Tag: Ferry

  • Sustainable Travel at Sea ⛴️: When the Sky Becomes Water

    Sustainable Travel at Sea ⛴️: When the Sky Becomes Water

    Not every crossing requires flying.

    Ferries transform distance into experience, turning the sea into a living transition rather than empty space. Departure and arrival become visible, tangible processes. You do not disappear into the sky. You move across the surface of the world.

    From Rail to Water

    Land gradually gives way to water.

    The journey often begins on rail. Along the Adriatic coast, the horizon widens slowly. The sea appears beside the tracks. Travel feels continuous.

    The edge of Italy, where movement changes form.

    Arriving in Ancona, geography shifts. From here, movement becomes maritime.

    Industrial, practical, transitional.

    The ferry terminal is functional rather than romantic. Vehicles queue. Passengers gather. It is where one landscape ends and another begins.

    Boarding the Crossing

    A floating structure replacing the runway.

    Boarding reveals scale. The vessel rises above the dock like a moving building. Cars disappear below deck. Foot passengers climb upward.

    Transit that allows rest.

    Cabins are compact but self-contained. Unlike air travel, you can unpack slightly. You can lie down. You can sleep.

    At sea, the journey is inhabited, not endured.

    Even a small private bathroom changes the rhythm. The crossing is not a gap in the journey. It is part of it.

    Northern Routes and Everyday Infrastructure

    Sea as corridor, not obstacle.

    In northern Europe, ferries feel embedded in daily life. Baltic crossings carry commuters, families, and freight.

    Transport and social space intertwined.

    On Viking Line routes, restaurants, cabins, and open decks transform transit into shared experience. The sea becomes connective tissue.

    Signals of transition within maritime travel.

    Environmental messaging is increasingly visible. The shift is gradual but tangible.

    Infrastructure linking regions where bridges cannot.

    In Scandinavia, ferries replace highways. Engines rest while ships carry vehicles across water.

    Why Ferry Travel Still Matters

    Ferries are not zero-emission. They consume significant fuel, especially when carrying vehicles and operating overnight. Compared to rail, maritime travel generally produces higher emissions per passenger.

    In northern Europe, however, the transition is visible.

    Operators on Baltic and North Sea routes, including Viking Line and Fjord Line, have introduced LNG-powered vessels, hybrid systems, and shore power connections. These upgrades can reduce CO₂ emissions by roughly 15–30% compared to heavy fuel oil, while sharply lowering sulfur and nitrogen oxides.

    The Baltic Sea is a designated Sulphur Emission Control Area, and since 2024 maritime transport has been gradually integrated into the EU Emissions Trading System.

    Average emissions per passenger kilometer in Europe are approximately:
    Rail: ~14 g CO₂
    Ferry: ~20–80 g CO₂
    Short-haul flight: ~150–250 g CO₂

    Rail remains the lowest-carbon option. But when the alternative is short-haul flying over water, ferries often represent a lower-impact choice.

    Sustainable travel is rarely about perfection. It is about direction.

    When the sea replaces the sky, movement becomes visible again.

    And at sea, that direction is slowly changing.

  • Sustainable Travel in Europe 🌍

    Sustainable Travel in Europe 🌍

    From Pilgrimage to Low-Carbon Movement by Interrail and Beyond

    A Slow, Grounded, and Cultural Way of Moving Through Europe

    For a long time, travel meant arrival. Flights, itineraries, destinations, checked off one by one.

    But over time, I began to understand something more essential: what shapes a journey most is not where we go, but how we move.

    This series traces my shift toward sustainable travel in Europe, not as a set of rules, but as a lived practice shaped by the body, time, and low-carbon movement.

    It began with walking. And it continues, still unfolding.


    🥾 Walking: The Body as Teacher

    When body becomes the vehicle.

    In the spring of 2025, I walked the Camino de Santiago from Zamora. Three weeks of near-zero-carbon movement redefined my sense of distance, time, and presence.

    Before walking the Camino, I traveled the way most modern travelers do. I chose the fastest way to arrive. Flights, connections, time zones. As if the journey only truly began once I had “arrived.”

    But after walking for weeks, I felt something I had never felt so clearly before: The body needs time in order to enter a place.

    When movement slows down, the senses awaken. Terrain, climate, distance, fatigue, none of these are inconveniences. They are signals.

    That was when I understood that sustainable travel is not only an environmental choice. It is also a form of respect for the rhythm of the body. This is why, after the Camino, I began rethinking the way I move.

    From Camino to Sustainable Travel →


    🛤 Trains: The Low-Carbon Backbone

    Watching landscapes change instead of flying over them.

    From May to July 2025, I traveled across Europe by train, using an Interrail Global Pass. Trains allowed me to arrive gradually, watching landscapes shift in real time.

    The value of train travel is not only its lower emissions. It creates a transition space. A stretch of time where body and mind adjust together.

    On daytime trains, I watched light shift, weather change, temperatures rise and fall. On platforms, I shared waiting time with commuters, families, solo travelers. These ordinary moments brought back a sense of humanity to travel.

    Trains do not erase distance. They make distance understandable. For the body and mind, that is a form of gentleness.

