Return to Home Page

January 10, 2008

Circle (most of) the globe using only budget airlines

Budget Long Haul has an innovative concept, and not one of the “I’ll only walk east today, only north tomorrow, only east the next day” variety. The site shows how a traveler can make it almost all the way around the world only on budget airlines.

Departing from the Americas, a traveler could reach Europe on Condor from North America or Air Madrid from South America. When the money runs out in Europe, time to go to Africa on Atlas-Blue. Ready for the next leg of the journey, Air Arabia brings one to the Middle East and then onwards to Asia where Jet Star can fly one to Australia and the Pacific Islands. The circle of budget airlines ends in the Cook Islands, but what’s a little gap in the ocean after circling most of the globe?

Of course, that’s just a sample trip; most of those legs have other airline options, so check the site out.

Overland travel (or air travel within the continent) would be necessary to circumnavigate most of the globe on budget airlines. Seat 61 can help a traveler find his or her way across a continent without leaving the ground, using bus, train, and ship.

The hassle factor of purchasing tickets on many different airlines makes the budget airlines round-the-world an option that would not suit everyone. With a traditional round-the-world ticket, there is a representative to contact if things go wrong, but there are far more conditions (such as the traveler cannot backtrack, can only make two stops per continent, etc.). Flying budget airlines around the world is an option for those who seek flexibility and don’t mind doing a little legwork on their own.

Posted by |  
Category: Notes from the collective travel mind
Related Posts: Zagat reports best airlines for 2007, Vagablogging props from Singapore Airlines magazine, Go Budget Travel


One Response to “Circle (most of) the globe using only budget airlines”

  1. Mike Says:

    Thanks for pointing this one out. Will be useful for sure.

Leave a Reply

Main

Bio

Stories

Essays

Interviews

Books

Images

Writers

Guide

News

Paris

Vagabonding.net

Contact

Marco Polo Didnt Go There
Rolf's new book!


Vagabonding
   Vagabonding


RECENT COMMENTS

Niall Doherty: Ah, I could quote Fight Club all day. Nice article. As someone who has...

Avon Blake: Sycophantic crap. Anyone who falls for this bullshit is an idiot.

Valerie Hawkins: I did the overland trip to India with “New Frontier” in...

Erica Johansson: These are some good tips. Jogging is my favorite so far. I love...

malia: thanks for the tips! i just received my absentee ballot in the mail and am...

Mike Melton: There is something about the crappy side of travel that tends to stick in...

Andreea Vaas: Going out of preplaned routes can bring you a lot of satisfaction because...

Andreea Vaas: Butter is far better and more healthier. However margarine is vegetal so...

Andreea Vaas: Ethical travel is slighty related to ecoturism and responsable traveling,...

Andreea Vaas: REally good reading even if i didn’t understood the part with the...

SPONSORED BY :



CATEGORIES

TRAVEL LINKS

ARCHIVES

RECENT ENTRIES

Explore local cemeteries
Hurray for street food!
Be careful what you bring, you might get caught ’smuggling’
Blogger Mojo in Wales and Beyond
Finding the extraordinary in the ordinary
Voting and traveling: not mutually exclusive
Is the age of cheap air travel coming to an end?
Restless Legs and World Hum reading series
Fit on the road
Rolf’s book tour diary now appearing at Gadling


Subscribe to this blog's feed
Counter