I did what you do... all of it in the USA... born and raised in Ohio... 600,000 miles on two Nissan pickup trucks... Montana, Seattle, New Mexico, Nashville... six years in a 12x12 cabin on the Blackfoot River in Montana... friends everywhere... never married... no kids... no property... I'm 77 now. I listened to your story and your voice. You both heartened me and broke my heart.
You LIVED more days in America than most Americans. Most of us just work eat, sleep and pay the bills. May your life always be blessed. “To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all.” ― Oscar Wilde
I wanted to leave that so-called culture for something much better abroad when I was 12yrs old. Started traveling the world in my 20's, to find the perfect place for me. I'm there now, zero desire to return to the U.S. 50+ yrs living, working there was enough for me. I can no longer live among Americans, meaning, no moral compass, dumb as a rock outside their job, comfort zone dwellers for life. If you don't get out, you will eventually become one of them, and not even realize it. So, escape while you can!
I traveled for work globally for over 30 years, and I've spent more time in hotels than my own home. Now I'm semi-retired and working at home. It's the best thing since sliced bread, I can have a aquarium, grow plants, walk around in my jammies, cook meals in a oven, and sleep in my own bed. You're still young and can hit the road again if you want, but as for me when people ask where I'm going on vacation in my old age the answer is home. 😁
I looked into van life stuff - not for me. I have a vagabond spirit but don't want to fill water jugs, eliminate in a bucket, or worry where my mail goes. I have pets. I'm in planning stage of my third major life change, selling my house to move cross country. I'll be temporarily crashing with friends but will be buying my next base camp 😊
I like a mix, have a home base with all the amenities and then head out camping or traveling a fair amount. I'm into fish keeping and that does make traveling pretty hard.
I’m in the later stage of my career as well and spent a lot of time traveling for work, totally relate. People ask “why don’t you travel?” I have, I’ve seen a lot and now I just want to sit, relax and enjoy being with myself alone. It’s ok to do nothing.
When good hearted people like Eva fall in love with our country, and decided to move here, we as a country become better for it. If it is truly your dream to live in the Western US, please do not give up on it. For many Americans, it is our dream as well. Good luck!
please do not move to the southwest. there is not enough water to support the hundreds of thousands of people moving here, please stop, people like you are destroying the very thing you look at such a beautiful opportunity. you are destroying the lives of everyone who is already here.Too many people pouring in too fast and driving up the cost of land and living. just stop, stay where you are at and make a good life there dont come here and ruin other peoples lives.
She didn't give up on her dream! Looks to me she did her research into buying form several states & then renting as possible. She concluded based on resources that Dream she wanted to buy was currently out of her reach!!! Seems to me she made reasonable decision based on her abilities & financial worth!!! 👌Good for you. 🙏 May God bless you!!!
@@qbw8834 the biggest issue is that it’s so many people’s dream. Much like living in a sky rise in NYC, or a beach front property in California, it’s not cheap because it’s a popular market with limited availability. Sadly, exclusivity makes it great but also expensive. If everyone could buy a $200,000 house there it would look just like every other suburb and its greatness would be lost.
Eva, as an American citizen living in Bulgaria I can only recommend that you check it out. I love it here, the people, the food, the nature. A different alphabet and language is challenging but doable, beautiful properties for as little as €100k. A suggestion and nothing more.
Eva is from Poland, Im sure she knows about Bulgaria. But I agree, its beautiful mountain country and close to greece or turkey for perfect summer vacation.
@@Mixonikjust returned from the region after over a year. Had to leave the core schengen areas of europe with a US passport and went to turkey. To my surprise it ended my most favorite place to visit...it was winter.
Thank goodness for people like you sharing this experience. I am in the final steps of my departure from the U.S to Portugal, because as a 33 year old American I too cannot afford to buy a house. I hope my travel with my Boxer is as seamless as yours and Vilks. Fingers crossed
oh I am sure people in Portugal just love Americans moving to their country to buy land and homes.....If you can not afford a home in the US you aren't trying hard enough.
Hello shadowplayer! I clearly don’t know you or what your financial situation is, but, I’m gonna ASSUME 😊 that you’ve done your research on this adventure of yours, because Portugal uses EURO, which is more expensive than the US Dollar. Also, buying a house there is not a easy process, add to that, the job situation. I suggest you research before you jump!
Eva, There has been a lot going on in the world during the last four years and even for a settled person that takes its toll. As a traveller, these things would hit even harder. As a loyal viewer I personally do not have any expectations of you other than that you do what is best for you at any given time and that your journey takes you closer to a happier reality, shorter or longer term. As your immediate destination appears to be Europe I do hope you can spend a restorative holiday season with family and friends. Thank you for being real and thoughtfully communicating your decision-making and struggles. I look forward to seeing what’s next for you no matter what you do. You go girl!
What a kind response to Eva. I hope she reads it. I wish her the best as well. It would have been nice for her to live in the United States, but it may be that this journey leads her to a better place than here.
Hi Eva: I am 73 years old and I have been a traveler all my life. for work and personally. I have lived a bit harder than you have. I once calculated that I had slept on the ground with no tent for over 4000 nights probably more now. I worked in the woods as a contractor and eventually for the US Forest Service. I started pretty early in my teens doing this kind work fighting forest fires doing all kinds of jobs. By my 30's I needed a home base as you suggested you do. I bought a 7acre place near Eugene, Oregon. for $7000 and built a log cabin but it was not quite remote enough. I still own it but only visit it a bit. I finally ended up in Oregon on the Idaho boarder about 3 miles from Halfway, Or. I live in a place called Pine Town where 9 people live. I live right by and airport. It is 50 miles from the nearest small town and 150 miles from Boise, ID. I have and airplane a Cessna 170 that is great to go out to back country airports inside wilderness areas.. I have about 30 million acres of wilderness out my back door and can get into it very quickly and can stay as long as I want. Fortunately I learned early how to navigate off trail before GPS and spend most of my time in wilderness off trail and love to sleep on the ground so I can look up at the stars. My roots are in a very rural place that is much like Northern Idaho, Western Montana and Western Wyoming. I had an off shore sail boat a Swan 36 and sailed in the Caribbean and all over the east coast but I sold it last year, it was a great time but I was ready to move on. I have always lived in Oregon I'm a 5th generation Oregonian on both side so really have deep roots here. I love being as far east as I can be in Oregon. Can share with you all kind of places where you can find some nice places you could live and spend less that $200 to set up something you could like. They are very remote, but you have most the skills to live this way. It takes stocking up, growing a garden and not having a big grocery store near by. I go to my cupboard, freezer or root seller to deicide what is for dinner. I have tricks to have a good garden and be able to be gone a few weeks at a time. I only discovered you a few weeks ago and have enjoy your TH-cam posts. Glad to share and answer your questions if you like. Good Luck ET
One of my favorite places that I vacationed was for a night or two in a rented RV at a campsite in the Oregon high desert. I remember taking a packed lunch, portable chair, book, and my dog to a large golden meadow nearby with scattered pine trees and spending several hours in one spot just decompressing. I don't know where (or if) I might still have any of my notes from that trip, so I doubt I could figure out where I was precisely enough to return one day, but it's a fond memory at least.
When I worked in CORPORATE AMERICA, I was a "Road Warrior" for some time. I understand how constant travel can become quite a grind. For years all that I used (clothes, hygiene products, snacks, computer) I carried on my shoulder or in my hand. The constant rotation of hotel to rental car to office to restaurant to hotel to car to airplane is dizzying. While I was in a lot of cities, I can't tell you much about them, because I was working all of the time, not sightseeing. At first, I was excited to be flying in an airplane. Towards the end of my work there, getting on an airplane was no more exciting than getting on a city bus! I am very happy that that part of my life is over!
I agree. It's fun for about the first two years. I'm going on 6 years of being a "road warrior", and I'm to the point where going to the airport is almost repulsive to me.
I agree with you! I once had a field service engineer job in my mid 20s. I would fly out from home on a Monday. Spends two weeks away and like you said worked a lot more than when I worked in my home city. Anyway, I realized within 6 months of that working life that there was no way I wanted to continue that type of job. I moved on. Don't miss it a bit!
Six (6) years is a LONG time to be living like that! It is NOT healthy. I gained 50 lbs. of fat and eight (8) inches on my waist! If I hadn't gotten out when I did, I KNOW that MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION was coming. Best of luck to you. 🤗@@jag8926
I retired 19 yrs ago after 28 yrs of flying 20+ weeks/yr. I retired with 5 million FF miles…after burning them on upgrades for 10 yrs. You can’t get me on an airplane these days. I’ll sail to Hawaii before I fly.
My supervisor knew that I had a cellphone and a laptop, therefore I had NO EXCUSE not to get my usual office work done even when I was travelling. On top of all of that, I had to create my own Power Point presentations to go with the talks that I gave to every customer in every city that I travelled to. I did NOT have a secretary, so if I didn't create it, I didn't have it!@@Movieman1965
I truly and deeply feel for you! The cost of property is a massive issue for a lot of us who live here, too. 😕 "The land of the free and the home of the brave" is turning into the land of the ridiculously expensive and the home of the debt-slaves... 😟
But at least we can fund Ukraine and half of the rest of the world, right? Debt slavery is still better than Orange Man, eh? Woops, why are you reading this? Get to work.
Didn't you ever sense, the U.S. was one big illusion created by the very rich to temporarily impress ignorant Americans, ignorant foreigners, was never designed to last forever. Just serve a globalist agenda. I sensed that as a 10yr old back in the 1950's. I was right!
I feel USA lost an incredible woman. I am sad as a USA citizen to lose someone like you with talent, gifts, energy, kindness and compassion to Europe or wherever you go. I love your incredible videos. If per chance, USA gets a second chance I will be cheering....love your YT channel.
Eva...what is profound about your video is that you have not said anything groundbreaking...the fact that you need a home base, mental health, housing crisis, etc. What is groundbreaking (and it is unfortunate) is that you realize it and share it. So good for you! Godspeed my virtual friend...Godspeed.
You haven't seen many videos like this on TH-cam before have you..? 😂🤦♂️ People are acting like this woman is so much more amazing than she actually is 😂 I'm trying to find what people are saying but it's just not happening..
@@mth4849exactly what I was thinking. So many are looking at these videos like this girl is the most amazing thing ever and doing things no human has done before 🤣🤷♂️ I've been to 39 states and to most countries in Europe and I don't need to let everybody know about it. Being a woman and making videos like this will get you lots of views just from being a woman. Didn't really want to bring that up because I know what people are going to say but it's the truth.
Travelling is not just about covering physical, external distances, but also about advancing along inner distances. Thanks you for the update and wishing you all the best for the coming steps Eva! 😊
What a loss for North America... What an amazing gurney, what a fabulous, fun, goddess of a woman. Where ever the winds take her, it will be a gift for those whos lives she touches along the way. Most certainly, she has touched the hearts of all on this continent.
I wandered around Europe, North, and West Africa, USSR and the USA for about 8 years, back in the 1970s, no mobiles, internet, etc so a very haphazard but wonderful times. I can understand the need to find a fixed point in one's life I ended up back in my home country, and I still traveled but on shorter more organised trips. By organised trips I mean I knew where I was going. Wherever you put down roots I wish you every happiness, though I will be surprised if you lose the urge to travel. The very best of luck young lady.
I only had one rule arrive in a town or city by 6pm so I could get my bearings before it got dark. Other than that it was just a case of what would happen next. Too old to really travel now but if I did I would leave the phone at home and just set off. Enjoy your traveling, a great way to find out about your true self, strengths, and limitations. @@shawnparenteau9395
@@p.chuckmoralesesquire3965 ive noticed it's a fad now to title van-life vids with a title that hints at disillusionment with van-life, it's probably proven to get more clicks.
There is an area in the north central US called the Driftless area. It's an area that was missed by the glaciers thousands of years ago. It is located in parts of the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, and even Illinois. If you're not aware of it, I strongly urge you research it and maybe check it out . Beautiful nature,wide open spaces and reasonably price housing.
I traveled around the world for 3.5 years out of a backpack. Towards the end it sorta lost its purpose. Everywhere I went was new and exciting but there was noone there who "knew" me to share it with. There is a lot to be said for having roots, a place to call home... your own shower. My transition from fulltime backpacker to regular everyday life took me a bit by surprise. It will be interesting to see what this is like for you. All the best to you.
It's odd this life we live Eva. 10:29 I've had many adventures in various parts of the world including surviving the Vietnam War yet as i sit here today i feel as if none of it happened and that I'm living only now in this moment and each day ahead is another beginning. I hope that one of your tomorrows you find that place that need to find. It's been great watching your videos, I'm hoping they'll be more.
All that travel in the US, and you never made it to Colorado? You're always welcome, HQ here. You had my Mother and I captivated before she passed of Cancer. She lived through you doing the things she couldn't at the time. You're productions will always have a place in our hearts.
You speak for so many who are either ill, unable to travel, and I am so glad to hear that you and your mother got to have some joy watching EVA She does bring joy blessing
I am an American and I’ve accepted that I probably will not own house in my city. I’ll have to move to a very small city or out of the country. You pretty much addressed why many people here live with roommates, with their parents or even in their cars. The American dream no longer includes a house the last 20 years or so 😂😂. I really enjoy your adventures and can’t wait to see where you will end up next
Moving to a small town doesn’t really help either. Housing prices there are catching up and the jobs pay crap. That’s why people leave them to begin with.
