Where else would you rather be?

Follow the travels of Tim and Tim on this blog - We will regularly post updates on our whereabouts on the globe; new pictures and new videos of our latest trips to keep you all energized and ready for that next adventure!

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Travel Oz

If you haven't yet, make sure you check out our work for Travel Oz on ABC1 in Australia, 6pm Wednesday nights.

For other regions check your local guides. 
  • Asia-Pacific: Australia Channel
  • Europe, Africa and Middle East: Europe Travel Channel
For now, here's a little taste from the wonderful world of Youtube...

Travel Oz Season 2: SS Yongala Dive


 

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FROM THE HEART

- The travel bug really is an insatiable disease. It doesn’t matter how much we travel, it just gets stronger and stronger, it actually seems like the more we do travel, the more we want to travel, there is always that place we didn’t get to, or that experience we missed out on, or that country just nextdoor we didn’t have time to visit.. “next time!” we always say - And that’s the curse…

- Probably the best part of our job is how each day we are doing something completely different to the last. One day we might be hanging with a group of super-trendy Tokyo socialites in Harajuku and the next we are on our way to a poverty-stricken region of Sub-Saharan Africa! This actually happened on our last trip…

- We got into this because we love to travel. The whole filming, presenting, TV thing came second. We now love more than anything to capture moments while we are on the road with our cameras but essentially, it all started out of a love for traveling and a passion for other cultures.

- Through our filming we have had the opportunity to spend time in some extremely poor and isolated places and it in these areas where we have learned the most about ourselves and our human connection to the earth. It almost seems like the happiest people we have ever come across are from the situations with the least monetary wealth. Some places in Africa or Papua New Guinea where people live a completely subsistence lifestyle without a cent but rich in their natural abilities, where their next meal depends on their ability to spear a fish or grow enough taro in their garden, is truly inspirational. It makes us question our own values and our own connection to the planet.