    Traveling Europe by Train: Learning to Arrive Slowly →


    🚂Night Trains: Time Reimagined

    Sleeping while the land moves.

    Not every journey needs to pause at night.

    Night trains dissolve the opposition between movement and rest. Instead of losing time to airports, artificial light, and exhaustion, I sleep while the land continues to move.

    There is something profoundly gentle about waking up in a new country without rupture. No sudden dislocation. No abrupt transition. Just continuity.

    The body travels. The mind rests. And arrival feels aligned rather than imposed.

    Night Trains in Europe (coming soon)


    ️Ferries: When the Sea Replaces the Sky

    The sea as transition, not empty space.

    Not every crossing requires flying.

    Ferries transform the sea into a visible passage rather than an empty gap between destinations. Standing on deck, watching the coastline slowly recede, I can feel departure happening in real time.

    Arrival unfolds the same way, gradually, perceptibly. The sea is no longer something to be bypassed. It becomes part of the journey itself. In that slowness, distance regains meaning.

    Ferries as a Gentle Crossing (coming soon)


    🚌🚏 Buses: Beyond the Railways

    Not romantic—but real.

    Not every place is connected by rail.

    In parts of the Balkans and other peripheral regions, buses are not a romantic choice, they are the only realistic one.

    They may not be punctual. They may not be comfortable. But they exist within the everyday lives of local people. Choosing them, for me, is a form of practical sustainability.

    Not pursuing ideal systems, but selecting lower impact, more human ways of moving within real conditions.

    When railways end, movement does not stop. It simply becomes more grounded.

    Traveling by Bus Beyond Railways (coming soon)


    🌆 Cities in Between: The New Space of Transition

    Slow travel happens in the in-between.

    The greatest gift of slower movement has been rediscovering the in between.

    Not the landmarks. Not the destinations. But the spaces between cities and countries that are usually ignored.

    In these transitions, I learned to accept uncertainty, delays, waiting. I began to understand that time is not wasted. It is a container. These experiences cannot be replicated by air travel.

    Cities in Between (coming soon)


    🍷🥂☕️🍻 Drinks on the Move: Culture in Motion

    Shared tables. Moving landscapes.

    Movement is not only about distance. It is also about ritual.

    Coffee on cold platforms at dawn. Beer after long days of walking. Wine in dining cars while fields blur past the window. These small drinks are not indulgences. They are anchors.

    They root me in a place without spectacle or performance. They invite conversation, or quiet observation. They turn anonymous transit spaces into temporary living rooms.

    Tasting something local between destinations is one of the most grounded forms of cultural connection. It is not about consumption. It is about presence.

    Drinks on the Move: Tasting Europe Between Destinations (coming soon)


    If travel is an extension of life, then sustainable travel is the choice to let that extension coexist rather than extract.

    Perhaps what we are truly trying to reach is not a particular city. But a way of moving that feels more aligned with ourselves, and more respectful of the world.

  • 🌍Interrail 2025: Exploring 24 Countries Across Europe in 3 Months 🚆

    🌍Interrail 2025: Exploring 24 Countries Across Europe in 3 Months 🚆

    Between May and July 2025, I embarked on my most ambitious journey yet — a 3-month Interrail trip covering 24 countries. From sipping wine in the vineyards of Spain to crossing the Arctic Circle under the midnight sun, each train ride was a chapter of discovery. Here’s the full route, highlights, and what made this adventure unforgettable.

    May–July 2025 · Visited 24 countries
    (Interrail app shows 21 because two were reached by ferry and Austria was exited by bus)
    Trains: 121 · Distance: 20,432 km · Time on trains: 11d 20h 45m

    Countries Visited (24)

    1. 🇳🇱 Netherlands
    2. 🇩🇪 Germany
    3. 🇮🇹 Italy
    4. 🇲🇪 Montenegro
    5. 🇷🇸 Serbia
    6. 🇬🇷 Greece
    7. 🇧🇬 Bulgaria
    8. 🇷🇴 Romania
    9. 🇭🇺 Hungary
    10. 🇨🇿 Czech Republic
    11. 🇨🇭 Switzerland
    12. 🇸🇮 Slovenia
    13. 🇪🇸 Spain
    14. 🇫🇷 France
    15. 🇵🇱 Poland
    16. 🇱🇹 Lithuania
    17. 🇱🇻 Latvia
    18. 🇪🇪 Estonia
    19. 🇫🇮 Finland
    20. 🇩🇰 Denmark
    21. 🇳🇴 Norway
    22. 🇭🇷 Croatia ferry
    23. 🇸🇪 Sweden ferry
    24. 🇦🇹 Austria exited by bus

    Notes: Croatia and Sweden were reached by ferry, hence not counted by the Interrail app.
    Austria was exited via bus/other transport, so no rail record.

    Trip Highlights

    • 🏔 Scenic rides across the Swiss Alps
    • ❄️ Crossing the Arctic Circle in Finland
    • 🏰 Visiting Europe’s charming microstates and small countries
    • ❄️ Nordic arc: Tallinn → Helsinki → Rovaniemi → Bergen
    • 🎶 Exploring Balkan culture in Montenegro & Serbia
    • 🍷 Regional wines & spirits tastings