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- Day 147
- Thursday, May 25, 2023
- 🌧 63 °F
- Altitude: 157 ft
SpainCasa Batlló41°23’30” N 2°9’53” E
Gaudi and Pickpockets in Barcelona

Oh Barcelona- last time I was here was in 1996. I have such amazing memories being here, visiting with my mom, for a few days. We walked everywhere, had delicious tapas, and had so much fun!
This has been different - we’re so tired and ready to go home. That said, Barcelona is an amazing city.
Some of the positives of Barcelona:
- seeing everything Gaudi like Sagrada Familia and his house. His architecture - well…I can’t even put it into words - you just have to experience his art and think about his mind worked.
- watching a swing band at the roof of Casa Batllò with the girls at night.
- tapas to me were a huge treat; girls not huge on Iberian ham and seafood. I enjoyed it all!
Main negative:
I got pickpocketed the first time I let down my guard this entire trip! Someone stole my phone while at a very busy store - I didn’t even know until a security guard told me he saw a couple follow me in the store on security cameras and the woman took the phone and passed it off to the man. They got arrested and I got my phone back - hallelujah!
Humbling experience to have travelled around the world and 2 days before I come home to get pickpocketed…hey! That’s part of the experience though right??
————————-
We leave in the AM and will be traveling for about 24 hours to get back home. We can’t wait. This has been an adventure of a lifetime…and more than anything I’m so grateful that both Brian and I got to spend so much time with our girls. They are such special human beings and I know that we won’t get this opportunity probably ever again to spend this much time with them. They’re growing up so quickly and it’s been beautiful to watch!
I hope that these experience will continue to shift and shape their uniqueness in this world; I hope they see that life goes on whether we like it or not; that there are always different ways to look at life, people, cultures, foods, love, and even a landscape. The world can be raw, beautiful, unique, harsh, and comforting all at the same time. It’s kind of how I feel about Gaudi’s work.
We just need to continue to shift our perspective a bit, realize we will always be learning, and we have to be open to continuing to grow as human beings.
This is my last post from the Sellers Family Round-The-World trip! Sellers girls out ❤️ we can’t wait to be home with Brian and the doggies.Read more
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- Day 143
- Sunday, May 21, 2023
- 🌧 63 °F
- Altitude: 23 ft
FranceAnse de la Grande Mer43°12’52” N 5°32’15” E
Croissants + Cats in Cassis, France

We were originally not planning on staying in the South of France but so glad we did! It was rainy and overcast but it was so beautiful and unique!
We stayed at an apartment that stood above small outdoor cafes in a narrow alleyway that stayed open late at night. You could hear the conversations, clinking of the wine glasses, and just felt the difference in the way of life here. Slower - more enjoyable - joie de vivre!
The girls favorite part was the cat - that we lovingly named Cassis (it’s actual name was Maggie who belonged to the people that lived upstairs) that would sit at the door of our apartment and the second we opened the door, would waltz in and act like she owned the place. She was a enormous cat with quite the personality. One tiny little rub and she made biscuits with her paws wherever she was. She snuggled with katie doing school work; she lay down next to Maddie. She walked along the alleyways outside. It was fun!
Our next favorite part was the breakfast at Monsieur Brun café - look at the pictures and see for yourself. Delicious and amazing!
We were sad to leave but happy we’re closer to coming home!! One week left!!
Next stop: lots of trains and then Barcelona!!Read more
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- Day 138
- Tuesday, May 16, 2023
- ☁️ 61 °F
- Altitude: 108 ft
FranceChamp de Mars Tour Eiffel Railway Station48°51’32” N 2°17’32” E
Oh la la - Sellers Girls are in Paris!

Yay! We’re in France! After our train from Munich -> Paris was cancelled due to strikes and the apartment we were supposed to stay at in Paris got cancelled a few days before we arrived (due to electrical problems) - and having a mommy -figure- out -new -plans-in-a-new-country frenzy, we made it.
Finally I can (usually/sometimes/a bit of the time) understand what is being said! I spent a year in Switzerland about 25 years ago so a bit rusty. Some people speak to me, say “vous Parlez bien!) and I can have a full conversation in French. Others switch immediately into perfect English; while a few lovely people have spoken…v-e-r-y s-l-o-w-l-y in French to me. I’ll take the wins while I can and let the others go. I’m having fun with my girls and we’re in Paris!
The essence of Paris is so romantic and alluring! The cafes with people drinking their coffee or wine in open cafes. People just outside and enjoying…something we Americans miss a lot of the time. The enjoyment…the interaction…the living in the moment. Maybe it’s just me as an introvert…but here - I can come, sit and just be. So I’m excited the girls have gotten to experience this!
Here’s the issue - we’re are here JUST at
the beginning of the high season and it is CRAZY busy and packed with people (tourists and locals)!. It became very overwhelming very quickly. I don’t remember feeling like that when I was last here. It’s like the number of people have outgrown this enormous city. I was grateful we were here in May!
Given the sheer volume of people, I think my favorite memory of Paris will be us 3 girls laying down on a lawn near the Eiffel Tower. There was so much buzzing around us - so many people and sounds - but the three of us were all just laying down on our jackets for about an hour watching it all happen. Weather was perfect and not a cloud in the sky.
The other very unique thing we did was a photo shoot. I found this amazing photographer Meiry, who lives in Paris, around the time we left on the trip in ‘22. Brian captures amazing picture of all of us but I wanted something with the 4 of us! We rarely get those. Anyhow Meiry had availability for 1 day only in May - May 18th- which happens to coincide with the 1 year anniversary of Brian’s mom’s death and right when we’d be in Paris. So I took that a sign we should it and booked it. I didn’t know at the time Brian would have to head back so we still went ahead and did it - but were sad Brian missed it! It was beautiful walking around early in the AM through the streets of Montmartre. Meiry is just a beautiful person - inside and out.
Some other highlights of our time in Paris:
- Eiffel Tower at sunset
- the louvre
- staying in Montmartre (and getting crepes and ice cream scooped in the shape of a flower!)
- walking along la seine
- sitting at the cafes and watching the people go by.
So now we are in a small seaside down in Southern France called Cassis (just to the southeast of Marseille). I hadn’t planned on having us come here but since our place in Paris cancelled, I figured maybe we should spend less time in Paris and more time in a quieter place! We used our eurail pass, hopped on a couple of trains and then a bus and voila - we’re here.
It’s rainy, busy with mostly French tourists, but still just stunning…
I’ll write more soon!
We’ll be home in about a week!!
❤️❤️❤️Read more

TravelerC’est superbe! So glad you made it and could enjoy Paris together (and yes- so much busier than I remember when we were there this past December)! The quiet town of Cassis must be lovely as well. xo
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- Day 137
- Monday, May 15, 2023
- ⛅ 61 °F
- Altitude: 1,755 ft
GermanyMary's Square48°8’14” N 11°34’32” E
German Strikes and Schnitzel!

It’s our last day in Munich, Germany! It has been one of the girls favorite places! I’ve enjoyed it but it’s been in the 40-50s and rainy half of the time - so I’m surprised!
We’ve walked a ton around the capital of Bavaria, learned to navigate the UBahn metro with decent competence (went the wrong way once yesterday but that’s part of the adventure right?), and felt like we experienced a bit what it would be to live here!
Maddie loved: “the metro, the food, and just the feel of the town!”
Katie loved: “this small town and the ice cream we had last night” (although the 3rd biggest city in Germany, Munich city center doesn’t feel like a huge city so I would agree with the sentiment!)
We’ve seen:
- a lot of underground Ubahn trains
-surfers riding big waves on the river at the English Garden
- local markets near the Marienplatz
- two castles of the “mad king” Ludwig and the German countryside
- the newest Guardians of the Galaxy in English at a local movie theater (it was much better than expected!)
- a naked man at a local park (apparently a common site here based on our research!)
- Maddie finally getting to do a few German lessons! Still loves it!
We’ve tried:
- schnitzel
- bratwurst
- the “famous boiled white wiener”- which had all of us in stitches. (Not very good)
- the most atrociously drool inducing sour gum I have ever tried (we had a competition to see who would survive! Katie won the very time!)
- after eights gelato (which may even beat out the outstanding gelato in Venice)!!
So it’s been fun!
We were supposed to go via train (eurail pass) to Paris tomorrow morning but train and transportation related strikes in Germany resulted in our train being cancelled. Super bummed and it’s required a huge amount of alternative planning. To top off the fun, the Airbnb I booked in Paris (the ONLY part of this last leg of the trip I booked in 2022!) cancelled yesterday!! Is the universe trying to tell me something??
Due to all that, we’ll be flying to Paris tomorrow (hello - new claim to our travel insurance company!), spend just a couple days in Paris and then we are going to hop on 2 trains to get to a small town called Cassis, in the south of France. I’ve never been So I’m excited! We’ll be there 2-3 days and then head to Barcelona..
At this point I’m hoping for the best but expecting more hiccups along the way!
Hope all the mamas had a beautiful Mamas day! ❤️ We went to see Guardians of the Galaxy and made sure to get back before the strikes began so we weren’t stranded!Read more
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- Day 133
- Thursday, May 11, 2023
- 🌧 52 °F
- Altitude: 1,808 ft
GermanyLehel48°8’29” N 11°35’19” E
What in the World is “Worldschooling?”

