From the Desk of Thomas Ott

I woke up one morning and decided to build a life instead of making a living. 
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Adventure

 

Bing Travel and the quick getaway!

A friend at work recommended that I check out Bing Travel instead of Kayak for my fare deals, and he's right.  Bing appears to be more comprehensive and will give you a prediction if the fare price will rise or fall within 120 days of your travel date.  Neat!

The reason why I'm checking out fare sites is that I'm planning a quick getaway, if feasible, to New Mexico for the Balloon Fiesta this year.  The best fare rate I can find right now is $299/person for early October 2010 without lodging and transportation.  For a family of four, or even if I did a Daddy & Daughter trip, it would turn quite expensive when I add in lodging and a car rental. So now I have to figure out if I could shoe string this getaway at all.  Back to the drawing board!

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Filed under  //   Adventure   Balloon Fiesta   Bing   Fares   New Mexico   Travel  

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100 Things To Do Before I Die list

I'm in the process of compiling my "100 Things To Do Before I Die" list and I have about 13 so far.  Its really a mind boggling task because there are so many beautiful and wonderful things to see and do in this world, and we are creatures with finite time and life.

I realize that I can accomplish these things but it requires me to throw off the shackles of a consumerist life, which is difficult when you have two cars, a mortgage, and two kids. Yet, adventurous people do it all the time, and I know that I can too!  2010 is going to be a great year as I start checking off these 100 things.

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Filed under  //   100 Things   adventure   consumerism   lists  

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Delighted in Minot ND

Yes I was, perfectly delighted with Minot ND. It's in the middle of
northern North Dakota with a domesticated wild west feel to it, if
that's even possible.

I found this post card from yesteryear in the Soo Line Rail Depot.
Its now a historical research center and mueseum, filled with all
kinds of interesting goodies. More to come...

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Filed under  //   Adventure   Amtrak   Depot   Minot   North Dakota   Soo   Train   Travel  

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Lunch at the Continental Midtown in Philadelphia

           
Click here to download:
Lunch_at_Continental_in_Philad.zip (11462 KB)

I had lunch with a friend, formerly my work colleague, yesterday.  He moved to Philadelphia recently and was nice enough to come to my office and take me to a really hip and trendy lunch place called "Continental."  It's an easily recognized restaurant from the street, it has a big green olive as a sign and the outside walls are red hexagonal shaped tiles.  

Inside things looked comfortable but funky, everything reminded me of a 50's or a Mad Men episode, something about it just screamed the "lush life."  We ended up in a booth upstairs, right in front of a swanky looking bar, and next to these tables that had chairs suspended from the ceiling and looked like bird cages cut in half!

For  lunch I ordered a Midtown Quickie, which is the daily special and happened to be a Buffalo Chicken sandwich and salad that day. Chris ordered a Crab Pad Thai.  After a Quickie meal I followed up with a lime sorbet for dessert.  The food was delicious, great service, and the ambiance made this a fun place to eat!

We spent the rest of the lunch hour catching up and I ended up getting the scoop on some cool places to eat around the office.  Chris also told me that the Amish and food markets are nearby, including an Art Museum!  I can't wait to go exploring the Center City in the next few weeks. So far, Philadelphia has been surprising me a lot!

Time well spent with a good friend if you ask me!

Location: 1801 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA

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Filed under  //   Adventure   Canon   Explore   Food   G11   Philadelphia   Photography   Resturant  

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An American Girl in Cambodia

I'm pretty sure that Leigh Morlock didn't read my blog to help her decide whether or not to move to Cambodia, but she just moved there from New Jersey.  After being laid off from her normal day job, Leigh took some time off to do soul searching and then sign up with an NGO to help build local businesses in Siem Reap, Cambodia.  Here's a small blurb from her site:

I chose to live as an optimist. I started reading personal development blogs that resonated with who I wanted to become. A fellow dreamer who my mentor introduced me to last April contacted me in September. He remembered a conversation we had in April when I told him I admired the work he did and would love to be a part of it. He wanted to know if I would be interested in moving across the globe to work for his NGO. Yes! Of course! I jumped at the opportunity. [Am American Girl In Cambodia]

The one thing that caught my eye as I read the beginning posts of her blog is her attitude and spirit toward adventure.  What makes different her from countless of other people in this world is her choice to live as an optimist.  She chooses to face all those winding roads with a positive spirit and not as a victim to circumstance! Good luck Leigh, I'll be reading!

