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About Olly Gaspar & We Seek Travel

Olly Gaspar

My name is Olly Gaspar, I’m an adventure traveler from Australia. I’ve spent the last six years traveling the world full-time, sharing my first-hand experiences & photography in over 700 travel guides on We Seek Travel.

Today, traveling, researching, and writing for We Seek Travel is my full-time job. I want to inspire you to embrace the adventure wherever you go.

I visit every destination I write about to bring you unique travel itineraries, epic hiking routes, fun tour ideas, travel & photography gear ideas, & interesting places to stay.

You may have seen my photos and byline in publications like Condé Nast Traveler, the Daily Mail, Wanderlust Mag, Tourism Tropical North Queensland, Tourism Seychelles, Visit Malta, and more.

> Read my story.

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What Will You Find on We Seek Travel?

We Seek Travel started as a way to share my adventures and travel photos from my trips around the world with my partner Haylea. Six years ago, we left Australia with our backpacks and have traveled to over 50 countries across 6 continents so far.

We’ve backpacked across India, climbed Himalayan peaks, crossed a desert on camel-back, cycled through the Arctic Circle, trekked with mountain gorillas in Africa, and fought Muay Thai in Thailand– and we’ve been writing all about it on this blog as we go.

Fast forward to today and We Seek Travel has grown into one of the world’s most popular adventure travel blogs– powered by a team of real travelers sharing authentic guides to the most incredible destinations around the world.

Since launch, over 5+ million travelers have relied on our guides to plan their trips– that’s a lot of epic independent travel!

Olly gaspar and haylea brown hiking in the mountains
Olly and Haylea in New Zealand

Travel Guides

All of our travel guides are based on our perspective and experiences with a strong focus on adventure. In most of the guides, you’ll see Haylea in most of the photos since I’m usually behind the camera!

Haylea and I like to travel at a slow pace and spend at least a month or two in each destination. This helps me write more detailed and comprehensive travel guides & itineraries, honest accommodation recommendations, and adventure inspiration for epic hikes, beaches, waterfalls, & tours.

Here are some of my favorite destinations I’ve written about so far.

My passion for photography is the cornerstone of the content on We Seek Travel. You’ll find my photos in every post. I also write the occasional travel photo gear guide and share reviews and recommendations for travel gear & packing tips.

I’m a believer in sharing real travel experiences by and for real travelers. Read my publishing principles to find out why you can count on me to tell it like it is.

Olly gaspar and haylea brown with pygmy a tribe in uganda
Olly and Haylea meeting the Echuya Batwa tribe in Uganda

We Seek Travel Adventure Trips & Tours

In 2023, I launched We Seek Travel Adventure Trips, offering tailor-made small group tours and trips to some of my favorite destinations on Earth.

Now, you can book these trips directly on We Seek Travel! Visit the trips page to check out our latest departures.

Here are a few standout highlights and features across the web and beyond.

Olly gaspar and haylea brown from we seek travel

Collaborations

I’ve worked closely with dozens of large and local tour companies, several national tourism boards, and major travel and adventure brands. Below are a few of the stand-out collaborations over the past 6 years.

  • 2024: Photography and adventure marketing collaboration with Epic Expeditions.
  • 2023Marriot Hotels – provided tourism marketing and photography services for Kathmandu’s leading luxury hotel
  • 2023Tourism Tropical North Queensland – provided industry advice and wrote an article about solo travel in Cairns
  • 2022Visit Malta – led a tourism campaign to promote adventure activities in the Maltese Islands
  • 2022TravelTalk Tours – led a marketing campaign in Turkey and Egypt and wrote an article about Egypt adventure travel
  • 2022 – MedExperience & Sail Croatia – provided photography and tourism marketing services
  • 2021Seychelles Tourism Board – led a tourism marketing campaign to boost adventure tourism in the Seychelles Islands
  • 2021Fitzroy Island Resort – provided photography and tourism marketing services
  • 2021 – LowePro – tested their top-of-the-range travel backpacks and provided photography and marketing services
  • 2021 – Manfrotto – tested and promoted their travel tripods as a recognized industry expert

Read more on my Media Kit, or connect with me on Linkedin for professional queries.

Olly gaspar travel and adventure photographer and blogger

My Story

First off, welcome, and thanks for reading my adventure travel blog!

This is my story of how our relentless passion for raw, adventure travel took me from teaching English online in hostel bathrooms– to getting paid to travel the world full-time as an adventure travel blogger.

Whether you’re interested in how I started traveling full-time, kicking off your own perpetual adventure travel, the digital nomad lifestyle, or what the process of starting a travel blog actually looks like, I’m sure you’ll enjoy my story!

I’ll keep updating this section year by year, so make sure to keep following along! Make sure to also follow me on Instagram and Facebook to see my latest adventures and guides.

2015: My First Big Backpacking Trip

I like to think that I was born into the nomadic, traveling lifestyle, or at least so in part. I was born in a small town in rural Sweden called Växjö, a town probably nobody has ever heard of. At the age of seven, my parents immigrated with me and my sister to New South Wales, Australia on student visas.

Over the next few years, we moved around a lot. By the time I was 10, I’d been enrolled in four schools but could now speak fluent English. Looking back, I’d say this perpetual movement at a young age had a big impact on my passion for travel and new experiences.

