How to Take a BIG Trip on a Little Budget

How could we take a big trip on a little budget? We got creative, kept it simple, and made a plan we could stick to. Read on to find out tips for taking big trips when your income is small.



Oasis Holidays India's Travel Tips for Taking a BIG Trip on a Little Budget:


1) Plan ahead, then set a budget and save for it.

Do you want to take a big trip next summer? Start saving now. Dream about the trip you want, then get real about how much it will actually cost. If you are driving factor in gas and an oil change. How much will you spend on lodging and attractions? Write it all down and do the math.



2) Save money on food whenever possible.

Make your own breakfasts. Pack lunches for outings.  If you drink adult beverages, buy them at the grocery store and enjoy them on the deck of your beach rental for 1/10th price of the bar down the road. Buy a case of soft drinks from the grocery store to enjoy instead of buying them at a gas station on the road. Stay in places where you can cook. Budget for some meals out, but save a ton by eating at your rental whenever possible. You can read about our beach week meal plan for some ideas here.



3) Choose your accommodations wisely.

We stayed with friends during most of our travels, and then rented homes for the rest. Renting a place with a kitchen in a beautiful location will be much more economical than a hotel stay every time. You can cook at home and entertain the kids in a larger space. We stayed with friends because one of the main purposes of our trip was to see people we miss from our East coast days, but it also saved us a ton.



4) Save money on attractions and souvenirs.

Keep the main thing the main thing, for you and your kids. You are getting to go on a fabulous trip, so your mementos will be photos and free stuff, rather than gift shop trinkets. We  should collect shells at the beach and rocks from our other stops to remember each place. And will print some out for the kids’ rooms and make a family photo book for all of us. Find all the fun free things to do in your location and do them first. If kids want to visit expensive attractions not on your list, they should pay with it with their own money. Give them jobs to do in advance of the trip so they have their own spending money.

Traveling together builds memories and gives your family so much quality time. If it is something you value, take time to plan for it and make it happen.

Read more of our travel tips here.

20 Things to See and Do at Least Once in Your Life

If you like to travel, you probably have a bucket list of places you want to hit throughout your lifetime. Here’s 20 things to see and do at least once in your life (…or maybe even a few more).

01. HOT-AIR BALLOON RIDE IN TURKEY


Cappadocia is a landscape that you will have never witnessed before in your lifetime. This makes it one of the most popular spots in the world to go up in a Hot Air Balloon. 

As you take off for sunrise you will start to be hypnotised by the spectacular and surreal landscape that lies below you. You will gently drift over the fairy chimneys, through valleys scattered with pigeon houses, over orchards and vineyards. The different colours of the diversified landscape will leave you breathless. An activity not to be missed. 


 02. NORTHERN LIGHTS IN THE ARCTIC CIRCLE

The spectacular Northern Lights are visible in the Arctic parts of Norway from October through March.

Nothing else on the sky looks like the Northern Lights! While the sun, the moon and the stars are visible from everywhere and natural parts of our everyday life, the Northern Lights can only be seen in certain areas. They vary in color and intensity and as opposed to the moon, sun and stars they are unpredictable and unique. The Northern Lights in Norway are called the night-time Aurora because they are on the night-side of the earth. The Northern Lights - nature's own light show - are solar winds that meet the atmosphere in a zone around the magnetic North Pole, forming arches, waves and curls of light moving across the sky, with sudden rays of light shooting down from space.


03. SAFARI IN AFRICA

Whether you go deep bush in northern Kruger or follow the big cats in the Maasai Mara, a trip into the wilderness will be life-changing.


04. SKYDIVE OVER THE SWISS ALPS

I’m not particularly fond of heights but I’ve told everyone that if I was to ever travel to Switzerland, I wouldn’t miss the chance to skydive over the Alps.


05.  FLOAT IN THE DEAD SEA IN ISRAEL

The Dead Sea (Yam Hamelakh — “The Salt Sea”) is the lowest place on earth, roughly 1,300 feet below sea level. Visitors can float effortlessly on the waters of the Dead Sea due to its concentration of minerals, which is the highest in the world.


06. NEUSCHWANSTEIN, A FAIRY-TALE CASTLE IN GERMANY

Neuschwanstein is a 19th-century Romanesque Revival palace that inspired Walt Disney to create the Magic Kingdom, in particular, Cinderella. It was built on a rugged hill against a backdrop of the most picturesque mountain scenery, especially magical during Winter. Talk about the perfect White Christmas!


07. THE GALÁPAGOS ISLANDS IN ECUADOR

The Galápagos Islands are a volcanic archipelago of islands in the Pacific Ocean. These 19 islands and the surrounding marine reserve have been called a unique ‘living museum and showcase of evolution’. Its geographical location and ongoing seismic and volcanic activity, together with the extreme isolation of the islands, led to the development of unusual plant and animal life – such as marine iguanas, flightless cormorants, giant tortoises, huge cacti, endemic trees and the many different subspecies of mockingbirds and finches.