—As I write this, I just found there will be a strike throughout Germany at the end of this week into next week, which means our train to France is probably going to be cancelled — so worldschooling will include navigating that now as well!—
During Covid I pulled the kids to homeschool for the 2020-2021 school year - it was a challenging shift for all of us. While I love educating in a nursing setting,I had no idea what I was doing with the kids in terms of education. Both of our amazing kiddos have dyslexia; both have various super cool skills, beautiful talents and also challenges. How do I teach? I Dunno but I had to figure it out somehow - the best I could at the time.
Jump forward to 2022 - I was thinking about this trip for our family after the mamas died and while googling, i saw the term “worldschooling”: Learning through experiencing different cultures, languages, histories, music, arts - perfect. I learned how to homeschool due to necessity the previous couple of years- why not learn to “worldschool”.
So here we’re are…about 5 months in to this trip and about to come home. We have the world as our teacher, so the learning just happens by “being”. We are also very fortunate to have an amazing online weekly tutor, Alex, that helped us during Covid as well. She helps the kids with math and English. Maddie has been working on research papers, OpEds; katie has been improving her skills as a budding writer. We’re starting the Diary of Anne Frank and are learning about World War 2. The kids have had to learn to be more independent in their work habits and overall thinking. They have had to push through challenging topics, fears, new cultures and foods, and they are growing before our eyes - mentally and physically. While I’m constantly helping throughout the day- they are the ones doing it and Brian and I are so proud of them!! ❤️❤️
As a beautiful friend reminded me recently that I should step back and look at what they’ve done in the last month or so…
In the past month:
- one month ago today: we were visiting my amazing aunts in Capetown and meeting family we hadn’t known about. We learned about life in South Africa, had delicious braai, learned some of the history of apartheid and Nelson Mandela, load shedding and met family.
- we saw so many amazing animals in Kruger National Park and learned about the intricate and complex ecosystem amongst animal species and the landscape in this amazing park.
- we traveled to Egypt - learned about Ramadan, hearing prayers over loud speakers, learned basic words in Arabic, saw the pyramids of Giza, rode camels, ate new foods.
- we travelled through Morocco, went into the 3rd largest mosque in the world, ate tagine and drank mint tea, learned about the Berber, the royal family, and saw beautiful architecture in the narrow pathways of Fes.
-spent a week living in an apartment in Venice, walking the canals, learned the history of Venetian masks, hearing church bells, and eating more delicious pizza and gelato than we could handle. (I also have a new favorite drink - Aperol Spritz! So good!)
- now we’re in Munich, Germany - we have walked through the Marienplatz, visited the local market and are currently studying in a cafe; Maddie is also taking a few German lessons at a school across town 2 hours a day (per her request) so we have quickly learned to take the metro here (somehow a fear of mine that is now overcome!) to turn a rainy 30 minute walk to school into a 5 minute walk and 2 minute metro train ride.
That is worldschooling. It’s been marvelous (!!) ❤️❤️ and challenging. Lots of laughter and tears! New sights and smells. Interesting sounds and unique ways of living life. What a beautiful world.
I wouldn’t have it any other way!Read more
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- Day 127
- Friday, May 5, 2023 at 6:45 PM
- ☁️ 68 °F
- Altitude: 59 ft
ItalyMuseo Correr45°26’2” N 12°20’15” E
Ciao Bella -Exploring Venice!

Venice has been amazing. We rented an apartment for the week and it’s been so nice to have our own rooms, make delicious Italian coffee in the morning, having an actual refrigerator requiring us going to a local grocery store, hang laundry to dry outside our window on the 2nd floor, walking along the myriad of canals and seeing 100s of gelaterias (we have tried many so far! - Suso is my favorite!!).
I have been so excited to be back here - last time I was here was during my junior year abroad in Switzerland. Late 90s had felt unreal to me - we would “ditch” school to hop on an overnight train to have an extra day in Italy over a weekend. Let’s just say it’s been awhile - and a lot has changed. A lot more people everywhere…a lot more shops…a lot more gondolas - but still the same allure…
…The same wonder hearing people speak in Italian with such an expressiveness in their hands and faces…
…The deliciousness of the pizzas (definitely the most delicious crusts I’ve get had) and they are the cheapest thing on the menu usually!!!
…The creaminess and delicious flavors of gelato!
…The feeling of not knowing what you will see as you cross over yet another small bridge over a lovely small canal and turn the corner…
…the feeling of questioning your mothering skills when the girls say they know how to get home from the grocery store…and letting them go alone(!). (Then realizing they got back to the apartment way more easily than I did!!)
…and getting a much needed haircut felt good too!
We’ve been here almost one week already - I can’t believe it. Time is going by so fast …and we are coming home in 2 1/2 weeks.
We’re going to watch the 90s version of Romeo and Juliet tonight (which I’ve never seen) and hop on a train tomorrow morning to visit fair Verona for a day.
On Tuesday AM, we’ll then take a 4 am water taxi and then Flight to Munich. We’ll be there for a week and Maddie will take her long awaited German lessons (she LOVES the German language!).
We’ll also begin studying a bit of a world War 2 for the last couple of weeks we are here, including reading the Diary of Anne Frank and visiting some WWII sites along the way.
Hope you are all doing well! ❤️
Next stop:
Munich and then Paris a week later - via train (I got a eurail pass for us!)Read more
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- Day 119
- Thursday, April 27, 2023 at 12:21 PM
- ⛅ 82 °F
- Altitude: 4,701 ft
MoroccoArbia Mia31°13’22” N 6°4’15” W
Morocco - Sellers Girls Explore