After finishing school, I didn’t really know what I wanted to do with my life, but I finished with decent grades, so I decided to enroll in an international business degree. I chose this because it seemed like the broadest subject.

Two years in, I was starting to feel a little lost and unfulfilled. So, Haylea I decided we’d commit to a year-long “gap year” of backpacking through Europe before wrapping up the last year of university. We figured that by then, we’d kind of have this travel bug out of our system and we’d be content with starting a conventional career.

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Italy 2015 – our first year-long backpacking trip across europe

To save up for this trip, we worked tirelessly, saving every single penny and locking ourselves into an obsessive money-saving mindset. I consider myself very lucky to have had an Australian passport by this stage, which allowed me to earn decent money for hard unskilled manual labor work.

While studying part-time remotely, I managed to secure 50-hour weeks digging trenches for a large-scale Australian telecommunications project. On the weekends I’d also do some childminding for extra cash and I was still able to get some decent Muay Thai sessions in every day.

I did this for eight months, without a single dollar of “unnecessary” spending. Haylea too locked into the money-saving mode, working equally hard to reach our savings goal. Safe to say, the hard work paid off. We managed to save enough money for 10 months of backpacking through Europe with just 8 months of work. Australia is the land of opportunity and I’m forever grateful for the hand I was dealt.

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Hiking in Norway on my first long backpacking trip – 2015

Also safe to say, that first backpacking trip didn’t get the travel bug out of our system. In fact, I’d say it ignited in us an undying passion for travel. 2015 was also the first time I picked up a camera for landscape photography, and instantly I was hooked.

From that moment we knew that all we wanted to do was to continue to travel. But, we also knew that dedicating years of our youth to working and saving money for short-lived moments of freedom was not going to be sustainable in the long term.

But still, I didn’t see any other way.

2015-2018: My Pursuit of Perpetual Travel

We returned to Australia and I graduated from Macquarie University while working several jobs in the hopes of saving more money for future travel. I refused to buy a car and cycled everywhere, non-essential spending was reduced to zero and I picked up extra work wherever an opportunity lay, from babysitting to teaching Muay Thai classes to cleaning gyms to trying my hand at online start-up ventures.

During this period I still managed to fit in several short ultra-low-budget adventure trips to The Philippines and Thailand. I also modified my road bike and rode it across the south island of New Zealand and squeezed in a month-long Muay Thai camp in Bangkok.

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Solo bike-packing in new zealand
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Raw travels – training with some former Muay Thai and future Lethwei World Champions in Bangkok

It felt great to be back on the road in those fleeting moments.

However, all they really achieved was cementing my longing for a raw, minimalist, and nomadic way of life.

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Stoked to be back on the road – Philippines 2016

2018: Starting Full-Time Travel & My First Remote Job

Then, in 2018, after reading books like The Alchemist and The Celestine Prophecy, while working a desk job to save up for another trip, I began to question what the end goal really was for me. I needed a purpose that aligned with my passion for raw travel, minimalist living, and photography. Pretty cliche, I know.

But, I also knew that I didn’t fit into the conventional framework of life and that Western ideals didn’t really resonate with me. I guess I can blame spending that on spending the majority of my teenage years in a Muay Thai gym.

I began furiously googling things like “how to make money online”, “how to become a digital nomad” and “how to get digital nomad jobs”.

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Google: “How the f*** do I become a Digital Nomad?”

Most of the answers then just confirmed the little I already knew. To work online in 2018 you needed to either convince your current employer or start an online business or eCommerce store. I had already tried starting an online dropshipping business and an online anti-piracy service but they ultimately failed because I wasn’t prepared to dedicate thousands of dollars to something that I wasn’t passionate about.

Then, I found an ad looking for remote online English Teachers.

My partner Haylea and I applied immediately and within a week we were offered a contract paying $20 USD per hour to work 12 hours a week on Sunday and Monday afternoons.

This seemed too good to be true for us. $20 was easily enough to get us through a day backpacking in Southeast Asia. We were being paid that per hour, each!

And, when you want something, all the universe conspires to helping you achieve it.

The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

Seeing how easy this was shifted my mentality instantly. I quit my desk job at the time and bought a one-way ticket to Thailand. A few weeks later I found myself training full-time and even fulfilling my bucket list dream of fighting Muay Thai in Thailand.

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Finally training for a fight in Thailand – one of my biggest bucket list goals – 2018
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Sometimes we had to teach English in the bathroom to limit noise

2018: Getting My Second Remote Job While Traveling

We stayed in Thailand for several months in 2018. My childhood friend Tom came to live with us on Koh Tao, where we both got our Dive Master certificate together. I also secured a second job as an SEO copywriter earning 3 cents per word, anything to help keep the dream of full-time travel alive.

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Living as a Dive Master on Koh Tao with my buddy Tom

This company asked me to write some pretty weird articles on some wild topics like “how to build a beehive box”, and “best bear spray for the backcountry”.

Either way, I quickly became an online expert on a lot of random topics. But hey, there’s a lesson for you, just because someone sounds confident in an article you read online, doesn’t mean they really know what they’re talking about!

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Beats the old office

This new source of income, combined with Haylea and me teaching English online, meant we could now finance our life on the road from our laptops.

It wasn’t a lot, but we got by.

While I didn’t enjoy writing about bee hive boxes or rocking beds for toddlers, I would have probably agreed to less than this 3 cents per word for the freedom, raw experiences, and challenges that these kinds of remote jobs enabled.

