“We tend to just meet people along the journey,” he says, “It’s often a safe bet that we will be able to have a conversation with other skoolie or vandwellers, or RVers in general, but Mariajose and I are both very social people and love to talk and meet with just about everyone.” They find new people not only in real life, but via their growing social media presence. Things went well, and the couple spent a few years in Nashville before deciding to hit the road in search of a new kind of community. I met her father, had a beer with him.” Chase, born in Knoxville, ended up helping them move across the city that same day. It’s a funny and long story, but ultimately it was an immediate connection that we followed up on with a date that night. “She came in to the place I managed,” Chase recalls, “and needed assistance. Mariajose, a Venezuelan, met Chase in Madison, Wisconsin five years ago. Travel Writers WantedĬan you string a few syllables together? Want to get paid to write great stories about living on the road? Pitch Us Your Idea “Tio Aventura is Spanish for Uncle Adventure,” Chase Green tells us from somewhere on the road.Īlong with Mariajose Trejo and their two dogs, they live in a converted school bus, traveling around in hopes of exploration, minimizing their impact on this Mother Nature we all spin around on, and pursuing this new American–perhaps worldwide–dream blossoming that is the wandering life.
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