Difference between revisions of "User:Robino"

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Early November I finally registered for this wiki, I made some new entries for cities such as [[Valencia]] and [[Granada]]. I hope they are usefull.
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__NOTOC__
  
==My experience with hitchhiking==
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[[Image:Robino_hitching.jpg|200px|thumb|right|To a [[Germany|German]] rainbow gathering in 2009]]
I have hitchhiking experience in the [[United Kingdom]], [[Netherlands]], [[Germany]], [[France]], [[Czech Republic]] and [[Spain]]. I am planning to do a hitchhiking trip from [[Amsterdam]] to [[Istanbul]] winter 2007.
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[[Image:Granada.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Me hitching from [[Valencia]] to [[Granada]] in 2006]]  
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[[Image:Robino_Sitarane.jpg|thumb|200px|right|[[Robino]] & [[Sitarane]] with their drivers while hitching from [[Amsterdam]] to [[Paris]] for the [[888]]-event, August 2008]]
  
Currently I live in [[Spain]], [[Barcelona]]. I also have a Couchsurfing [http://couchsurfing.com/robino profile].
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==Experience==
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Robino has hitchhiking experience in the [[United Kingdom]], [[Ireland]], [[Wales]], [[England]], [[Belgium]], [[Netherlands]], [[Germany]], [[France]], [[Czech Republic]], [[Switzerland]], [[Austria]], [[Slovenia]], [[Italy]], [[Croatia]], [[Serbia]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Spain]], [[Romania]], [[Poland]], [[Ukraine]], [[Turkey]] and [[Portugal]]. The first time hitching was in '98 with a girl from [[Nijmegen]] to [[Amsterdam]]. After four rides they got stuck somewhere in [[Utrecht]] and he took a train. A year later he hitched around the UK twice and - apart from that day he took a wrong car out of [[London]] - he happily never gave up again.  
  
==My philosophy on hitchhiking==
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Since February 2009, Robino also started to hitchhike from his home to his office, once or twice a week, and writes about that in Dutch at [http://liftenwerkt.nl Liften werkt]. Due to his unfitness to work in an commercial office he had to quit this job just 6 weeks later. But ironically, on his final hitch to the office, he was offered another job by his driver.
Hitchhiking is a sport. For me it is not about cheap travelling, but about meeting random people of whome some never turn out to be so random at all.
 
  
I believe also in hitchhiking karma. I generally sense which cars stop for me, and which persons to talk to when waiting for a ride.  
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==Philosophy==
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Hitchhiking for me is above everything a sport (as in mental exercise and endurance). It is not about cheap travel but about persistence, creativity, sharing, strategy, interpersonal skills and meeting random people - of whom some never turn out to be so 'random' at all.
  
My longest waiting time never exceeded over an hour.
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I believe also in 'hitchhiking inevitabilities', especially if you surrender to the road. If you hitch like this, many times you are ending up getting specifically those rides which - in one way or another - have a significant correlation with your life, experiences or mindset. You can also make rides happen but you should be wise enough to listen very carefully to what the road is trying to tell you. Things that are out of the ordinary do happen.
  
I strongly believe in a hitchhiker with an active attitude, walking up to people and talking to them to ask them for a ride.
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==Non-action==
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I used to believe in a hitchhiker with an active attitude; walking up to drivers and talk to them to ask them for a ride. Whether you are waiting at a service station, rest-area or simply at a roundabout or traffic lights where cars stop. One of my favourite approaches is to wave and make them stop and then make the driver understand what I am actually doing: hitching.  
  