Most importantly, the writing job taught me a lot about SEO, a skill that would become very valuable for me once I started my own blog.

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Haylea hanging out with some kids on Apo Island

In the second half of 2018, we made our way through Indonesia and the Philippines. I began writing about some of the far-flung places we visited and launched this website, but never published anything online.

2019: Starting My Adventure Travel Blog: We Seek Travel

After hopping around Asia spending roughly $40 USD per day between us, we took a flight to Sri Lanka in January 2019.

We rented two tuk-tuks and drove them across the country with some old friends. This was one of my favorite trips to date.

It was then in a lazy beach town called Hikkaduwa where I quietly hit publish on the first blog posts on We Seek Travel. By this time I’d accumulated lots of written content and photos from our adventures already, and finally had a place to publish them.

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I started my adventure travel blog, We Seek Travel, in hopes of having my own place on the internet where I could showcase my photography, which had grown into a pretty serious hobby for me by then.

By this time, I’d accumulated a bunch of great photos and I wanted to be able to document and share all of the awesome adventures we’d been on.

I also noticed that some of the blog posts I was writing for my online writing job were showing up among the first results in Google and generating a lot of traffic for those businesses. Most of these pieces were on topics I had literally zero idea about before being given the assignment.

So, I thought I’d take the technical skills I’d learned and apply them to my own project.

I figured, if I was able to rank for topics I didn’t know anything about, then surely I could rank for travel content, which was pretty much my daily life at this stage!

So, I started my blogging life knowing a bit of SEO and a lot about travel and the destinations I was writing about. In the blogging world, this is kind of weird and actually, a bit of a reversed learning curve as SEO is usually one of the last things newbie bloggers master.

Regardless, over the course of the next few months, I finally got my self-hosted WordPress blog in order and started uploading blog posts and useful travel guides based on our experience traveling through Sri Lanka, India, and Nepal with Haylea and my friend Ryan, as well as a subsequent solo stint through Myanmar.

At this stage, We Seek Travel saw its first 10,000 monthly page views. This was pretty much all from Google as I wasn’t using social media that much.

My mindset was always a bit hesitant on the whole social media thing, the last thing I wanted was to become another manufactured influencer. Instead, I tried to focus more on telling stories about the adventure and location rather than shamelessly selling my personality.

Google seemed to like this, but social media, not so much.

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I also wasn’t earning any money from blogging yet, since I was reluctant to put any ads on my travel website and I didn’t really know much about affiliate marketing.

To me, it was just exciting that people were seeing my adventures. I started getting emails and comments about how much I’d inspired people to go on similar trips and how much my blog helped them plan their trips.

This was and continues to be the biggest motivator for me.

Nevertheless, during this period We Seek Travel was far from a job, more like a side project and I continued to teach English and write random (sometimes fun, but mostly boring) articles for big websites in order to continue living the digital nomad lifestyle and keep the adventures rolling.

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Freedom over comfort is the motto

2019: Sailing the East Coast of Australia

While growing up in Australia, my dad had the crazy idea to build a 50-foot steel yacht in our backyard, which turned into a family affair for the duration of my childhood in Australia. My dad finally launched Malaika in 2014, and in 2019 it was finally time for her first major maiden voyage.

My parents had already sailed hundreds of nautical miles north but Haylea and I flew back to Australia to join them for the last three months of the trip to Cairns. To date, this is still one of the most memorable experiences and was the perfect way to celebrate this decade-long family project.

Junk rig sailing at michaelmas cay great barrier reef, sailing up the east coast of australia,
Sailing on the Great Barrier Reef on a home-built yacht

During this time, I started uploading weekly Sailing Log updates on this blog, which documented our adventures on Malaika.

2019: Traveling Back to to Asia

Once we’d completed the sailing journey, we flew straight back to Southeast Asia and backpacked for the last three months of the year through Borneo, Lombok, Komodo, and Northern Thailand.

Things to do on lombok, mount rinjani

While we’d spent close to two years in Southeast Asia at this point, we felt there was just so much more left to see, especially since we tend to travel quite slowly to really do a deep dive into a destination.

Additionally, this slow travel pace also allowed me to dedicate some days to writing blog posts on We Seek Travel, while we both still also worked our remote jobs online.

This was also the time when we started working with a few small tour companies and hotels, taking photos for them in exchange for some free boat trips and lodging. This seemed too good to be true at the time for me but helped me learn a lot about the tourism industry.

Pink beach komodo island

2020: Traveling Into the the Pandemic

After over a year of blogging, We Seek Travel was still only seeing around 30,000 page views per month, which is far from impressive after an entire year of working on it.

I put this down to avoiding popular topics and just writing about whatever I was interested in. Usually, these were off-the-beaten-path places in Asia and the Indian subcontinent that nobody was really searching for.

Nevertheless, it was certainly getting some attention from a few Australian media outlets who were interested in sharing our unique adventure travel style.

30,000 monthly hits was also still enough to start earning me a little bit of money for all my effort. So, I decided I would start running some Google Adsense display ads.

Was I excited about having ads on my blog? Definitely not, but to finally be compensated for the hundreds of hours spent in front of my laptop felt good.

During the first few months of 2020, we landed our first big collaboration in New Zealand. We spent two months exploring the South Island with SpaceShip Rentals, who offered us a free van in exchange for publicity on the blog. During these months, We Seek Travel was really starting to take off.