Our time in Morocco is one of the first official “tours” we have done on this entire trip. The company is amazing - the places we have stayed are very unique and wonderful - but after traveling for so long and so quickly - this pace is a bit grueling and we’re tired.
Our guide said that some people will do a similar trip in 3 weeks to a month. We are doing this in a 10 day trip…did I know this beforehand? No of course not - my planning of things has had to be more basic and hasty. Without that we wouldn’t have made it out our front door last December. Given our quite expedited schedule, I’m getting a lot of sighs from the kiddos. Our conversations go about like this:
Kid 1: how long are we driving today?
Me: I don’t know - as long as i takes. Just go with it.
Guide: about 8 hours.
Kid 1 and 2: muffled complaints and sighs from back seat.
Me (inside my brain): well (bleep bleep) …that’s longer than I thought. oh well at least I get to look out the window and relax!
Kid 1: ok I guess I’ll go to sleep…lays head down and falls asleep immediately in back seat.
Kid 2: will there be wifi? I still don’t understand why I have full bars and the wifi doesn’t work.
Me: cause we’re in the middle of the Sahara.
Kid 2: but I have full bars
Me: desert - Morocco - lots of sand dunes - bad wifi. Just look out the window! It’s beautiful!
Kid 2: UGH and lays head against window begrudgingly…
8 hours later
Kid 1: wakes up and says “oh that wasn’t so bad”
Kid 2: yah not so bad - it’s pretty here - can I call my friends once we get to the riad? I hope the wifi works!
🙂
Anyhow we spent two days in the Sahara - in a camp that we accessed over sand dunes by camel and then stayed at a Berber camp. We then went quad biking in the dunes (probably one of my favorite activities of this entire trip - which I was very surprised by). Maddie and I rode individual quad bikes and katie hopped on back with a guide. We felt alone out in the dunes and I got to watch Maddie sprout her wings as she rode up and along high dunes in the sunset. I then got to ride on the back of her quad bike with her driving which made me flash forward a few years to thinking about her driving. She did a great job!!
Then we spent time in Fes, a large city with meandering pathways only understood by someone that is from the city. It’s very easy to get lost and some of the pathways were so skinny we almost had to tuck our arms in to get through!
My favorite city other than Marrakech was Chefchaoun, a small city nestled in the mountains, with predominantly blue colored buildings here in the north. We spent the afternoon “getting lost” in various narrow walkways through town and amazingly ended up coming out at an ice cream shop. Delicious. Then while the kids stayed happily in our room, I got a traditional hammam, a cleansing of the skin in a steam room. The woman was amazing, scrubbed so much horribly dead skin off and sang in Arabic. It sounds cheesy but it was this beautiful connection and while I was having my body cleansed, I feel a bit of my soul was as well.
While we’re happy to move on to Venice today - all day travels once again - and will be happy to explore on our own rather than on a tour I’ll miss some things:
- tagine
- the hammam (I’m not great at taking care of myself but loved this)
-being so surprised by the varying landscape - some of the country felt like wine country - some like Virginia - other like you would expect sand dunes.
- the beautiful mosaics on every wall/building/mosque
-prayers over the loud speakers
- pathways where each time, you don’t know what you’ll experience around the next turn
-watching the girls yell out “another kitty” around just about every corner in every town. Their love for animals is special.
So we are leaving the continent of Africa now after 4 weeks…we have experienced so much here…but I’m ready to wander along canals with the girls.
We’ve been FaceTiming Brian multiple times a day and while he’s missed so much, we are so happy he’s back home with our pups - and we’re just about ready to be back too!
We’ll write more soon! ❤️Read more
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- Day 115
- Sunday, April 23, 2023
- ☀️ 86 °F
- Altitude: 1,535 ft
MoroccoBahia Palace31°37’17” N 7°58’55” W
Marrakech- Time to Say Goodbye

Brian and I have always wanted to come to Morocco - and Brian in particular has always wanted to go to the Sahara - so we’re bummed about him heading home a bit early and missing the desert portion of Morocco - that said it’s been an AMAZING trip together and it’s time to start preparing to come home.
We all spent 3 days all together in Casablanca and Marrakech before Brian headed home (via Istanbul) and us girls headed to the Sahara. Brian got to see the outside of Ricks Cafe, homage to one of his favorite movies Casablanca. We got to watch sunrise from the rooftop of our riad together, having Moroccan mint tea tour and watching things come to life in the old Medina. We also got explore some Berber villages with the girls before taking Brian to the airport and say goodbye for the next month. It’s a strange thing to have literally been staying in the same room or being side by side 24/7 for 4 months and then to part ways - will take some adjusting for sure.
If you were to ask the girls their favorite part of Marrakech - they would say the cats. Oh the cats! On the small walkway to our riad/hotel, 3 separate cats gave birth in a 24 hour period. While the cats are feral, many people make an effort to care for them so the cats are quite friendly! We saw lots of little kittens and cats kept trying to get the kids’ attention.
If you were to ask me my favorite part- it’s the winding pathways along ochre colored walls, colorful clothing the Muslim and Berber women wear, along with the all of the beautifully decorated mosques and frequent prayers over the loudspeakers. It’s the sunrise from the rooftop of our riad. It’s been watching the kids connect with the animals.. Another lovely jolt to the senses…
————-
As I write this, Brian has just made it home safely — and is girls are currently in Fes, just having finished our time in the Sahara.
We’ll be touring the city tomorrow and then have one more night before we head to Western Europe. Venice—Munich—Paris—Barcelona. Some flights - lots of train time and then will be time to come home.
Ill do another post at the end of Morocco - pics here will reflect time in Marrakech and maybe a teaser from the Sahara 🙂
Hope you are all well - lots of love to all of you. ❤️Read more
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- Day 111
- Wednesday, April 19, 2023
- ☁️ 91 °F
- Altitude: 95 ft
EgyptMaşrif Ghaţāţī29°59’8” N 31°8’43” E
Cairo - pyramids and cattle?

Egypt was originally just supposed to be a layover from South Africa to Morocco but we decided early on to extend it for a few days just to see Cairo and Giza. It was a bit more than we bargained for and my least favorite place so far (more due to the nature of the tours)- but still definitely worth the stop.
Our hotel, located in Giza in a non touristy neighborhood off a dirt road, was very unique. It has narrow stairs and hallways was located up on just the 13-15 floors of a large building. This hotel happened to have a spectacular view of the pyramids on its rooftop and we were served traditional Egyptian breakfast each morning - with cooked eggplant, fruit slices, egg and bread.
Our trip happened to coincide with the tail-end of Ramadan and as you can imagine not many restaurants were open during the day. We were lucky we got the breakfast! We had to survive on thai chili Cheetos and way too many cashews and dried apricots for our digestive tracks during the day. In addition, the owner of the hotel was extremely kind in inviting all of us to break fast with them on the last night of Ramadan - so we had a fabulous Egyptian meal while overlooking the pyramids.
However, the tours felt different here. I felt for the first time since a zip lining tour in Costa Rica in January, like we were cattle getting pushed along all day. In Costa Rica, there were tons of people zip lining so while it was super fun, we got pushed on each zip line quickly. There was no rest. Here in Egypt it was the sites - “Go see this quickly and we got the best seat just for you!” “Then let’s go across town and we chose this best thing for you…” “Oh and my manager said that if you want, after this whole day tour, to hop on an overnight bus (12 hours!!) to do another tour tomorrow in Luxor and then another overnight bus back - we can help you pack and go in 2 hours” - ah heck no!! I just want to rest.
While I am surprised frequently by our experiences in new countries, I’m usually happy to encounter these surprises - things that are different from our expectation. Why? Because I like when my preconceived notions are incorrect! If they’re positive or negative - I’m constantly learning and adjusting my way of thinking.
That said, Cairo has 30 million people and it’s massive highways don’t have ANY markings to separate individual lanes - basically their highway reminded me of a bumper car ride where the track starts and cars basically go in which and all merge and sway - except in this case - miraculously no bumping! My eyes were wide open in the back watching this phenomenon / kids asleep on my shoulders. (They have become seasoned travelers for sure)
——————-
Anyhow we just completed ANOTHER overnight flight and have landed safely in Morocco.
Many of you may not know but Brian is cutting his trip short to help out with some things at home…so we are all parting ways on Tuesday April 25th to start making his way home.
The girls and I will continue on for another month and then will head home a bit early as well!Read more
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- Day 105
- Thursday, April 13, 2023 at 1:53 AM
- 🌙 59 °F
- Altitude: 2,228 ft
South AfricaShabeni25°9’9” S 31°14’42” E
Kruger National Park Splendor

I hadn’t given Kruger National Park much thought before going this past week. Part of that is due to the sheer volume of planning involved in this trip and the other part is due to…naïveté, ignorance maybe, lack of understanding of how this type of natural environment can wallop and overwhelm your senses in its vastness and beauty…but it got me. I was mesmerized each and every time I went out into the park.
We spent almost a week - 6 hours east of Johannesburg at a lodge inside of the Numbi Gate of Kruger National Park. Our lodge was without a doubt glamping - and I’m ok with that. We ate delicious meals on campus and then Either went out on game drives with the lodge or did our own “self drive”. When I say we did a self drive, I mean Brian drove (amazingly well on the Left side of the road - and steering wheel on right side of the car). He was a champ! There is NO way you would get me to drive - I do enough back seat or passenger seat driving for all of us when I don’t drive on the opposite side of the road!
He would drive us on these bumpy dirt roads past zebras, enormous giraffes, curious hyenas, one of my favorite - the mystical Kudu, lions, elephants, baboons and even rhinos!
The complexity, adaptability and interdependence within each group/pack of animals, plants, and birds were remarkable. Every time I went out - I learned something new and loved every second of it. I went on some sort of game drive daily and just let the wind blow in my hair , watching the landscape change, animals come out of hiding from the hot sun to get water, and experience animal life awaken as the sun went down.
Whether it was learning what type of leaves “bush” locals use if they don’t have toilet paper! Don’t accidentally use the similar looking leaf with hidden spikes!
Or learning first hand about puff adders (highly venomous snake) because Katie almost stepped on one near our tent!
Or seeing hippos up close at sunset, learning
About their territorial behavior in the water and soon after seeing the hyena mom, on the side of the road, who was breast feeding a bunch of hyena pups. Hearing our guide yell at said pups and then explaining to us “don’t let the hyena pups bite our tires - they’ll pop them and then those pups won’t seem so cute anymore because we’ll be their snack!”
Or seeing the myriad of colors in the sky at sunset. I didn’t know that many colors were possible!
Kruger - you won over my heart. We’re forever grateful and we’ll definitely see you again!
Next stop: quick stop in Cairo and then Morocco!Read more

