Introducing our five new Vagablogging writers…

This week marks the official debut of five new contributors here at Vagablogging. Over the next several months, they will be blogging great new travel content five days a week. In no particular order, this is who they are:

Lea Woodward is currently traveling the world with her husband as a Location Independent Professional. This year the pair have been to Panama, Buenos Aires, Toronto, and Grenada — and they have plans to go back to Grenada, and then to Dubai and South Africa, until April next year. They do this while running their businesses (marketing and technology coaching and graphic design) over the Internet.

Aaron Hotfelder is a 22-year-old grad student from St. Louis, currently studying law in Columbia, Missouri. He’s been vagabonding on several occasions in the past, including extended solo trips to Morocco, Central Europe, and Ecuador — all places he lived in for over four months.

Eva Holland works as a historical researcher and freelance writer in Ottawa, Canada. Her travel writing and blogging has appeared in the Ottawa Citizen, the Edmonton Journal and World Hum. She is also a regular contributor to Not Coming to a Theater Near You, a site that specializes in reviewing independent, obscure and older films.

Abha Malpani is a regular contributor to Gridskipper and Written Road. She also writes for Madrid based expat websites Map Magazine and European Vibe — as well as her personal blog. She has lived in India, England, Australia, Dubai and now Spain — and she has traveled to Cuba, Jamaica, Portugal, Sweden, Denmark, Thailand and Malaysia.

Alison Brick has worked as a copywriter at Gap, as San Francisco entertainment contributor to Gather.com, and as a writer at the travel company Backroads, where she currently works.

Welcome, Lea, Aaron, Eva, Abha, and Alison! And please feel free to send them blog ideas via the “collective (at) vagabonding (dot) net” address!

Posted by | Comments Off on Introducing our five new Vagablogging writers…  | September 23, 2007
Category: Notes from the collective travel mind

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