Views were increasing quickly and I was now earning enough from my blog through affiliate marketing (still no ads) to quit writing articles for other people, I could quit my SEO copywriting job! This was massive for me and allowed me to dedicate a lot more time to writing my own posts and developing my photography and travel writing skills.

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Spaceships rentals – our first big collaboration

We were stoked to have such a great collaboration with Spaceships and it provided us with the freedom to spend an awesome few months hiking every in the South Island and publishing a lot of blog posts!

Then, when all the pieces looked like they were coming together, the pandemic.

Mueller hut camping
Life in New Zealand living in a rental van is pretty damn sweet

2020: Doubling Down on Travel Blogging During the Pandemic

The Covid pandemic hit, and around April 2020 New Zealand immediately began banning all forms of movement within the country. The entire travel industry shut down overnight, and just like that, blog traffic dropped to as low as 100 page views a day.

We decided to cancel our travel plans for the year and flew to Cairns in Far North Queensland, Australia. We figured this would be the last place a virus would get to.

And we were right. Cairns remained Covid-free for the rest of 2020, and we were able to spend six months hiking and exploring the rainforest and islands of Far North Queensland. I consider myself very lucky that while the rest of the world was struggling with trying to contain a virus, I was still free to keep the adventures rolling.

Nandroya waterfall photography

To add to our fortune, I was also able to get my remote jobs back, which gave me the flexibility to still work on We Seek Travel and keep a small income rolling in while the blog wasn’t generating anything.

Devils thumb hike queensland
Adventures kept rolling in Cairns

While it might have seemed silly in the midst of a pandemic, I made an educated gamble to double down on my blog during this time. I began obsessively self-learning everything there was about SEO, affiliate marketing, page speed, and everything else I could about blogging.

I also published a comprehensive eBook about the Three Passes Trek in Nepal and launched over 100 blog posts in this six-month period, most about all of the hikes, waterfalls, and other adventures in and around Cairns.

Fast forward to late 2020 and Australia was very much isolated from the rest of the world. We had the freedom of movement and as a result, many of my Cairns posts were getting attention from locals, which helped motivate me to continue.

Where to stay in cairns, things to do fitzroy island, islands off cairns, drone
Not a bad place to be stuck during a pandemic

Then, another gamble. We decided to use our rainy-day savings fund left over from our savings back in 2018 to purchase a high-roof, long-wheelbase 2013 Ford Transit Van and convert it into a campervan.

We figured that the virus wasn’t about to slow down, and even if it was, Australia’s borders didn’t look anywhere near close to opening to the rest of the world anytime soon.

Taking our van on the spirit of tasmania
When life gives you a pandemic, buy a van

So, we drove the new van 2,300 kilometers (1420 miles) south to New South Wales, where Haylea’s family was kind enough to let us work on our new lockdown project. The next three-month period was the longest pause in travel we’d had in over two years, but I continued to document our van build on We Seek Travel.

Today, over 100,000 people have relied on my van-build guide as a resource to build their own off-grid campervan– that’s a lot of vans!

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Van travel in australia
The finished product

2021: Van Life in Tasmania

For the first half of 2021, we traveled around the island state of Tasmania in our new off-grid home. We continued to work online while exploring all of the hikes, waterfalls, and hidden gems in Tassie, and posting all of the adventures on We Seek Travel.

Van driving through black spur drive
Black Spur Drive
Mount amos sunrise

In total, I published over 120 blog posts during this six-month period, mostly about hikes and hidden gems in Tasmania.

While I wasn’t seeing much traffic due to the ongoing pandemic, I figured once the world returned to normal, people would begin reading my blog again. I certainly wasn’t complaining about the situation, and I was happy living presently while still dedicating time and energy to growing this blog.

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Unfortunately, it seemed that our luck began to run out in the second half of 2021. While the rest of the world began to open up, the virus was finally able to creep through the Aussie iron borders.

We kept a close eye on this, and the timing called for us to try to sell our beloved van and head back overseas where the rest of the world was now opening up.

Momentum is an important thing for me, and I was petrified of being locked down and not being able to move. We made the right moves at the right time to keep our freedom and avoided lockdowns altogether.

After just one day of posting the ad, an awesome lady named Ali decided to buy it from us in hopes of driving it through Australia in 2022.

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Take care of her :'(

2021: Back to International Travel & My First Tourism Board Job

At the end of 2021, the best place to go with the least restrictions was Mexico, so after selling the van we booked another one-way ticket across the world and hoped for the best.

This was Haylea and I’s first time setting foot on the American continent, and it was super exciting. We were missing our van, but there’s just special about owning only the things you can carry. Unfortunately, most of the places I’d written about so far were still locked down, which meant very little search traffic to my blog, and very little income.

However, at this stage, I had so much content out there, that we were still able to fund our travels through some affiliates. But we kept our $50-per-day budget between us.

Riding a moped in mexico

Initially, the plan was to backpack through Mexico and head down deeper into Central America, documenting some awesome spots along the way. However, things changed quickly when I was offered my first Tourism Board job in the Seychelles.

I’m forever grateful for this opportunity, as it really kicked things off for me. These islands are traditionally a luxury honeymoon destination. However, with such epic and rugged islands, the board knew there was lots of potential for adventure– they just needed the means to get that out there.

This was my job.