TravelerI can’t imagine how he would, unfortunately. As startling as it was to see that and to know that he’ll likely be killed soon, it was also a good lesson in the circle of life. He’ll help feed several animals and will allow them to continue living - so that’s good news for those animals, insects, and birds.
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- Day 98
- Thursday, April 6, 2023 at 4:38 PM
- ⛅ 68 °F
- Altitude: 16 ft
South AfricaBoulders Beach34°11’49” S 18°27’3” E
Capetown - Family and Penguins!

I woke up this morning and experienced something that is occurring more frequently - I truly couldn’t remember where I was! I thought “definitely not Nepal - where am I?” Finally realized as I looked around and saw I’m in a huge beautiful tent that I’m in South Africa - in Kruger National Park. (I’m a bit behind in writing)
There are such stark differences between Nepal and South Africa- both so beautiful in their own way. Both with such unique histories, landscapes, cultures and religions. Different food. We’ve quickly become accustomed to Load shedding (daily scheduled power outages) here. And while Nepal is home to one of my favorite sites (Bouddhanath) in the world, South Africa tugs at my heart in particular as it’s where my father was born…and where my Aunt Amanda lives that I only got to know recently. A large part of my family’s history is here…and It has been remarkable. ❤️
Capetown is at the south-western most tip of Africa. It is surrounded by uniquely lined and stacked mountains on multiple sides, including Table mountain, which we visited via a large, high tech revolving cable car. We stayed at a beautiful bed and breakfast a block from my aunt so we could have some good family time. We went Aunt Amanda and Aunt Penny’s house with their lovely cats. We had a beautiful family picnic at the local botanical gardens. We had a braai (traditional South Africa grill/BBQ) with distant cousins which was also so special. We also drove along beach towns on the coast, made friends with a local kite surfing family, and Maddie became close friends with the daughter and had her first sleepover since being on this trip. She even got to try kite surfing.
We also got to go to Boulders Beach and were surprised to see hundreds of penguins nesting. We even got to go in the water near them - freezing water - so only Brian went swimming! Shocker 😂. We also got see an animal we had never heard of called a Dassie. Super cute combo looks like a mini bear and Guinea pig that hang out in and on the bushes near the Cape.
I have travelled quite extensively in the past but still get caught off guard by how many things (places, ideas, and animals) I didnt know existed. For some reason I love learning about how much I don’t know. I love that reality check in life - there is so much out there. There is always something new. There is always something to be explored. So much beauty in that. I feel that constantly here. It’s beautiful.
And more than anything I’m so grateful to have had the opportunity to get to know my Aunt - we are so blessed to have such a beautiful human being as part of our family. Beyond grateful…❤️
Anyhow long post - hope you’re all well! I’ll write soon about Kruger National Park then we’ll be off to Egypt and Morocco!
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“Life is a daring adventure towards an unknown future. Its beauty depends on how much you enjoy the journey.”
Debasish MridhaRead more
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- Day 90
- Wednesday, March 29, 2023 at 6:38 AM
- ☀️ 37 °F
- Altitude: 10,417 ft
NepalPoon Hill28°24’1” N 83°41’21” E
Nepal Trekking Awesomeness!

When I read about this trek before we left on the trip, articles considered this one of the “easiest” treks in Nepal that a 6 year old could do. Well - that 6 year old better be in some crazy good shape because we just spent 4 nights and 5 days getting crushed (in a good way though) by the Himalayas!
The Ghorepani-Poon Hill trek was an amazing and truly remarkable experience that I will forever cherish. We had a guide, Santosh, and two porters (each one carried a backpack - one with clothes and supplies and the other camera gear!). These 3 men made the trip for us - helped us every literal step of the way, helped us with finding delicious and authentic food, lodging, and were crazy patient with us as we walked usuallly up hill around 5-6 miles per day. We spent so much time together: ate together and laughed together - and they watched some of cry together.
This “tour” is not a luxury tour by western standards - we trekked during the day, stopped at open air guest/tea houses that served lunch, usually filtered our own water using our grayl water bottle, then trekked a couple more hours before we spent the night in a tea house which is a combined hostal/restaurant (all menus the same at each tea house in the region)- that have no heat other than furnace on the main level that everyone sits around getting warmed up by the heat and warm masala or lemon ginger honey tea. It was rough, cold and challenging — but that is part of what makes this so amazing and so worth it.
The food was amazing (lots of Dal bhat and veggie curry with rice and chapatis and Tibetan bread). The tea was divine. The duvets were super warm as long as an extremity didn’t poke out by accident in the middle of the night- even having my jacket covered shoulder exposed sent shivers through my whole body. Showers only happened once in 4 nights…
But we did it!
On day 3- we woke up at 430 am to hike in the dark to the summit of Poon Hill - if you can imagine walking up stairs non stop for an hour up the side of a large mountain in the dark- that’s what we did. The views were stunning the whole way up as the rising sun decided to slowly display ever changing colors across the sky. Brian and Maddie went up first and katie and I a bit slower - the views were stunning and we did it!!
We had our share of experiences with critters- between dogs and cats that jumped into the girls laps to their delight to Maddie and I separately finding ENORMOuS spiders (no joke - 5-6 inches across) in our bathrooms within 20 minutes apart at night, resulting in multiple frantic yelling out to our guide and having him laugh after lifting up and proudly showing us the very large dead bodies of the gargantuan spiders that are apparently common in this part of the country. We did not sleep well that night!
Anyhow were back in Pokhara now, got a deliciously warm shower, are back to school work, and will head back to Kathmandu tomorrow - overland rather than fly -because after our last flight we learned that the same airline (Yeti) AND route we flew on last week crashed 2 months prior to our trip. We hadn’t known that when we booked it, so decided to be on the safer side! So tomorrow we’ll drive between 6-8 hours to get back to Kathmandu.
We hope you are all doing well and hopefully enjoying the beginning or end of spring break back home!!
Next Stop: Cape Town, South Africa!! We leave on Monday.
Below is the overview of our trek- feel free to read or not but I wanted to remember some of the details for myself and the book I’m going to create from FindPenguins…
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overview of our trip:
Day 1: we drove an hour and a half from Pokhara to our trekking starting point (funny we thought those views were amazing at the beginning - little did we know!). Santosh had us drive a bit further up the trail than they would normally for adults since we had kids. It was appreciated!! We still walked uphill several hours. We stayed in Ulleri at night at a simple tea house with delicious food and masala tea. We taught Santosh Uno and had a woman from Spain join us - we got to practice our Spanish! We had our own bathroom in our room. It was cold! First time girls spent the night in a separate room from us.
Day 2: all day trek from Ulleri to Ghorepani and stayed at another tea house with stunning views of multiple snow capped enormous mountains. Basic room was freezing at night but very warm duvets!! Girls had to change clothes under the covers! 🤪 it worked well. We got to meet some fluffy sweet dogs and a very cute kitten that jumped on both girls laps - made their day. We also met some really nice people from Ireland that night who were super sweet in listening to a lot of kid dog and gerbil stories about back home! Kids had pizza - B and I ate some veggie thali- so so good!
Day 3: ugh - woke up at 430 am - could see our breath in the room. We got our head lamps out and began the early 5 am trek to Poon Hill. - an hour or so trek up - hard but amazing! Santosh got us some warm tea at the top and had helped encourage Katie the whole way up! Then we came back to the tea house for breakfast (delicious), warmed up near their large furnace and trekked the rest of the day (5-6 hours) to Tadapani. Santosh recommended a pony for the first hour of significant up hill trekking for Katie toward Tadapani - which ended up being a great idea because she was so exhausted and loved being on the horse! Tadapani ended up being awesome because even though we ended up at a tea house with a shared toilet for 20ish people, we met two French families living in Dubai - there were lots of kids and they got to play!!
Day 4: tadapani to Gandruk - girls said goodbye to their friends and we finally got some downhill but then realized our muscles got more sore from downhill than uphill! 3 hour trek to Gangdruk.
That night in Gandruk - my least favorite - I saw the biggest spider of life. So did Maddie - not cool but at least they weren’t poisonous!
Day 5: Gandruk to Pokhara - we trekked downhill only for over an hour and then car brought us back to our hotel (2 more hours). Long warm showers followed just about the second we walked back in here and we haven’t left the room since other than to get food downstairs !
It’s been an adventure!!Read more
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- Day 83
- Wednesday, March 22, 2023 at 5:26 PM
- ⛅ 66 °F
- Altitude: 4,262 ft
NepalAsan27°42’42” N 85°18’43” E
Returning to Kathmandu

