Hobo’s show their camps
Great stories about the Hobo camps… 
Great stories about the Hobo camps… 

Something that is overlooked by a lot of travelers who plan to spend some time on the road is an address book. I know it’s the information age and you have a laptop and phone… but, those can be stolen, broken, or simply a dead battery. Before you hit-the-road take some time to write down everyone’s information, including their email addresses. Ask your friends and family if they have friends/ family around the U.S. that would consider allowing you to sleep on a couch, with their recommendation. So not only get your family and friends information but their family and friends as well. Even if it’s a backyard to camp in with a water hose shower and hopefully some leftovers for dinner. Make as many friends along the journey as you can. Offer to cut their grass and do some little chores to say, Thanks!
Travel is a time for growth, new experiences, and seeing more of the country or the world. If you’re going on a journey, you’ll want to remember everything you did. A travel journal is far more important to enrich your trip at the time and will preserve your memories of the experience for a lifetime.
Buy a durable hardcover blank journal if possible. If you’re on a tight budget, look for a bound notebook that will be big enough to glue in menus and programs but small enough to fit in your backpack or bag.
Make sure you have a good pen and some small colored pencils or a travel-size watercolor set for quick sketches. A small pair of scissors and a short plastic ruler will also come in handy. Buy a good quality glue stick. Glue a large clasp envelope to the inside of the back cover of the journal and put papers there until you have time to glue them into the book.
Get a small zippered pouch or large Ziploc bag for all your journal supplies — preferably a clear one so you can see what’s inside. Pack it your carry-on bag if you will be flying.
Very important… Date your entries! You may think you’ll remember but the days will start blending together real quick.
Collect ticket stubs, business cards from restaurants and hotels, paper menus or logo napkins, and other paper items that will add visual appeal and help you remember your trip. Put them in the clasp envelope in the back of your journal until you can incorporate them into it.
Glue in the information as you go along, or leave room to add items later. Liquid glue takes longer to dry than the glue stick, but it will hold in items better.
A digital camera and/or voice recorder would be great to document events as well!
* Schedule time to make notes at about the same time every day. If you write in the evening, you can make notes on everything you did that day, even if you don’t have time to fill it out right then. If you write in the morning, you can recap the previous day and make notes about what you want to do that day. Then you can add details and glue in your paper items whenever you have time during the day, or even when you return from your trip.
* It will be tempting to focus just on outward experiences, such as what you saw and where and what you ate, but it will be more interesting later if you include your personal responses to the people you meet and the places you see. Tell your feelings, and reflect on the meaning of your experiences. Try collecting email addresses from some of the people you meet to keep them updated on your travels.
* Details fade quickly, so don’t wait to write down important events, conversations, sights, contact information for people you meet, and notes on things you still want to do or remember. Yes, it takes some time away from sightseeing, but it will make your trip more meaningful.
Friendly Place

Unfriendly Place, get out of here.
New Hobo Sign – Attack happened here!
Strong Police Presence
Rutger Hauer stars as the nameless hobo who drifts into town via freight train only to find the place littered with crime, prostitution and violence. So of course, Hobo just wants to go about his own business, but the town’s horrific predicament is too much for our hobo hero to ignore. So, along with his trusty shotgun, he takes it upon himself to rid the streets of its trash, blasting one scumbag at a time.
The is one of the most bizarre movies you’ll ever watch. You’ll here foul language, blood, bizarre killings, not much nudity though. It’s 1 1/2 hours of HOBO KICKASS! When it’s over you will find yourself saying… WTF?