Seychelles coastline

I spent two weeks exploring my ass off in the Seychelles. The board gave me a pretty packed itinerary, but I pretty much doubled it by waking up before the birds and exploring and photographing some of the more off-the-beaten-path places on the islands.

The Seychelles Tourism Board couldn’t believe how much I’d covered in just a short two weeks and gave me an awesome testimonial. Today, they’re still using tons of my content which is transforming a whole new sector of adventure tourism in this island group.

Hiking in the seychelles

I flew back to Tulum, Mexico, where Haylea and I stayed for a while catching up on blog content. I published over 30 comprehensive Seychelles adventure guides in just a few weeks.

End of 2021: I’m now a Full-Time Travel Blogger

As I slowly started building a portfolio of successful collaborations with travel brands, tour companies, and brands, my blog really started gaining momentum again.

These were mostly content-creation partnerships in Mexico and the United States throughout the last months of the year. I’d get small jobs to photograph their tours and products/services and write honest reviews about them on my blog.

I wasn’t getting paid much from these early gigs, but for me, I was just happy to be gaining traction.

Dive platform at tulum cenote
Van road trip in death valley, usa
An epic road trip through Southwest USA with Travelers Autobarn

Then some good news. Even with the new variant, Australia was opening up, which meant that some of my biggest areas of coverage were getting hits again.

As I sat there on my sister’s apartment floor in Houston Texas on Christmas, I finally had hit enough monthly sessions (50,000) to apply for Mediavine– the bee’s knees of ad management companies. Ads went live and within just a few days, I went from just scraping by to earning a full-time wage from my blog.

This felt surreal. It’d taken me nearly 3 years of working on what started as a hobby project to finally turn it into a job that could sustain me financially. I put this down to focusing on creating content that I liked and that I know would be helpful for people, not just chasing high earning keywords.

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New Year’s Eve in Houston – 2021

2022: Growing We Seek Travel into an Adventure Travel Brand

2022 was a huge year for Haylea and me. The world was opening up quickly, resulting in massive travel demand. All the work I’d put in over the past few years was finally being seen.

By now, companies and tourism boards were really seeing the value we could offer them. We were hired for content creation and promotional campaigns all over the world, including in Colombia, Malta, Greece, Turkey, Croatia, and Egypt.

This gave us a unique opportunity to explore the typical attractions, as well as working with the boards and companies to find and publish about many hidden gems in each destination.

Every month in 2022 we were flown to a new destination. This was a very fast-paced year but it helped develop our skills and passion for travel even further.

We went from working in hostel bathrooms for 3 cents per word to being paid to travel by tour companies and tourism boards. Tour companies were now paying for our stays in luxury, 5-star resorts like these incredible Santorini cave hotels– What happened?

Kayak in malta's coral lagoon
Working with the Malta Tourism Board – 2022

We approached every job with the intent to over-deliver in content and effort. Consequently, after each collaboration brands and tourism boards would give us an excellent testimonial.

Diver at the blue hole in egypt
Content creation trips with dive resorts in Egypt – 2022
Johnny cay on san andres island, colombia
Working with local tour operators in Colombia -2022
Cruise boat in croatia
Developing tourism marketing campaigns in the Adriatic with Sail Croatia – 2022

However, being more used to slow travel, the year took a bit of a toll on us.

We loved the freedom and the amazing places we were being paid to visit, and we were doing a lot of hiking and adventure in our campaigns and tourism collaborations, I did miss that sense of independent travel, especially in the mountains.

Girl at the great shinx of giza
Exploring Egypt with TravelTalk Tours
Hot air balloon tour in cappadocia, turkey
Content creation trips in Turkey

So, in late 2022 I flew back to India to complete my Basic Mountaineering Course at the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute in Darjeeling, India. I’d been dreaming of this for a long time. I lived and trained for a month in the Indian Sikkim Himalayas learning the ins and outs of mountain climbing in one of the most remote regions on earth.

I also met some great people that I know will be friends for life.

Climbing glaciers in india

Living in the mountains without access to the internet was a refreshing feeling after a huge year of cycling non-stop adventure with long hours in front of the laptop.

But, after I returned to the land of internet connectivity, I found that my blog sessions were still continuing to grow exponentially, even though I hadn’t touched my blog for over a month.

The hundreds of posts I had constantly published since 2018 were still climbing the rankings of Google and being read by more and more people every day.

By now, hundreds of thousands of people per month were reading about my adventures and my detailed destination guides on We Seek Travel and using them to plan their own travels. This still blows my mind to think about.

Nepal hiking, himalayas

So, for the rest of the year we put a pause on jobs and collaborations and focused on the raw adventure travel that we fell in love with. Haylea and I went back to the Himalayas to climb Mera Peak and then flew to Bangkok to relax and get some blog work done.

Trekking to mera high camp, nepal

The rest of the year was spent traveling slowly between Thailand and Australia, working on expanding and improving the travel and adventure guides on We Seek Travel.

2023: More Adventure Travel

Feeling accomplished by admittedly a little tired after such a huge year, I decided that I was going to be much more selective with the jobs, gigs, and collaboration offers I was receiving. To me, this privilege felt very strange, as I honestly would have done anything to get paid to travel just a year or two before.

I wanted to keep the adventure rolling, but knowing time on this earth is limited, we decided that we would only say yes to the travel that Haylea and I really wanted to do.

