE Pinball-TNT Amusements - Duration: 43:59. TNT Amusements Inc 3,405 views

gambling boat in tampa florida

Copyright © 2024 top100.realmoneygamestop.xyz