PORTOROZ, SLOVENIA...2000 km via Budapest
filmed Slavko Franca
on 10.6.2018
ZAGREB COST OF LIVING | Monthly Digital Nomad Croatia Living Costs
Cost of living in Croatia vlog. Today we share our monthly living costs as digital nomads in Zagreb... ✈ How to become a digital nomad:
We recently covered a cost video on Croatia, as we walked around the streets of Zagreb covering some daily costs along with some of our more broad living costs by day. Todays video goes deeper into our monthly costs as digital nomads in Zagreb.
This is a pure cost of living video for a 30 day period in Zagreb, of course it is purely based on our experience only so should be used as a guide to work out your own costs if you plan on planning your travel here or passing through Croatia.
We probably should mention how cool Croatia is and Zagreb in particular. Zagreb is a highly underrated city and one of our fav places that we've stayed longer termish as digital nomads. Great internet speeds, good coffee and pretty decent living costs are all perfectly aligned with the nomad lifestyle.
I mentioned a bunch of links and resources in the video, I think this was all of them:
1) Learn how to travel full-time —
2) Travel Insurance / Instant Quote —
3) Travel Insurance / Blog Post —
4) $25 Off Hotel Bookings —
5) $40 Off Airbnb —
6) Cost Of Living Playlist ‚—
7) BEST VPN = proXPN, use save4769 to save 50% off —
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✈ TRAVEL FULL-TIME:
Join 1,000+ others and learn the steps and secrets of how to travel full-time. No bullsh*t, just pure information gold with 220 pages covering everything we know in one place. Learn more here:
VIDEO EDITING:
Learn how to edit like us—
▬▬▬
SUPPORT:
Enjoying our content? For the cost of a coffee you can help us keep creating videos, look here —
▬▬▬
OUR GEAR:
➜ Main camera —
➜ Our filming gear —
➜ Travel equipment —
➜ Our site —
▬▬▬
DEALS FOR YOU:
► $25 USD hotel cash —
► Get $40 USD FREE, Airbnb Sign Up —
► Book & Merch Discounts —
▬▬▬
TRAVEL RESOURCES:
✈ Best Hotel Cost Comparison —
✈ Amazing Travel Insurance —
✈ Best VPN deal —
▬▬▬
SHOP OUR STUFF:
❤ Get Some D&S Merch —
❤ Our Full-Time Travel Book/Guide —
❤ One Off PayPal Donations — info@danegerandstacey.com
❤ Patreon Support —
▬▬▬
LET'S BE FRIENDS:
★ Instagram —
★ Facebook —
★ Twitter —
▬▬▬
ABOUT US:
We're Dane & Stacey, full-time travellers, digital nomads, publishers and YouTubers from New Zealand. We share vlogs on countries we visit like most travel vloggers, but we're a little different as well. Slow Travel is what defines us — renting an apartment to spend longer exploring a city, sharing local life and going deeper into cultures and experiences. Ultimately our goal is to create informative, fun and cinematic videos, be sure to subscribe to follow along
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#croatia #digitalnomad #costofliving
NOMAD - Wywiad
Taki o malutki wywiadzik z moją osobą - troszkę beznadziejnie posklejane ale ważne, że jest (y)
NOMAD - Hitscan player - 4.2K SR Peak
Slovenia Diaries Day 3 - Krvavec
Riding Krvavec bike park near Ljubljana
travelbook 2008: the video
some clips from my camera, stitched into a 7 minutes video.
Songs:
Michael Buble - La vie en Rose
Theme from Lonely Planet Globe Trekker
IS CROATIA EXPENSIVE? Zagreb Kuna to Dollar Cost of Living | Croatia Prices Travel Vlog
Is Croatia expensive? Find out the prices in Croatia with US Dollar to Kuna conversion. The Zagreb cost of living is...⬇ Click 'Show More' ⬇ Learn to travel full-time:
In this travel vlog from Zagreb we look at the cost of living in Croatia - is Croatia Expensive is one of the most common questions we get, so thought it was best we dedicate a whole video to the prices. Today we tackled price of food, coffee, restaurants, gyms, coffees, super markets and more. If you're wanting to know the cost of living this is the one! We have Dollar to KN as well :)
► AIR BNB: $40 credit —
► HOTELS: $25 cash —
Oh, except for the other video on OUR living costs we'll share in a few weeks time! That will cover the full costs of everything we spent during our one month travel or stay in Zagreb down to the final cent, again with a Kuna to US Dollar conversion to ease the pain of figuring it out... we got you!