Hat tip to @khmerbird for the link!

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Filed under  //   Adventure   Cambodia   New Jersey   Travel   Vagabonding  

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Stay curious my friends!

I’ve always been a curious sort of fellow.  Perhaps that’s why the idea of traveling around for months at a time, exploring new cultures and meeting new people, just plain excites me.  Who wouldn’t want to take 3 months off and roam the Italian back country or hike around the rim of Australia? 

This is why I’m such a fan of Rolf Pott’s Vagablogging blog.  Rolf’s blog is inspirational to me because he’s actually living his dream of a Vagabonding life.  He routinely shares tips and travel tricks for Vagabonding your way to happiness.  Most of the stories posted are from contributing travelers who were curious and decided to go somewhere new.  They chose break out of their shells and it drove them to visit a new country and take a road less traveled.  In my opinion, this attitude eventually drives us to happiness and contentment

I fully believe that happiness is made up of at least a generous helping of curiosity.  It’s is like that special gift you unwrap on Christmas morning with ferocity!  What’s in the box?  What special meaning does it hold? Only you can find out! 

That’s why I say, stay curious my friends!

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Filed under  //   adventure   philosophy   travel   Vagabonding  

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Vagabonding, Photography, and Kids

I loved to roam around as a kid.  I remember riding my bicycle with my friends Marshall and Andre down streets that were less traveled looking for something, anything that would make our minds race of adventure.  Sometimes we got to the end of the road and found nothing interesting, other times we discovered new ponds, abandoned ruins, and cool looking woods.  We were modern day Marco Polo's in Northern New Jersey, peddling hundreds of miles on our biycles and had nothing to show for it but sore legs, flat tires, and smiles.

I'm sure the vagabond bug bit me back then as a teenager and it was the reason why I moved out to New Mexico after college.  It was also the reason why I took my first cross country trip the year before, and why I love to go hiking and camping.  I love to explore and I was fortunate enough to take two extended "vagabonding" type of trips before I got married and had kids.  I spent a total of 6 weeks roaming around the southwest deserts in the US taking pictures.  Mostly I lived out of my tent or my truck and I vividly remember rationing my money for gas, waking up at dawn to take pictures, and just exploring places like Moab, Capitol Reef, Joshua Tree, and Escalante. I was never happier in my life except the time I got married and welcomed my two children into this world.

The vagabond life really inspires me and I wish to do it more often, but the demands of my family, work, and children currently keep me home.  I'm not complaining but I'm longing for adventure again and to go out into the world and see new things, stay for a while in one place, and take in all the "flavor" of the place.  I'm really hoping that in the next year or two I'll be able to go roaming around again but this time with a smaller co-adventurer at my side!  I'm sure that I'll have at least one kid in tow, each of us with a camera in hand, visiting out of the way places in the world, experiencing new cultures, meeting new people, and shooting them.  Ahem, their picture! :)

Take a friend, your spouse, your Dad, your kids, or go by yourself, but just get out there!  Life's an adventure, what have you done today?

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Filed under  //   adventure   children   kids   New Jersey   New Mexico   photography   travel   vagabonding  

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Adventure Camping in the Eastern Sierras

If you want to know what adventure camping with the family looks like, have a gander at this family portrait.  This picture was taken at elevation 9,100 feet in the Eastern Sierra Mountains, just a few miles west of Bishop, CA.  The stream in the background comes from Lake Sabrina, a glacial lake, and has native Brook Trout in it (we even caught one).  Every morning, when the sun peaked over the mountains, the fish started to jump in the stream and hummingbirds flew up from their perches. 

Sure it was cold in the mountains, and we were chilly the first night there, but it was trivial compared to the fun and bonding time we shared.  Life is good.

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Filed under  //   Adventure   Family  

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