I was in Jordan close to the border and was tempted to cross over to Syria for a peep but was promptly advised against doing so. All the best for your future travels and I am sure you will find other challenges after traveling to the remaining states you are yet to visit.
Hi Peter, Thank you for your comment. The bucket list of destinations to visit never gets shorter.. We actually wrote a few posts about how we arranged our visas and trip to Syria. Check out this link on our website which should answer your questions.
As a teen I lived in PNG from , specifically in Bougainville and having travelled extensively throughout Asia, Indonesia and the South Pacific I unreservedly say that the upmost beautiful beaches are found on Bougainville!
The Solomon Islands is similarly lovely! Enjoy when you get back to your trekking! BTW, I am Canadian so visa issues with different countries and having to plan travels thoughtfully is something I know too well. Yes, your passport does not have to be stamped like Israel but optics and potential ramifications need to be thought out. Happy Travels! I have been traveling for the last 12 years and I have only visited 84 countries as I travel slowly.
I like to stay in a country for a while so I can see it all and assimilate the culture and traditions. Maybe one day I will see most of the world, however, that is not my goal. Enjoy your travels as I am enjoying mines. Hi you must be enjoyingyourself purposefully with all that travel. Go for the remaining few countries when you feel comfortable.
Could you send me a list of all countries in the world? Never easy to get the completelist. Thanks no. Hi Mohan, and thank you for your message. We consider there to be countries in the world and this is the list we use as reference. Best of luck to you both. Have u got any blog related to cost to travel in each country you visited? Or how you are being sponsored? What are the VISA requirements and restrictions in each country.
For Australia or British passport holders probably same sort of rules and regulations. Hi Raihan, Thank you for your good wishes. We share our best hints and tips here, and we apply this to every destination we visit. Visa requirements are always changing, so we recommend that you always check out your own government website first. Go to Final 9 countries remain to visit every country in the world!
Table of Contents: Hide. Papua New Guinea. Solomon Islands. Love it? Share it! About the Author: Marty. A coffee lover, history junkie, former tour guide, and endless optimist. Saskia September 13, at am - Reply. Marty September 13, at am - Reply. Matt September 18, at am - Reply. Rach September 21, at am - Reply. Peter November 27, at pm - Reply.
Rach November 29, at am - Reply. Debbie Ward November 27, at am - Reply. Cristina Grau November 27, at am - Reply. Mohan November 28, at am - Reply. Hi Damien. Most of Syria is now safe. The Syrian coast in the Mediterranean is also very stable and has never had war and is very untouched and peaceful, with great beaches and lush nature. Hamah and Homs is also completely safe, but Homs has some sad destruction that you may or may not want to see.
Aleppo is largely safe, however there is shelling on the edges west of Aleppo. I am also trying to visit every country in the world. You already managed to visit them all, congrats on that! So once I have cleared immigration, I would just walk straight back and still count it. I will be in my mid 30ies when I finish every country unless something unexpected happens and people often ask me what will come after that.
There will be less drive to visit some weird places but I would go back to the best places. I also started a travel blog to track my progress on traveling to every country. Nice to see a realistic approach to counting countries. I got sick of reading articles about thoses doing it solely for bragging rights and no actually spending any quality time in the country. I am at over c20years, most of which holding a full time job with some travel component. I think 91 is an underestimation.
If you strip out the most problematic nations it must be in the thousands. I am also just setting up my list of visited countries and will enter no. Interesting to see that we count the same, or lets say nearly. Please do not hesitate to ask more questions, I am sure this may be shocking to hear at first, as this is not the image being brought up by media:. Hello johnny One word legend Just wanted to know how the hell you managed to visit Iran and Israel?
The worry is unfounded. I had an Israeli stamp in my passport but a year later, that passport expired and I got a new one. I have since been to a number of Gulf Arab states, no problem at all. Even on a new passport, they seem to know that you have been to Iran. You are such an inspiration…. You have Norway to go?? I wish I could join you. Thanks for the inspiration and various information about your travels. I too would like to visit all the countries. I am currently traveling in Costa Rica and in a few days will visit country 60 — Panama.