In 2000, I spent several months backpacking through Southeast Asia, including about 3 weeks in Nepal and Tibet. I had gotten a respiratory infection while in Nepal, so couldn’t go trekking like I had hoped to. Somehow I ended up spending most of my time near a place previously unknown to me - Bouddhanath Stupa, the largest Buddhist prayer Kora in all of Nepal. It became precious to me - I spent hours there, watching the Tibetan Buddhists pray and walk clockwise around the prayer circuit, spinning prayer wheels clockwise, quietly saying mantras, with colorful prayer flags flapping gently in the wind overhead with the smell of incense in the air. It became my happy place and since that time, I’ve always considered it my favorite place on the other side of the world. ❤️
More than 20 year later I have finally returned with Brian and the kiddos - and the second I saw it again, my breath stopped. It is magnificent. No amount of pictures or video can do it justice. As a proud hospice nurse who believes deeply in the work I do, I don’t always understand what makes me tick but I do know it’s based on a spiritual connection to my work. That said, I feel as strongly and spiritually connected to Bouddhanath even 20 years later as I do in being a hospice nurse. So glad to be back…
For us as a family, this has been yet another eye opening part of this adventure: seeing the “monkey temple,” homeless dogs, Hindu cremations on an outdoor funeral pyre (yes we saw this), learning about the Sherpa, meeting monks, lots of cars and chaotic traffic, a crazy ride in a Rickshaw, and having the most wonderful guide that we ended up having dinner with the following night along with her family. We have been blessed with this.
Tomorrow we head to Pokhara and then trekking…
You’ll probably hear from us after the trek is done / not sure about wifi up in the Himalayas as it’s already terrible in Kathmandu!
Love and light!Read more
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- Day 80
- Sunday, March 19, 2023
- ☀️ 84 °F
- Altitude: 82 ft
ThailandHat Lamai9°27’39” N 100°2’27” E
Everybody was Muay Thai Fighting…

Every morning around 6 am I have been waking up to the sound of yelling over at the Muay Thai studio down the road from us. What better way to spend our time …or have the girls spend their time than learning some Muay Thai while we’re here in Thailand!
I grew up doing judo so while it’s always been really important to me to have that sense of self / with knowing how to protect myself…and I’ve always wanted to have the girls learn to defend themselves as well. However we just haven’t really made that happen yet. So why not start in Thailand.
One hour of training - it was hot! The coach did not go easy on either of them and they rocked it - again! The cool thing about it was how happy everyone was - it was serious but happy at the same time.
We head out tomorrow and they’re going to practice for another hour with the same coach before we check out in the AM.
Otherwise we’ve had fun seeing a different part of Thailand. Girls have continued to do homeschool.We’ve had some crazy cheap massages. And we’ve had some AMAZING Thai food!
Tomorrow we’re off to Bangkok for the night and then Nepal. We’ll be in Kathmandu for several days, Pokhara for 4-5 days and then a 5 day trek into the Himalayas! Can’t wait!
See you in the next country!!Read more
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- Day 73
- Sunday, March 12, 2023
- ⛅ 91 °F
- Altitude: 184 ft
ThailandBan Nam Hak8°52’46” N 98°40’51” E
Elephant Hills - Surat Thani, Thailand

I’m literally staring at the screen not sure what to write - another moment of awe as I reflect on yet another amazing part of this trip.
We spent 4 nights at Elephant Hills Elephant Sanctuary in Surat Thani, Thailand. This was a decadent treat - beautiful landscapes, interacting with and feeding beautiful Asian Elephants, amazing Thai food (getting our spice on), luxury tent, jumping off a huge traditional Burmese junk boat into salty Indian ocean water, and connecting with a phenomenal group of different people from all over the world.
I didn’t realize how elephants were used for labor here - including transportation of large trees that have been knocked down, tourism - elephant rides, circus style shows, etc. Elephant Hills rescues these work elephants and gives them a wonderful life in the countryside of Surat Thani. Some things we did:
Day 1- canoeing and learning about and feeding the elephants.
Day 2- kayaking in the mangroves and jumping from the second level of a large boat into a very salty river that connects to the Indian Ocean.
Day 3 - rode a long tail boat out to a floating camp where we spent the day swimming in and relaxing along a 100 meter deep lake surrounded by high gumdrop shaped mountains that reminded me of Guilin, China. Stunning - oh and then there were the huge fish we swam with 🐟 🙃
Day 4 - school work, packing, a ginormous spider (huntsman spider right outside our tent) and a day traveling to Koh Samui - girls are going to try Muay Thai fighting today!!
Hope you are all well! Be safe.
Next stop: we’ll be in Koh Samui until Monday - one night back in Bangkok - and then Kathmandu Nepal!!Read more
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- Day 69
- Wednesday, March 8, 2023
- ☀️ 95 °F
- Altitude: 26 ft
ThailandWat Si Rattana Satsada Ram13°45’6” N 100°29’34” E
Bangkok - Fun, Friends, and Sweat!

Brian and I had both been to Bangkok before so we were curious about how this leg of our journey would be for the 4 of us. We once again took a red eye flight from Australia coupled with layover for 4 hours in the middle of the night in Singapore making us all extremely tired and grouchy. Most exciting way to start a new and more challenging section of this journey when everyone is homesick already I personally think. 🙂
Bangkok is hot - not an “oh I could use a bit of air conditioner hot” - it’s a “sweat running down your back till your pant legs are wet because we have to wear appropriate attire to the Grand Palace and temples” type of hot. Fortunately Bangkok also included friend time - new and old.
We happened to be in town at the same time as friends we haven’t seen since before the kids were born, the Mladinichs. They were visiting some of their buddies in Thailand - so we made some new friends as well, experienced amazing Thai hospitality - all sweating it out together! Adults got to hang out at night eating the most amazing Thai food while the kids played in an amazing pool in their neighborhood. Connection is so important - and it nourished all of us - body and soul.
The Grand Palace and temples were amazing though. The enormous Reclining Buddha always makes me shake my head in awe; the vibrant colors and ornate design of the temples leave me speechless - while sweating a lot. We were happy to see the kids experiencing all of it!
Just for reference - in Bangkok we stayed at a hostel in the city that cost about 25 US dollars per night. Our bathroom was a small combo of shower and toilet where you had to close the lid of the toilet while you showered to keep the seat dry so you can later pee without slipping right off. School work and tutoring was done on the bed - we all adjust as we go!
And once again with my wonderful planning, we are taking a 7 am flight to Surat Thani to go to an elephant sanctuary - which means we had to get up 345 am to catch a taxi to the airport. At some point I’ll learn!
Next up: elephant hills sanctuary. (Shh - we’re here right now - I’m behind on posting. Yesterday we spent time and fed elephants and it was AMAZING!!!) - will do that post soon.
❤️
Sent from my iPhoneRead more
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- Day 69
- Wednesday, March 8, 2023 at 2:19 PM
- Altitude: 59 ft
AustraliaFig Tree Pocket27°32’5” S 152°58’6” E
Goodbye Australia!