So what's your thoughts on the costs of Croatia? Let us know in the comments if you think Zagreb is expensive and how that converts to US Dollar for you - we'd be very curious to hear! Also, any other costs that would be helpful next time we do a video on different costs? Hit is in the comments below.
Want to see more living cost videos? Check out this playlist:
▬▬▬
✈ TRAVEL FULL-TIME:
Join 1,000+ others and learn the steps and secrets of how to travel full-time. No bullsh*t, just pure information gold with 220 pages covering everything we know in one place. Learn more here:
VIDEO EDITING:
Learn how to edit like us—
▬▬▬
SUPPORT:
Enjoying our content? For the cost of a coffee you can help us keep creating videos, look here —
▬▬▬
OUR GEAR:
➜ Main camera —
➜ Our filming gear —
➜ Travel equipment —
➜ Our site —
▬▬▬
DEALS FOR YOU:
► $25 USD hotel cash —
► Get $40 USD FREE, Airbnb Sign Up —
► Book & Merch Discounts —
▬▬▬
TRAVEL RESOURCES:
✈ Best Hotel Cost Comparison —
✈ Amazing Travel Insurance —
✈ Best VPN deal —
▬▬▬
SHOP OUR STUFF:
❤ Get Some D&S Merch —
❤ Our Full-Time Travel Book/Guide —
❤ One Off PayPal Donations — info@danegerandstacey.com
❤ Patreon Support —
▬▬▬
LET'S BE FRIENDS:
★ Instagram —
★ Facebook —
★ Twitter —
▬▬▬
ABOUT US:
We're Dane & Stacey, full-time travellers, digital nomads, publishers and YouTubers from New Zealand. We share vlogs on countries we visit like most travel vloggers, but we're a little different as well. Slow Travel is what defines us — renting an apartment to spend longer exploring a city, sharing local life and going deeper into cultures and experiences. Ultimately our goal is to create informative, fun and cinematic videos, be sure to subscribe to follow along
▬▬▬
#croatiatravel #croatiaprices #costofcroatia
MUSIC:
GlobulDub - Moods
WHEELS OF LIFE
THROUGHOUT OUR LIVES WE ARE DEPENDENT ON MANY WHEELS, FROM PRE-BIRTH TO THE GRAVE.
Most authorities regard the wheel as one of the oldest and most important inventions, which originated in ancient Mesopotamia in the 5th millennium BC (Ubaid period), originally in the function of potter's wheels. Near the northern side of the Caucasus several graves were found, in which since 3700 BC people had been buried on wagons and carts. The earliest depiction of what may be a wheeled vehicle (here a wagon—four wheels, two axles), is on the Bronocice pot, a ca. 3500 BC clay pot excavated in southern Poland.[4]
The wheel reached Europe and Western Asia in the 4th millennium BC, and the Indus Valley by the 3rd millennium BC. In China, the wheel is certainly present with the adoption of the chariot in ca. 1200 BC,[5] although Barbieri-Low (2000) argues for earlier Chinese wheeled vehicles, circa 2000 BC. Whether there was an independent invention of the wheel in East Asia or whether the concept made its way there after jumping the Himalayan barrier remains an open question.
