Traveling the Equator and Polar Circle (Top 5 Countries to Visit) + How Climate Change Impacts Locals with Gunnar Garfors

Traveling the Equator and Polar Circle (Top 5 Countries to Visit) + How Climate Change Impacts Locals with Gunnar Garfors

What can we actually learn about climate change when we stop reading headlines and start listening to the people living it? Gunnar Garfors is the first person to travel to every country in the world not once, but twice. He’s a Norwegian adventurer, journalist, and author whose latest project took him across the equator, the Arctic Circle, and the Antarctic region to explore the lived experiences of climate change. His new book, Mellom Linjene (Between the Lines), captures these human stories behind the headlines, showing us how the changing climate is affecting the lives of fishermen, farmers, city dwellers, and Indigenous peoples from the Amazon rainforest to the ice desert of Greenland. Gunnar shares his experience researching and writing his book and recounts the very real ways climate change is reshaping the planet’s most climate-vulnerable zones. We talk through five of his favorite countries along the Arctic Circle and the equator, weaving together adventure, personal stories, and eye-opening conversations with locals on the ground. Gunnar’s first-person encounters with reindeer herders, farmers, fishermen, and locals living at the edges of the world help paint a fuller, more human picture of what’s happening. You’ll hear how polar bears are wandering into villages in search of food, why Amazonian ferry rides matter, and what it’s like to get called out on the Congo River for representing the global north. How is climate change affecting the places you care about or the way you think about travel? I'd love to hear your thoughts, and I hope you’ll share by sending me an audio message. Premium Passport: Get ad-free episodes, exclusive content, and access to all episodes for only $3/month. Subscribe now! Tune In To Learn: Why Gunnar retraced his steps across 21 countries and Antarctica despite already visiting every country twice What ticks, shifting seasons, and reindeer behavior are revealing climate changes in Finland What a screaming fox in Canada had to say about a massive landslide and how melting snow and rising rivers are reshaping northern communities How the Amazon River’s disappearing waterways are affecting transportation, food access, and entire communities Why fishermen in São Tomé and Príncipe are traveling farther for fewer fish, and what a disappearing rainy season means for daily life What it’s like to spend five days on a cargo barge in the Congo (with very little food and a lot of humidity) How climate change is forcing rural farmers in the DRC to question the cause and confront visitors with unexpected responsibility Why telling personal stories might be the most powerful way to talk about climate change Advice to travelers who want to get out of the Western bubble and witness these changes firsthand And so much more Resources: Join Zero To Travel Premium Passport Sign up for our FREE newsletter Visit Gunnar’s website Follow on Instagram Want More? Top 7 Up-And-Coming Destinations to Visit (Before They Get Crowded) With Gunnar Garfors Visiting Every County In The World…TWICE! With Gunnar Garfors World Tour for Climate Change: Hitchhiking, Biking, and Low-Carbon Travel With Megan Routbort Thanks To Our Sponsors Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

Jaksot(300)

Counterintuitive Advice on Selling Online, Starting Before You’re Ready, & Building a Fiction Career with Nat Eliason

Counterintuitive Advice on Selling Online, Starting Before You’re Ready, & Building a Fiction Career with Nat Eliason

What if the best time to start your business or creative pursuit was before you felt fully ready? And what if you didn’t need to follow all of the current “best practices” to market yourself?  Nat Eliason is an entrepreneur and author based in Austin, Texas. Over the past decade, he’s built a career that gives him location freedom through writing, course creation, and now fiction. His debut sci-fi novel Husk: Book 1 of the Meru Initiative, was released in May 2025.  In this episode, Nat returns to share his experience transitioning from nonfiction writer to sci‑fi novelist, revealing the counterintuitive strategies he used to launch Husk and build momentum in the noisy creator economy.  Whether you're building a location-independent business or launching a creative project from anywhere in the world, Nat shares how to take control of your output, challenge “start later” thinking, and embrace the long game. He also opens up about what it takes to be patient in a fast-moving digital world, how he used an experimental marketing mindset to sell his products and books, and the often unseen emotional work of building something sustainably.  What’s one creative project you want to launch? I'd love to hear about it, and I hope you’ll share by sending me an audio message.  Tune In To Learn:  Nate’s journey as an entrepreneur and author, and how he constructed the fictional world of Husk  Insight into balancing the joy of the journey with your bigger goals  Why starting creative work before feeling "ready" may be your strongest move  How to think like a business even while focusing on fiction or creative work  Why Nat says newsletters and funnels are out and where you should focus instead  The creative way that Nat sold his preorders instead of launching through Amazon  Advice for staying motivated before your work gains traction   How the "prep trap" holds creators and entrepreneurs back, and how Nat learned to bypass it  Nat’s favorite fiction book recommendations  And so much more  Resources:  Sign up for our FREE newsletter  Visit Nat’s website  Get the book, Husk  Instagram  Want More?  Lessons From Winning and Losing Millions in Crypto, How To Find Fulfilling Work, Advice for Transitioning to a Creative Career, and Creating Unlimited Upside With Nat Eliason  How to Grow Your Location Independent Solopreneur Business in 2025 + Advice from 8 Years of Slow, Nomadic Travel with Jeremy Enns  An Interview With John Craigie: Notes From The Road  Thanks To Our Sponsors  Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card.  Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