08. THE TAJ MAHAL AT SUNRISE IN INDIA

The Taj Mahal at Agra, India, is one of the wonders of the world, and also known as “crown of Palaces’. It’s 171 metres (561 feet) in height and it took 17 years to complete!



09. HIKE IN TORRES DEL PAINE NATIONAL PARK, PATAGONIA

Torres del Paine National Park, in Chile’s Patagonia region, is known for its soaring mountains, electric-blue icebergs that cleave from glaciers and golden pampas (lowlands) that shelter rare wildlife such as llama-like guanacos.


10. SAIL CROATIA’S DALMATIAN COAST

Amazing beaches and sunshine are the star attractions here, while medieval towns and charming fishing hamlets provide a gorgeous coastal backdrop. A very popular venture among young people, but one I would encourage everyone to experience once in their life. The Yacht Week was the craziest most incredible week of my life and I would recommend it to anyone!



11. TAKE A CRUISE IN HA LONG BAY, VIETNAM

Hạ Long Bay, in northeast Vietnam, is known for its emerald waters and thousands of towering limestone islands topped by rainforest's. Junk boat tours and sea kayak expeditions take visitors past islands named for their shapes, including Stone Dog and Teapot islands.

Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, New Zealand




12. VISIT THE WAI-O-TAPU THERMAL WONDERLAND

New Zealand’s most colourful geothermal attraction, located on the North Island with unique features including the world famous Champagne Pool naturally coloured springs, bubbling mud, steaming ground, expansive vistas, huge volcanic craters and sinter terrace formations.


13. SWIM IN DEVIL’S POOL IN AFRICA



Only a slippery, submerged lip of rock stands between these bathers and a 100m drop over the world’s largest waterfall. There’s a reason it’s called the most dangerous swimming pool in the world. Definitely one for the thrill-seekers.

Machu Picchu in Peru

14. HIKE MACHU PICCHU IN PERU

Machu Picchu is an Incan citadel set high in the Andes Mountains in Peru, above the Urubamba River valley. Built in the 15th century and later abandoned, it’s renowned for its sophisticated dry-stone walls that fuse huge blocks without the use of mortar, intriguing buildings that play on astronomical alignments, and panoramic views. Its exact former use remains a mystery.

Shwedagon Pagoda in Rangoon, Burma

15. ADMIRE THE SHWEDAGON PAGODA IN RANGOON, BURMA


The 325ft zedi , adorned with 27 metric tons of gold leaf and thousands of diamonds and other gems, is believed to enshrine eight hairs of the Gautama Buddha as well as relics of three former buddhas.

Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia

16. WALK ON WATER IN SALAR DE UYUNI IN BOLIVIA\



Introducing the world’s largest salt flat. It’s the legacy of a prehistoric lake that went dry, leaving behind a desertlike, 11,000-sq.-km. landscape of bright-white salt, rock formations and cacti-studded islands. Though wildlife is rare in this unique ecosystem, it does harbor many pink flamingos!Related: 10 Most Surreal Destinations in the WorldYi Peng Festival in Thailand

17. RELEASE A CANDLE AT YI PENG FESTIVAL IN THAILAND

The Festival of Lights is celebrated all around Thailand with Loi Krathongs (lotus-shaped receptacles) released on water to bring luck and fulfill wishes. Did anyone else immediately think of Tangled? (if you didn’t, you MUST watch that movie!).
Blue Lagoon, Iceland


18. SWIM IN THE BLUE LAGOON IN ICELAND

In a magnificent black-lava field, the milky-teal spa is fed water from the futuristic Svartsengi geothermal plant. The superheated water (70% sea water, 30% fresh water, at a perfect 38°C) is rich in blue-green algae, mineral salts and fine silica mud, which condition and exfoliate the skin.

Volcano Sliding, Nicaragua


19. BOARD DOWN AN ACTIVE VOLCANO IN NICARAGUA

People are hiking up an active volcano in Nicaragua, and sliding down, sitting or standing, on a thin plywood or metal board at 60mph. I mean honestly, who wouldn’t want to tick ‘slid down an active volcano’ off their bucket list?


20. VISIT JAPAN DURING CHERRY BLOSSOM SEASON

Springtime in Japan is nothing less than magical. From late March to mid April/May, the country’s iconic sakura (cherry blossoms) capture the attention of visitors and locals as their beautiful pink flowers blanket the country in soft, colourful splendor.