Although they did not develop the wheel proper, the Olmec and certain other western hemisphere cultures seem to have approached it, as wheel-like worked stones have been found on objects identified as children's toys dating to about 1500 BC.[6] Early antiquity Nubians used wheels for spinning pottery and waterwheels.[7][8] It is thought that Nubian waterwheels may have been ox-driven[9] It is also known that Nubians used horse-driven chariots imported from Egypt.[10]
The invention of the wheel thus falls in the late Neolithic, and may be seen in conjunction with the other technological advances that gave rise to the early Bronze Age. Note that this implies the passage of several wheel-less millennia even after the invention of agriculture. Looking back even further, it is of some interest that although paleoanthropologists now date the emergence of anatomically modern humans to ca.150,000 years ago, 143,000 of those years were wheel-less. That people with capacities fully equal to our own walked the earth for so long before conceiving of the wheel may be initially surprising, but populations were extremely small through most of this period and the wheel, which requires an axle and socket to actually be useful, is not as simple a device as it may seem. Also, a wheeled vehicle can only be used when harnessed to a draft animal. Cattle was domesticated c. 8000 BCE, and horse c. 4000 BCE. Only with the domestication of the horse did the wheel show its true potential in Eurasia. Making and balancing a wheel also requires a skilled wheelwright, a profession limited to organized societies.
Wide usage of the wheel was probably delayed because smooth roads were needed for wheels to be effective.[11] Carrying goods on the back would have been the preferred method of transportation over surfaces that contained many obstacles. The lack of developed roads prevented wide adoption of the wheel for transportation until well into the 20th century in less developed areas.
Early wheels were simple wooden disks with a hole for the axle. Because of the structure of wood a horizontal slice of a trunk is not suitable, as it does not have the structural strength to support weight without collapsing; rounded pieces of longitudinal boards are required.
The spoked wheel was invented more recently, and allowed the construction of lighter and swifter vehicles. The earliest known examples are in the context of the Andronovo culture, dating to ca 2000 BC. Shortly later, horse cultures of the Caucasus region used horse-drawn spoked-wheel war chariots for the greater part of three centuries. They moved deep into the Greek peninsula where they joined with the existing Mediterranean peoples to give rise, eventually, to classical Greece after the breaking of Minoan dominance and consolidations led by pre-classical Sparta and Athens. Celtic chariots introduced an iron rim around the wheel in the 1st millennium BC. The spoked wheel had been in continued use without major modification until the 1870s CE, when wire wheels and pneumatic tires were invented.[12]
The invention of the wheel has also been important for technology in general, important applications including the water wheel, the cogwheel (see also antikythera mechanism), the spinning wheel, and the astrolabe or torquetum. More modern descendants of the wheel include the propeller, the jet engine, the flywheel (gyroscope) and the turbine.
wikipedia
Slovenia VIII 2012
Kobariski Stol i Lijac
(AV17780) Slovenia and the European Union Financial Crisis
Description: Slovenia and the European Union Financial Crisis
Lecturer: Roman Kirn
Date Created: 10/14/11
Original Creator: University Lecture Series
Original Format: CD-DA
Original Digital Format: .WAV File
Ancient Roman Hot Spring Baths in England | Bath, Somerset | England Road Trip Travel Vlog 3
After starting out our England road trip in Bristol, our next stop was the historical city of Bath in Somerset! In this travel vlog, we visit the ancient Roman Baths (hot springs), built more than 2000 years ago, and we also try some traditional food from the area, the Bath bun!
⭐Location: Bath, Somerset
The YHA is an awesome charitable organisation with great places to stay all over England & Wales. You can see where we stayed here:
⭐Music:
⭐Help support future videos by becoming a Patreon:
You can also find us on:
⭐INSTAGRAM:
⭐FACEBOOK:
Our Equipment:
⭐Camera:
⭐Lens:
⭐Drone:
⭐Gimbal camera:
⭐Action camera:
……………………………………….
We are an English travelling couple who met in Thailand, got engaged in Czech Republic and have continued to travel the world together ever since!
Our most recent challenge was leaving the UK with just £500 between us and the aim to create a sustainable travel lifestyle!
We work online and aim to spread the message of “Earn Less, Live More”, which encourages people to question their definition of success, and to pursue what makes them truly happy instead of chasing only money.
Creating this location independent lifestyle has helped us through depression and given us an incredible opportunity to make our lives more fulfilling. We want others to do the same and join us on this full time travel and digital nomad journey!
LIVING ON THE ROAD (& social media break)
I MOVED TO A NEW CHANNEL :)
???? Click here:
???? The trailer for the channel:
Vertigo (choreography workshop, mentor: Eduardo Torroja)
Workshop schedule: 23.-26.09.2013, Ljubljana.