We are currently in Brisbane, Australia getting prepared to hop on yet another red eye to Bangkok via Singapore.
Our last few days have been travel and adventure filled - we took an overnight train (25 hour) with sleeper seats (hallelujah because I cannot sleep on planes, cars, or in any mode of transportation requiring sitting mostly upright) from Queensland to Brisbane! This train was a highlight for me for two reasons: 1) it was Katie’s 11th birthday! 🥳 and 2) I got 25 hours of mommy alone time - in my own little cubicle style area! I slept well and It was heavenly!
Brisbane has been lovely - all along the river that runs through town (aptly named Brisbane River) are public lagoon style pools, shops, and mostly lush green space and gardens. We’ve enjoyed it.
Our last stop today before our red eye to Thailand was at the Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary. Maddie is doing a research project on koalas right now so this was a perfect last stop. The koalas were adorable; they love eucalyptus (live in the trees and eat the leaves); and cool factoid: if you ever get a koala stuck in your pool (!), you should throw a large rope in to help them climb out! This is definitely not something you hear in the US! We also got to feed lots of kangaroos!
Thank you Australia for your hospitality, beauty, and awesome accents.
We’re excited to be on our way to Thailand where just by chance, some of our friends, the Mladinichs, will be in Bangkok at exactly the same time as us! So we’re going to hang out with some friends!! Yay!
Next 2 weeks: Thailand. Bangkok, Surat Thani, and Koh Samui.
Then Nepal!
May you all be happy, healthy and safe! ❤️ from our family to yours!
——————
“Happiness is not something readymade; it comes from your own actions.” - Dalai LamaRead more
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- Day 65
- Saturday, March 4, 2023 at 6:25 PM
- ☁️ 82 °F
- Altitude: Sea level
AustraliaNudey beach16°55’31” S 145°59’4” E
Great Barrier Reef - Good Grief!

We have spent almost a week up here in Cairns, near the Great Barrier Reef in north eastern Australia in Queensland. We intentionally spent a week in one hotel to try to provide stability for the kids. What we adults have now fully learned is that the solution (like there is just one!) is not just about staying in one place - it’s about connection. The girls miss home. They miss friends. They miss our pets. They miss their grandmas that aren’t with us anymore. We are still all grieving- but that is part of this journey for us. So it’s probably been the toughest week emotionally for everyone.
That said, The great barrier reef was amazing - I can’t even begin to compare it to the Galapagos. It’s like night and day. Going underwater in crystal clear water, swimming amongst the myriad of vibrant fish of varying shapes and sizes; The live flowing coral and enormous clams - that breathe and flow with the current. It’s like a dream. Watching Maddie dive down deep and turn around and wave at us; watching Katie overcome her fears asking to dive down as well and then saying how fun it was when she breeches the surface. It’s a beautiful thing to watch.
I don’t even think the kids recognize how much they have grown in the last two months. I think there is healing there too, very slowly, for all of us. But we miss our moms so much.
Some of our highlights this past week:
- Fitzroy island: snorkeling straight off the beach and being absolutely blown away and stunned with having our first unexpected exposure to the amazing underwater world of the Great Barrier reef.
- Manu the cockatoo: apparently a very notoriously dumb male cockatoo had a crush on me. He liked all of us girls but then took a particular liking to me and sought me out while at a wildlife center. Not sure if this is a high point or something to be proud of but it was hilarious. (Check out long but ultimately silly video)
- Moore Reef: learning to wear a stinger suit and snorkel in a stunning setting - amazing
-mentioning to an Aussie about the heavy rains they have here (torrential is the first word that comes to mind) and having him say “If the rain doesn’t bounce 3 feet off the ground, then it’s not REALLY rain. Welcome to the tropics!” 🙃
-seeing the girls giggling and playing together even after the many epic arguments this week.
Some low points:
-katie has learned that she is very allergic to something INSIDE (most likely molds) just about everywhere in Cairns, finally prompting an urgent care visit yesterday with her and another “Welcome to the tropics!” Comment from the very nice doctor. 🤣
-homesickness-it is the real deal this week. Girls are feeling it full force this week. We have to learn to navigate this and I’m glad we are together and talking about it.
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Katie’s 11th birthday is this Monday! On her bday, we’ll be hopping on a 24 hour train down to Brisbane and then will prepare to leave for Thailand! We’ve been watching some YouTube videos on how to say hi and thank you in Thai - getting ready!
Love to you all!
Next stop: Brisbane, Australia by train and then Bangkok, Thailand!Read more
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- Day 56
- Thursday, February 23, 2023 at 5:30 AM
- ⛅ 73 °F
- Altitude: 33 ft
AustraliaCurtin Reserve33°56’3” S 151°10’41” E
Sydney in 36 hours

Planning a 6 month round-the-world trip actually requires a lot of …well…planning. Something I’m not generally great at doing and have been waiting for the day when I realize - oops I booked the wrong flight; oops I forgot to have gotten a hostel/hotel for the right day so we’re shelterless, etc. but thankfully - I’m not quite there yet!
That said, scheduling only 36 hours in a large city like Sydney after traveling for 20+ hours with huge time zone change/ jet lag (16 hours ahead of EST) and then hopping on a plane that requires us getting up at 430 am - not the best move. That said, we did it! Maddie and Katie rocked it! I, on the other hand, well you can see the picture Brian took of me in our hotel. 🤣
After 36 hours, we are back at Sydney airport and are on our way to Cairns, Australia, the jumping off point to the Great Barrier reef.
A couple of key points here:
1) When I originally planned this trip, the Galapagos and Ecuador were NOT part of the plan. We never planned to go to the Galapagos AND the Great Barrier Reef. We were supposed to be spending 3 weeks in the mountains of Peru but the impeachment of Peru’s president and subsequent violent protests changed our itinerary and here we are…
2) Originally I thought we could drive up or take a bus to Cairns from Sydney - only to quickly realize Australia is about the size of the US and that Cairns is 1500 miles away. Moving around daily or every few days is exhausting and thus, I made the decision to fly. We have to be in a stable place to do home/world school every day - which other than getting from place to place and immersing ourselves in the cultures, is our main priority. We’ll be up in Cairns for a week and a half our so - Finally staying put for a bit (relaxed sigh).
Sydney was quick but wonderful for all of us. I don’t know how to describe our experience - we all felt the city was like a more relaxed version of New York. Tall buildings but not so tall. Lots of people but not so many people. People seemed calm, happy even though it’s bustling. Amazing food with tucked away chic food courts tucked between or along the bottom level of buildings. Amazing gardens (royal botanic and Chinese Friendship Gardens high on my “adore and want to sit here all day and revel in its splendor” list) and parks. Sydney Opera House - stunning! So all in all - it’s been great for us while being completely exhausted.
We’re almost a third of the way through this trip - how is that possible? I’m so grateful for every experience and watching all of this through the eyes of Maddie and Katie is just the best. There is awe, apprehension, appreciation, wonder…and also an attempt to try Vegemite about 10 minutes ago. I don’t think this family will ever be spreading that on our toast in the morning. 🥴
Looking forward to the next part of this trip - and what adventures await. I’m pretty sure at some point you’ll see a post starting with “OOPS - I forgot to…(fill in the blank)” but we’re not there yet thankfully!
Our best wishes and love headed to all of you and your families!! ❤️❤️
The Sellers Fam
Next stop: Cairns and the Great Barrier Reef!Read more
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- Day 51
- Saturday, February 18, 2023 at 4:54 PM
- Altitude: 686 ft
United StatesBallard34°38’16” N 120°6’27” W
Goin’ Back to Cali