So, after spending some time in Australia visiting families and updating blog posts I flew to Nepal for my first job of the year– a climb up to Island Peak with Epic Backpacker Tours. As I’m sure you’ve seen from this blog, hiking and trekking are some of my favorite adventure activities, and mountaineering in Nepal feels like a natural step up from that and I was very eager to learn more about this world after graduating from the mountaineering course in India.

After a successful summit and good praise for my photo and marketing work, I really felt like I was at the top of the world, both physically and career-wise.

Climbing island peak summit in nepal
2023 – My first Himalayan mountaineering job

On the trip, I met my good friend Sandip from Himalayan Masters, who I now work with closely to grow his Himalayan trekking & adventure company.

Next, Haylea and I flew back to one of our favorite countries, Thailand, to explore a region we hadn’t before. We spent roughly 6 weeks hiking, island hopping, and training Muay Thai in Krabi. During that time we focused on what we wanted to do, and only said yes to collaborations when they lined up with our plans.

Again, I was on a blogging roll, pumping out dozens of blog posts and now getting Haylea more involved in the website side of things. She had helped a lot to get We Seek Travel where it is today. But in Thailand in early 2023 was the time that she really made this her full-time job too.

While I still write the blog posts, her planning, research, editing, and admin really helped take this blog to a new level of growth.

Taking a longtail boat from ao nang to railay beach
2023 – Spending two months exploring Thailand

After two more months in the tropics, we flew back to Nepal to hike the Manaslu Circuit with my friend Sandip. While I didn’t tell Haylea this at the time, this was a secret idea to help acclimatize us for a special project a few weeks later.

Little did I know that this would turn out to be one of our favorite treks to date.

Larkya pass, manaslu circuit trek
2023 – Always finding ourselves back in Nepal

From Kathmandu, we flew to Uganda to explore the country with Elyson Adventures. We drove around Uganda in a Land Cruiser for two weeks, enjoying game drives and staying at incredible safari lodges. This trip also allowed us to tick off two amazing bucket list items, including mountain gorilla trekking and chimp habituation.

Olly gaspar wildlife photographer
2023 – Taking travel photography to new levels in Africa

Without much opportunity to get any laptop time, we flew from Uganda to Kilimanjaro Airport for the adventure travel job of a lifetime– an opportunity to document a climb of Mount Kilimanjaro via the Lemosho Route with Altezza Travel.

I was particularly nervous about this one, not because of the mountain, but with the summit timing lining up perfectly with Haylea’s 29th birthday, I took the opportunity to pop the question (she said yes).

Olly gaspar and haylea brown engaged on kilimanjaro mountain
2023: A surprise for Haylea on the roof of Africa

Halfway through 2023, after an amazing time exploring the National Parks of East Africa and enjoying our engagement, we flew back to Thailand to work and publish travel guides from our trips. However, unfortunately, I didn’t manage to get as much work done as I’d hoped this time in Bangkok since I was preoccupied with planning the next adventure.

In July 2023, myself, my lifelong friend Ryan, and my good friend Jessy, who I met at the Himalayan Mountaineering Insitute the year before, flew to Norway with plans to ride 2,500 kilometers unassisted across the country, from Stavanger to Tromsø.

We did this as an epic charity project and were able to raise over $10,000 for the Fred Hollow’s Foundation via a few different donation sources. This project gave me a lot of time to think about the life we’d built and the freedoms it was allowing for us.

Pedalling the edge in bergen
2023: Riding our bicycles across Norway for charity

After the ride, I met Haylea back in Australia to catch up on some much-needed laptop time in between another spontaneous van trip across New Zealand.

Digital nomad traveler hiking in the mountains
2023: Back to New Zealand for some more adventures with Haylea

As of September 2023 I felt in awe of the lifestyle that we had built for ourselves and the opportunities handed to us. At this stage, the blog was read roughly 250,000 times every month, sightly down for the first time since the pandemic.

2023: A Shaky End to the Year

However, October marked a significant shift in the blogging world, and not for the better.

Google rolled out a controversial update called the “Helpful Content Update,” aimed at fighting back against the flood of AI-generated content cluttering search results.

I won’t bore you with the technical jargon, but in simple terms, Google was panicking. Fake AI content farms were popping up everywhere, churning out garbage articles, even creating entire fake travel magazines and bloggers with AI-generated faces and names. In an attempt to fix this, Google threw a blanket rule over search rankings, heavily boosting websites they could easily verify as legitimate. That mostly meant big platforms like Reddit and TripAdvisor.

You can probably guess how that played out. Reddit threads and TripAdvisor reviews started ranking for travel itineraries to remote waterfalls or off-the-beaten-path destinations—which, let’s be honest, are the last sites you want to visit for this kind of advice.

Unfortunately, real travel blogs who actually visit the destination they write about—including We Seek travel, was caught up in the crossfire. Our traffic tanked from around 250,000 monthly readers to just 50,000. It was a gut punch, but luckily we were still able to stay afloat because I had built such a vast library of content.

It sucked. But I’d been here before. Just like during the pandemic, I decided to double down.

Vlasoff cay, great barrier reef cairns
Even with all the blogging shake-ups Cairns was a great place to spend the rest of 2023

After our New Zealand adventures, Haylea and I flew back to Cairns and focused entirely on expanding our hiking and adventure guides for New Zealand. No, they weren’t getting ranked—thanks, Google—but I knew deep down that the only thing that could outlast this sea of artificial content was authenticity. I thought, people crave real, traveler-to-traveler advice, and will even more so with the sea of unhelpful AI garbage being served up by bot farms and sites like TripAdvisor.