9 Syys 1h 25min

The Elements of AlUla: Arabia’s Lost City and the Heritage of Earth

The Elements of AlUla: Arabia’s Lost City and the Heritage of Earth

Today, I’ve got a special episode from The Elements of AlUla, a travel docuseries produced by Armchair Productions. The company was founded by Aaron Millar, who you may know as the host of The Armchair Explorer podcast.  In this series, Aaron is going to take you on a journey into the heart of one of the most ancient kingdoms on Earth. Located in the northwestern corner of Saudi Arabia, Alula is an oasis in the desert, layered in 200,000 years of human history.  Until recently, it was closed to outsiders, and to this day, only a handful of visitors have ever been. In this immersive documentary recorded on location, we’ll take you to the heart of one of the great wonders of Arabia and give you a glimpse of what it feels like to be there for real.  Highlights Include:  Exploring the ancient city of Hegra. Built by the same people who built Petra in Jordan, Hegra is every bit as spectacular, but only visited by a handful of intrepid travelers.  Visiting Jebel Ikmah, a library of ancient inscriptions carved into stone that reveal life in the desert more than 2,000 years ago.  Riding Arabian horses to petroglyphs in the desert (and nearly falling off).  Meeting a herd of overly friendly camels, with a taste for microphones.  Learning from rawis, local storytellers, about the history of the incense road, a vast trading route that passed through Alula and changed the face of Arabia forever.  Resources:  Sign up for our FREE newsletter  Listen on Apple, Spotify  ExperienceAlula.com  Instagram, Facebook, X  Armchair Productions  Armchair Explorer Podcast  Want More?  Top 3 Life Lessons from the World’s Greatest Adventurers with Aaron Millar (Host of the Armchair Explorer Podcast)  Travel To Utah: Fireside Dances, Ancient Ruins, and the Beauty of Hózhó (Balance)  Exploring San Francisco by Cable Car  Thanks To Our Sponsors  Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card.  Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

4 Syys 48min

15 Years of Sacrifice, Secrets, & Sleeping with Cobras: Refusing an “Ordinary” Life to Build a Lost Paradise with Martin Vrana

15 Years of Sacrifice, Secrets, & Sleeping with Cobras: Refusing an “Ordinary” Life to Build a Lost Paradise with Martin Vrana