@craigsilver9 No insult intended: But If you are an American and is over 55 today, a man with out any severe disabilities and don't own a house, IMO, is because you didn't want to do so.... unless u lived in a very expensive city. I came to the US with $1,032 in 1980 as a 20 yr old ... got cheated $700 when I tried to buy a used Gran Turino car... so I was left with $332. I worked 2 jobs, went to school, slept on the floor of a friend apartment, ate ramen with the cheapest hotdog as meat and today I have 3 properties and a retirement income of $4k+. I am not bragging. I came to the US legally. And I am not a very smart person, non-white, just average, used no drugs or alcohol, no family here in America to help me, no US gov't assistance, always paid my taxes, etc IMO, The American dream is still very much ALIVE for those who want it, so I feel like you don't know what you are saying, when u say the American dream is not available. I am speaking out as I think too many people like yourself are pushing the wrong narrative. Once again no insult intended: But I would love to hear, how life has treated you, that you have loss or gave up on the opportunities to do better for yourself. ps: 65 upticks on you comment, I predict I will get maybe 5 upticks and 500 downticks. What u think? BTW: The Red hat I have owned since 2010 and my handle and my photo is not Political in any way.
@@nocturnalrecluse1216 i live in California, a state that's been overwhelmingly democrat for decades. We literally have the worst and most expensive housing market in the country..... The average price of a house in my county of Santa Cruz is around a minimum of 800k, and we're talking like a 2 bed 1200 sq/ft in the hood.
Im so sorry it didn't work finding a home base in the U.S. i wish you well on your next journey. Its funny , as I would love to leave the U.S. due to the same financial reasons and the political climate. You are a very courageous, beautiful being. Honor and Respect.
Vaya con dios, Eva. Thank you for sharing your adventure so that we could feel part of our journey. Hope you will share your continuing life adventures with us.
Eva, uwielbiam Cię oglądać, słuchać i wiem, że na pewno Twoje nowe życie będzie równie ciekawe jak to, które masz już doświadczone. Być może zatrzymasz się w Polsce, ale gdziekowliek to będzie, tam będziesz razem z olbrzymim bogactwem wewnętrznych zasobów, które są Twoją kreacją. Ściskam
Sadly Eva, ALL of us face this same personal issue in our lives. We mature, become wiser, and find a need to have a place to call home. Someplace permanent. Luckily you made this determination still in your youth. Strangely, I found just the OPPOSITE in finding someplace to live. I lived in London. I lived in Switzerland. But, as an American, I found EVERYTHING to be SO EXPENSIVE in Europe. Buying a house was VERY expensive. But HALF the size as comparable in the US. Your specific issue is more complicated, hence the cost, because you wanted land. Lots of land. If you tried to duplicate all that acreage with a house in Europe, you will find it even MORE expensive. So our dreams need to become more realistic and practical. As for Odyssey, the solution was actually simpler. Sell it. Buy a US, up dated, up graded version of Odyssey. They sell the same model and make in the US. But if Europe is where you think you can feel you are home, then you have your answer.
I'm sorry to hear you're not staying in America, but I can totally understand your reasons. Many of my friends have had a similar realization concerning the price of land here, and even if you do end up buying something, the property taxes can become a burden over time. I hope you will return some day !
Thank you for giving us a chance Eva. Americans are bombarded with how awful we're all supposed to be, and how awful our country is, it can get painful to read sometimes. While we're not perfect, no place is really, we do have some kindness and decency left in us, and you help to show that while you were here. Sorry for all of the big trucks, not sorry for the beautiful people you met and the awesome places you saw. Many blessings for you friend, be safe, and I hope you and Vilk find your little part of paradise in this world, wherever it may be.
I hear you with all of that. It's not us the people of America that has given us a bad name, it's our war mongering, imperialistic government that has. The American people hate it as much as the rest of the world.
Agreed. We have issues, like any other people and places do! The rental issues are understandable, but I really appreciate how nice this channel was to see some really lovely places and kind people!
Much agreed.. im fascinated by other states, countries, cultures, and I love people. So seeing comments about how awful we "all" are is just gut wrenching. Seeing someone appreciate our beauty is so nice for a change ❤
Ditto to so many of you. As a lifelong Montana resident it’s so sad to see many of our native residents no longer able to live here. We would have loved to call you a neighbor Eva - you seem to embody the Montana spirit! For more on the housing crisis and affordability crisis consider reading this great book: Billionaire Wilderness by Justin Farrell.
I read an interesting article about digital nomad fatigue. After about 4 years people tend to burn out. Away from family and friends. Not really anywhere long enough to make more than superficial contact with locals. The only people you really connect with are other digital nomads. A lot of them end up settling down in places like southern Europe or Oz. And while they still travel for maybe 3 months a year their followers tend to get upset that they have deviated from "the way". But hats off to you. 6 years! Golly gosh. After 15 days bike packing my cozy apartment with it's own toilet and shower starts to look really attractive lol.
Eva, you are one of the world's TOP female solo travellers. A rare combination of courage, self-dependency, confidence and hardwork, you can literally achieve anything in life and live alone at any place you wish to. My bestest wishes for your upcoming chapter of solo adventures, in some new regions of the globe. 😊👍🏻
Do you really think what she is doing is any more amazing than the mom her age raising or 5 kids? Different yes but no more difficult and certainly no more filled with meaning and insight.
@@kurtfroberg3608exactly what I thought when I seen a few of her videos.. these people act like she's discovering new locations on Earth or something.. 😂 People are impressed with..? I have no idea.
Enjoying your video. This is the 2nd one I am watching. I had left Korea a year before my graduation to travel and volunteer many many moons ago somehow my Spanish got me a job in Latin America... long story short now I live in Florida selling real estate. Bitter sweet I exchanged my nomad sprit to stable job. Your story inspired me and at the time took me back to some of memories! Safe travels!
Is sad to see you go, you always present your stories in such fascinating and captivating way. Thank you for all you’ve shared! I hope you can find that place your seeking for 🙏🏼
What a wonderful pleasure it has been to have you traveling in the USA. You opened our eyes to some of our own country in a very positive way. Just know that many Americans feel the same way you do with the costs of living and buying is so expensive. Very understandable feelings indeed. Thank you and I look forward to you showing us new and different dreams God Speed EVA USA will miss you.
All the affordable housing that the American middle class could afford has been bought up for the purpose of short term rentals such as AIRBNB and VRBO etc. This has absolutely ruined young American's future regardless of career or education. Sadly we let a lot of American and foreign investment ompanies come in and buy up properties for their real estate portfolios, just to be turned into short-term rentals. This doesn't just happen in destination locations either it's happening everywhere. Good luck with your travels.
come to the UK - same thing. and Europe. many cities are now BANNING it. thank god. but worse our rental market is also bought up by offshore hedge funds, so they PAY NO TAX to the nation they feed off. inequality globally is a PROBLEM that needs addressing. wages have hardly increased in thirty years but in London a house bought for 50 grand in 1990 will now be worth 800 grand. INSANE.
I don’t think all affordable houses were bought for short term rentals. There are people who bought homes to sell again and for any number of other reasons. If people stopped paying high prices for houses the prices would have dropped by now.
I went through this same process. Back packing everywhere-> living abroad for years -> suddenly yearning for a home base. While your life will look slower now, you'll have such a deep and rich appreciation for it. You spent years appreciating other's homes. Now you'll get to find the beauty in yours. Embrace the shift, it's just you growing
I relate to this. I spent more than a year without a home travelling Europe and the Caribbean, and after years of moving and travelling I just felt this urge to create a home for myself. My life is a lot more predictable right now, and I went from living in the fast lane to creating a whole different lifestyle, but it’s everything I need and more. That’s the beauty of life. It’s cyclical. Every new phase brings about new lessons and experiences. I’m very happy to be in this place where I am at.
Congratulations on listening in so well to what you need. The journey always continues twists and turns that can be surprising and rattling but also joyful and full of new discoveries! Peace to you and thanks for sharing this all with us!
I have enjoyed being a part of your journey through America. As an American I am so sorry that you could not make roots here. You and your pretty smile and outgoing personality and your many adventures you have shared with us will be so missed.
Eva, I have enjoyed your American adventure so much! I’m sorry to see you leave…sorry for our housing prices!!! I look forward to hearing that you and Vilk, and Oddessy arrived in Europe safely. Thank you for sharing…INSPIRED!
“We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.” -T.S. Eliot
There are many practical issues to building your own home but Eva has not mentioned the most fundamental issue, which is citizenship. If you are not a citizen, most countries, including USA, insist that you leave after a some time, this results in leaving your home behind. US citizenship is rather difficult to acquire. There is really no point in building a home if you don’t have a strategy to become a citizen or visit frequently.
Illegal of course.. but if you buy a house in the US they don’t give you a legal permanent residence. Regardless if you buy or not. You should be a legal resident then makes sense to move to the USA. If you don’t have a social security number how do you want to keep your life together? You need the social security number eventually everywhere!!
@@darksnow1111 But you need at least a visa. I guess until then she traveled on B-2, where you are kicked out after 6 months. Maybe she could get temporary O-1B visas based on YT projects, but these are nonimmigrant, too. And any action like buying a plot of land or a house which shows intention of immigration will endanger any nonimmigrant visa.
As a much much much smaller TH-camr, how are you not making enough revenue from your amazing TH-cam success to cover the purchase of one of those houses? It kind of doesn't make sense. We want you to stay here! What a great addition to our American community.
She could easily get a plot of land and build a nice yurt or amish two story cabin in Montana.. now a 750 k mansion with the perfect view of the mountaim range.. casper wyoming has that also but its mega boring and the winters are unbearable for outdoor hiking at all.
It's probably due to upload frequency and consistency, to get a reliable views and thus income you need to be very consistent, and for the past year or so the youtube channel has been put kind of on the back burner to focus on her mental health (rightly so). My guess is that heavily influences the revenue stream for the channel.
I think all TH-camrs should always leave out finances and how much they make on TH-cam . It can and will distract from the videos. These journeys she has are amazing . Getting to see the world . Different cultures . Keep the focus on that . She makes some amazing videos of her journeys . Sweet personality as well really adds to the value to watching these
@@evazubeck I was just commenting from the point of view of being a TH-camr myself with about 10,000 Subs... if you just did some linear math for your channel you shouldn't be a millionaire but you should be able to cover those homes...I would think. Bottom line, love your channel and sad to see you go. We're genuine fans and appreciate all the work you have to put in to make your channel and life a success.
I only found your channel about five months ago. When I was younger I travelled the West every year when I could take long vacations. While I visited many of the areas you did, your explorations were fascinating and very different than most. You truly explored the outer world and at the same time your inner world which makes you so unique. I too searched to find a living area in the northwest but due to health issues found an affordable cabin in the southwestern desert. Continue to trust your intuition and inner callings, it will lead you to where you need to be. I love the beginning of the video seeing you walk on the beach in bare feet with Vilk. What a lucky pup. Looking forward to watching your vids from the beginning. Blessings on your continued travels within and through life.
Wow Eva, this one really hit home for me. As an american but also a world traveler, California was my dream since i was a child and i moved there 20 years ago and worked very hard to try to build a life for myself there, in the place that had become my home. However yes due to the cost of living (housing specifically) in the USA these days it became very clear that my dream of owning a home just wasn't going to happen and even renting became a struggle, so now I'm back out there exploring the world trying to find a new place to call home. Congrats on your incredible journey thus far and i wish you best of luck in this next phase of life!
I can completely relate to you. I'm in the same boat. Buying isn't an option and renting doesn't feel like one either anymore. So I'm traveling and feeling into my next steps.
It is insane, the housing prices in California. Average priced single family home in San Diego is $1 million. And when I say average, i mean AVERAGE! Nothing special. My sister was trying to buy a place here with a $1.1 million budget and gave up. She had a modest, short list of requirements and nothing filled the bill. Wound up buying in Seattle, which isn't exactly cheap. But no comparison for how much home she got for that budget up there.
Beautiful! Things changé! ❤❤❤❤❤ I had been travelling for 35 years in my profession as an intl. Management consultant. Now I look for two places: one in Germany in summer and the other in my wife's country Cameroun! I love it! ❤❤❤❤❤❤
I feel your pain. I'm a US citizen. I had traveled to the West four years ago and fell in love with a small mountain town. I looked at houses at the time and could have afforded one but my career at the time still had me firmly planted in the SE of the US. Now all of that has changed. I've relocated to that small mountain town but can no longer afford a house here because the houses are over 2x the price they were four years ago. My advice is just to be patient because sooner or later the bubble is going to burst again and the prices will tumble.
Prices are only too high if you can't afford them. Bubbles eventually pop but bubbles are never the same. Where I'm from, there is no foreign tax, the international rich keep flooding in, prices are still inflating. When it all crashes the desirable cities will still be out of reach, people need a place to live, don't expect people to abandon their homes too readily.
@@pujabelgian, the bubble is definitely going to burst and it's going to make 2008 look like a mild pop. The reason? Commercial real estate is going to be a huge part of this one. There is a huge portion of that market that can't get businesses to rent or buy from them. As for residential properties, "Prices are only too high if you can't afford them" yeah that's like 80-90% of the US population right now. That's due to the destruction of the American middle class by NAFTA and other factors. If you're in a home you own then you're exactly where you need to be. Anyone else is struggling to pay rent and most likely is one emergency away from being completely broke.
