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Gayla Gray's avatar

I always enjoy your newsletters, pictures and more. It is unlikely I would ever travel like you two do, but I feel as if I am sometimes with your stories. Thank you again. :)

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Al Salas's avatar

Though we are not nomads, as retirees in Spain, we've had some very similar experiences and outcomes. We had a comfortable retirement budget for staying in the states (on the Delaware shore, after retiring from DC), but decided that, if we could at least break even, we'd like to move for the adventure and great year-round weather. We very roughly figured out the costs should be a bit less, so made the jump (after lots of planning). It turns out that our running costs have been about half of those from our first two years in relatively low-cost Delaware! Yet we're traveling much more (even with covid, we have been able to travel responsibility all over Spain -- from a three-week road trip through northern Spain, to periodic two-day stays a little closer by, to weekly day trips visiting nearby villages); and eating out more and better. And we've developed a wonderfully healthy new hobby, hiking almost weekly with friends in the surrounding mountains. And, huge bonus, we wake up to beautiful views of the sea and mountains -- something we could never have afforded in the US, if we could even find such a place. There are of course many challenges, but that's partly good, too -- they help keep us learning. We recently heard a statement about the stages of retirement: There's the go-go, followed by slow-go, followed by no-go. Our goal is to extend the go-go as long as possible, by keeping physically and mentally active -- things that come with the territory of locating in a different country.

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