digital nomad stories about art, presence & worship of mother nature

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How to Travel the World on a Vegan Diet

Hi, my name is Lilli and I am a digital nomad and full-time travel the world with my husband and my two children. We also live vegan.

In this article I will share my experience with those of you who are interested in living a more vegan life, but are struggling with the practicability, especially while traveling.

A vegan diet is intimidating for many people. A lot of foods in our Western culture are based on animal products. Excluding them is unthinkable for many of us, even in the eye of the cruelties the meat, egg and dairy industry are well known for. Our cultural habits are so strong and the social alienation, that comes with changing the diet, seems too deterrent for some of us, so we make up excuses for not making, what we know would be the morally right thing to do.

If this is you, I want to let you know that you are not alone. I followed an omnivorous diet for the most time of my life, I have been there and I know how overwhelming it can seem to make dietary changes, especially when you don’t have a social circle to support you.

But I have learned a lot during my last year as a vegan nomad and I promise you, it is much easier than it may seem and there are no vegan travellers starving out there!

“Picking Oranges” – Aveiro, Portugal, 2022

While we are traveling, we place ourselves into unknown environments in which we don’t navigate as effortlessly. We have to get to know everything from scratch. While this is exciting and beautiful, it is also exhausting when this uncertainty takes over things of the daily life we want to feel a sense of security about, like having a good nights sleep or a full stomach.

Thankfully we live in the age of information, where we have Googlemaps guiding us towards the next grocery store or have apps like Happy Cow or Vanilla Bean, where we can easily find the nearest restaurant the offers vegan options.

This already leads me to my first tip to maintain a vegan diet without experiencing a negative impact the quality of the traveling experience:

  • Research vegan restaurants beforehand

Every newbie vegan knows the frustration of spontaneously walking into a restaurant and realising every-single-dish contains some sort of animal product. You often times wonder: “Why the hell do you need dairy in this?” or “Is this chicken really adding flavour to this Curry?” Of course not, but it is what it is, and you making the transition will impact the pace of the progress. So whenever you’ll find a vegan product or a vegan dish in a restaurant you can be proud of yourself, because you helped to achieve this too!

Okay, but what do you do in order to get great food on you holiday in the meantime? As already mentioned, there are amazing apps out there that offer you insights into the kind of restaurants that serves food suitable for a vegan diet, but sometimes their lists aren’t complete so don’t be sad if you don’t immediately find a close-by vegan restaurant on the apps.

The Yelp app also recently added a filter option for Vegan- and Vegetarian-friendly restaurants. The filter is somewhat hidden in the subcategory “Restaurants”, where you’ll find it at the very bottom of a long list of culinary categories.

Yelp filter-option for “Vegan” and “Vegetarian” under the Subcategory “Restaurants”.

I experienced, that most restaurants that are listed as “Vegetarian” also offer vegan options, because the audiences overlap largely. It is good to know, that many countries also use the word “vegetarian” but mean “plant-based”, which is the same as “vegan”. To avoid cultural confusion its good to double-check. The translator deepl.com works amazingly well and can be used to research the question in any language.

“este prato contém produtos de origem animal?” Was one of the first sentences I memorised when I came to Portugal.

If you don’t find any vegan options listed online:

  • Ask for it!

I never had any negative experience when asking politely asking in a restaurant if they could veganise a dish from the menu. In fact, some waiters even offered proactively to veganise an existing dish for us. The worst thing that can happen, is that they have inflexible processes, can’t make anything nice and you are left with a boring salad or French fries.

I am also convinced that by asking for something vegan, we are making the demand for vegan options more visible, then if we would simply go home hungry. We don’t have anything to lose and everything to gain!

Vezelay, France, 2021
  • Cook yourself when traveling remote places

No matter if you like to camp, travel with a van or prefer the comfort of a Airbnb: If you like to travel to remote places, the density of restaurants will be lower. In more rural areas, you will generally find more traditional cuisine than in metropolitan areas. In countries with a food culture heavily relying on animal products, it will get exponentially harder to find vegan-friendly places to eat out.

When we stayed in France, we visited some rural places in Burgundy and the Champagne-Adrenne region and the only thing we could eat out were French fries. My body and health weren’t too excited about this prospect. Being vegan also means that you will have to know a thing or two about including sufficient nutrients in your diet and it is generally good advice to learn the basics of vegan cooking.