Public presentation: 27. Sept. 2013 -- MSUM/U3
CoFestival is the meeting of three contemporary dance festivals in one -Modul Dance produced by Kina Šiška, Pleskavica produced by Fičo baleta and Nomad Dance Academy Slovenia, and MedUkrep produced by PTL -- Dance Theatre Ljubljana. This year's edition CoFestival under the common moto The Art of Co-living runs in two parts: from 17th to 21st June and from 23th to 26th September 2013.
Within the programme MedUkrep by Dance Theatre Ljubljana, the second cycle of the platform ]open-closed[ will be held from 24rd to 27th September, when people will be invited to join the already existing group from the workshop of Matej Kejžar. The choreography workshop with the working title Vertigo will run as an open methodological process which will attempt to think choreography based on creating dance in different spaces. The mentor of the process will be Eduardo Torroja who collaborated with Wim Vandekeybus from the very beginning of the renowned dance company Ultima Vez, being a dancer and assistant director in Wim Vandekeybus very first dance performance What The Body Does Not Remember(1987).
About the workshop
Participants will explore and confront Vandekeybus' energetic vocabulary through floorwork, partner- and contact work, and movement as a 'theatrical act' rather than as a 'technique'.
About the mentor
Eduardo Torroja was born in Madrid, Spain, where he studied dance and theatre. In 1986 moved to Brussels to collaborate with Wim Vandekeybus as a choreography assistant, trainer and performer for the very first Ultima Vez productions What The Body Does Not Remember(1987), Les Porteuses de Mauvaises Nouvelles(1989), The Weight of a Hand(1990) and the film Roseland(1991).
During the nineties, he worked with Rosas -- Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker in Erts and Mozart -Concertaria's: Un Moto di Gioia. And also with Needcompany -- Jan Lauwers -- Grace Ellen Barkey in Rood-Red-Rouge, Morning Song, The Miraculous Mandarin, Caligula and King Lear.
He signed the choreography of Starmania, a french-canadian rock opera directed by Lewis Furey (1993-2000).
He has undertaken the teaching of Hands (P.A.R.T.S. -- Brussels and IT Dansa -- Barcelona), Frisking (State School of Athens and Ballet des Jeunes d'Europe) and a duo from Les Porteuses de Mauvaises Nouvelles (Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris) and has given Ultima Vez repertoire workshops in Leuven, Volgograd, Brussels, Madrid, Amsterdam, Seville, Rotterdam, Lisbon, etc.
In 2000 he moved back to Madrid and since then he is acting in film, TV and theatre productions, assisting director for films and going back to Brussels for different projects: artistic assistant for Ultima Vez Blush(2002) and Sonic Boom(2003)...
Getaway | Portugal with David Reyne Part 2 of 3
Join David Reyne for part 2 of 3 of his journey with Scenic through Portugal and the Douro Valley.
This week, David journeys east all the way to the Spanish border, visiting some of the Douro Valley's most enchanting towns, some of which are now virtually deserted, like Tarouca, the site of Portugal's first cistercian monastery, founded in 1124.
Later on, David crosses the border to Salamanca, to visit Spain's famous Golden city, where the history of Salamanca goes back over 2,000 years.
Learn more about Portugal river cruises:
Evil Eddie Richards in Cyprus 18/08/2007
Evil Eddie Richards @ Boat Party for Fire island performed on 18/08/2007 (This is why they call him Evil!) recorded by P.S.
How Kai Started a Full-Time Amazon Business in 6 months, Traveling on Remote Year | LTLP Ep #1
***UPDATE SEPTEMBER 2016!!***
Our product did over $209k in sales volume our first year (about $50k net profit after $16k initial investment) .. over 5,000 units sold! That was an average of 16 units per day the first year! Safe to say it was a successful product????
Also, due to popular demand of Amazon questions and after helping many subscribers get started.. I'm recording my own AMAZON COURSE!
It's a bunch of screenshare videos and PDF's going thru what worked about our product selection process, why our product did so well, and how to set everything up from sourcing from China to importing to Amazon FBA (we screwed it up our first time) to optimizing your sales page.
