2 |
By hitchhiking around the world, I really mean stading beside a road with your thumb up and hoping somebody picks you up, no hot air baloons or hiking. I also did not mean that you must go around the equator, that seems unnecessary to me.
|
2 |
By hitchhiking around the world, I really mean stading beside a road with your thumb up and hoping somebody picks you up, no hot air baloons or hiking. I also did not mean that you must go around the equator, that seems unnecessary to me.
|
3 |
I
am
not
sure
how
to
fit
crossing
the
ocean
into
the
equation,
though.
If
one
was
allowed
to
flight
across
the
ocean,
the
challenge
would
be
easy
-
according
to
these
maps
https://en.
mapy.
cz/s/fozepedohu,
Prague
to
Hanoi
is
12
000
km
/
122
hrs
of
driving,
which,
with
a
speed
of
6
hrs
per
day
is
like
21
days.
Sure,
with
border
crossings,
etc.
,
it
would
take
longer,
but
it
is
still
not
much.
USA
is
crossable
in
8
days
and
once
you
get
your
final
flight
from
New
York
to
Spain/Western
Europe,
you
are
in
Czech
Republic
in
3/4
days
at
max.
But
with
ships,
it
might
be
much
more
difficult.
There
are
some
ways,
supposedly,
to
cross
the
Atlantic
and
Pacific
for
free
-
you
can
work
as
a
crew
on
some
yacht
and
in
return
you
do
not
pay
for
the
journey.
That
would
however
require
some
ship
sailing
skills.
I
also
thought
that
if
one
was
able
to
get
all
the
way
up
to
Vladivostok,
that
maybe
it
would
be
ok
just
to
take
a
ferry
and
pay
for
it
(
I
would
consider
it
to
be
ok
according
to
the
rules
-
the
journey
across
Asia
would
be
noticeably
longer
and
there
is
still
the
ship,
which
is
much
slower
than
an
airplane)
.
Previously
I
thought
that
it
would
be
even
better
to
get
further
up
and
east,
near
Bering
strait
and
find
some
ferry
there,
but
looking
at
the
map,
it
seems
that
that
part
of
the
world
is
even
emptier
than
I
thought,
so
that
does
not
seem
possible.
Also,
hitchhiking
across
Russia
from
West
to
East
does
not
seem
wise
either
(
but
getting
through
China
to
Vladivostok
should
be
ok)
.
|
3 |
I
am
not
sure
how
to
fit
crossing
the
ocean
into
the
equation,
though.
If
one
was
allowed
to
flight
across
the
ocean,
the
challenge
would
be
easy
-
according
to
these
maps
https://en.
mapy.
cz/s/fozepedohu
,
Prague
to
Hanoi
is
12
000
km
/
122
hrs
of
driving,
which,
with
a
speed
of
6
hrs
per
day
is
like
21
days.
Sure,
with
border
crossings,
etc.
,
it
would
take
longer,
but
it
is
still
not
much.
USA
is
crossable
in
8
days
and
once
you
get
your
final
flight
from
New
York
to
Spain/Western
Europe,
you
are
in
Czech
Republic
in
3/4
days
at
max.
But
with
ships,
it
might
be
much
more
difficult.
There
are
some
ways,
supposedly,
to
cross
the
Atlantic
and
Pacific
for
free
-
you
can
work
as
a
crew
on
some
yacht
and
in
return
you
do
not
pay
for
the
journey.
That
would
however
require
some
ship
sailing
skills.
I
also
thought
that
if
one
was
able
to
get
all
the
way
up
to
Vladivostok,
that
maybe
it
would
be
ok
just
to
take
a
ferry
and
pay
for
it
(
I
would
consider
it
to
be
ok
according
to
the
rules
-
the
journey
across
Asia
would
be
noticeably
longer
and
there
is
still
the
ship,
which
is
much
slower
than
an
airplane)
.
Previously
I
thought
that
it
would
be
even
better
to
get
further
up
and
east,
near
Bering
strait
and
find
some
ferry
there,
but
looking
at
the
map,
it
seems
that
that
part
of
the
world
is
even
emptier
than
I
thought,
so
that
does
not
seem
possible.
Also,
hitchhiking
across
Russia
from
West
to
East
does
not
seem
wise
either
(
but
getting
through
China
to
Vladivostok
should
be
ok)
.
|
4 |
With ships, I think that 80 days around the world is quite realistic (waiting in the port for some time before the ship departs, a week or so across Atlantic, more across Pacific). What do you think?
|
4 |
With ships, I think that 80 days around the world is quite realistic (waiting in the port for some time before the ship departs, a week or so across Atlantic, more across Pacific). What do you think?
|