Did you know that it’s about $1,000 cheaper (per ticket!) to fly from Ecuador to Australia if you go 3,000 miles out of the way and go through Los Angeles? 🤷🏻♂️
We didn’t either, but we do now! (The catch is that it takes you 4 flights and 30 HOURS to travel that 3,000 miles, but… $4,000 is $4,000.)
I (Brian) was a little worried that coming BACK to the USA for 11 days in the middle of an around-the-world adventure might “take us out” of our travel frame of mind, but Heather assured me that it’d be a good thing to do.
As usual, she was right, and it’s been such a GREAT 11 days here with friends and family.
We spent five days in Hermosa Beach with close friends Weddle, Lisa, and baby Everleigh, and it was so good to get to meet little Everleigh and really catch up for the first time since before COVID.
Being in LA also let us see some of Heather’s best friends, Nat and Dani, and spend some good time with them and their families in Irvine and Agoura Hills.
Then it was on to Heather’s dad’s new house in Santa Ynez, up in the hills about 30 minutes from Santa Barbara. Seeing them and spending time with most of Heather’s side of the family, including the girls’ uncles, aunt, and cousins… and two more kids 2 years old and younger… was so good for all of us.
I also got to see my great McGuire Programme friends in Santa Barbara, Dave and Maria, and it was really good to talk about all things overcoming-stuttering and reset some goals for myself there.
So now… we’re standing in line to board the plane to go to Sydney, Australia, via Auckland, NZ. 20 more hours of total travel and the biggest time shift any of us have ever experienced await!
Two weeks in Australia, including Sydney, Cairns and the Great Barrier Reef, and then a couple days in Brisbane before heading BACK to the Northern Hemisphere and visiting Thailand.
Catch you Down Under! 🤙🏻Read more

TravelerExcited; I had just looked a few days ago concerned that youall had changed your mind about traveling

TravelerHaha - nope! There's no stopping this train... 🤣. We're about an hour from Auckland right now, somewhere over the South Pacific... ✈️ Hope you're well!

I can hardly contain myself. So excited for the kids and all they get to experience at such a young age. Enjoying the excerpts through word and pics. Keep them coming. [Victoria]

TravelerThanks so much, Victoria! We're having a great time, learning from the amazing things we're seeing and the challenges we're overcoming along the way. Hope you're well!

Any chance any of our time in Thailand will overlap with yours!? We land in Bangkok the 10th and head back the 22nd. In Bangkok 10-13 and part of 21st before heading home. [Lindsey Mladinich]
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- Day 41
- Wednesday, February 8, 2023
- Altitude: 20 ft
EcuadorBahía Baquerizo Moreno0°54’13” S 89°36’52” W
Goodbye and thank you Galapagos!

If someone had asked me a couple months ago whether I would be willing to jump into the ocean knowing I may see hammerhead sharks swimming near by - it would respond With a HECK NO! And guess what - we ALL did it!
San Cristobal island is the oldest Galapagos Island and has exceeded our expectations!Seriously EVERY SINGLE DAY has been a new adventure.
-We went snorkeling at the famous Kicker Rock where we saw hammerheads, sea lions, sea turtles, and loads of fish in water so deep, you couldn’t see the bottom. It was Katie’s favorite (she was crazy brave because it was intimidating!)!! Then there was Maddie - who We could barely keep contained on the surface - she kept saying “can I please dive down?!!” We wouldn’t be surprised if a PADI scuba diving class is in her future.
-We got to JUMP into the middle of the ocean when a pod of dolphins were swimming by our boat.
-We got to really spend amazing family time with Jenny which was almost unreal because of our location!
-We finally got to see the election results for the country after weeks of rallies and parades and friendly Brian got to meet the new leader of San Cristobal and take a selfie with him.
-We watched the sunset on multiple days with sea lions just chilling nearby on the beach. We even saw one roll down the beach all the way to the water 🤣
- Yesterday we decided that we would “try” one last beach called Loberia that we could snorkel at - Oh my gosh - it was the most amazing experience I think any of us have had. Swimming alongside sea lions and sea turtles in shallow safe waters…we swam next to them! It was so amazing!!!❤️
Maddie says the Galapagos is like a place you could only see in a movie and that Rupert (the baby sea lion thst the girls named that came up to Maddie when we first arrived) was her favorite.
Katie says she loved the snorkeling at Kicker Rock with all the wildlife. Amazing!
Off to LA - in the middle of a 29 hours of travel time with less than an hour of sleep. We’re all exhausted so hopefully this post makes some sense! We had to say goodbye to Jenny this morning, which was sad, but we’re hoping we can convince her to join us on another leg of this trip!Read more
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- Day 34
- Wednesday, February 1, 2023 at 5:54 PM
- ⛅ 82 °F
- Altitude: 43 ft
EcuadorPuerto Ayora0°44’38” S 90°18’57” W
Galapagos now please!

After our wonderful week in Cuenca, Ecuador, we took an all day harrowing car ride to the city of Guayaquil, our last mainland stop before our flight to Santa Cruz Island, Galapagos. The day included Cajas National Park (a national park up at 14000 feet where we hiked in beautiful mountains pushed up by techtonic plates, with clear blue lagoons nestled within). This was followed by 3 hours of driving along the side of the Andes mountains as we descending back to sea level.
During this time, we encountered a fairly recent enormous land slide (7 months ago) that took out the main road (already fairly treacherous looking) and basically required the roads be rerouted along a very steep and narrow slope with no guardrail. To boot, add in the crazy fog, rain that leaked through on to Brian’s and my heads in the car and I’ll just say I was questioning my choices for all of us in the subsequent hour or two. In addition to all of that, apparently Guayaquil is a big cartel hub and the news was filled with assasination footage captured on security cameras.
After a quick flight from Guayaquil to Santa Cruz Island, our next leg of our adventure awaited! 💕
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What was the 4 Sellers traveling …is now 5. Meeting up with auntie Gigi has been such an easy transition (for us at least - she has to put up with a lot more than we do)!
Oh Santa Cruz, Galapagos - similar to your wild and diverse landscape, we have been enamored by the unreal wildlife! We’ve seen marine iguanas swimming between us at Tortuga Bay, sea lions chillin on benches sleeping, 10-20 black tipped reef sharks right next to the pier, giant tortoises fighting for dominance (check out the picture Katie took!), and enormous pelicans diving into the water right next to us to eat some delicious fish.
There is so much to see and learn - Charles Darwin was here about 200 years ago, studying adaptation and natural selection: How the iguanas now swim like sea lions, the birds have adapted their beaks to better survive the varying landscape, and giant tortoises can raise up their legs and necks and now have the ability to eat leaves higher up on bushes, similar to the idea behind the giraffe’s neck.
The girls have loved seeing all these incredible animals and landscapes. I’ve never seen their faces with so many surprised “O” shaped mouth expressions with all the animals everywhere! It’s been fun to watch through their eyes!
We’ve loved Santa Cruz Island but I am really looking forward to our next stop: San Cristobal island, the oldest inhabited Galapagos island, tomorrow for our last bit of Ecuadorian and South American adventure! Two hour boat ride first thing in the morning - I’ve heard it can be really choppy so we’ll see how it goes!Read more
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- Day 29
- Friday, January 27, 2023
- ⛅ 72 °F
- Altitude: 8,373 ft
EcuadorParque Calderón2°53’51” S 79°0’22” W
BINGO in Cuenca, Ecuador

Yep, we feel like we’ve won the jackpot here in Cuenca. We’re staying right near the center of town (which is up at around 8400 feet) - with almost daily festivals, hearing music till late outside as well as the bells of the old cathedral next our hotel ring at 6:37 am 72 times in a row. We have seen amazing Incan ruins in town and also experienced a spiritual purification at the local market, with very strong smelling flowers and liquid/oils and a raw egg being rubbed on us. And then both girls won $8 at an expat hangout bingo day! Who says what a “typical” Ecuadorian experience while traveling should be - right?
One of the dilemmas while traveling with kids for this amount of time and moving around so much is that they miss their friends back home and at their age, friends are their whole world. So before coming to Cuenca, I joined a Facebook group for expats (no- we’re not moving - there is just a huge expat community here because it’s awesome and super cheap with good healthcare, and I needed some info). I wrote to some expat families and one American family that lives in Cuenca responded (yay!), telling us about Bingo at a sports bar in town - which has turned into a wonderful new friendship and connection point for all of us. We have played bingo, gone to their house, and hung out at a local park with them. The kids had a blast - and so did us grownups!
We’re more than halfway through our week in Cuenca. Who knew that Ecuador would be so amazing and diverse in its landscape and overall feel! On Sunday, we head to Cajas National Park and then Guayaquil, our jumping off point to the Galapagos! We get to finally see Jenny (Brian’s sis) on Monday and spend a week together in the Galapagos! Yay! Let the adventures continue! Hope you are all happy, healthy, and safe! ❤️Read more
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- Day 23
- Saturday, January 21, 2023 at 6:41 AM
- ☁️ 55 °F
- Altitude: 6,050 ft
EcuadorBaños de Agua Santa1°23’44” S 78°25’48” W
Baños de Aqua Santa