What happens when someone gives up security to build a tropical dream on a tiny island, with no job, no plan, and only one light bulb for power? Martin Vrana is the founder of Lost Paradise, a boutique resort he spent nearly 15 years building from scratch on a small island off Bali’s coast. Born and raised in Scandinavia, Martin left a safe life behind to follow an adventurous dream, one that taught him resilience, determination, and the art of creating a life on his own terms. In this episode, Martin tells the story of how he turned a blank plot of land into Lost Paradise resort, through three jobs, relentless determination, and years of overcoming logistical, emotional, and cultural challenges. Martin shares the raw truth behind building Lost Paradise from the ground up: the emotional cost, the logistical nightmares, and the relentless mindset that carried him through. You’ll hear how he navigated burnout, sacrificed relationships, and lived off-grid with no electricity, all while staying anchored to his vision. This story isn’t about overnight success; it’s about what’s possible when you refuse to quit. What wild dream or goal of your are you ready to make happen? I'd love to hear about it, and I hope you’ll share by sending me an audio message. Tune In To Learn: Why he kept the journey secret (even from his own mother) How sourcing reclaimed wood across Indonesia became an epic logistical feat What it felt like to work 450 hours a month to fund a project you’re not sure will succeed How natural disasters and COVID unexpectedly pushed the project forward The emotional toll of isolation, stress, and living off-grid in a half-built bungalow How Martin became part of the community, learning language and culture on the ground Why he calls himself a modern-day adventurer, not a social media entrepreneur What building Lost Paradise taught him about success, freedom, and fulfillment How he’s recovering from the journey and what he’s dreaming up next And so much more Resources: Sign up for our FREE newsletter Lost Paradise Resort Martin on Instagram Watch the YouTube documentary Want More? 100 Documentaries Project: Traveling the Globe to Find Extraordinary Humans + Changing the World One Story at a Time with Robin Danehav How To Go Sailing Around The World with Brian Trautman Bicycling Across the USA Without Money in Search of Human Connection With Daniel Troia Thanks To Our Sponsors: Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card. Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

2 Syys 1h 16min

Remote Roundup: Future Hotspots, Productivity Experiments, Digital Nomadding 2.0 (August 2025)

Remote Roundup: Future Hotspots, Productivity Experiments, Digital Nomadding 2.0 (August 2025)

What does thriving as a long‑term digital nomad look like in 2025? Welcome to our debut episode of Remote Roundup - a new monthly series exploring what's new in remote work and travel, including helpful tools and resources, need‑to‑know trends, destinations, and insight into what it really means to live and work around the world. Caitlin Sunderland is the associate producer, and Janessa is the partnerships manager of the Zero To Travel podcast. Both are digital nomads who’ve embraced the ups and downs of remote work life from all over the world. Caitlin and Janessa open up about navigating burnout, experimenting with work routines, their thoughts on where nomads will be heading next, and what it means to be a “digital nomad 2.0.” You'll hear real stories and reflections on money, mindset, productivity, identity, and the emotional shifts that come with long-term travel.  What did you think of this episode? We’d love to hear your thoughts, and hope you’ll share by sending an audio message. Tune In To Learn: Why one underrated city could be your ideal remote base outside of the Schengen Zone How 4‑hour work containers and energy management can boost focus Advice for experimenting with your routines (without the guilt) Our predictions for the next digital nomad hubs What it means to build a sense of stability and home on the move A wild café policy that had us doing a double-take What rapid‑fire questions reveal behind the scenes of Zero to Travel And so much more Resources: Sign up for our FREE newsletter Caitlin on Instagram Janessa on Instagram Rogue Roundup article Cal Newport Deep Work Want More? Two Paths to Location Independence and Travel (No Skills Required) With Caitlin Sunderland and Janessa Klatt Building a Travel Lifestyle: Digital Nomadism, Slow Travel, Exploring Latin America with Kyle Cohenour The Reality of Digital Nomad Life (Warts and All) With Steph and Dalt Thanks To Our Sponsors: Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card. Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

28 Elo 56min

100 Documentaries Project: Traveling the Globe to Find Extraordinary Humans + Changing the World One Story at a Time with Robin Danehav

100 Documentaries Project: Traveling the Globe to Find Extraordinary Humans + Changing the World One Story at a Time with Robin Danehav