As a North American, I have been a global nomad since I was 4 yrs old...spanning my life over Asia, Europe, North America and Northern Africa. I am now 44 yrs old. I have built my career in the most fascinating, highly competitive Asian countries in my 20s and 40s. I have lived in jungles. I have lived very interesting chapters that are vastly different from each....but like you, the "settling" roots started to creep in around 2020 for me. It's the strangest feeling..to want to settle down. However, I think my "book of life" is telling me that it might be one of the most pivotal chapters of my life.
Eva....this is your impact....I am here, mourning the departure of someone I have never met. Don't get me wrong. I am very happy for and inspired by your ability to honor your introspection. Safe travels, as always, Eva.
I’m a US Citizen 31 years old and this is such a huge dilema for lots of people in my generation. You can’t get a house or land for under $100,000 like our parents were able to. They make it super hard not to go into a lifetime amount of debt in order to live a nice settled down life. The American dream has turned into an unrealistic American nightmare.
Its only a dilemma if you want someplace in the coastal (east or west coast) areas. The midwest plains states has very affordable properties. Don't expect prices like your parents paid. My parents bought their first home for 5k. (1949). I bought my second home for 180k, sold it for 260k (Portland Ore.). Im looking to move to Kentucky. Housing around there is @ 130 to 150 starting. If you have patience you can find a nice affordable home here in the states.
@@joec5544g when held for inflation, the average home is 3-4X more expensive today than it was in the 80s. Ask any boomer if they could have afforded their first home if it cost 4X more while their salary stayed the same? Don't be so simple minded.
No it hasnt. The US is still going strong, meanwhile here in Europe our economies are stagnating. If you are willing to put in the work the US is still the best country on earth. Ofc if you like taking welfare checks from the government then many European countries are a better option.
I'm a US citizen, that lived and worked outside of the US for 13 years. It was a great adventure, but internally I knew when it was time to get off the train. Same thing, tired of my things being in storage, tired of not having a permanent dwelling, and being able to work with my hands in my own garage/house/yard. One thing I can tell you from my own experience, sometimes it's best to disengage, and then recenter your focus and goal setting. Going home will be a great thing, and you've accomplished an immense amount for all of your travels, be proud of it. The US is certainly expensive...but...it's also somewhere you can can re-assert your life, when you are in a position to. Love to have you back here, but please, take the time to re-invest in yourself, your homeland, and your people. You'll know when it's time for a change after that.
I could never go back to the US of A that exists today. People are full of lies, conspiracies, really rather weird beliefs, and extremism. Is there anything American that actually works? I cant see anything from over here in very, very civilized Europe.
Sounds like mensplaining things to women. You can't tell her what to do, something like re-invest in yourself, your homeland, and your people. It's not up to you to tell her what to do and whether she should invest in "her homeland" or "her people."
I traveled 15 years and now I’m 35. I learned that I like stability, routine, and just bought my first house. If it’s your passion, you’ll always find a way to make travel happen. But it’s also OK if that’s not what you want to do anymore either 😊
I think that it's a natural process to adventure ......but after a while you need roots or a sense of place of your own...otherwise you could drift...It's good to travel..It's the best form of education!!!
I'm sure I speak for a good many Americans but I am sorry to see you leave. Eva, you are a wonderful ambassador from whom we all learned and experienced so much. I wish you much happiness and fulfillment in wherever your life leads you but please know that you will always have our hearts and our friendship. God be with you always.
Eva - Your dream for finding a home here in the western U.S. was a very emotional one for me for I am trying to find my way back home in the western mountains north of Seattle, WA. 🌲 (I've been on the road across the US and Canada for 8 years representing music companies and their artists here in the South and I'm glad that I rented a studio apartment as a home base which helped my mental health). - Currently, I decided to quit my job in the music industry. My heart no longer desires to represent the music industry and artists, but instead find ways to represent nature, wildlife and oceans that will bring awareness to their health & survival. 🦋 I know some way/some how I'll find my way back home and have a home that is surrounded by nature, but at least I'm not on a time-frame as you were. - Eva, I do hope that one day you'll find a way to return to Montana and create your home-base there. In the meantime, I wish only the best for you and Vilk and I thank you for sharing your awesome journeys with us all! I'll keep watching for your awesome videos❣🤗🦋
Dear Eva, you're a lovely friend surrogate here on YT, sorry to hear about your mental health, I hope it will get better soon, the world can unfortunately be pretty f****d up and it's quite normal that your mind reacts with distress to distressful situations but please don't forget that you're pretty amazing so don't allow any creepy crap to convince you otherwise. Your videos have been a mental health relief for many of us much more than any regular service in the market so may it all come back when you need it the most. Take care 💪🩷
So positive news: Tenets United in Bozeman, MT has gotten the city council to ban short-term rentals that are not occupied by the owner. Let's hope that has some affect on housing there. I felt it first hand as a graduate student at Montana State University. Rent went up 35% from one year to the next because "market value". Housing here is a crushing reality, and has only furthered my interests into finding alternatives. Mainly, a sailboat.
Airbnb has had the same effect in Australia. I’m in Tasmania and I’ve never seen homelessness here like the last 5 years. Rents have gone through the roof. We have a big tourism industry and many cashed-up people visit and then return here paying big dollars for property pushing prices up out of the reach of locals.
Most people build their lives around other people before deciding where to settle. Is that what is missing in your life? Person or people who define your life. (Love your videos!)
Being in your early and mid 30s is a transitional time and it takes some soul searching to adjust to it and learn how to thrive again. I have never met anyone who didn't struggle a bit during that period of life. Whether they have kids, married, single, traveling, changing careers, doing the same thing they always have - whatever the life circumstances are there is no easy way to navigate this time of life. In my experience, you get through it and eventually realize well, life goes on - all we have are the moments. Take care of your health, mental and physical, and you will come out the other end just fine. As for your dream to live in the western united states - it's a great dream and well worth some sacrifice if you truly want it. It is achievable, despite the cost, you just need to be patient, creative, and strike when the iron is hot. I've loved watching you embrace our country. Good luck on this new chapter of life.
Wowza.... This was a heavy video and I could feel the weight on you as well. Thank you for all you've done and shared with us. I can relate so much with all of your thoughts with buying property in the US. It's insane what this country is quickly becoming. GOOD LUCK TO YOU AND VILK and thanks again. 🖖😁🙏💙
If you're wanting nature at an affordable price. Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio, parts of Tennessee (to a lesser extent) and across Appalachia are affordable. The problem with a lot of Western states is that a lot of people, especially rich people from California, also want to live there. Idaho is a prime example of what you're seeing. In the US there are a lot of ridiculously expensive pockets but if you're willing to live in the cheaper (less "glamorous") parts of the country. There are actually places you can afford. The Midwest is also a cheap place to live, Dubuque Iowa is a pretty and inexpensive part of the state. It's also currently a seller's market across the country so that doesn't help.
Hi Eva. I feel you. My partner and I are leaving Vancouver Canada after 7 years of happiness here. The housing crisis is just too intense at the moment and it's impacting our quality of life. It's impossible to make plans for the future. I can relate to how you feel, it's heartbreaking. We're lucky enough to be Europeans (French) and to have options. My heart goes out to all North Americans in these difficult times. Much love to you all.
You're lucky indeed. I moved to Vancouver 2 years ago and I regret it. It's insanely expensive here. More expensive than the US. But I can't just come back to Europe where I lived before for several years because my passport is useless. And my homecountry is a dictatorship these days. So I'm stuck here for now. Can't even leave Canada to travel. Have to wait until I get Permanent Residency and become a citizen eventually. After that it's probably back to Europe or try my luck in the US. Visas suck
@@nicktankard1244 So sorry to hear this, as I've lived in the suburbs of Vancouver all my life, married and brought up two children, who both now have families of their own, and paid handsomely to have homes of their own. The main problem is that you have to go so far out, to find something affordable, then for many such a long drive back to the city to where they work. I suppose trying to find a career choice outside the city would be the way to go, if at all possible. I'm now retired, and see these expenses making life so hard for our youth and families. Personally, I believe the influx of immigration is one of the main culprits, adding to the homeless population, and now governments forcing the taxpayers whom have already got a huge burden of cost, now this same government wanting the taxpayers to pay for accomodation and drugs/meds for the homeless! The Liberal way of give give give, has finally outperformed itself, as nothing was saved for hard times, and our debt is now out of control, to where our services are in crisis, right across the board, where people now line up at food banks to make it through the week. It's a complex issue, but government choice, has brought us to this, and until the current one is gone, it will take time to try and get back on our feet again, or so we can only hope.
@@Powerstroke98 i can hardly complain about immigrants because I am one myself. But I agree that Canada invites a lot of people to move here without providing much support and infrastructure to sustain this many people. Coming from Europe I'm not a fan of North American suburban style of living. I will be so depressed there. I work from home so commuting is not an issue. But I want to live in a walkable neighborhood and be able to easily take public transport to various events in the city or just walk to a grocery store. I hate driving. So I've been living in Mount Pleasant. It is so expensive here I don't even dream of buying property but at least it's not an unwalkable and super boring car-dependent suburb :)
@@nicktankard1244 Could you explain why you feel depressed here Nick? I was born and bred here, and live within 10 miles still, of the home I was brought to as a new infant! So, I have had the view of change...extreme change all my life, and I'm now retired! Traffic definitely could make one feel depressed, and I was in that traffic all my life in going to work, but found it a necessity, as my priority was to my family, as well as paying as much as possible on my home, to try to pay it off as quickly as possible. I'm unsure if any family these days, could work their entire life, and pay off a mortgage with the price of homes, even out in the suburbs, yet in Britain it's been that way for decades, where all would live in the same home. Not sure I could do that, but we all do what we have to do of course. Unlike you, I have always LOVED driving, and still do to this day, wondering what's around that next corner, when on a road trip. After a change of careers when in my fifty's, of all things I chose to get my Class 1 license and even drove semi-trucks for my last 10 years of working, and I honestly still miss doing so, as it was really fun, most days. Of course there are different ways of working in the trucking industry, and some could certainly be boring, but not the type I did. Nonetheless, I believe the mass immigration has led to many of the problems we're currently in, and most definitely don't support the current government any more, as corruption has taken place, and our debt level is into the stratosphere, for the amount our population is at. I wish you well, wherever you end up Nick...the very best of luck!
Eva, It is our loss, to have you depart. I won't say how it leaves me with an empty space, or how much I have appreciated being able to share your personal growth, joys, and pains. I feel I know you. You are leaving a family here who cares for you. Safe travels. Please don't forget us.
Eva, I am sure you won't see this, but maybe you do or maybe another person, who knows. I am 25, and I am also on that search of a new home. I was recently living in Belgium (I am Spanish). I was doing a PhD there. However, it was being such and awful experience that I needed to go back to my own country, without really wanting to. Spain is lovely, but not what my life has been there. So you are being really helpful for me in a life period where I am trying to understand myself somehow, seeing another person also willing to find her home. Thank you so so so much.
New to your channel and I just adore you! You’re such an inspiration! Thank you for making this channel and allowing us to go along on your journey 🙏 Sometimes I get so bogged down with life and feel like there’s just one - boring - way to live it, which isn’t really living right? It’s so good to see someone that’s stepping outside the box and taking advantage of this life and showing that there is a different way, a more fulfilling adventurous way, to live. Keep doing what you’re doing girl, live it up for the people like me who are too afraid or unable due to life’s circumstances to take that step. ✊
Yeah, property prices in the U.S. are completely insane right now, part of the reason there is so much homelessness. Best wishes for you wherever you may settle.
The UK is even worse, those styles of property with land would cost at least double those prices. Mind you it is mainly because we don't have a great deal of available land.
I think it’s because the Fed kept interest rates very low for a long time, and the banks leveraged themselves to the hilt. RE prices are unsustainable. Boomers are rapidly downsizing. The largest generation is exiting the RE market. RE is on its way down. I’d be selling now while I could still get my equity out of it.
@@Tom-tk3du It's the same over here in Europe and down in NZ. Grandparents of a friend bought some retirement-homes (to rent out) in Spain for ~USD125000 each. They're now rated at over a million. It's crazy. The house i wanted to buy in NZ went from NZD275000 to NZD1250000 in 7 years.
Sorry we could not be your home. Thank you for showcasing the beauty within the USA. We are not perfect, never have been, but will strive to be better. Blessings to you. Few in our country can say they dipped a toe in the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean. I’ve done it and now you have. Be well. Your follower from Virginia, USA.
Quit trying to speak for the country It's just very weird.. You could say the same crap about every country on this planet.. enough with that dumb crap
I will miss your travels here. You have seen more of this country than I have in my lifetime. It’s fun watching your genuine enjoyment on your journey. Safe travels ahead to you and return soon.
Air bnb has ruined it for ALOT of countries. Rural nsw australia has very little options for rentals. I ended up homeless for 5 weeks living in tents with my hubby and 5kids a year ago. I was with social housing and still ended up homeless
I’m so sorry to hear you go, but I understand. As an US citizen I too love the Western states, but the price of homes/land have gotten crazy. That’s why I have been living in Ecuador for the past 4 years. Yes, sad, but our reality. 🙏 Luckily, there is beauty and great people all over this world of ours. Peace.