We are currently in a smaller Ecuadorian town called Baños de Aqua Santa, in a valley surrounded by lush green mountains and volcanoes (dormant fortunately!). It’s beautiful here and the people have been extremely kind and genuine.
We’ve loved it here! Our hotel is awesome, food outstanding (anyone want a tomahawk steak? Arepas? Empanadas with chocolate and banana? 🥰) and we have all stepped out of our comfort zones!! We have been so impressed with all the new activities and foods the girls are trying.
In the last two days, we have gone to a local thermal bath/pool house. The girls jumped right in and had a blast. We’ve gone on two very small but extremely high up cable cars across a very wide and deep valley with a river very far below us. They rocked it. We went right next to an enormous waterfall. They then proceeded to do the “flight of the condor” - where we strapped into a secure swing and we got launched off a ramp that swung over the edge of a cliff!! Have I mentioned the rivers and valleys way below us? The girls and I went on “The Beauty” which forced me to hold in a few choice words. I thought it felt huge. However, Brian, chose “The Beast” which was much bigger. He didn’t hold in his choice words🤣! So much fun!
I wouldn’t be surprised if Maddie wants to move up to the “Beast” soon. You can hear her in the video scream “This is awesome!” ❤️
Today we are taking it easy. Katie has yet another cold. We also have the girls math tutor, Alex, today via zoom. Worldschooling has been an interesting and challenging yet rewarding experience so far. The girls are learning so much about these various cultures. I’m still scrambling trying to figure how to help them learn without using up an entire travel pack for all their school supplies.
We are currently packing, getting ready to head to Cuenca tomorrow, where we’ll be staying for a week. It’s a colonial town about 7 hours south of here and is supposed to be a great place to stay awhile and also explore! I’m planning on taking the girls to get a traditional spiritual cleansing with egg (!) at a local market in Cuenca. Should be exciting!
Hope you are all having a great weekend!Read more
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- Day 20
- Wednesday, January 18, 2023 at 1:09 PM
- ⛅ 54 °F
- Altitude: 12,808 ft
EcuadorLoma Mirador0°11’15” S 78°32’6” W
Hi from Ecuador, South America!

Hi everyone! We arrived in Quito, Ecuador about 3 days ago at midnight via Panama. We were exhausted! However, Brian and I watched the flight status to see exactly when we were crossing over the equator with bated breath since neither of us have ever travelled to the Southern Hemisphere. So exciting!
Here’s the thing, while writing this, a light bulb just went off - I just realized that when I was a little kid, I went to Bali, Indonesia, and I literally JUST NOW looked at a world map and guess what - Southern Hemisphere! 🤣 Neither of us had been to South America before so who cares, I’m still excited!!
I’m not going to lie - Quito was a bit much for us. 😳
Traveling together as a family is a unique experience. We are learning that we just can’t push too much and this is especially the case in a big city with an altitude around 9,000 ft. Walking up 3 steps made us winded like we had just sprinted a mile. I, in particular, dealt with a throbbing headache on day 1. While walking around, when we were two blocks (SO close!) to the historical center of Quito with is a UNESCO heritage site, I could tell some of us were on the verge of tears.
I later heard “Mom, I want to go back to Costa Rica - I don’t want to see anymore drunk men. I don’t like it here”. We will see so much during these 6 months - we just needed to go back to the hotel and relax.
While there have been challenges (a couple of letdowns occurring here including with me), we did two really amazing things in Quito. We did go to the Equator or “el Mitad del Mundo,” where we jumped back and forth between Northern and Southern Hemisphere. That was fun as you can see from pictures and Katie’s video that we included. 😂 We also went on a cable car up to 13,000 feet which gave us a panoramic view of all of Quito! Stunning!
Yesterday we hopped in a transport and are now in Baños del Aqua Santo or Baños, which is a town nestled in a valley with mountains and the largest (dormant) volcano in Ecuador just outside our window. It’s quieter here (I hear chickens rather than buses and horns outside my window). I feel my shoulders relaxing and that I can breathe a bit better (less stress and lower altitude)! There are apparently hot springs 5 minutes away which we’ll learn about TODAY and we’ll be headed to a very high swing on top of one of previously noted mountains nearby. We are also going to be starting our studies of the Galápagos - because we’ll be there in just under two weeks. Jenny, Brian’s sis, is meeting us there and we can’t wait!
Goodbye all - hope you are having a great week. You’ll hear from us soon!! ❤️Read more

TravelerThis is such a great summary, babe! It’s so much fun seeing our trip through your eyes… and I just want to clarify that I was NOT one of the “drunk men” Maddie was referring to. 🤣😳
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- Day 17
- Sunday, January 15, 2023
- 🌧 82 °F
- Altitude: 30 ft
Costa RicaBoca Vieja Creek9°25’59” N 84°9’51” W
Goodbye Costa Rica!

This week has been one of the most beautiful albeit challenging experiences we’ve had as a family. Last night as Maddie and I went out to the local market, she said “I love it here. I don’t want to leave.” Ah what that does to a mama’s heart who questioned whether a homestay would be too challenging and different. ❤️ I’m actually almost teary eyed thinking about leaving Quepos, Costa Rica and our new Costa Rican family to head to Ecuador.
In one week:
— the girls have learned to easily navigate themselves on the public bus and can get themselves to and from our homestay to the bus station and all the way to Manuel Antonio Spanish school.
— we have truly embraced the meaning behind “Pura Vida” (it’s good/pure life) 💕
— the girls have opened their minds and have given their all with an intensive kid’s Spanish class while I had to laugh my way through mistakes I made trying to have conversations in Spanish with my Spanish teacher who became a fake hospice patient and family for my learning enjoyment.
— Brian got to thoroughly enjoy being out taking video and photos in this stunning landscape.
— we have experienced the BEST home cooked Costa Rican food gracias a Francisca(!!) - lucky us. As the kids have said, “Sorry mom - but when you try, it just isn’t the same” - uh yes I agree!
— we got to learn first hand about the beautifully diverse wildlife here - from two toed blond nocturnal, omnivorous sloths versus three toes grey vegetarian diurnal sloth, to VERY loud red macaws, monkeys everywhere overhead, to iguanas eating flowers in trees at the beach overhead(never expected to see that!)
- we have learned that we LOVE seeing this through the eyes of our children: the mind expanding experiences, the beauty, and even the hardship - because from hardship there is growth. We have seen so much and I’m so grateful.
— !! I have learned that packing and doing laundry for 4 is way stinkin harder than when I travelled independently or when it was just Brian and I. Home/worldschooling books, sheer volume of technology/chargers, masks and JUST SO MUCH stuff. It’s ridiculous. I’ve done laundry 3 times this week. Francisca saw me and said “la Vida de una mama” - we both smiled and sighed. It’s beautiful and exhausting.
Thank you Costa Rica. Sad to leave but on to Ecuador!!! Time to pull out our pants and jackets!
Pura Vida!!Read more

TravelerSo happy that the Pura Vida life touched your hearts in such beautiful ways! ❤️❤️❤️ (But also - pants and jackets in Ecuador? I thought it said 70’s?!)

TravelerHey! It’s mid 40s at night up in Quito (since it’s around 9000 ft) Also very few people seem to wear shorts around here!!!

TravelerSure of walking up stairs and getting out of breath sounds good you should join . Yeah I will enjoy all the wonderful things of elevation sickness what a wonderful feeling 😌
TravelerAmazing absolutely amazing. You ALL have reset the standard for LOVE. Be safe as you finish up this part of life’s journey. 😊
TravelerC’est magnifique! Love reading your reflections and seeing the photos. Miss you. Wishing you all safe travels and sending lots of love! xo
TravelerSave trip home, I’ve loved reading all about your adventures 😍