“Fruit Market Haul” – Piracanga, Brasil, 2021

Different to a widespread belief a vegan diet is not a privilege only the wealthy can afford. When you cook yourself, a vegan life can actually be much cheaper. The key to cost-efficiency lies in eating whole foods over replacement products like vegan cheese, vegan sausages etc. which (sadly) are as of today still more expensive than the non-vegan version.

If you learn to cook vegetables, beans, tofu and legumes you can get away with spending much less and eating much healthier and nutrient rich than if you’d stick to the average western omnivore diet.

If your are new to Veganism or cooking or both, I warmly recommend you check out my favourite vegan bloggers Gaz Oakley, Zucker & Jagwurst (German) and Bosh! Also cooking apps like KptnCook offer filters for vegan cooking and are an amazing source of inspiration for those on the beginning of their cooking journey.

Isn’t it just amazing how amazing people can share their expertise so easily nowadays?

  • Choose vegan-friendly destinations

As I have mentioned earlier – rural France was especially challenging to eat out as a vegan. Similar bad was our restaurant experience when we visited the German/Polish island Usedom, which is mostly frequented by rather conservative audiences with a preference for traditional food.

Other cultures are less reliant on animal products: A lot of Italian pasta dishes are accidentally vegan and most Asian countries don’t incorporate dairy in their food, which makes it much more easy to make a dish vegan.

No vegan dish is displayed here, but she did cook vegan for us 😉 – Koh Phangan, Thailand, 2018

The spread of the buddhist religion has left its mark on large parts of Asian cuisine. Buddhism teaches that the soul can be reincarnated into any body independent of the species one embodied in its past life. If you believe that an animal has a soul alike your own, it is much harder to kill it solely for sensory pleasure.

Christianity on the other hand, attributes a soul only to the humans species, who are believed to being gods kind and entitled to use the earth and all her creatures to their means.

The tendency to value animal lives higher, is reflected in the food culture as well, wherefore the accessibility of meatless dishes differs across cultures of different philosophical and theological beliefs.

In Thailand we experienced that a the majority of dishes are offered either with meat or tofu. Fish sauce is often used in Thai dishes, so this would be one thing to keep in mind.

Our favourite Thai island Koh Phangan also had a large vegan community and many beautiful vegan restaurants can be found especially in the Western part. Vegan heavens like this exist all over the world and it’s wonderful to be in a place where you can choose anything on the menu without thinking twice.

  • Be integer, but don’t be hard on yourself

Becoming vegan has enriched my life in so countless ways, but I’m not going to pretend that it is easy in every situation in life.

It can’t be denied, that as of today, we live in a world which is mostly non-vegan. And if you are like us and like to explore different cultures, you will find, that you can experience a local culiniary culture only on to a limited extend.

As sad as this is, we simply cannot image eating meat anymore, even if we wanted to make a one time exception to experience a local tradition.

Other vegans may not agree with this, but I would rather see people making exceptions from now and then (as long as it doesn’t become a habit), before giving up on Veganism entirely. After all, it should be a life long transition and not a temporary experiment.

I personally found it very easy to maintain a vegan diet during our travels because of all the amazing information out there and Jaap being a very good cook. But the transition to a plant-based diet is very subjective and happens in a different pace for everyone.

I will never tell anyone to commit to a vegan life only if they can 100% maintain it. Every piece of flesh not eaten is a step in the right direction. Every animal not breed into a life condemned to suffering and painful slaughter is worthwhile the changes we make to our habits.

Listen to your heart, educate yourself, keep an open mind, stay curious and be courageous to try something new!

If you want to learn more about the life of a vegan full-time-traveller, don’t hesitate to leave a comment or contact us on our socials.

Sending you love,

Piracanga: Living an Earthful Dream in Brazil

“Transforme o seu mundo” – (Eng.) Transform your world.

Ecovila Piracanga is a human settlement. A community in development. People connected by nature, experiencing a more natural way of living, to inspire self-knowledge and exhaling more awareness.

This paradise on earth is located in Northeastern Brazil, in the state of Bahia, 250 km from the capital Salvador. Piracanga is at the beginning of the Maraú Peninsula, close to the surfing hot-spot destinations of Itacaré and Barra Grande. The Ecovila Piracanga is in a rural and coastal region, in an environmental protection area, in the municipality of Maraú.

Its garden is the Atlantic Rainforest, the river and mangrove are the backyard. The long beach is the extension of the village and invites for beautiful walks with a view of coconut trees and the preserved biodiversity.

While Piracanga is open for visitors, it is also a community that exists in itself – in a unique, magical dimension.

