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After what some may consider careers in consulting and logistics, we quit our jobs, sold our stuff and left Germany to be full-time travelers and development volunteers. This blog is about our travels, our work as volunteers and our alternative life strategies - always looking to make an impact and to find the meaning in what we do or put some into it if we can't find any. -
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Shirt Raffle -Unser letztes Hemd
20. April 2011 // 19 Comments -
Fundraising: Yodelin' for donations
15. März 2011 // 15 Comments -
How to survive in Belize City
3. September 2011 // 13 Comments -
How to prepare for a hurricane in Belize
22. August 2011 // 7 Comments -
Die erste Woche beim Roten Kreuz / First week at the Be ...
16. Juli 2011 // 5 Comments
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1 Jahr später: das Ende der sinnvollen Reise (?) Versuc ...
5. August 2012 // 0 Comments -
Lebenszeichen / Signs of Life
12. Juli 2012 // 0 Comments -
Action at Mama Noots
7. Juni 2012 // 2 Comments -
Tip: Rainbow Hotel, Caye Caulker, Belize
3. Juni 2012 // 0 Comments -
River Rafting and Volunteer Consulting
31. Mai 2012 // 0 Comments
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[...] why over half of all Belizean children drop ...
By Activities in Belize..., 20. März 2013 -
[...] tips can help you avoid being robbed or losi ...
By How to survive in Be..., 27. Februar 2013 -
[...] (If you’d like to see some photos of G ...
By 1 Year in Belize &la..., 23. November 2012 -
Hallo Kerstin :) in 4 Monaten starten wir auch un ...
By Lydia, 31. Oktober 2012 -
[...] but then my friends and fellow foreigners-wo ...
By Mayflower Bocawina a..., 22. Oktober 2012
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How to treat your regular taxi driver
Taxis (green license plate) waiting. Belize, Central AmericaWhen you’re living abroad, you may find yourself in a situation where you can’t walk around at night. Or not at all. Like in Belize City. But even when we were still back in Germany, I had regular taxi drivers that would take me to the airport or train station a couple of times per [...]
Wie man seinen Taxifahrer behandeln sollte

Wenn man in einem fremden Land wohnt ist man öfter mal in der Situation, dass man nicht einfach loslaufen kann abends nach der Party. Oder vielleicht gar nicht los laufen kann. Wie in Belize City. Aber selbst als wir noch in Deutschland waren, hatte ich meine festen Taxifahrer, die mich zum Flughafen oder Bahnhof gefahren [...]