I wish she had a chance to check out Minnesota or the Appalacha region. You can find property for far, far cheaper than the Western States. Montana and Wyoming are where the rich buy land and it has become very unaffordable. But you can find the same acres + property for a fraction of the price in West Virgina, or Northern Michigan. It may not be as wild as the west, but these regions are still less populated and filled with wonderful nature. As Eva once said, the US is huge, and she only really focused on one part. If you do make it back to the states, go travel around Appalacha. It's wonderful.
Wow. I didn't expect this. I've been following you for years and I hope you're able to settle into a place you and Wilk can call home. I'll keep watching. It's been great following your adventures.👍
Eve I have been following you for the past 5 years and you had a great impact on my life. Seeing you changing from one dream to an other makes me feel confused but it shows me how courage you are. Sometimes I feel like I wanna change my dream (or the path that I have chosen) but I just don't have enough courage to admit that to myself. Good luck in every step you take.
I just ran across 2 of your video's today, sorry to see you leave. I got a little emotional when you were leaving Jarbridge NV, I've never been there and likely couldn't live there but it seemed like with the right person you would have loved it there. Good luck in your life.
I bought 30 acres of beautiful land full of trees and 1/4 mile of frontage creek/spring for under $70k four years ago. Bought a sawmill $5k. Building my dream cabin and couldn’t be happier. Great community where we rely on each other. I wish you well on your journey and will be here in northwest United States enjoying the freedom of living your best life. ❤️
Honestly, as American citizens my wife and I wholeheartedly agree with you. It is absolutely ridiculous how expensive living here is, and it's a shame because the places you've been are all so strikingly beautiful, yet financially unattainable. Personally speaking, we're looking to move overseas in the next few years because we don't like the culture in the US and like you found, it's just way too wildly expensive here.
I feel you. I’m sat in the airport in the Philippines after escaping the “normal” life and chasing a travel dream but I’ve got to the point where I feel like I want to settle down. I’ve been traveling across the globe on and off since 2016 and I think ready for the next chapter. Amazing video and wish you all the success in the future :)
Imagine how the housing prices feel to those of us who live here. It's devastating. I can't imagine I'll ever own my own place, or even be able to survive once my parents are gone.
I know it sounds like a long time but in 10 years from now the housing landscape will be completely different. We are on the brink off the Boomer's mass retirement and in about 5 years most of them will be beyond the average US lifespan. We have not had a replacement level fertility rate for some time and unless we have insane levels of immigration, housing inventory will skyrocket.
British fan here, I travel to the States for my job 2 to 3 times every year. I take my family on holiday there as well. I love the USA and would move my family there tomorrow if I could find the right job there or move with my company. So far I have travelled to 15 States and I am sure I will add another 5 or more in 2024. I've loved watching your travels through the US, even more so the recent video featuring Iowa, a State I find fascinating and where the people are so friendly. Over the last 10 days I drove through Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Its a real shame to see your journey in the US come to an end, I hope you find the pull to return after some time off. Geographically and with the diversity of people and characters and lifestyles, for me, nowhere touches the US for this! Good luck, I will keep watching for whatever adventure comes your way next!
Have you been to Utah? Neither my husband nor I grew up there but we love it so much. I’ve lived most of my adult life in Utah. I’ve been to England twice now and I really love it. I’m glad that you get to come visit the US so often and that you enjoy it so much.
@@dmsjt5181 Hi, Utah is very much on my wish list, and despite trying, I have not yet found a business reason to go there. However, if I do not find some business, I will visit all the same. So far I have visited multiple towns and cities in Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Philadelphia, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Florida and California. I tend to revisit the same States many times due to customer locations. On my last trip I managed to get a new experience by taking the ferry from Muskegon MI across Lake Michigan to Milwaukee, that was cool!
Eva, this is so sad. But, I know this is not the end of your story. Thank you for sharing your adventures with us and I'm looking forward to what's next. Be blessed my friend.
Alaskan here, I feel ya. I love my country, and I love the nature here. However, this is not a good place to raise children, sustain a business, and the education and healthcare are really poor, so my wife and I must leave in order to provide the best life for our children. Thank you for highlighting the beauty of our special nation. I wish you all the best in your travels.
I'm sorry it's rough in Alaska 😢 things are great here in Indiana. We have access to great hospitals and doctors. My kids attended a rural school and did very well earning multiple scholarships for college. I know Alaska is very beautiful but it sounds like it is low on resources.
Thank you so much for the unique view and perspective of our country! It was great having you here. Whether you come back someday or follow your life's ambitions somewhere else, we look forward to the videos of your new adventures and wish you the very best!
It's crazy to think that in another part of the world, there is a woman living with her odyssey and traveling around the world alone with her dog. Meanwhile, I am living my life differently, going to campus every workday, working on a lot of tasks, trying to reach different goals every period, and that still goes on. I realize that we always looking for something, in every aspect of our lives, and it makes me realize that life is just like that. We never stopped at one point, we always looking for another thing. Thank you Eva for bringing such a great channel, for me and for us to see your life, see your journey, and get insight/perspective from your pov. thank you so much, hope you have an amazing life, and see you on another video! I'll wait!!
I think you need to realize what she is doing isn't impressive at all.. many many many many people are doing it and have done it and didn't need to broadcast it to everybody to feel good about themselves..
Go with your gut. Always. When things aren't working out, in your case, pricing, that's when you need to take a step back and evaluate. I remember when I was wanting to purchase a home, I kept running into road blocks, it wasn't the right time. So, I took a step back and put buying a home on the back burner. When the time was right, everything happened seamlessly. You'll figure it out and you'll understand why it all worked out the way it did!
Saw this after my last comment, wow! My reaction is this is the issues my sons and daughters-in-law face in our quest for "the American Dream" ! That being said, I would be glad to " Buy" Oddessy and "lease" it back to you should you choose to return to the US. My 12-14 year old students at school are inspired by your videos. Keep chasing your dream, and keep us posted! Fritz
Yeah my husband, 6 month old, and I rent in the western US (originally from the eastern US) and we had the dream to buy land and own a home, but we’re legitimately not sure it’s possible anymore. It’s hard to even pay rent. My husband’s grandparents and extended family live in Ireland so we may head that direction. We love Ireland 💚
Is it possible to buy perhaps in a smaller town, as it seems most young folks all want to live in the big cities these days? I don't mean by a hundred acres, but buy a modest home in a small town perhaps?
@Powerstroke98 housing is expensive. But there are areas that are cheap. And areas where you can get land for a decent price if you know we're to look.
we live in a smaller commuter town about an hour outside of galway city in Ireland. there was only 1 house listed in our town to rent this week. so many people apply for one house are very hard to find to rent and it costs a fortune to live in Ireland. rent is expensive. bills have gone up and food had gotten really pricey. its not a good time to be looking for houses in Ireland at the moment. x house costs are high to buy and rent is extortionate. definitely a housing crisis going on. health care is free if needed but waiting lists are scarily long. heslthcsre system under so much strain. xxi do hope you find the best way to suit you and your family x
It took me until 34 to settle and ended in Fairbanks, Alaska. Now 61 our 6th just turned 18! Interestingly enough, our 25 yr old son after finishing an engineering degree now travels but purposely avoided doing it on social media to avoid dependency. I've watched other TH-camrs in your same dilemma, and a good example of "settlers" is Eric and Ariel with "Simple Living Alaska." Any who, you are beautiful and amazing. Best to you!
took me to 49 before I made my way to the great white north, just started my 3rd october and got a house out west of fairbanks, have no intention of leaving. Ive lived all over the US, Europe traveled across the south pacific and ME. This is the first place ive been since visiting Ireland and slovenia where I felt like I fit in.
@@Irishhaf I visited Europe in 1991 and never came back until August of this year. Slovenia is beautiful, i was living in Austria for those 32 years. No way I could live with the traffic and going around in circles in the lower states, anymore, so I came to Alaska at the age of 53 on October 1st. I can´t say i´m settling down as it is hard to stop traveling when you´ve done it your whole life, but i decided to stay in the snowiest city in the USA for this winter, and then I´m heading to the Denali area in May. So far loving it.
@@Irishhaf so you got here 2 days before me haha I was actually in Fairbanks on October 2nd. I drove from Fairbanks to North Pole and then to Nenana and then down through the interior all the way to Whittier and then back up across to Glenallen and drove over the Thompson pass to Valdez. I started putting up some videos of the drive. You have to drive to cantwell, because from ferry to cantwell was beautiful.... Also from Palmer to Glenallen was nice. And the waterfalls are cool.
Good Luck on your new adventure. What you have seen in your travels, no one can take that away from you. It is part of you and has enriched you significantly. Thanks for allowing me to tag along. ❤❤❤
One of the reasons I love your channel is how genuine you are! It was obvious how emotional this decision was for you but much respect for your honest and rational outlook on life. Knowing yourself that well is a true gift. We look forward to your next adventure!
Wow, this is such big news to share! It feels like the beginning of a very different chapter. Any guesses as to where I’m headed next? 😉
Sweden?
Yukon?
I’m guessing Britain, Canada or Poland.
Portugal
-Denmark, Norway, or Sweden?
I did what you do... all of it in the USA... born and raised in Ohio... 600,000 miles on two Nissan pickup trucks... Montana, Seattle, New Mexico, Nashville... six years in a 12x12 cabin on the Blackfoot River in Montana... friends everywhere... never married... no kids... no property... I'm 77 now. I listened to your story and your voice. You both heartened me and broke my heart.
When were you in Nashville? I wonder how the music scene started in that awesome country town!
Your profile could be that of a PTSD-ed Vietnam vetreran; if so. thank you for your service.
12 x 12 cabin? So a clubhouse?
You LIVED more days in America than most Americans. Most of us just work eat, sleep and pay the bills. May your life always be blessed.
“To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all.” ― Oscar Wilde
I wanted to leave that so-called culture for something much better abroad when I was 12yrs old. Started traveling the world in my 20's, to find the perfect place for me. I'm there now, zero desire to return to the U.S. 50+ yrs living, working there was enough for me. I can no longer live among Americans, meaning, no moral compass, dumb as a rock outside their job, comfort zone dwellers for life. If you don't get out, you will eventually become one of them, and not even realize it. So, escape while you can!
'Most people die at twenty five, but aren't buried until they are seventy five' Benjamin Franklin
'The start stops most people' NFL coach Don Shula
She was working here, being a youtuber is not easy.
It’s been a beautiful time. I’m very lucky ❤
She experienced it as our ancestors did. When she got a taste of how the rest of us experience it, she rightfully turned away.
I traveled for work globally for over 30 years, and I've spent more time in hotels than my own home. Now I'm semi-retired and working at home. It's the best thing since sliced bread, I can have a aquarium, grow plants, walk around in my jammies, cook meals in a oven, and sleep in my own bed. You're still young and can hit the road again if you want, but as for me when people ask where I'm going on vacation in my old age the answer is home. 😁
Amen, brother!
Yes yes ❤
I looked into van life stuff - not for me. I have a vagabond spirit but don't want to fill water jugs, eliminate in a bucket, or worry where my mail goes. I have pets. I'm in planning stage of my third major life change, selling my house to move cross country. I'll be temporarily crashing with friends but will be buying my next base camp 😊
I like a mix, have a home base with all the amenities and then head out camping or traveling a fair amount. I'm into fish keeping and that does make traveling pretty hard.
I’m in the later stage of my career as well and spent a lot of time traveling for work, totally relate. People ask “why don’t you travel?” I have, I’ve seen a lot and now I just want to sit, relax and enjoy being with myself alone.
It’s ok to do nothing.
When good hearted people like Eva fall in love with our country, and decided to move here, we as a country become better for it. If it is truly your dream to live in the Western US, please do not give up on it. For many Americans, it is our dream as well. Good luck!
It is only a dream as you well said. Once you wake up to the reality.....
please do not move to the southwest. there is not enough water to support the hundreds of thousands of people moving here, please stop, people like you are destroying the very thing you look at such a beautiful opportunity. you are destroying the lives of everyone who is already here.Too many people pouring in too fast and driving up the cost of land and living. just stop, stay where you are at and make a good life there dont come here and ruin other peoples lives.
She didn't give up on her dream! Looks to me she did her research into buying form several states & then renting as possible. She concluded based on resources that Dream she wanted to buy was currently out of her reach!!! Seems to me she made reasonable decision based on her abilities & financial worth!!! 👌Good for you. 🙏 May God bless you!!!
@@qbw8834 the biggest issue is that it’s so many people’s dream. Much like living in a sky rise in NYC, or a beach front property in California, it’s not cheap because it’s a popular market with limited availability. Sadly, exclusivity makes it great but also expensive. If everyone could buy a $200,000 house there it would look just like every other suburb and its greatness would be lost.
Not all of us! I do/have lived in UT/ID/WY The laws, rules & taxes are crazy. Now the m*x*cns just want to pick a back yard
Eva, as an American citizen living in Bulgaria I can only recommend that you check it out. I love it here, the people, the food, the nature. A different alphabet and language is challenging but doable, beautiful properties for as little as €100k. A suggestion and nothing more.
Eva is from Poland, Im sure she knows about Bulgaria. But I agree, its beautiful mountain country and close to greece or turkey for perfect summer vacation.
Romania too😊❤
@@cris-mm I was going to recommend Romania too. Such beautiful mountains with very few people living in the mountains there
@@Mixonikjust returned from the region after over a year. Had to leave the core schengen areas of europe with a US passport and went to turkey. To my surprise it ended my most favorite place to visit...it was winter.