I work full time as an international teacher, but having lived in Mexico, Brazil, Malaysia, Italy, Germany and now again in Mexico, I can easily travel during vacation time. I look forward to hearing of your final four countries.
Hey Johnny! Although practically you can only access Karabakh from Armenia, it is still considered a part of Azerbaijan by law. I love travelling to new places. As an Irishwomen it would make me immensely proud for you to be in the record books for this!
Really inspiring post and a good example. I have a question, what are you going to do after you take down all countries form the list? Hello WeiLe.. Good question buddy! I believe sky is the limit. Who knows after striking all the countries on the face of the earth he may would like to play golf on Mars stopping en-route on moon to sip chilled beer on Mons Huygens Tallest mountain on moon.
Hence, as I said before- sky is the limit!! Wow you have been so many places. I am from Turkey,place call Cappadocia. It is very nice place. Have you been to cappadocia my home town I hope one day i will write my own success story like you.
Holler when you visit and make sure you come to Lagos, Nigeria…. Great blog, Johnny. I see that Chad is still on your list of countries to go.
All the best on your adventures. I just got back from Japan. I am currently blogging about it. Its amazing how many places you have seen. An amazing and inspiring post! Hope you could achieve your dream and be a big inspiration to others. Hi man! Awsome website and blog you have! Congrats on your visited country! Your tips are very much apreciated! See you when you finish in Oslo!
Congrats on doing so well. I have the same goal as you do. I am determined to visit every country in the world, but I travel so slowly that it will be a long time before I reach that goal.
This is just awesome, Nepal is my dream. Wish i could be you man, very glad to find this blog. Regards from Brasil. I learnt about this blog from the Business Insider article. I actually graduated from Uni. Just wanted to say I have really enjoyed reading your blog since discovering it last week. Starting a website with my friend another intrepid traveller and professional photographer over the next week or two. Up there with the most amazing natural rock formations I have seen, with an epic view over the Norwegian Fjords.
Facebook is similar. This sounds like a lot of money, and it is a lot of money. But now I have a team of about 23 people, so I'm paying a lot of salaries.
That's only ad revenue. Then there's my merchandise, which is not really that profitable. It's more for growing the community. There's a lot of different revenue streams. No, I don't nickel and dime myself. It kind of ruins the fun. I'm still pretty frugal. I'm not going to spend money on first-class tickets unless I have points. I still eat street food, and I still sleep in modest hotels. Even if I make 10 times the amount that I make now, I don't need to be flashy.
I come out of pocket and pay for almost everything, except with tourism boards — they cover everything. Usually when I work with a hotel, I do a paid sponsorship. If a hotel offers me a really nice room for two nights, I'd rather just pay for it and not have to post about it.
It's probably spending 24 hours with the pygmy tribe in the Central African Republic. They are genetically the shortest human beings in the world. I had to fly into the capital of Bangui, take an eight-hour taxi ride into the middle of nowhere and walk through the forest for two hours. We found a local guide on the way. They told me not only had they never seen a white person, but they had also never seen a non-pygmy.
They had never left their tribe to go out into the city. Food poisoning. Probably the worst I've had is in Yemen. I've had for poisoning about 30 times. I got really sick in Iran and India too. But I'm also eating stuff that I know is risky. At the end of the day, you just lose 10 pounds and move on. We're making a really cool docuseries about visiting every country. I've got a book coming and an NFT project, which I'm really excited about.
I'm building meetups in different cities around the world. But I don't want to lose the core of going out there and meeting people and inspiring people to travel. Skip Navigation. And he did it in less than a decade. Is there a name for this group? VIDEO This travel enthusiast skipped a corporate job, but still makes six figures.
How do you organize your visits? Binsky said getting visas to places such as South Sudan here is the hardest part of travel planning.
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