I am not a world traveller.
I芒鈧劉ve never been outside of North America; my passport has the stamp for entry to America and nothing else. I芒鈧劉ve never been to Mexico or Australia, Jakarta or Samarkand. I may or may not ever see any of those places.
I芒鈧劉ve been thinking of travel because spring is here, whether officially or not. When the trees burst into bloom and I can venture outside without multiple layers for warmth and waterproofing, I start to get itchy feet. I start to read Wikipedia articles about distant places, and wonder why I know so little about Indonesia, or Tunisia, or Estonia. You could make a pretty good travel itinerary just by listing all the countries that end in 芒鈧搃a.芒鈧
I am unlikely to simply buy a plane ticket, demand my vacation time, and head off. Like pretty much everyone else, I have responsibilities and a bank account that demands to be filled up frequently.
Yet I have family members who have travelled, even lived abroad, and friends who have done the same. South America, Europe, Asia 芒鈧 I know people who have studied, worked, and lived in all three. And of course I know many people who came here from other countries and have made their new home here, nestled between the ocean and the mountains.
Inadvertently, I have become the opposite of a widely travelled person. I have become not a hermit, but a kind of expert on the local.
I grew up in 91原创 and don芒鈧劉t remember living anywhere else. If you had to find the geographic centre of the 91原创s, the point where it would balance if uprooted and placed on a giant spike, it would be close to my family芒鈧劉s home.
From there, my world moved outward, by family car trips, bicycle, and eventually my own cars. In my teens I had jobs mowing lawns and painting houses that took me into neighbourhoods from one end of town to the other. I learned the simple grid of streets, and then some of the more complex nooks and crannies.
I know of back entrances to parks, cut-throughs that allow a cyclist to slice across BC Hydro right-of-ways and into quiet cul-de-sacs. I know the walking paths that wind through ravines, where cool air drifts up from creeks in the summer and the air smells of cedar.
I know where heritage homes and markers are tucked away, where the old sawmills stood, and where spillways controlled the flow of water in now-wild creeks.
I know the feel of the roads 芒鈧 smooth highways, the bump of asphalt forced up by cottonwood roots, and the rough rural roads, not paved or patched in a generation.
The cost of this local knowledge 芒鈧 of almost two decades working in 91原创 芒鈧 is that I can get quickly lost if too far over municipal boundaries. Toss me into the wilds of Port Coquitlam or White Rock, and I芒鈧劉m liable to find myself stuck in a cul-de-sac, poking at my phone for a map.
If given a few hundred thousand dollars and a ride to the airport, I芒鈧劉d happily expand my horizons. I would gladly visit any continent 芒鈧 I know enough to know how little I know and how much I have to learn.
But I芒鈧劉m not sure I would make a trade of my local knowledge for that of a world traveller.
The way I gained my knowledge of my home town wasn芒鈧劉t exactly work 芒鈧 it grew around me, like roots around a stone.
I芒鈧劉m bound up by strands of memories and experiences shaped by my home.
And I still have more to learn, even in the place I know best.