I'm moving to Bulgaria next year and am looking forward to it. It seems like such a beautiful place!
Very brave of you to openly share your feelings and emotions Eva! I highly admire you for that. Good luck on the next part of your journey!
Thanks Huub, I appreciate you!
Eva, you can be anywhere on the planet and we are there with you too. Go and find your home, just keep us in the loop.
The western capitalist housing crisis seems to have no solution. Regulation is required and the building of social housing
I agree but gotta say Im sad
the big time spoiled brat energy in this video, get a real job
"Almost " - anywhere😊
Thank goodness for people like you sharing this experience. I am in the final steps of my departure from the U.S to Portugal, because as a 33 year old American I too cannot afford to buy a house. I hope my travel with my Boxer is as seamless as yours and Vilks. Fingers crossed
oh I am sure people in Portugal just love Americans moving to their country to buy land and homes.....If you can not afford a home in the US you aren't trying hard enough.
Right? just come in and take someones back yard like the m*xcans do
Lots of Portuguese are having trouble finding affordable housing also!
Hello shadowplayer! I clearly don’t know you or what your financial situation is, but, I’m gonna ASSUME 😊 that you’ve done your research on this adventure of yours, because Portugal uses EURO, which is more expensive than the US Dollar. Also, buying a house there is not a easy process, add to that, the job situation. I suggest you research before you jump!
@@suecoelho467 Hence Im still in USA !
Eva, There has been a lot going on in the world during the last four years and even for a settled person that takes its toll. As a traveller, these things would hit even harder. As a loyal viewer I personally do not have any expectations of you other than that you do what is best for you at any given time and that your journey takes you closer to a happier reality, shorter or longer term. As your immediate destination appears to be Europe I do hope you can spend a restorative holiday season with family and friends. Thank you for being real and thoughtfully communicating your decision-making and struggles. I look forward to seeing what’s next for you no matter what you do. You go girl!
What a kind response to Eva. I hope she reads it. I wish her the best as well. It would have been nice for her to live in the United States, but it may be that this journey leads her to a better place than here.
Ditto ❤
Don’t give up, Eva. Things change. You never know when you’ll get the opportunity to revisit an old dream.
She will be back. It is no picnic in Europe either.........
Hi Eva: I am 73 years old and I have been a traveler all my life. for work and personally. I have lived a bit harder than you have. I once calculated that I had slept on the ground with no tent for over 4000 nights probably more now. I worked in the woods as a contractor and eventually for the US Forest Service. I started pretty early in my teens doing this kind work fighting forest fires doing all kinds of jobs. By my 30's I needed a home base as you suggested you do. I bought a 7acre place near Eugene, Oregon. for $7000 and built a log cabin but it was not quite remote enough. I still own it but only visit it a bit. I finally ended up in Oregon on the Idaho boarder about 3 miles from Halfway, Or. I live in a place called Pine Town where 9 people live. I live right by and airport. It is 50 miles from the nearest small town and 150 miles from Boise, ID. I have and airplane a Cessna 170 that is great to go out to back country airports inside wilderness areas.. I have about 30 million acres of wilderness out my back door and can get into it very quickly and can stay as long as I want. Fortunately I learned early how to navigate off trail before GPS and spend most of my time in wilderness off trail and love to sleep on the ground so I can look up at the stars. My roots are in a very rural place that is much like Northern Idaho, Western Montana and Western Wyoming. I had an off shore sail boat a Swan 36 and sailed in the Caribbean and all over the east coast but I sold it last year, it was a great time but I was ready to move on. I have always lived in Oregon I'm a 5th generation Oregonian on both side so really have deep roots here. I love being as far east as I can be in Oregon. Can share with you all kind of places where you can find some nice places you could live and spend less that $200 to set up something you could like. They are very remote, but you have most the skills to live this way. It takes stocking up, growing a garden and not having a big grocery store near by. I go to my cupboard, freezer or root seller to deicide what is for dinner. I have tricks to have a good garden and be able to be gone a few weeks at a time. I only discovered you a few weeks ago and have enjoy your TH-cam posts. Glad to share and answer your questions if you like. Good Luck ET
Thanks for your contribution. How did the water/electricity/gas supply work for you?
Sorry I don't really understand you question. @@GuaShow
Sounds pretty good and is defently the only way to keep out the coming NWO prison!
@@EricTwombly I guess the question was if you live off grid or not. How do you have water, electricity etc
One of my favorite places that I vacationed was for a night or two in a rented RV at a campsite in the Oregon high desert. I remember taking a packed lunch, portable chair, book, and my dog to a large golden meadow nearby with scattered pine trees and spending several hours in one spot just decompressing.
I don't know where (or if) I might still have any of my notes from that trip, so I doubt I could figure out where I was precisely enough to return one day, but it's a fond memory at least.
When I worked in CORPORATE AMERICA, I was a "Road Warrior" for some time. I understand how constant travel can become quite a grind. For years all that I used (clothes, hygiene products, snacks, computer) I carried on my shoulder or in my hand. The constant rotation of hotel to rental car to office to restaurant to hotel to car to airplane is dizzying. While I was in a lot of cities, I can't tell you much about them, because I was working all of the time, not sightseeing.
At first, I was excited to be flying in an airplane. Towards the end of my work there, getting on an airplane was no more exciting than getting on a city bus! I am very happy that that part of my life is over!
I agree. It's fun for about the first two years. I'm going on 6 years of being a "road warrior", and I'm to the point where going to the airport is almost repulsive to me.
I agree with you! I once had a field service engineer job in my mid 20s. I would fly out from home on a Monday. Spends two weeks away and like you said worked a lot more than when I worked in my home city. Anyway, I realized within 6 months of that working life that there was no way I wanted to continue that type of job. I moved on. Don't miss it a bit!
Six (6) years is a LONG time to be living like that! It is NOT healthy. I gained 50 lbs. of fat and eight (8) inches on my waist! If I hadn't gotten out when I did, I KNOW that MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION was coming.
Best of luck to you. 🤗@@jag8926
I retired 19 yrs ago after 28 yrs of flying 20+ weeks/yr. I retired with 5 million FF miles…after burning them on upgrades for 10 yrs. You can’t get me on an airplane these days. I’ll sail to Hawaii before I fly.
My supervisor knew that I had a cellphone and a laptop, therefore I had NO EXCUSE not to get my usual office work done even when I was travelling. On top of all of that, I had to create my own Power Point presentations to go with the talks that I gave to every customer in every city that I travelled to. I did NOT have a secretary, so if I didn't create it, I didn't have it!@@Movieman1965
I truly and deeply feel for you! The cost of property is a massive issue for a lot of us who live here, too. 😕 "The land of the free and the home of the brave" is turning into the land of the ridiculously expensive and the home of the debt-slaves... 😟
But at least we can fund Ukraine and half of the rest of the world, right?
Debt slavery is still better than Orange Man, eh? Woops, why are you reading this? Get to work.
Boy ain't that the truth.... 🤦🇺🇸
Gasprices have been going out of control I have read online as an European. But grocery too. Inflation looks like out of control.
Since when were you free ? You were always controlled by corporations, lobbyists and zionists
Didn't you ever sense, the U.S. was one big illusion created by the very rich to temporarily impress ignorant Americans, ignorant foreigners, was never designed to last forever. Just serve a globalist agenda. I sensed that as a 10yr old back in the 1950's. I was right!
I feel USA lost an incredible woman. I am sad as a USA citizen to lose someone like you with talent, gifts, energy, kindness and compassion to Europe or wherever you go. I love your incredible videos. If per chance, USA gets a second chance I will be cheering....love your YT channel.
cool
Nah.
At the mean time, we are getting more and more illegal immigrants crossing the border every minutes. 🤣🤣🤣
We don't care
good for her for calling out air bnb as a scam
Eva...what is profound about your video is that you have not said anything groundbreaking...the fact that you need a home base, mental health, housing crisis, etc. What is groundbreaking (and it is unfortunate) is that you realize it and share it. So good for you! Godspeed my virtual friend...Godspeed.
Can you comprehend how precious you are? How cherished you, oddessey, doggie, and your adventures are?!? We are living vicariously through you!! 👍
Chuck, try to get out a little more dude
You haven't seen many videos like this on TH-cam before have you..? 😂🤦♂️ People are acting like this woman is so much more amazing than she actually is 😂 I'm trying to find what people are saying but it's just not happening..
@@mth4849exactly what I was thinking. So many are looking at these videos like this girl is the most amazing thing ever and doing things no human has done before 🤣🤷♂️ I've been to 39 states and to most countries in Europe and I don't need to let everybody know about it. Being a woman and making videos like this will get you lots of views just from being a woman. Didn't really want to bring that up because I know what people are going to say but it's the truth.
Travelling is not just about covering physical, external distances, but also about advancing along inner distances. Thanks you for the update and wishing you all the best for the coming steps Eva! 😊
What a loss for North America... What an amazing gurney, what a fabulous, fun, goddess of a woman. Where ever the winds take her, it will be a gift for those whos lives she touches along the way. Most certainly, she has touched the hearts of all on this continent.
I agree, it would have been nice to have Eva become a North American! I feel the loss!
whens the proposal coming brother hahaha
Bacon
We didn't lose anything.. knock off the pathetic crap
I wandered around Europe, North, and West Africa, USSR and the USA for about 8 years, back in the 1970s, no mobiles, internet, etc so a very haphazard but wonderful times. I can understand the need to find a fixed point in one's life I ended up back in my home country, and I still traveled but on shorter more organised trips. By organised trips I mean I knew where I was going. Wherever you put down roots I wish you every happiness, though I will be surprised if you lose the urge to travel. The very best of luck young lady.
That sounds awesome, I travel around the usa a fair amount and I always wonder what it would have been like before smartphones or gps
I only had one rule arrive in a town or city by 6pm so I could get my bearings before it got dark. Other than that it was just a case of what would happen next. Too old to really travel now but if I did I would leave the phone at home and just set off. Enjoy your traveling, a great way to find out about your true self, strengths, and limitations. @@shawnparenteau9395
I’d like to know more about your story sir @ba-gg6jo
click bait title booooooooooooooooooOOOoooring.
@@p.chuckmoralesesquire3965 ive noticed it's a fad now to title van-life vids with a title that hints at disillusionment with van-life, it's probably proven to get more clicks.
There is an area in the north central US called the Driftless area. It's an area that was missed by the glaciers thousands of years ago. It is located in parts of the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, and even Illinois. If you're not aware of it, I strongly urge you research it and maybe check it out . Beautiful nature,wide open spaces and reasonably price housing.
I traveled around the world for 3.5 years out of a backpack. Towards the end it sorta lost its purpose. Everywhere I went was new and exciting but there was noone there who "knew" me to share it with. There is a lot to be said for having roots, a place to call home... your own shower. My transition from fulltime backpacker to regular everyday life took me a bit by surprise. It will be interesting to see what this is like for you. All the best to you.
Every person with wanderlust still needs a home. Hope you find what you need, Eva! We'll enjoy whatever adventures you post!
Thank you 🙏🙏
Best of both worlds.
@@evazubeck You are so full of it.
It's odd this life we live Eva. 10:29
I've had many adventures in various parts of the world including surviving the Vietnam War yet as i sit here today i feel as if none of it happened and that I'm living only now in this moment and each day ahead is another beginning. I hope that one of your tomorrows you find that place that need to find.
It's been great watching your videos, I'm hoping they'll be more.
All that travel in the US, and you never made it to Colorado? You're always welcome, HQ here. You had my Mother and I captivated before she passed of Cancer. She lived through you doing the things she couldn't at the time. You're productions will always have a place in our hearts.
I am really sorry about your mum but this is such a sweet comment to leave. I wish you healing and all the best. Xx
🙏🏼
Sorry for your mother ❤
You speak for so many who are either ill, unable to travel, and I am so glad to hear that you and your mother got to have some joy watching EVA She does bring joy blessing
Joining many in praying for comfort for you and your family.
I am an American and I’ve accepted that I probably will not own house in my city. I’ll have to move to a very small city or out of the country. You pretty much addressed why many people here live with roommates, with their parents or even in their cars. The American dream no longer includes a house the last 20 years or so 😂😂. I really enjoy your adventures and can’t wait to see where you will end up next
Moving to a small town doesn’t really help either. Housing prices there are catching up and the jobs pay crap. That’s why people leave them to begin with.
Republicans killed it.
@craigsilver9 No insult intended: But If you are an American and is over 55 today, a man with out any severe disabilities and don't own a house, IMO, is because you didn't want to do so.... unless u lived in a very expensive city.
I came to the US with $1,032 in 1980 as a 20 yr old ... got cheated $700 when I tried to buy a used Gran Turino car... so I was left with $332.
I worked 2 jobs, went to school, slept on the floor of a friend apartment, ate ramen with the cheapest hotdog as meat and today I have 3 properties and a retirement income of $4k+. I am not bragging. I came to the US legally. And I am not a very smart person, non-white, just average, used no drugs or alcohol, no family here in America to help me, no US gov't assistance, always paid my taxes, etc
IMO, The American dream is still very much ALIVE for those who want it, so I feel like you don't know what you are saying, when u say the American dream is not available. I am speaking out as I think too many people like yourself are pushing the wrong narrative.
