
Little Passports: a new educational subscription that aims to turn 5-to-10-year-olds into travel freaks. In an era dominated by electronic communication, people are embracing concepts from a slower age.
Little Passports delivers monthly travel packages designed to provide a fun, hands-on way for kids to learn about other countries without leaving home. The first shipment in the USD 10.95 per month subscription prepares little voyagers for their global adventure with a mini suitcase, passport, world map and a letter and photo introducing their travel guides, Sam and Sofia.
Each following month, children receive a personalized letter and package from Sam and Sofia, which includes travel-related items like a passport stamp, suitcase sticker and collectible boarding pass to access online games and activities that teach geography, history, culture and vocabulary.
As exciting as receiving mail is, imagine for a generation that’s no more used to walking to the mailbox hoping to find any kind of postal treasure. Me wantee!
Walking around the Sunday market at Colliure, France.

We had a beer this weekend at Les Templiers, 12 Quai de l’Amirauté (Colliure). 10-15 people where joyfully singing and dancing at the bar, listen!

Sailing the world learning

The Scholar Ship is over due to lack of necessary funding. When I saw it for the first time I couldn’t believe someone actually got to build something so magical such as a dream boat traveling the sea while you keep up with your University classes. An intercultural loaded moving university sailing the seas in between 1-week stops through out a semester of in-field learning.
The Scholar Ship is a dream come true. I never got to feel too much excitement over studying again but oh my, I would get straight As just for being on this ship. Even push a long-time dreamed teacher carrier just to be part of it.
Get this ship on the ocean again!
A seminomad’s dream: your suite in nature trailer.
Designed by Axel Enthoven, the Opera folds out of the trailer in minutes revealing a sleek interior that includes hot and cold running water, a toilet, a simple stove, a wine cabinet and an espresso bar as well as two luxury beds that slide together at the push of a button, and an enclosed teak veranda.
I used to dream and draw this kind of moving homes when travelling by car as a kid. Impossible structures with wheels that always included a pool and an intimate sense of luxury and futurism. Looking at the Opera makes me go back to the days when I thought being a kid consisted in designing your future.