So we spent the final weeks of the year grinding away on the blog, pouring energy into writing, and spending quality time with family over Christmas. We even got a chance to fly back down to NSW to spend some time over New Years at Haylea’s parents out west. It was a slower, more reflective end to a truly adventurous year—but it felt right.

Family at a rural property in nsw

2024: Back into the Adventure in Lombok

After some end-of-year reflection, it was time to get back into the adventure. I flew to one of my favorite islands on Earth: Lombok. My first trip there in 2019 led me to forge some great friendships, and over the years, my friend Dayat and I had been quietly working behind the scenes on something exciting—our own adventure tour.

We spent the month finalizing plans for the Lombok Loop, an epic 4-day motorcycle journey inspired by Vietnam’s Ha Giang Loop. It felt like the perfect adventure for Lombok. The island is one of the most diverse I’ve explored in Southeast Asia—quiet black sand beaches, world-class surf breaks, dense jungle waterfalls, and the towering Mount Rinjani volcano.

We carefully crafted the itinerary, trained local riders to lead groups, and partnered with local operators, hotels, and restaurants. This experience was different for me. I wasn’t just the traveler or photographer this time—I was behind the scenes, developing and launching a tour from the ground up. It was challenging but incredibly rewarding to be part of something that directly supports my friends and the local community.

We also decided that 10% of all Lombok Loop bookings would go to support Dayat’s English foundation. This program connects travelers with locals to offer free English lessons for underprivileged kids in Lombok. It felt amazing to build a tour that not only offers epic adventures but also gives back to the community.

Motorbikes on a group trip in the rice fields of lombok
Two men on a motorbike in the jungles of lombok

After weeks of meticulous planning, I needed a break. So, Dayat, my friend Luke, and I hit the road for an epic motorbike trip across Lombok and Sumbawa—an island few tourists venture to. It was the perfect way to unwind and reconnect with the raw adventure that first drew me to travel.

Whale sharks sumbawa lombok 9
Swimming with the whale sharks at saleh bay in sumbawa

2024: Living in Northern Thailand

After our time in Lombok, I met up with Haylea, and we flew to Chiang Mai. This was a city we’d explored as backpackers at the very start of our adventures, but this time we had a different reason for returning.

The ongoing algorithm changes in the blogging world were shaking up the industry. Many of our favorite travel blogger friends had lost most of their traffic—years of work, passion projects, and livelihoods wiped out overnight. Our traffic had dropped drastically too, but we were still getting just enough readers to keep us on the road. It was stressful. We didn’t start travel blogging to make a lot of money; we started out of a passion for adventure.

But after tasting the freedom of making a living from doing what we loved, we weren’t ready to give it up.

What frustrated us the most was knowing that our content was genuinely helpful. Industry leaders even used We Seek Travel as an example of how badly Google’s updates had missed the mark. Our readers were messaging us saying that they weren’t seeing our guides on Google anymore either.

We constantly heard from industry experts and other bloggers that if our site wasn’t ranking, something was seriously wrong. This gave us hope. People still wanted to read our content, and we were determined to get our guides back in front of them.

Olly in chiang mai

So, we decided to slow down and spend three months in Thailand, diving deep into updating the blog. It was our first real taste of the “digital nomad” lifestyle—staying in one place, getting to know the area, and focusing on work.

Living and working in Chiang Mai as a digital nomad is ALL that it’s cracked up to be. The city is lively but not too busy, with easy access to nature and is full of incredible cafes and cowork spaces.

We spent months in Chiang Mai updating every single article on We Seek Travel—over 700 posts at this point. We also took time to explore locally and enjoy a slower side of travel. I got back into Muay Thai training, which felt great, and we settled into a productive rhythm.

They say time flies when you’re in a routine, and that was definitely true. The first few months of the year flew by.

Haylea and olly in thailand
Girl traveler following a chiang mai itinerary
Between all the laptop hours we got plenty of time to explore the city too!

2024: Digital Nomad Life in Kuala Lumpur

Eventually, our Thai visas ran out, so we flew to Kuala Lumpur, mainly because it had the cheapest flights at the time. We planned to spend another month focusing on the blog and exploring the city. It was strange not hiking for so long, but living in the city turned out to be incredibly productive. We quickly published articles from our 2023 backlog and updated existing content across all destinations.

Kuala Lumpur was also surprisingly affordable—we scored a stunning condo on the 63rd floor with panoramic city views and amenities like a sauna, pool, steam room, and gym, all for just $500 a month. It was mind-blowing.

2024: Back to Thailand

After a few weeks in KL, we flew back to Thailand, this time to take a proper break. We headed to Krabi to celebrate my mum’s 50th birthday with family, including relatives visiting from Sweden. It was great to relax and catch up, but unfortunately, while training Muay Thai, I tore my bicep tendon. I knew it was serious immediately—the tendon snapped off the bone, and my bicep shot up to my shoulder.

Family traveling in thailand

This injury brought our holiday plans to a halt. I spent days in and out of hospitals for MRIs and X-rays, and it was clear I needed urgent surgery. Thankfully, Thailand has excellent healthcare, and Bangkok Hospital in Phuket handled the surgery. I was beyond grateful that Heymondo, my long-term travel insurance, fully covered the procedure.