Once again no insult intended: But I would love to hear, how life has treated you, that you have loss or gave up on the opportunities to do better for yourself.
ps: 65 upticks on you comment, I predict I will get maybe 5 upticks and 500 downticks. What u think?
BTW: The Red hat I have owned since 2010 and my handle and my photo is not Political in any way.
@@nocturnalrecluse1216 lmao, you need a history lesson
@@nocturnalrecluse1216 i live in California, a state that's been overwhelmingly democrat for decades. We literally have the worst and most expensive housing market in the country..... The average price of a house in my county of Santa Cruz is around a minimum of 800k, and we're talking like a 2 bed 1200 sq/ft in the hood.
This feels like losing a friend and a pet. I hope you find peace wherever you go. Please don’t leave us hanging . Stay in touch with us all. ❤
A pet? Lmaoo
Im so sorry it didn't work finding a home base in the U.S. i wish you well on your next journey. Its funny , as I would love to leave the U.S. due to the same financial reasons and the political climate. You are a very courageous, beautiful being. Honor and Respect.
Spoken as a true ignoramus who’s never even visited another country let alone lived in one. I urge you to go it will be hilarious watching you
spoken as a true maga maggot.@@huitrecouture
Vaya con dios, Eva. Thank you for sharing your adventure so that we could feel part of our journey. Hope you will share your continuing life adventures with us.
Eva, uwielbiam Cię oglądać, słuchać i wiem, że na pewno Twoje nowe życie będzie równie ciekawe jak to, które masz już doświadczone. Być może zatrzymasz się w Polsce, ale gdziekowliek to będzie, tam będziesz razem z olbrzymim bogactwem wewnętrznych zasobów, które są Twoją kreacją. Ściskam
Sadly Eva, ALL of us face this same personal issue in our lives. We mature, become wiser, and find a need to have a place to call home. Someplace permanent. Luckily you made this determination still in your youth.
Strangely, I found just the OPPOSITE in finding someplace to live. I lived in London. I lived in Switzerland. But, as an American, I found EVERYTHING to be SO EXPENSIVE in Europe. Buying a house was VERY expensive. But HALF the size as comparable in the US.
Your specific issue is more complicated, hence the cost, because you wanted land. Lots of land. If you tried to duplicate all that acreage with a house in Europe, you will find it even MORE expensive. So our dreams need to become more realistic and practical. As for Odyssey, the solution was actually simpler. Sell it. Buy a US, up dated, up graded version of Odyssey. They sell the same model and make in the US. But if Europe is where you think you can feel you are home, then you have your answer.
I'm sorry to hear you're not staying in America, but I can totally understand your reasons. Many of my friends have had a similar realization concerning the price of land here, and even if you do end up buying something, the property taxes can become a burden over time. I hope you will return some day !
Thank you for giving us a chance Eva. Americans are bombarded with how awful we're all supposed to be, and how awful our country is, it can get painful to read sometimes. While we're not perfect, no place is really, we do have some kindness and decency left in us, and you help to show that while you were here. Sorry for all of the big trucks, not sorry for the beautiful people you met and the awesome places you saw. Many blessings for you friend, be safe, and I hope you and Vilk find your little part of paradise in this world, wherever it may be.
I hear you with all of that. It's not us the people of America that has given us a bad name, it's our war mongering, imperialistic government that has. The American people hate it as much as the rest of the world.
Agreed. We have issues, like any other people and places do! The rental issues are understandable, but I really appreciate how nice this channel was to see some really lovely places and kind people!
Much agreed.. im fascinated by other states, countries, cultures, and I love people. So seeing comments about how awful we "all" are is just gut wrenching. Seeing someone appreciate our beauty is so nice for a change ❤
No one’s perfect but you’re pretty f bad. Those telling you that are absolutely correct. Kudos to them
@@stellac884Right back atcha. 😉
Ditto to so many of you. As a lifelong Montana resident it’s so sad to see many of our native residents no longer able to live here. We would have loved to call you a neighbor Eva - you seem to embody the Montana spirit! For more on the housing crisis and affordability crisis consider reading this great book: Billionaire Wilderness by Justin Farrell.
Billionaires and California to blame
@@realisticthought1781 The US has 700 billionaires. I can't imagine 700 people can ruin an entire huge state like Montana just because they are rich.
I read an interesting article about digital nomad fatigue. After about 4 years people tend to burn out. Away from family and friends. Not really anywhere long enough to make more than superficial contact with locals. The only people you really connect with are other digital nomads. A lot of them end up settling down in places like southern Europe or Oz. And while they still travel for maybe 3 months a year their followers tend to get upset that they have deviated from "the way". But hats off to you. 6 years! Golly gosh. After 15 days bike packing my cozy apartment with it's own toilet and shower starts to look really attractive lol.
Hahahaha! "After 15 days bike packing my cozy apartment with it's own toilet and shower starts to look really attractive lol." Hahahaha!
Eva, you are one of the world's TOP female solo travellers. A rare combination of courage, self-dependency, confidence and hardwork, you can literally achieve anything in life and live alone at any place you wish to. My bestest wishes for your upcoming chapter of solo adventures, in some new regions of the globe. 😊👍🏻
@@suzanneblaylock9598REALLY?!?!
Oh, stop. She’s a con. A more sensible person would first ask “Who could bankroll her trip to our country in the first place? And why?”.
Do you really think what she is doing is any more amazing than the mom her age raising or 5 kids? Different yes but no more difficult and certainly no more filled with meaning and insight.
@@kurtfroberg3608exactly what I thought when I seen a few of her videos.. these people act like she's discovering new locations on Earth or something.. 😂 People are impressed with..? I have no idea.
Enjoying your video. This is the 2nd one I am watching. I had left Korea a year before my graduation to travel and volunteer many many moons ago somehow my Spanish got me a job in Latin America... long story short now I live in Florida selling real estate. Bitter sweet I exchanged my nomad sprit to stable job. Your story inspired me and at the time took me back to some of memories! Safe travels!
Is sad to see you go, you always present your stories in such fascinating and captivating way. Thank you for all you’ve shared! I hope you can find that place your seeking for 🙏🏼
No problem... It is well known by psycology that this feeling is a female trait. Nothing wrong with you. plainly Natural
What a wonderful pleasure it has been to have you traveling in the USA. You opened our eyes to some of our own country in a very positive way. Just know that many Americans feel the same way you do with the costs of living and buying is so expensive. Very understandable feelings indeed. Thank you and I look forward to you showing us new and different dreams God Speed EVA USA will miss you.
All the affordable housing that the American middle class could afford has been bought up for the purpose of short term rentals such as AIRBNB and VRBO etc. This has absolutely ruined young American's future regardless of career or education. Sadly we let a lot of American and foreign investment ompanies come in and buy up properties for their real estate portfolios, just to be turned into short-term rentals. This doesn't just happen in destination locations either it's happening everywhere. Good luck with your travels.
come to the UK - same thing. and Europe. many cities are now BANNING it. thank god. but worse our rental market is also bought up by offshore hedge funds, so they PAY NO TAX to the nation they feed off. inequality globally is a PROBLEM that needs addressing. wages have hardly increased in thirty years but in London a house bought for 50 grand in 1990 will now be worth 800 grand. INSANE.
The short term rental thing is actually global and messing with affordable housing.
I don’t think all affordable houses were bought for short term rentals. There are people who bought homes to sell again and for any number of other reasons.
If people stopped paying high prices for houses the prices would have dropped by now.
Yeah it really is a global issue
Airbnb and VRBO need to be shut down plain and simple.
I have enjoyed watching the videos of your travels in North America. Good luck with the next phase of your life!
I went through this same process. Back packing everywhere-> living abroad for years -> suddenly yearning for a home base. While your life will look slower now, you'll have such a deep and rich appreciation for it. You spent years appreciating other's homes. Now you'll get to find the beauty in yours. Embrace the shift, it's just you growing
I relate to this. I spent more than a year without a home travelling Europe and the Caribbean, and after years of moving and travelling I just felt this urge to create a home for myself. My life is a lot more predictable right now, and I went from living in the fast lane to creating a whole different lifestyle, but it’s everything I need and more. That’s the beauty of life. It’s cyclical. Every new phase brings about new lessons and experiences. I’m very happy to be in this place where I am at.
Congratulations on listening in so well to what you need. The journey always continues twists and turns that can be surprising and rattling but also joyful and full of new discoveries! Peace to you and thanks for sharing this all with us!
I have enjoyed being a part of your journey through America. As an American I am so sorry that you could not make roots here. You and your pretty smile and outgoing personality and your many adventures you have shared with us will be so missed.
I am in love with you since you uploaded your first video. Whatever you do, be happy, be what you are!
Eva, I have enjoyed your American adventure so much! I’m sorry to see you leave…sorry for our housing prices!!! I look forward to hearing that you and Vilk, and Oddessy arrived in Europe safely. Thank you for sharing…INSPIRED!
I will miss you Eva. The western USA will miss you.
@-officialEvazuBeck. and I’ve got a surprise for you p.o.s. Scammer
Quit speaking for everybody
@ kma
“We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.” -T.S. Eliot
There are many practical issues to building your own home but Eva has not mentioned the most fundamental issue, which is citizenship. If you are not a citizen, most countries, including USA, insist that you leave after a some time, this results in leaving your home behind. US citizenship is rather difficult to acquire.
There is really no point in building a home if you don’t have a strategy to become a citizen or visit frequently.
Uh tens of millions in America here illegally are saying hold my Modelo.
@@jjman533😂😂😂😂
idk about others, but you defintely don't need citizenship to live permanently in the US. You are completely misinformed.
Illegal of course.. but if you buy a house in the US they don’t give you a legal permanent residence. Regardless if you buy or not. You should be a legal resident then makes sense to move to the USA. If you don’t have a social security number how do you want to keep your life together? You need the social security number eventually everywhere!!
@@darksnow1111 But you need at least a visa. I guess until then she traveled on B-2, where you are kicked out after 6 months. Maybe she could get temporary O-1B visas based on YT projects, but these are nonimmigrant, too. And any action like buying a plot of land or a house which shows intention of immigration will endanger any nonimmigrant visa.
As a much much much smaller TH-camr, how are you not making enough revenue from your amazing TH-cam success to cover the purchase of one of those houses? It kind of doesn't make sense. We want you to stay here! What a great addition to our American community.
She could easily get a plot of land and build a nice yurt or amish two story cabin in Montana.. now a 750 k mansion with the perfect view of the mountaim range.. casper wyoming has that also but its mega boring and the winters are unbearable for outdoor hiking at all.
Believe it or not but most TH-camrs aren’t millionaires 😉 But I’m sure that just the perfect place will pop up sooner or later.
It's probably due to upload frequency and consistency, to get a reliable views and thus income you need to be very consistent, and for the past year or so the youtube channel has been put kind of on the back burner to focus on her mental health (rightly so). My guess is that heavily influences the revenue stream for the channel.
I think all TH-camrs should always leave out finances and how much they make on TH-cam . It can and will distract from the videos. These journeys she has are amazing . Getting to see the world . Different cultures . Keep the focus on that . She makes some amazing videos of her journeys . Sweet personality as well really adds to the value to watching these
@@evazubeck I was just commenting from the point of view of being a TH-camr myself with about 10,000 Subs... if you just did some linear math for your channel you shouldn't be a millionaire but you should be able to cover those homes...I would think. Bottom line, love your channel and sad to see you go. We're genuine fans and appreciate all the work you have to put in to make your channel and life a success.
I only found your channel about five months ago. When I was younger I travelled the West every year when I could take long vacations. While I visited many of the areas you did, your explorations were fascinating and very different than most. You truly explored the outer world and at the same time your inner world which makes you so unique. I too searched to find a living area in the northwest but due to health issues found an affordable cabin in the southwestern desert. Continue to trust your intuition and inner callings, it will lead you to where you need to be. I love the beginning of the video seeing you walk on the beach in bare feet with Vilk. What a lucky pup. Looking forward to watching your vids from the beginning. Blessings on your continued travels within and through life.
Wow Eva, this one really hit home for me. As an american but also a world traveler, California was my dream since i was a child and i moved there 20 years ago and worked very hard to try to build a life for myself there, in the place that had become my home. However yes due to the cost of living (housing specifically) in the USA these days it became very clear that my dream of owning a home just wasn't going to happen and even renting became a struggle, so now I'm back out there exploring the world trying to find a new place to call home. Congrats on your incredible journey thus far and i wish you best of luck in this next phase of life!
I can completely relate to you. I'm in the same boat. Buying isn't an option and renting doesn't feel like one either anymore. So I'm traveling and feeling into my next steps.
It is insane, the housing prices in California. Average priced single family home in San Diego is $1 million. And when I say average, i mean AVERAGE! Nothing special. My sister was trying to buy a place here with a $1.1 million budget and gave up. She had a modest, short list of requirements and nothing filled the bill. Wound up buying in Seattle, which isn't exactly cheap. But no comparison for how much home she got for that budget up there.
Beautiful!
Things changé! ❤❤❤❤❤
I had been travelling for 35 years in my profession as an intl. Management consultant. Now I look for two places: one in Germany in summer and the other in my wife's country Cameroun!
I love it! ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Znasz powiedzenie " wszędzie dobrze , ale w domu najlepiej "? Niezwykle emocjonalny ten odcinek taki pachnący jesienią. Greetings from Poland.