Slow Vacationing in Slovakia: Sauntering Through Varying Degrees of Snow


“There is one way to understand another culture. Living it. Move into it, ask to be tolerated as a guest, learn the language. At some point understanding may come. It will always be wordless. The moment you grasp what is foreign, you will lose the urge to explain it. To explain a phenomenon is to distance yourself from it.” ― Peter Høeg, Smilla's Sense of Snow
The curse of the journalist is that you have to detach yourself from the subject to be able to objectively tell a story. Good thing I’m not just a journalist. I’m using my poet card today. So, you can watch me grovel about my softest spot and safest corner this side of Europe, strolling along snow-laden lanes and braving the winter weather. Besides, I couldn’t really explain to you exactly how snow falls, or how it looks like, how it tastes in your tongue. The only thing I could do is to describe in degrees my days there in the former half of Czechoslovakia.
Every time I talk about Slovakia, it gets as personal as it is slow, a little too laidback compared to its Czech neighbour. But if you think that heavy snow would dampen our spirit, and discourage us from sightseeing, you’re in for a very cold surprise. Let’s take it one step, one snowflake at a time.
23 December 
Bratislava is unexpectedly warm. Sunny almost the whole day. Many things to discover yet. Slovakia is new territory to me. Danube is at its familiar, tranquil charm though. Here is a city of contradictions: old castle beside a UFO-shaped tower; shining cars along an ancient river; cold weather, warm people.
My friend’s house is a labyrinth, a house of doors.

24 December
Challenge of the Day: Learn Slovakian and not get lost around my friend’s house. I helped prepare lunch with my friend’s parents. They talked to me in Polish, Russian, Slovakian, English, Italian, German, Czech, French.
Traditional Christmas dinner involved cabbage sour soup, fish with potato salad, dessert. For starters, slices of thin bread were served with honey and garlic. My friend’s mom signed a cross on our foreheads using honey for “sweetness” all throughout the year. Garlic was for good health, instead.
25 December
It’s snowing on Christmas Day. Sneh, snow. Biely, white. I’m having “Death by (snow and) Chocolate”, hot dark chocolate with pistachio and whipped cream after a visit at the ruins of the Beckov Castle by the Jewish cemetery on a snowy day. It’s real Slovakian weather, according to my friend’s dad.
26 December
It’s -6* and by some Slovakian logic, it’s the perfect night to go out with friends until 4:00 in the morning.
27 December
Sunny. But it’s -7*, so just a little stroll in on the schedule. It’s just that a stroll in this part means two hours of walking in the snow and into the woods. It was all worth it though. Snow is immaculate. It brings down everything to its bare essentials. It also makes it easy for the eyes to freeze a moment into a postcard. Every detail against a backdrop of white. Quite a beautiful for a “short afternoon walk”.
28 December
So, you get the logic, by now. -6* = perfect for a night out. -7*, an afternoon walk. -3*? Warm enough to go out swimming in an outdoor pool. There, as you are chest-deep in thermal water, is the perfect spot to look up the sky and watch the snow fall.
29 December
It’s -13.5*, let’s go visit the mayor of the town. It’s -10*, let’s go check out a nearby castle. It’s only -3*, we still can go see a wooden Church.
30 December
It’s -16.5*, perfect day to drive up to Prague for the New Year’s.
Slovaks are so used to the snow, the moment some little snowfall would come, the city trucks are there immediately to erase them off the streets before they accumulate, perhaps even before they could fall.
But the winter that I welcomed into my tropical sensibilities, and carried home with me back into the islands, it’s still frozen within the walls of my warm memories, unstained, unmelting. // Unshod Rover for Oasis Holidays
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For guided tours as well as other tour and travel packages in Europe, you may contact our subsidiary Volando Tours.  

For Tour and Travels India as well as International packages from India, please contact us at Oasis Holidays

Unshod Rover is a worldwide-eyed wanderer currently based in Bangalore, India. You may follow his musings and journeys on this blog. "All Rover the World" chronicles his continuing travels wandering about the world and stumbling upon strangers.

How Indians kill time in airports before the flight departure gates open ;)

Airports are crazy places. Generally they're exceptionally busy, and the larger ones in the country can be quite big and confusing. Often the security measures can also be quite intimidating.In this article we'd like to walk you through how Indians kill time in airports before the flight departure gates open ;)


1) Search desperately for Free Airport Wi-Fi



2) Find phone charging ports frantically



3) Use the entire lounge seating to stretch out and sleep like its :"Mera Baps" 



4) Go to the gate every 10 minutes and ask the staff if the flight is delayed (even if the screen shows scheduled on-time departure details)



5) Ponder if its worth buying a coffee for rs.60 versus inside the airport versus Rs.10 outside



6) Social Networking: selfies with the chairs, selfies in the restrooms, selfies with planes taking off in the background...selfies...selfiesss....till its time to go to point number 2.



