Teardrops n Tiny Travel Trailers. How To Plan A Killer Road Trip! Part 2: $$$ « Travels with the Blonde Coyote. People often ask me how I can afford to travel so much.
A large part of the answer has to do with the fact that I don’t pay rent, have very few monthly bills, absolutely no debt and, since everything I own has to fit in my car, I don’t buy a lot of stuff. Everything I own, packed to leave Maine But despite all the costs I cut due to my lifestyle choices, I’m still not rolling in it. After all, I make my living as a freelance writer and this is no way to get rich. Blonde Coyote's Teardrop Trailer. The Blonde Coyote travels the backroads of the American West with a pair of trusty canines, a Subaru named “Raven” and a handcrafted teardrop trailer named “Rattler”.
Mary Caperton Morton (aka The Blonde Coyote) is a freelance science and travel writer, photographer and a professional housesitter who has spent the past couple of years moving around the country every four to six months. Mary used to live out of her car in between housesitting jobs and carried her camping gear on the car’s roof rack – until she fell in love with teardrop trailers.
“I saw my first teardrop at a campground at Guadalupe National Park in Texas and fell instantly in love,” Mary said. “Less than a month later, I bought my own. ARCHIPELAGO CINEMA. Wednesday, March 28, 2012 Redefining the outdoor cinema, is architect Ole Scheeren.
His vision was to build a giant floating cinematic auditorium, where? Not in a parking lot, not on top a fancy building, not on the roof of a pub, but in the oceanic setting of Yao Noi, Thailand. The thought of watching films here seemed surprising: A screen, nestled somewhere between the rocks.