I feel your pain. I'm a US citizen. I had traveled to the West four years ago and fell in love with a small mountain town. I looked at houses at the time and could have afforded one but my career at the time still had me firmly planted in the SE of the US. Now all of that has changed. I've relocated to that small mountain town but can no longer afford a house here because the houses are over 2x the price they were four years ago. My advice is just to be patient because sooner or later the bubble is going to burst again and the prices will tumble.
And the prices were bad then. Basic needs housing as an investment and allowed by foreign interest is a disaster.
Prices are only too high if you can't afford them. Bubbles eventually pop but bubbles are never the same. Where I'm from, there is no foreign tax, the international rich keep flooding in, prices are still inflating. When it all crashes the desirable cities will still be out of reach, people need a place to live, don't expect people to abandon their homes too readily.
Not to burst your ignorance bubble but World War III is here
My guess is sooner on the bubble bursting.
@@pujabelgian, the bubble is definitely going to burst and it's going to make 2008 look like a mild pop. The reason? Commercial real estate is going to be a huge part of this one. There is a huge portion of that market that can't get businesses to rent or buy from them.
As for residential properties, "Prices are only too high if you can't afford them" yeah that's like 80-90% of the US population right now. That's due to the destruction of the American middle class by NAFTA and other factors. If you're in a home you own then you're exactly where you need to be. Anyone else is struggling to pay rent and most likely is one emergency away from being completely broke.
As a North American, I have been a global nomad since I was 4 yrs old...spanning my life over Asia, Europe, North America and Northern Africa. I am now 44 yrs old. I have built my career in the most fascinating, highly competitive Asian countries in my 20s and 40s. I have lived in jungles. I have lived very interesting chapters that are vastly different from each....but like you, the "settling" roots started to creep in around 2020 for me. It's the strangest feeling..to want to settle down. However, I think my "book of life" is telling me that it might be one of the most pivotal chapters of my life.
Eva....this is your impact....I am here, mourning the departure of someone I have never met. Don't get me wrong. I am very happy for and inspired by your ability to honor your introspection. Safe travels, as always, Eva.
Mourning?? 😳
I’m a US Citizen 31 years old and this is such a huge dilema for lots of people in my generation. You can’t get a house or land for under $100,000 like our parents were able to. They make it super hard not to go into a lifetime amount of debt in order to live a nice settled down life. The American dream has turned into an unrealistic American nightmare.
And your parents couldn't buy a house for 15 thousand like their parents. Get over it.
Its only a dilemma if you want someplace in the coastal (east or west coast) areas. The midwest plains states has very affordable properties. Don't expect prices like your parents paid. My parents bought their first home for 5k. (1949). I bought my second home for 180k, sold it for 260k (Portland Ore.). Im looking to move to Kentucky. Housing around there is @ 130 to 150 starting. If you have patience you can find a nice affordable home here in the states.
Seth...ignore the scoffers who don't have a clue. You are right. The USA lends currency from the Fed and that's the root of the corruption.
@@joec5544g when held for inflation, the average home is 3-4X more expensive today than it was in the 80s. Ask any boomer if they could have afforded their first home if it cost 4X more while their salary stayed the same? Don't be so simple minded.
No it hasnt. The US is still going strong, meanwhile here in Europe our economies are stagnating. If you are willing to put in the work the US is still the best country on earth. Ofc if you like taking welfare checks from the government then many European countries are a better option.
I'm a US citizen, that lived and worked outside of the US for 13 years. It was a great adventure, but internally I knew when it was time to get off the train. Same thing, tired of my things being in storage, tired of not having a permanent dwelling, and being able to work with my hands in my own garage/house/yard. One thing I can tell you from my own experience, sometimes it's best to disengage, and then recenter your focus and goal setting. Going home will be a great thing, and you've accomplished an immense amount for all of your travels, be proud of it. The US is certainly expensive...but...it's also somewhere you can can re-assert your life, when you are in a position to. Love to have you back here, but please, take the time to re-invest in yourself, your homeland, and your people. You'll know when it's time for a change after that.
I've lived out of the USA for decades. There is no way I could afford to move back. I'm thinking of retiring in Laos or Paraguay.
I could never go back to the US of A that exists today. People are full of lies, conspiracies, really rather weird beliefs, and extremism. Is there anything American that actually works? I cant see anything from over here in very, very civilized Europe.
Sounds like mensplaining things to women. You can't tell her what to do, something like re-invest in yourself, your homeland, and your people. It's not up to you to tell her what to do and whether she should invest in "her homeland" or "her people."
I just found you. Keep us updated. Best of luck to you!!
I traveled 15 years and now I’m 35. I learned that I like stability, routine, and just bought my first house. If it’s your passion, you’ll always find a way to make travel happen. But it’s also OK if that’s not what you want to do anymore either 😊
What happened to your TH-cam channel?
I think that it's a natural process to adventure ......but after a while you need roots or a sense of place of your own...otherwise you could drift...It's good to travel..It's the best form of education!!!
I'm sure I speak for a good many Americans but I am sorry to see you leave. Eva, you are a wonderful ambassador from whom we all learned and experienced so much. I wish you much happiness and fulfillment in wherever your life leads you but please know that you will always have our hearts and our friendship. God be with you always.
Eva - Your dream for finding a home here in the western U.S. was a very emotional one for me for I am trying to find my way back home in the western mountains north of Seattle, WA. 🌲 (I've been on the road across the US and Canada for 8 years representing music companies and their artists here in the South and I'm glad that I rented a studio apartment as a home base which helped my mental health). - Currently, I decided to quit my job in the music industry. My heart no longer desires to represent the music industry and artists, but instead find ways to represent nature, wildlife and oceans that will bring awareness to their health & survival. 🦋 I know some way/some how I'll find my way back home and have a home that is surrounded by nature, but at least I'm not on a time-frame as you were. - Eva, I do hope that one day you'll find a way to return to Montana and create your home-base there. In the meantime, I wish only the best for you and Vilk and I thank you for sharing your awesome journeys with us all! I'll keep watching for your awesome videos❣🤗🦋
Dear Eva, you're a lovely friend surrogate here on YT, sorry to hear about your mental health, I hope it will get better soon, the world can unfortunately be pretty f****d up and it's quite normal that your mind reacts with distress to distressful situations but please don't forget that you're pretty amazing so don't allow any creepy crap to convince you otherwise. Your videos have been a mental health relief for many of us much more than any regular service in the market so may it all come back when you need it the most. Take care 💪🩷
So positive news: Tenets United in Bozeman, MT has gotten the city council to ban short-term rentals that are not occupied by the owner. Let's hope that has some affect on housing there. I felt it first hand as a graduate student at Montana State University. Rent went up 35% from one year to the next because "market value".
Housing here is a crushing reality, and has only furthered my interests into finding alternatives. Mainly, a sailboat.
Hoping for the same here in Missoula!
@@strauskp Let's hope it takes off everywhere! No one should own a second house they don't use in a place people want to live.
Born and Raised Montanan here. Any type of housing or land is beyond fucked here. I hope it shifts back to a resolution.
greed
Airbnb has had the same effect in Australia. I’m in Tasmania and I’ve never seen homelessness here like the last 5 years. Rents have gone through the roof. We have a big tourism industry and many cashed-up people visit and then return here paying big dollars for property pushing prices up out of the reach of locals.
mainland tourists mostly - seachangers, treechangers, and those who don't like having scorching hot summers.
Bothwell is my favourite😅.
“Homelessness” is nearly all caused by addiction and untreated mental illness. Not Airbnb.
yes agree I am on the Goldy and Airbnb is crazy here.
@@freeagent8225 nice little spot up there, with plenty of history if you’re into golf, astronomy and old buildings!
Most people build their lives around other people before deciding where to settle. Is that what is missing in your life? Person or people who define your life. (Love your videos!)
it's all good; don't be afraid of the changes as you get older. we evolve as we learn more about ourselves
Being in your early and mid 30s is a transitional time and it takes some soul searching to adjust to it and learn how to thrive again. I have never met anyone who didn't struggle a bit during that period of life. Whether they have kids, married, single, traveling, changing careers, doing the same thing they always have - whatever the life circumstances are there is no easy way to navigate this time of life. In my experience, you get through it and eventually realize well, life goes on - all we have are the moments. Take care of your health, mental and physical, and you will come out the other end just fine.
As for your dream to live in the western united states - it's a great dream and well worth some sacrifice if you truly want it. It is achievable, despite the cost, you just need to be patient, creative, and strike when the iron is hot. I've loved watching you embrace our country. Good luck on this new chapter of life.
Excited to see where you end up Eva!
@@ozibits3444 nobody cares
Pregnant.
Lovely, beautiful, safe, clean and gentle Canada hopefully.
On mars i can be your hostess👽
... in a rut, like most of us.
Wowza.... This was a heavy video and I could feel the weight on you as well. Thank you for all you've done and shared with us. I can relate so much with all of your thoughts with buying property in the US. It's insane what this country is quickly becoming. GOOD LUCK TO YOU AND VILK and thanks again. 🖖😁🙏💙
If you're wanting nature at an affordable price. Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio, parts of Tennessee (to a lesser extent) and across Appalachia are affordable. The problem with a lot of Western states is that a lot of people, especially rich people from California, also want to live there. Idaho is a prime example of what you're seeing. In the US there are a lot of ridiculously expensive pockets but if you're willing to live in the cheaper (less "glamorous") parts of the country. There are actually places you can afford. The Midwest is also a cheap place to live, Dubuque Iowa is a pretty and inexpensive part of the state. It's also currently a seller's market across the country so that doesn't help.
Hi Eva. I feel you. My partner and I are leaving Vancouver Canada after 7 years of happiness here. The housing crisis is just too intense at the moment and it's impacting our quality of life. It's impossible to make plans for the future. I can relate to how you feel, it's heartbreaking. We're lucky enough to be Europeans (French) and to have options. My heart goes out to all North Americans in these difficult times. Much love to you all.
You're lucky indeed. I moved to Vancouver 2 years ago and I regret it. It's insanely expensive here. More expensive than the US. But I can't just come back to Europe where I lived before for several years because my passport is useless. And my homecountry is a dictatorship these days. So I'm stuck here for now. Can't even leave Canada to travel. Have to wait until I get Permanent Residency and become a citizen eventually. After that it's probably back to Europe or try my luck in the US. Visas suck
@@nicktankard1244 So sorry to hear this, as I've lived in the suburbs of Vancouver all my life, married and brought up two children, who both now have families of their own, and paid handsomely to have homes of their own. The main problem is that you have to go so far out, to find something affordable, then for many such a long drive back to the city to where they work. I suppose trying to find a career choice outside the city would be the way to go, if at all possible. I'm now retired, and see these expenses making life so hard for our youth and families. Personally, I believe the influx of immigration is one of the main culprits, adding to the homeless population, and now governments forcing the taxpayers whom have already got a huge burden of cost, now this same government wanting the taxpayers to pay for accomodation and drugs/meds for the homeless! The Liberal way of give give give, has finally outperformed itself, as nothing was saved for hard times, and our debt is now out of control, to where our services are in crisis, right across the board, where people now line up at food banks to make it through the week. It's a complex issue, but government choice, has brought us to this, and until the current one is gone, it will take time to try and get back on our feet again, or so we can only hope.
@@Powerstroke98 i can hardly complain about immigrants because I am one myself. But I agree that Canada invites a lot of people to move here without providing much support and infrastructure to sustain this many people. Coming from Europe I'm not a fan of North American suburban style of living. I will be so depressed there. I work from home so commuting is not an issue. But I want to live in a walkable neighborhood and be able to easily take public transport to various events in the city or just walk to a grocery store. I hate driving. So I've been living in Mount Pleasant. It is so expensive here I don't even dream of buying property but at least it's not an unwalkable and super boring car-dependent suburb :)
@@nicktankard1244 Could you explain why you feel depressed here Nick? I was born and bred here, and live within 10 miles still, of the home I was brought to as a new infant! So, I have had the view of change...extreme change all my life, and I'm now retired! Traffic definitely could make one feel depressed, and I was in that traffic all my life in going to work, but found it a necessity, as my priority was to my family, as well as paying as much as possible on my home, to try to pay it off as quickly as possible. I'm unsure if any family these days, could work their entire life, and pay off a mortgage with the price of homes, even out in the suburbs, yet in Britain it's been that way for decades, where all would live in the same home. Not sure I could do that, but we all do what we have to do of course. Unlike you, I have always LOVED driving, and still do to this day, wondering what's around that next corner, when on a road trip. After a change of careers when in my fifty's, of all things I chose to get my Class 1 license and even drove semi-trucks for my last 10 years of working, and I honestly still miss doing so, as it was really fun, most days. Of course there are different ways of working in the trucking industry, and some could certainly be boring, but not the type I did. Nonetheless, I believe the mass immigration has led to many of the problems we're currently in, and most definitely don't support the current government any more, as corruption has taken place, and our debt level is into the stratosphere, for the amount our population is at. I wish you well, wherever you end up Nick...the very best of luck!
Eva, It is our loss, to have you depart. I won't say how it leaves me with an empty space, or how much I have appreciated being able to share your personal growth, joys, and pains. I feel I know you. You are leaving a family here who cares for you. Safe travels. Please don't forget us.