Please feel free to add in your pointers too if it does tickle your funny bones.. :)

Dear Nippon Maru: A Letter to a Japanese Ship (and its possible reply)




In 2003, together with more than 300 youth leaders, we sailed around Southeast Asia and Japan aboard a ship named Nippon Maru (literally "Japanese circle"). For more than a month, we lived in the spirit of cultural exchange and camaraderie despite our differences. As young leaders, we were welcomed in every port of call like ambassadors, earning an audience with prominent leaders like then Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri, and with Emperor Akihito with wife Empress Michiko. 


A day before we left the ship (which also signalled Nippon Maru's last sail for the program after decades of service), I wrote this letter in behalf of the other participating youths. 






Dear Nippon Maru,

This morning, I woke up with the ocean in my head constantly moving against my temples as if it was angry that I have forgotten about it during my sleep. While some would call this seasickness, I think that this is an awakening, a call to remember.

It seemed like it was just a day ago when you welcomed us, all 300 -plus youth leaders from Southeast Asia and Japan, into your halls and cabins. Experiencing for the first time your warmth and comfort, we were like stray waves that have found a temporary shore by your presence.

This morning, I wish I could skip the morning exercise just to stay in my room and recall the many times I spent bedridden because of seasickness. Or the times I prepared and opened gifts for and from our homestay families . Or the cup noodles I shared with my cabin mates over conversations that ranged from culture to souvenir prices.

I would like to skip breakfast and just marvel at the assortment of food that we get to eat three times a day, witness how the crew happily present us our meals, and just look at the immortal ocean through the windows.  I would like to be free for the whole day and just run around you – entering your rooms, opening doors, bumping on the walls, and climbing up and down the stairs. Just to memorize the secrets of your cabins, your halls and lounges, and the decks, I would like to run my fingers again on their floors, walls, and even ceilings.

But then, I could just sit here in my cabin and look at myself in the mirror.

What have I become because of you? Every part of my face has an answer. My eyes glow with a vision of a world of peace and understanding. My nose, proud that I have done something to bridge the gaps of my ignorance and prejudices.  My lips, joined together to savor a thousand words in various languages that have linked the ASEAN to Japan.

My skin remains eager to feel the texture of national costumes being exchanged every occasion, and the geography of the palms that have travelled across the borders of color and culture.

My ears just can’t stop expanding even after listening to a thousand speeches, and morning and night calls. They long for more songs, greetings and prayers, which have transcended beyond the barriers of language and religion.











This morning, I broke my face with a smile shaped like a boat sailing in the ocean of my memories of you, Nippon Maru. You have been a pillar and a bridge, a home to us.

If they say a picture paints a thousand  words, and a face could launch a thousand ships, you are the Ship that has launched a thousand journeys of young people honing their leadership skills to bring about unity.

Tonight, I will not give up my memories of you to sleep.  Instead, I will dream about you.  As I wake up to another morning, I will remember you.

It will take just a second to close my eyes and go back to a place where we joined our efforts to build a better world. And no amount of seasickness could stop me from humming over and over again… “Nippon Maru, sailing the blue, blue ocean…”

Yours in gratitude and remembrance,

Participating Youths of 2003






Dear Participating Youths of 2003,

I feel sorry that you woke up this morning with the ocean in your head, but for what it’s worth, I’d like to tell you that I’ve been living with the ocean for so long. I feel how you feel.

If I were your fingers, I would already look like prunes after soaking myself in saltwater for thirty years.  But why am I still here?

A wise man said that if you want to create sailors, don’t send them to the forest to gather wood and build a ship. Instead, let them long for the deepest sea.

I’ve been travelling ever since. But the ocean still remains a mystery to me. I still find it difficult to understand its temper and moods.

Now, we only have a day or two to spend together. I will go back as an empty box floating without a star to reach for. You are all my paddles and we both long for that one island of peace and unity.  I have been a wishing well for all your dreams.

Tonight, I want to share the sky with you. I want to console myself with the thought that  as we part, we’ll always share the same moon. For as long as there are seas, I will always reach you. Let the waters be the bond between our souls.

Tonight, I hope the stars would reflect the memories we share with each other. In the dark sky, let them paint a picture of our experiences.

I will always remember how you ran around me to smell the morning air, how you gathered in my arms singing songs, and how you discovered my secret pockets, and spent perhaps, the best times of your life.

I can only hope that these empty halls of mine would house the echoes of your laughter  and songs, and would rock me once in a while in my silent moments.

For tonight, let the waves of goodbye transport us to that place where we fear to tread on, but eventually we will reach there.  And yes, let your smile be a boat in the ocean of our memories.

For tonight, let me cradle your first steps toward your dreams.
For tonight, let me experience seasickness.
Let me savor the saltiness of tears.  Let me cry.

Yours in memory and experience,


Nippon Maru