2024: Spring in Tbilisi

The year was shaping up differently than we’d planned. Our blog traffic was still down, and now I faced a rough 3–6 month rehab to regain full use of my arm. We had dedicated the first part of the year to working nonstop on the blog to make it the most helpful adventure travel resource online. We were ready to get back to exploring and had even booked flights to a new country—Georgia.

Traveler laying on chairs sleeping at the airport
It was a long flight to georgia

But with my injury, hiking was out of the question. We’d planned some epic adventures and a lot of time to explore this country, but my injury had other plans for me. We took it as a sign that more work needed to be done on the blog. So, we chose to stay in Tbilisi for another three months.

Olly arriving in tbilisi
Arriving in Tbilisi– the best wine in the world!

From our first bite of khinkali, we fell in love with the city. Tbilisi completely exceeded our expectations. It was vibrant, the food was incredible, and the locals were warm and welcoming. Plus, it was one of the most affordable places we’d ever visited.

Girl walking with big bread in tbilisi
Excited for bread after spending half the year in Asia.

We rented a cozy apartment in the lively Vake neighborhood for $600 a month. It had everything—spacious living areas, a full kitchen, fast internet, and even a balcony. As part of my rehab we embraced a whole-foods diet (with the exception of a few khinkhali and khachapuri dates) with fresh, local produce, and it was amazing to cook our own meals again. Our entire monthly budget, including food, gym memberships, accommodation, and high-speed internet, stayed under $900 USD while living very comfortably.

We quickly settled into a routine in Tbilisi. I focused on rehab at the gym, and we both worked hard on updating every blog post—making We Seek Travel the best it could be. We still made time to explore, and for my birthday, Haylea surprised me with an unforgettable cabin stay in the Kazbegi mountains.

Traveler patting a dog in georgia
Traveler relaxing in a cabin in georgia
Man driving in the snow
Driving to the border of russia

By June, my arm was almost fully healed, and we had hit our goal of updating every single post on the blog. We put hundreds of hours into making our guides as helpful as possible over these few months in Georgia.

I also published dozens of new articles and spent time improving the website’s design and user experience. Even though we hadn’t seen any major improvements in search rankings yet, we were proud of the work we had done. We celebrated our last night in Tbilisi with great food, Georgian wine, and a toast to our hard work. Sometimes I wondered if all this effort was worth it, but deep down, I knew it was. We believed in our content and trusted that it was only a matter of time before the universe rewarded us.

After six months of slower travel and countless hours behind a laptop, it was finally time to hit the road again.

Traveler with horses in kazbegi mountains

2024: European Summer

We flew back to Istanbul to meet our good friends Tom and Kim. Kim is Haylea’s cousin, and Tom is one of my best friends from school. Funny enough, Haylea “manifested” their relationship years ago around a campfire in Tasmania, and now they were together.

Travelers taking a selfie in europe

We spent the summer traveling through Europe, free from the stress of algorithms and blog updates. My arm was healing well, and I felt ready to embrace adventure again. We attended a wedding in Santorini and road-tripped through Italy, from the northern regions to Sicily. I wasn’t focused on documenting anything—I just wanted to live in the moment. I got my camera out when I felt like it.

After two incredible months, Tom and Kim flew home, and so did Haylea. But I had different plans.

2024: K2 Base Camp

I was about to embark on an adventure I’d dreamed of for years: trekking through the Karakoram region to K2 Base Camp in Pakistan. I landed a photography job with my friend Chris from Epic Expeditions, who I had climbed Island Peak with the year before.

Going from a European summer to the rugged mountains of Pakistan was a culture shock, but it reignited my love for the high mountains. I was excited to be behind the camera again, and for the first time in months, it didn’t feel like work. We had great weather and the trip went really well, I managed to capture some of my favorite photos I’d ever taken on this trip.

2024: Living in Koh Tao

After the trek, Haylea and I flew back to Cairns to begin a new chapter. Back in Tbilisi, we had spontaneously decided to buy our very own sailboat when an opportunity came up for one in Cairns. We hadn’t told anyone yet, but we were thrilled to start restoring her and making her our home. After six years of living out of backpacks, it was time for a new style of adventure.

We quickly got to organizing everything, nervously as we bought the boat without seeing it ourselves! Luckily the boat was in good condition and while there was some work ahead of us, we were really happy with it.

But before diving into our boat project, we flew to Koh Tao to house-sit for a friend. I was hesitant to leave the boat behind after we finally got to meet her, but I quickly embraced the island life back on Koh Tao. My arm had healed, and I was back to training Muay Thai regularly at Monsoon Gym.

Muay thai fighters on koh tao

We found a great work-life balance on Koh Tao, working less but still publishing new content. Best of all, our blog traffic started bouncing back. Google released updates that boosted our rankings. Although we were at 125,000 monthly views—half of what we had in 2023—it felt like progress and we were very grateful that we were one of the only travel blogs that were able to recover traffic after Google’s updates back in 2023.

Olly gaspar with tobyrruf sailing boat

By the end of the year, we flew back to Australia and were reuinted with boat project. Tobyrruf, our 40ft steel Adams cutter, was a one-in-a-million boat. We can’t wait to make her ours and sail into 2025 for what promised to be our most epic adventure yet!

Stay tuned and thanks for reading.

– Olly Gaspar

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