Eva, I am sure you won't see this, but maybe you do or maybe another person, who knows. I am 25, and I am also on that search of a new home. I was recently living in Belgium (I am Spanish). I was doing a PhD there. However, it was being such and awful experience that I needed to go back to my own country, without really wanting to. Spain is lovely, but not what my life has been there. So you are being really helpful for me in a life period where I am trying to understand myself somehow, seeing another person also willing to find her home. Thank you so so so much.
New to your channel and I just adore you! You’re such an inspiration! Thank you for making this channel and allowing us to go along on your journey 🙏 Sometimes I get so bogged down with life and feel like there’s just one - boring - way to live it, which isn’t really living right? It’s so good to see someone that’s stepping outside the box and taking advantage of this life and showing that there is a different way, a more fulfilling adventurous way, to live. Keep doing what you’re doing girl, live it up for the people like me who are too afraid or unable due to life’s circumstances to take that step. ✊
Yeah, property prices in the U.S. are completely insane right now, part of the reason there is so much homelessness. Best wishes for you wherever you may settle.
The UK is even worse, those styles of property with land would cost at least double those prices. Mind you it is mainly because we don't have a great deal of available land.
It is the same in Europe re property prices ....... this problem needs to be tackled
I think it’s because the Fed kept interest rates very low for a long time, and the banks leveraged themselves to the hilt. RE prices are unsustainable. Boomers are rapidly downsizing. The largest generation is exiting the RE market. RE is on its way down. I’d be selling now while I could still get my equity out of it.
They're bonkers everywhere.
@@Tom-tk3du It's the same over here in Europe and down in NZ. Grandparents of a friend bought some retirement-homes (to rent out) in Spain for ~USD125000 each. They're now rated at over a million. It's crazy. The house i wanted to buy in NZ went from NZD275000 to NZD1250000 in 7 years.
Sorry we could not be your home. Thank you for showcasing the beauty within the USA. We are not perfect, never have been, but will strive to be better. Blessings to you. Few in our country can say they dipped a toe in the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean. I’ve done it and now you have. Be well. Your follower from Virginia, USA.
Quit trying to speak for the country It's just very weird.. You could say the same crap about every country on this planet.. enough with that dumb crap
@@BriBryBriBryhope you had a great Thanksgiving lol
I will miss your travels here. You have seen more of this country than I have in my lifetime. It’s fun watching your genuine enjoyment on your journey. Safe travels ahead to you and return soon.
That's your own fault
Air bnb has ruined it for ALOT of countries. Rural nsw australia has very little options for rentals. I ended up homeless for 5 weeks living in tents with my hubby and 5kids a year ago. I was with social housing and still ended up homeless
I’m so sorry to hear you go, but I understand. As an US citizen I too love the Western states, but the price of homes/land have gotten crazy. That’s why I have been living in Ecuador for the past 4 years. Yes, sad, but our reality. 🙏 Luckily, there is beauty and great people all over this world of ours. Peace.
I wish she had a chance to check out Minnesota or the Appalacha region. You can find property for far, far cheaper than the Western States. Montana and Wyoming are where the rich buy land and it has become very unaffordable. But you can find the same acres + property for a fraction of the price in West Virgina, or Northern Michigan. It may not be as wild as the west, but these regions are still less populated and filled with wonderful nature. As Eva once said, the US is huge, and she only really focused on one part.
If you do make it back to the states, go travel around Appalacha. It's wonderful.
Wow. I didn't expect this. I've been following you for years and I hope you're able to settle into a place you and Wilk can call home. I'll keep watching. It's been great following your adventures.👍
Eve I have been following you for the past 5 years and you had a great impact on my life. Seeing you changing from one dream to an other makes me feel confused but it shows me how courage you are. Sometimes I feel like I wanna change my dream (or the path that I have chosen) but I just don't have enough courage to admit that to myself. Good luck in every step you take.
I just ran across 2 of your video's today, sorry to see you leave. I got a little emotional when you were leaving Jarbridge NV, I've never been there and likely couldn't live there but it seemed like with the right person you would have loved it there. Good luck in your life.
I bought 30 acres of beautiful land full of trees and 1/4 mile of frontage creek/spring for under $70k four years ago. Bought a sawmill $5k. Building my dream cabin and couldn’t be happier. Great community where we rely on each other. I wish you well on your journey and will be here in northwest United States enjoying the freedom of living your best life. ❤️
Four years ago to now is completely different in real estate.
@@bekahia yes, you are right. But I’m still seeing 60-100 acre go for under $100k
Honestly, as American citizens my wife and I wholeheartedly agree with you. It is absolutely ridiculous how expensive living here is, and it's a shame because the places you've been are all so strikingly beautiful, yet financially unattainable. Personally speaking, we're looking to move overseas in the next few years because we don't like the culture in the US and like you found, it's just way too wildly expensive here.
Many areas in states in the United States has cheap houses and cheap land
@@jeffhampton2767 cheap for a reason TBH
Then there's the ever increasing rampant & random gun violence, no longer predominantly in urban areas, that speaks for itself and the future.
@@daviddb4858 FALSE! Only part of America is expensive and many states is very inexpensive. Europe is far more expensive than the United States
@@daviddb4858 honestly healthcare is another huge factor for our desire to expatriate
I feel you. I’m sat in the airport in the Philippines after escaping the “normal” life and chasing a travel dream but I’ve got to the point where I feel like I want to settle down. I’ve been traveling across the globe on and off since 2016 and I think ready for the next chapter. Amazing video and wish you all the success in the future :)
Exactly how I'm feeling, but I absolutely hate my home country of the UK so I dont know what to do.
@@LincolnClay98 most people from the UK settle in Thailand or Philippines nowadays.
I'm from Michigan. I traveled across the United States but then I just wanted to come home again. It's good to have a base of operations.
Imagine how the housing prices feel to those of us who live here. It's devastating. I can't imagine I'll ever own my own place, or even be able to survive once my parents are gone.
Your parents actually help/ed you, not the opposite
Sounds like Heaven
she's looking at places with 2700 sq ft and 20+ acres of land, so....yeah.
Just a pity party is all this us. Grow up you 30-40 year old lil children lmmfao
@@vancomycinb1193 Remember, they are out in the middle of nowhere. They still should not be ANYWHERE near those prices.
I know it sounds like a long time but in 10 years from now the housing landscape will be completely different. We are on the brink off the Boomer's mass retirement and in about 5 years most of them will be beyond the average US lifespan. We have not had a replacement level fertility rate for some time and unless we have insane levels of immigration, housing inventory will skyrocket.
British fan here, I travel to the States for my job 2 to 3 times every year. I take my family on holiday there as well. I love the USA and would move my family there tomorrow if I could find the right job there or move with my company. So far I have travelled to 15 States and I am sure I will add another 5 or more in 2024. I've loved watching your travels through the US, even more so the recent video featuring Iowa, a State I find fascinating and where the people are so friendly.
Over the last 10 days I drove through Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
Its a real shame to see your journey in the US come to an end, I hope you find the pull to return after some time off. Geographically and with the diversity of people and characters and lifestyles, for me, nowhere touches the US for this!
Good luck, I will keep watching for whatever adventure comes your way next!
Have you been to Utah? Neither my husband nor I grew up there but we love it so much. I’ve lived most of my adult life in Utah. I’ve been to England twice now and I really love it. I’m glad that you get to come visit the US so often and that you enjoy it so much.
@@dmsjt5181 Hi, Utah is very much on my wish list, and despite trying, I have not yet found a business reason to go there. However, if I do not find some business, I will visit all the same.
So far I have visited multiple towns and cities in Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Philadelphia, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Florida and California.
I tend to revisit the same States many times due to customer locations. On my last trip I managed to get a new experience by taking the ferry from Muskegon MI across Lake Michigan to Milwaukee, that was cool!
@@dmsjt5181hello 👋 from Poland 🇵🇱 and my channel and countryside 🏡🐕😊!!
Eva, this is so sad. But, I know this is not the end of your story. Thank you for sharing your adventures with us and I'm looking forward to what's next. Be blessed my friend.
Alaskan here, I feel ya. I love my country, and I love the nature here. However, this is not a good place to raise children, sustain a business, and the education and healthcare are really poor, so my wife and I must leave in order to provide the best life for our children. Thank you for highlighting the beauty of our special nation. I wish you all the best in your travels.
I'm sorry it's rough in Alaska 😢 things are great here in Indiana. We have access to great hospitals and doctors. My kids attended a rural school and did very well earning multiple scholarships for college. I know Alaska is very beautiful but it sounds like it is low on resources.
Thank you so much for the unique view and perspective of our country! It was great having you here. Whether you come back someday or follow your life's ambitions somewhere else, we look forward to the videos of your new adventures and wish you the very best!
It's crazy to think that in another part of the world, there is a woman living with her odyssey and traveling around the world alone with her dog. Meanwhile, I am living my life differently, going to campus every workday, working on a lot of tasks, trying to reach different goals every period, and that still goes on. I realize that we always looking for something, in every aspect of our lives, and it makes me realize that life is just like that. We never stopped at one point, we always looking for another thing. Thank you Eva for bringing such a great channel, for me and for us to see your life, see your journey, and get insight/perspective from your pov. thank you so much, hope you have an amazing life, and see you on another video! I'll wait!!
I think you need to realize what she is doing isn't impressive at all.. many many many many people are doing it and have done it and didn't need to broadcast it to everybody to feel good about themselves..
Go with your gut. Always. When things aren't working out, in your case, pricing, that's when you need to take a step back and evaluate. I remember when I was wanting to purchase a home, I kept running into road blocks, it wasn't the right time. So, I took a step back and put buying a home on the back burner. When the time was right, everything happened seamlessly. You'll figure it out and you'll understand why it all worked out the way it did!
Saw this after my last comment, wow! My reaction is this is the issues my sons and daughters-in-law face in our quest for "the American Dream" ! That being said, I would be glad to " Buy" Oddessy and "lease" it back to you should you choose to return to the US. My 12-14 year old students at school are inspired by your videos. Keep chasing your dream, and keep us posted! Fritz
Yeah my husband, 6 month old, and I rent in the western US (originally from the eastern US) and we had the dream to buy land and own a home, but we’re legitimately not sure it’s possible anymore. It’s hard to even pay rent. My husband’s grandparents and extended family live in Ireland so we may head that direction. We love Ireland 💚
Unfortunately Ireland has a housing problem also. We have housed about 120,000 refugees this year, so housing is very expensive and scarce
Is it possible to buy perhaps in a smaller town, as it seems most young folks all want to live in the big cities these days? I don't mean by a hundred acres, but buy a modest home in a small town perhaps?
@Powerstroke98 housing is expensive. But there are areas that are cheap. And areas where you can get land for a decent price if you know we're to look.
we live in a smaller commuter town about an hour outside of galway city in Ireland. there was only 1 house listed in our town to rent this week. so many people apply for one house are very hard to find to rent and it costs a fortune to live in Ireland. rent is expensive. bills have gone up and food had gotten really pricey. its not a good time to be looking for houses in Ireland at the moment. x house costs are high to buy and rent is extortionate. definitely a housing crisis going on. health care is free if needed but waiting lists are scarily long. heslthcsre system under so much strain. xxi do hope you find the best way to suit you and your family x
@@ggandbb1702 Well it makes a change from you exporting a housing crisis to other countries.....
It took me until 34 to settle and ended in Fairbanks, Alaska. Now 61 our 6th just turned 18! Interestingly enough, our 25 yr old son after finishing an engineering degree now travels but purposely avoided doing it on social media to avoid dependency. I've watched other TH-camrs in your same dilemma, and a good example of "settlers" is Eric and Ariel with "Simple Living Alaska." Any who, you are beautiful and amazing. Best to you!
took me to 49 before I made my way to the great white north, just started my 3rd october and got a house out west of fairbanks, have no intention of leaving. Ive lived all over the US, Europe traveled across the south pacific and ME. This is the first place ive been since visiting Ireland and slovenia where I felt like I fit in.
@@Irishhaf I visited Europe in 1991 and never came back until August of this year. Slovenia is beautiful, i was living in Austria for those 32 years. No way I could live with the traffic and going around in circles in the lower states, anymore, so I came to Alaska at the age of 53 on October 1st. I can´t say i´m settling down as it is hard to stop traveling when you´ve done it your whole life, but i decided to stay in the snowiest city in the USA for this winter, and then I´m heading to the Denali area in May. So far loving it.
@@Irishhaf so you got here 2 days before me haha I was actually in Fairbanks on October 2nd. I drove from Fairbanks to North Pole and then to Nenana and then down through the interior all the way to Whittier and then back up across to Glenallen and drove over the Thompson pass to Valdez. I started putting up some videos of the drive. You have to drive to cantwell, because from ferry to cantwell was beautiful.... Also from Palmer to Glenallen was nice. And the waterfalls are cool.
She may be beautiful by Alaska standards.
I have family in Fairbanks. They love it.
Good Luck on your new adventure. What you have seen in your travels, no one can take that away from you. It is part of you and has enriched you significantly. Thanks for allowing me to tag along. ❤❤❤
It’s been so amazing and I hope to continue travelling to some degree. A different mission awaits now :)
I Love You! Thanks for a beautiful experience watching you and Vilk travel the Earth. Always beautiful, educational, and entertaining. Super.
One of the reasons I love your channel is how genuine you are! It was obvious how emotional this decision was for you but much respect for your honest and rational outlook on life. Knowing yourself that well is a true gift. We look forward to your next adventure!