Decisions were made, travel route were planned, credit cards were used. Time to move on.
Follow me to China, Central and South America, Australia, South-East Asia or Europe. Enjoy the pics and crazy travel stories!
The funny bus stops are still here, I love them. They give the city a futuristic feel: step into the magical tube and be transported somewhere else!
Old, young, firm or jiggly, tiny or more generous, bare butts are everywhere. Brazilian women wear bikinis but not just any kind of bikini: the G-string one.
You know the story. It all started as a small fishermen village, a roadless place... and it became "the place". As in "the beach".
Locals tend to think Recife is this super dangerous place but I didn't get that "must get out of here now' vibe over there. The streets were busy and chaotic but lively and people were friendly...
We settled in Ponta Negra, one of the beach close to Natal. And like everything in Brazil, it took some time to figure things out.
When was the last time you flew for less than $30? Not this advertised price, the total price, taxes included? Yeah, never. Same here.
I wanted to learn more about Brazilians—what people eat, what they do, how they work and interact. A bit wiser and more comfortable with our surrounding, we headed back to Recife to explore the...
With its steep streets and colourful colonial buildings, Olinda reminded me of a smaller version of Antigua in Guatemala, Granada in Nicaragua, Valparaiso in Chile or Paraty in Brazil.
Bye bye cosmopolitan city. The northeast is a different beast. It's not as safe or as easy for foreign travelers. We have to learn to do things the Brazilian way.
Okay. So Mark believes I actually understand what dogs “say” (I pretend to translate barking) but he doesn’t think coconuts are real. Something went wrong with my parenting skills.
I'm trying to make conversation in Portunhol (or Portuñol?) while Mark is asking me where the planes are, why we are going fast and why we are going to China.
The sky was grey and dark clouds heavy with rain were looming on the horizon. It felt like the day’s metaphor where everything could go either way—sunny or rainy.
The place to celebrate New Year in São Paulo is Avenida Paulista, a 2.8 kilometre thoroughfare packed with small businesses, government buildings, museums, mansions and offices.
Article views: 339 “Can you imagine being a tall foreigner and landing in China without bags? That would be worse. There is no way you could find clothes that fit.” “Or travelling to Australia. It’s...
"What do we do?" I asked, an helpless French. "There is nothing we can do," Feng replied, the tough Canadian.
Mark is a little bit into Minions, a little bit into dinosaurs, a little bit into stars, a little bit into trucks and trains. But he is into planes a lot. "Is it appropriate to give a three-year-old...