What can happen when a filmmaker decides to spotlight invisible geniuses and hidden stories that change how we see the world? Robin Danehav is a Swedish documentary filmmaker known for embarking on a bold quest to create 100 short films revealing the everyday impact-makers whose stories remain untold. Based in Stockholm and often traveling worldwide, Robin explores humanity, creativity, and empathy through compelling, intimate films. In this episode, Robin shares how the “100 Documentary Project” began, what fuels the journey, and why storytelling rooted in purpose can reshape our lives. Robin shares how a one-year TV course and leap from IT sparked his filmmaking path and why his “100 Documentary Project” became both a purpose and a personal challenge. You’ll hear what it means to reframe your side hustle as your main work, and how traveling to places like Uganda and Bali shaped his storytelling. Robin opens up about the emotional depth he seeks in his subjects, why integrity matters more than clicks, and the biggest creative lesson travel continues to teach him. Whether you’re a storyteller, creator, or traveler, you’ll walk away with new insight into the value of empathy and everyday impact. What hidden stories in your life or community deserve to be shared?  I'd love to hear your thoughts, and I hope you'll share by sending me an audio message. Tune In To Learn: Why a dinner with a pasta maker in Lisbon led Robin to start his filmmaking quest How counting down from 100 shaped the structure and mindset of the project Advice for identifying emotional moments even when subjects are camera‑shy Why reframing the side hustle as your main purpose can change everything How storytelling connects emotion and deeper impact How travel constraints sparked creative solutions on location How collaborating with a mission‑driven coffee company enabled an unforgettable shoot in Uganda Tips for filming long‑form with limited gear and adapting when tech breaks Insight into the editing grind, the “80/20 rule,” and the tweaks that take the longest And so much more Resources: Sign up for our FREE newsletter Robin’s website YouTube Instagram Want More: Making IMAX Films Around the World, Mindful Travel, and Working with Jane Goodall with Mike Day Beyond the Summit: Climbing Mt. Everest, Filming at 29,000 Feet, a Cultural Journey through Nepal, and Taking Your Childhood Dreams to Heart with Alex Harz Immersion Travel: Becoming a Porter in Nepal with Nate Menninger Thanks To Our Sponsors: Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card. Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

26 Elo 1h 5min

Disrupting Travel and Building Community with Beth Santos

Disrupting Travel and Building Community with Beth Santos

Do you ever feel limited by society’s expectations and stereotypes surrounding travel?  When Beth Santos started a travel blog, her goal was to challenge norms by exploring the diverse and shared experiences of women traveling the world. It has since morphed into Wanderful, an international community and social network with over 40,000 active members composed of women and non-binary people of all ages and backgrounds. Aside from this booming online community, Beth has also created WITS Travel Creator + Brand Summit, the Bessie Awards, and the first-ever outdoor women’s festival. This episode is all about rethinking what it means to travel and how the narratives we tell (and believe) can exclude so many people. Beth and I get into how she reconnected with her Portuguese heritage and how that led to a life of travel and leadership. She shares her story of moving to São Tomé and Príncipe in her early 20s, the emotions around not speaking the language of her own family, and how she eventually turned those early experiences into a powerful global community. We talk a lot about what it means to lead with vulnerability, how to build safe and inclusive spaces, and why the dominant solo female travel narrative is way too narrow. Beth also opens up about entrepreneurship, failure, and parenting as a founder.  What are some ways you can create a safe space for others? I'd love to hear some of your ideas and hope you will share by sending me an audio message. *This is a previously released episode from the archives! Zero To Travel interviews are timeless, offering valuable insight whenever you listen. Tune In To Learn: Why "travel" isn’t about miles traveled, but the challenge to your assumptions How Beth’s heritage and a two-year stint in São Tomé shaped her journey Advice on using vulnerability to build authentic, enduring communities How solo female travel is often framed as either romantic or frightening—and why that’s incomplete Why women dominate travel decisions and how that shapes industry narratives How Wanderful links women around the globe with real, local advice How to hold space as a leader—even if "failure" occurs Why the life of a traveling entrepreneur and motherhood aren’t mutually exclusive The story behind Wanderfest—the first outdoor travel festival by and for women Why breaking the rules empowers people to be themselves Resources: Sign up for our FREE newsletter Check out the Wanderful community  Learn more about Beth Santos Connect with Beth on LinkedIn Want More? Inspiring Female Adventurers Series: Around America And Beyond with Renata Chlumska How Words Can Shape Your Life w/ Stephanie James Choosing The Travel Life w/ Rachel Hill Thanks To Our Sponsors Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card. Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

21 Elo 1h 1min

The 5 Best Hacks of “All the Hacks”: Travel, Money & Life Optimization with Chris Hutchins

The 5 Best Hacks of “All the Hacks”: Travel, Money & Life Optimization with Chris Hutchins

