Quit my job, and go west? How to do a serious long road trip
Okay, so I'm contemplating something that a lot of people I know would consider 'really stupid.' I have a good paying, steady job, but I want to quit and travel the country for the summer, and get a job again in the fall.
Some background on me. I did a road trip two years ago, alone, and crossed the country back and forth in 3 weeks, and spent nearly $3,000 dollars because I was young, just out of college and didn't care. Motel 6's every night! 12 hours of driving a day if I had to!
Now, I want to make to make my money last longer, be more frugal, and travel the country for an entire summer taking a slow pace and avoid the interstates at all cost. I have a reliable '04 gulf, so my car will be good for the trip. But my biggest concern isn't the trip, and financing the trip itself right now. Before I can even get to that, I need some advice on how to handle being "unemployed" for an entire summer.
Have any road-trippers here done this- how easy was it getting a job again? How much savings did you spend after the trip trying to make ends meet until you had income. Was storing your few remaining possessions a problem? Do employers ever ask about your "lost summer?"
Well aside from that business, I'm just wondering if anyone has any advice for a 24 year old who can't wait any longer to heed the call of the open road again, and wants to go all out.
Finance advice, sleeping advice, think It's a bad idea? let me have it!
Thanks in advance. I used this forum a lot before my last trip, I know there's a lot of good people on here.
Make the trip work for you
Like Craig, I've come close to doing this as well, or, getting a job with a trucking company and doing long haul, that way I would still be making money. In the end, it wasn't common sense or anything, just certain shackles that would not be broken.
Depending on what you do currently for a living, you may be able to make this trip work for you in the long run. I would definitely say though document your plans regarding making the trip, that way you can show a potential employer that you didn't just get a bee in your bonnet, quit your job, and take off. As someone who has done interviews, hearing that you quit your job and started traveling would send up red-flags of reliability (is this person going to get cheesed one day, quit on us as they're crossing the state line?). If you show very methodical planning with documentation that you took months to plan this right, including documented conversations with your manager about it, it should calm them down.
Second, explain to your current employer exactly why you want to do this. That should help too.
Third, make the trip work for you. Like I said, it depends on what field you're in now, but if you can take a metric ton of pictures, write about what you see, and who you met, it could actually be a boon for you. I'd make a journal and a portfolio, and when you go into interviews, have that ready. When they ask, show them pictures of places you went and all the different people across the US that you had a chance to visit with, and provide excerpts from your journal. With that, during the trip, go out of your way to meet different people from around the US (this board would be a great way to arrange such things, besides sitting in a coffee shop and striking up conversation with people). It would definitely show a prospective employer, in my opinion anyway, that you have good communication skills, you're accessible to many different people, and you have a sense of leadership to seek out these interviews on your own.
I think if you do it right, it can be a good thing for you.
-Brad
Gosh, I really don't have much to add
But I would like to say that I wish with all my heart that I had heeded the call of the open road before the marriage, mortgage, and kids made it virtually impossible....(I say "virtually" because some people still find a way to make it work.)
Anyway, go for it! You might not find as good of a job when you get back, or one you like as much. Oh, well....you can keep looking and, hopefully, get back on your career track later.
Why limit it to just the summer? If you could make your money last six month, why not travel for six month? Camping...especially doing free disbursed camping, when available...and eating out of your cooler are fairly inexpensive and will really stretch your dollar. Especially if you're taking time to explore an area and not doing a lot of driving for brief periods. I mean, let's say you're really enjoying Colorado and find a national forest with disbursed camping near a few places that intrigue you. With free camping, cheap eats at your campsite, and the fairly low amount gas in your Golf would cost you for short drives, I could easily see that you could get by on $100 or so for the entire week. Traveling this way, gas would be your biggest expense. Well, something to think about anyway.
The only real issue I see is the lack of medical insurance if something should happen to you. There are very inexpensive medical policies that would cover you for catastrophic situations. If you got something with a $5000 deductible, it should be really inexpensive. This is something you might want to think about and make plans for.
Gosh, I'm jealous. You're gonna have a fantastic summer!
I'm in the exact same situation...
I, too, am 24 and have been dreaming about doing a roadtrip for the past few years. I'm from the midwest, and i've done the east coast and west coast in two different trips, but I'd like to quit my job to do an extended road trip this summer before, like everyone says, I have real responsibilities like kids and a mortgage and a husband. Thing is I have a job I really enjoy, am making decent money, and feel like I'm being dumb to give it up. I want to leave June 1 when my current lease is up (and therefore avoid paying rent while I'm on the road), but at that point I will only have been at my current job for 9 months and I'm worried my employeer won't hold it for me. Ideally, I'd love to document the trip and do a book/articles of some sort (I'm a journalist), but at the same time, I don't want to commit to a project while I'm out on the road, doing my thing, if that makes sense. Just as the first poster asked, does any one have any ideas on how to finance a trip like this, as well as suggestions of places I won't find in guidebooks?
thanks.
Round the world trip!!???!!
Wow...I can't wait to hear about this one! :) Is there some kind of international race circuit you plan on following? LOL
Chasing Cars: The World Tour
No, not race related. Though I will plan it to hopefully take in some of the more interesting races as I pass through places :) There's a lot of things that need to finally fall into place yet (mostly there though) and I'll be asking for tips, of course (!), when the time comes. I just wanted to post here to offer some encouragement to the OP really... If you're aware of all the potential pitfalls related to your finance and employment and are still feeling the call - just get out there and do it!
'Theres more to life than a mortgage'
"There's more to life than a mortgage and a lawn to mow"-Joni Mitchell
There is. Much more. I feel 24, still but like so way past that in actual years. You are only young and able like 24 once. You will learn more about life and the people and America than at a job in some airless cubicle making money for some corporation. I am going on another cross country trip both ways SF to NY this summer. I'm going solo one way and going with my boy the other way in our Prius. We are bringing a tent, and sleeping bags and thanks to websites like this we're going to ask a lot of questions and plan a fantastic trip.
As for you young ones,
keep clean, don't take drugs, read the classics, stay off the tv, keep your ears to the train tracks and find that we're all gonna die someday, let go, plan for your future but when you can, break out of the ordinary and live. Travel, risk. Give openly of yourselves, listen to others and trust yourself ultimately.