I highly recommend to at least speak some hitchhiking sentences in the language of the country where travelling.
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But over the last couple of years, I more and more believe in mixing it with taking it easy, lying down in the grass with a sign next to you, reading a book, writing notes, taking a nap, and just waiting for a driver to wake you up, even without putting up your thumb all the time. The "right driver" will recognize and stop for 'that relaxed person'. Try it. I got rides of 1,000 km like this with wonderful connections. Just by doing "nothing".
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==Photos==
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I have a collection of photos of people hitchhiking. [https://robokow.net/hitchhikers Check it out]!
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==Missions==
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These were my missions as I wrote them in 2010. None of these has been accomplished yet ;-)
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* To hitch the complete [[:Category:E40|E40]], 8500 kilometer long from [[Calais]] to [[Ridder]] in [[Kazakhstan]], and further into [[China]].
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* To cross one of the Oceans by [[sailboat|boat hitching]]
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* To have a copy of [[Random Roads]] in my hands before [[6810|6-8-10]]
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==Personal==
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Currently I live in Amsterdam. I also lived in [[Barcelona]], [[Istanbul]], [[Het_Gooi|Huizen]] and [[Newcastle]]. If you're coming to Amsterdam, [https://www.bewelcome.org/bw/member.php?cid=robino Be Welcome]. [http://casarobino.org My house] used to be regularly visited by other hitchhikers (but that's kind of over now). You can also have a look at my [https://robokow.net personal website] and send me [https://www.robokow.net/contact an e-mail].
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[[Category:Hitchhikers]]
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[[Category:Hitchhikers in the Netherlands]]
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{{user cc-by-sa}}
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{{IsIn|:Amsterdam}}

Latest revision as of 13:08, 3 April 2015


To a German rainbow gathering in 2009
Me hitching from Valencia to Granada in 2006
Robino & Sitarane with their drivers while hitching from Amsterdam to Paris for the 888-event, August 2008

Experience

Robino has hitchhiking experience in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Wales, England, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, France, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia, Italy, Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Spain, Romania, Poland, Ukraine, Turkey and Portugal. The first time hitching was in '98 with a girl from Nijmegen to Amsterdam. After four rides they got stuck somewhere in Utrecht and he took a train. A year later he hitched around the UK twice and - apart from that day he took a wrong car out of London - he happily never gave up again.

Since February 2009, Robino also started to hitchhike from his home to his office, once or twice a week, and writes about that in Dutch at Liften werkt. Due to his unfitness to work in an commercial office he had to quit this job just 6 weeks later. But ironically, on his final hitch to the office, he was offered another job by his driver.

Philosophy

Hitchhiking for me is above everything a sport (as in mental exercise and endurance). It is not about cheap travel but about persistence, creativity, sharing, strategy, interpersonal skills and meeting random people - of whom some never turn out to be so 'random' at all.

I believe also in 'hitchhiking inevitabilities', especially if you surrender to the road. If you hitch like this, many times you are ending up getting specifically those rides which - in one way or another - have a significant correlation with your life, experiences or mindset. You can also make rides happen but you should be wise enough to listen very carefully to what the road is trying to tell you. Things that are out of the ordinary do happen.

Non-action

I used to believe in a hitchhiker with an active attitude; walking up to drivers and talk to them to ask them for a ride. Whether you are waiting at a service station, rest-area or simply at a roundabout or traffic lights where cars stop. One of my favourite approaches is to wave and make them stop and then make the driver understand what I am actually doing: hitching.

But over the last couple of years, I more and more believe in mixing it with taking it easy, lying down in the grass with a sign next to you, reading a book, writing notes, taking a nap, and just waiting for a driver to wake you up, even without putting up your thumb all the time. The "right driver" will recognize and stop for 'that relaxed person'. Try it. I got rides of 1,000 km like this with wonderful connections. Just by doing "nothing".

Photos

I have a collection of photos of people hitchhiking. Check it out!

Missions

These were my missions as I wrote them in 2010. None of these has been accomplished yet ;-)

Personal

Currently I live in Amsterdam. I also lived in Barcelona, Istanbul, Huizen and Newcastle. If you're coming to Amsterdam, Be Welcome. My house used to be regularly visited by other hitchhikers (but that's kind of over now). You can also have a look at my personal website and send me an e-mail.