To join the email list about the next course opening, go to my blog at
Also feel free to comment your questions below anytime!
Peace from Chiang Mai, Thailand!
????
***
Show notes:
REMOTE YEAR? WTF is that??
[sry the connection gets bad at the end there... just skip ahead 30 secs..]
For yall who ain't know, and Kai is the #1 reason we got into selling on Amazon back in January in Chiang Mai, and he's been helping us the whole way ever since...
He's currently in Croatia, on month 4 of traveling the world on this Remote Year thingy... where he got selected to be one of 75 (out of 25,000) remote employees, online business owners and freelancers who applied to go on this year-long round-the-world trip/experiment to work, live, and travel in 12 different countries in 12 months....pretty tight, right?....
It's crazy cuz I saw him make his first dollar online in November and go on to making a full-time traveling income by January .... i know...... Just check out his blog page of all the places he's been and the shit he's done in the past 6 months... ( ...and also his Instagram ( ... a lot of cool stuff for just 6 months....
Summary:
- It starts by reading The 4-Hour Workweek (that's a given)
- Kai worked a sales job and saved 20+ grand
- Quit job, moved to Chiang Mai to attend E-commerce conference and live cheaply in the Digital Nomad Capital of the World.
- Invested $1,000 in 100 'test units' of a hot-selling Amazon Product (buy wholesale from Alibaba.com and Private-Label your own logo and box)
- Went all-in with a 20k investment of 2,000 units (the more you can afford to invest the better)
- Gave away 250 units to friends and Facebook review groups to get 100 reviews ASAP.
- Used Feedbackgenuis.com email follow-up system to ask customers to leave Seller Feedback ratings, then auto-email those people to also leave a Product Review rating.
- Started traveling within 3 months of launch
- Hired an employee in the Philippines to handle little customer service messages
- Launched second product within 6 months
- Applied for the 'Remote Year' among 25,000 applicants
- Now working in a new country each month with 75 digital nomads
- Making $7,000-$8,000 a month
- 'Maintaining' the business 4-hours per week
- Spending the rest of his 'computer time' researching other investments, businesses, and income streams.
4HWW Assignment complete. Go do whatever TF u want.
Best Advice:
- Hang around people who want to do the same thing, i.e. other 4HWW-business minded people
- Take that leap of faith - find an excuse.
- Once you get around people who are ahead of you already living it, it starts to become real
- Chiang Mai is the cheapest diginomad city to live to quit your job and get started.
LINKS!
Kai's blog:
and Instagram:
Johnny's blog: the blog that introduced both of us to Chiang Mai and got us started at the DropshipLifestyle Conference October 2014,
RESOURCES TO GET STARTED ON AMAZON:
How we got here / our story:
Good podcasts:
Ryan Moran:
YouTube Channel:
The Amazing Seller:
YouTube Channel:
Gregor Kamnikar dance performance How to make mistake
Gregor Kamnikar dance performance How to make mistake - 10000waves, the 10th wave at Laboratory and Platform for Profound Dance My Neighbour vol.3 at Hostel Celica in Ljubljana, Slovenia, 27th March 2009.
- Gregor Kamnikar is researcher of physical intelligence (plazma.ops.si). His work
stems in contemporary dance (dancer, choreographer, teacher, lecturer). Most
of his creative work spins around devising a game with a name Commoveo
(commoveo.ops.si).
Slovenya'da Troy (Kanal D)
Sn. Bağış Slovenya'da Troy açılışında
po**o idiot::cefurji.net
pojebo idijot
Serbia to Montenegro (by train), Backwards
The cities seen in Serbia are Užice(stop) then Valjevo, before ending in Belgrade, which is not visible. The route is Belgrade-Bar.
Edit: In-the-field sounds left intact at border section, Užice, and brief dialogue(you can hear me try to speak Serbian) at final stop in BG. Sound effect of train used throughout otherwise(noticed?). Since I used a camcorder and it was usually physically outside of train car window while shooting, the built-in mic picked up wind noise to the point where I couldn't use natural sound. Tilt-shift video effect used throughout.