What if the secret to unlocking a better life and travel experience lies not in more, but in smarter choices? Chris Hutchins is the host of the “All the Hacks” podcast, where he distills practical strategies across life, money, and travel. An optimizer by nature, Chris has saved millions by breaking down every aspect of life to maximize happiness at the lowest cost. Chris joins me to share the top hacks from his podcast - life-changing mindset shifts that shape how we experience travel, time, and value. You’ll hear how he uses travel as a lens for smarter life decisions, from taking second trips to embracing intentional spending. We talk about the emotional side of optimization, how to avoid over-optimizing, and why some of the best “hacks” are actually mindset shifts. If you've ever questioned whether squeezing in that extra flight or saving those extra points was worth it, this conversation might change how you travel and live. What’s one tiny hack you’ve adopted that’s unexpectedly amplified your joy or efficiency? I'd love to hear your thoughts, and I hope you'll share by sending me an audio message. Tune In To Learn: Why returning to the same destination can unlock a more meaningful travel experience How buying back your time (groceries, errands) can pay more than saving money When it's smarter to spend money instead of optimizing every detail, especially in different seasons of life Surprising things you didn’t know you could negotiate and how a simple ask can save thousands Why buying airline or hotel points during promotions can open up luxury travel for a fraction of the cost How to spot deals that aren’t just discounts, but potential income streams with a little creativity The mindset shift from deal-hunting for its own sake to building long-term value in how you spend and live A simple way to search for unclaimed money that might literally have your name on it Chris’ favorite tools and tech to save time, money, and mental energy with almost no effort Why the best hacks are the ones aligned with your time, energy, and priorities - not just your wallet Resources: Sign up for our FREE newsletter Listen to All the Hacks podcast Coyote game Die with Zero by Bill Perkins The Five Types of Wealth by Sahil Bloom Want More: How to Win at Travel with “The Points Guy” Brian Kelly Top 8 Food Hacks in Europe: How to Find Authentic Culinary Experiences on the Old Continent with Kenny Dunn 10 Key Principles That Built a $40M Business While Traveling with Dan Demsky Thanks To Our Sponsors: Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card. Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

19 Elo 1h 23min

7 Ways to Improve Your Next Road Trip (Lessons from our Norway Family Road Trip) with Anne Dorthe

7 Ways to Improve Your Next Road Trip (Lessons from our Norway Family Road Trip) with Anne Dorthe

Could a loosely planned road trip actually turn out better than a perfectly mapped itinerary?  Anne Dorthe is my wife and travel partner of over 11 years, and a Norwegian local with roots in Trøndelag.   In this episode, Anne and I share the story of our recent open-ended family road trip through Norway. We talk about the lessons we learned along the way, sharing insights that can be applied to anyone planning a more relaxed, rewarding road trip, whether in Norway or somewhere else.  If you’ve ever dreamed about traveling Norway without spending a fortune, this conversation offers a real-world example of how to make it work. You’ll hear about the small, in-the-moment choices that shaped each day, the unplanned stops that became highlights, and how following the weather brought a sense of ease and adventure to the whole trip. We’ll also talk about the joy of connecting with friends along the way, the simple comfort of cabin stays, and why embracing flexibility over a fixed plan deepened our connection to every place we visited.  What’s a spontaneous road trip or travel adventure you took that surprised you by how well it flowed? I’d love to hear your thoughts, and I hope you’ll share by sending me an audio message.  Tune In To Learn:  Why letting go of a rigid schedule created our best family memories  How weather reports guided our route more than any app ever could  The exact approach I used to politely get a hotel refund  How overpacking led to lessons for smarter packing next time  Why cabins felt more authentic than hotels  The power of paper maps and local advice  What it’s like to wild-camp at 900 m with kids  How visiting friends became our travel anchor  How an unplanned ferry ride led to one of Norway’s most beautiful beaches  What it felt like swimming with our kids in Norwegian fjords and lakes  And so much more  Resources:  Sign up for our FREE newsletter  Stiklestad Viking Experience  Want More?  America’s Greatest Road Trip! Key West to Deadhorse: 9,000 Miles Across Backroad USA With Tom Cotter  2,000 KM on Foot From Oslo to the North Cape (With a 4-Year-Old, Husband, and Dog) + Making Big Life Changes With Ingrid Alm  Top 10 Road Trip Albums With Jason Law from Festy GoNuts  Thanks To Our Sponsors  Apple Card - Earn 3% back on the Apple products and services you love with Apple Card.  Booking.com - Book your next stay and find exactly what you’re looking for on booking.com

12 Elo 45min

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