In this place the sky meets the earth. And the Atlantic ocean meets the Piracanga River.

Rio Piracanga, Bahia, 2021

Everything that comes from the earth returns to the earth.

Water is the greatest wealth of our planet. To me, it’s the foundation of life itself. The very element that makes life on earth possible. In the ecovillage it is an abundant virtue. The Piracaga River flows through the mangrove until it flows into the Atlantic Ocean. This natural source of water is supplying all needs of the settlement.

Everything that comes from the earth returns to the earth. Everything that comes from the water returns to the water.

With this awareness, life in Piracanga is lived – minimizing impacts to the environment. The search for more balance to keep the ecosystem healthy is in the very DNA of not only the people who have founded the Ecovila, but also everyone who visits, or stays permanently. They dedicate their time and love to the care of the land and water.

The entire village is detached from the public energy grid and sustains it’s own water cycle, which is recycled in a zero-impact way.

This comes with some ajustments in the daily rountines: The specific use of biodegradable products, without chemicals, the composting, which transforms organic waste into fertilizer, the dry toilets, which save water and produce fertilizer, the waste management, with selective collection and reuse and the solar energy, which supplies with renewable resource.

Even the houses are built with rustic structures from local raw material and natural ventilation which makes them applicable for bio-construction as well. So ideally the village could almost completely go back into the cycle of nature when the humans have long left the settlement.

Cleansed by nature.

The sun provides lighting and electrical energy through a photovoltaic system. But the consumption needs to be conscious. In order to save energy the use of lights, plug time, and shower time, especially at night and during cloudy weather needs so be limited to a minimum. Wasteful usage can result in power outages during the night.

We experienced, that in spring time, when it was rainy from time to time, the electrical power was available between 6am in the morning and 2am in the night. That meant, that we didn’t have a fridge, which needs power all around the clock, nor energy intense machinery like washing machines. Hair dryers, flat irons and irons weren’t used either.

Before we arrived we thought that those were pretty big adjustments to make and we had a lot of respect for the challenge ahead.

How did we end up in this place anyways?

The family of one of my best friends lives in Sao Paulo and has left the metropolitan area when the pandemic started. They choose Piracanga as their refuge with very little exposure to other people and a lot of nature around to recharge. Ever since they moved there, my friend would tell us about the place, how they lived and what they had build there. Being on a journey to a more sustainable life, we naturally were intrigued and besides all the challenges that this places would pose upon our routines, we were excited to learn more about how to life a zero-impact life.

When I took my first outdoor shower and used the biodegradable bar soap, I especially bought for this place, I felt like I was washing modern civilisation and all the problems that came with it away.

Vegan, Organic, Local.

As Vegans, we seek to feed ourselves with more awareness and respect for life and to reduce the suffering of sentient beings, those who feel pain and joy, when it’s not needed.

The inhabitants of Piracanga share these values. As they dedicate themselves to a waste-free, sustainable way to live, they consume mainly what the surrounding lands provide. And it was abundant. The “Feira” market which was on Tuesdays and Fridays offered all kinds of fruits, vegetables, homemade bread, kumbucha and cakes and a little store in the village sold lentils, rice and even some organic chocolate.

However, being in the middle of the rainforest, we weren’t the only ones interested in the rich fruits the environment provided.

The monkeys weren’t the only ones attracted by the food. We had to take extra care to keep the outdoor kitchen clean because otherwise we’d have an invasion of ants and cockroaches.

The insect life was plenty nonetheless. The most painful visitors were the mosquitoes. But we also saw giant spiders and snakes, from whom we respectfully stayed at distance from. We were in the jungle after all!

Our little Moglis.

It was so beautiful to see our kids navigating so courageous, yet so mindfully in this raw environment. It was so magical seeing them picking fruits from the trees, seeing, feeling, hearing and breathing nature.

We thought it could be very challenging to only have very few toys, being without the foods and habits they gotten used to, but they adjusted so fast and we could tell that they were very happy.

Lana, our oldest, went to pre-school there and assimilated the Portugese language so easily. Despite the language barrier in the beginning, she made many friends to play and explore the jungle with. She still calles me “Ma-Mãe” a mix of the German “Mama” and the Portugese “Mãe”.

All of these things made us very optimistic that they are well equipped for all adventures that lie ahead.

The Indigos and the spirit of nature.

One of the two last tribes of the indigenous Tupinambá is living Olivença in the region of southern Bahia, close to Piracanga. They were frequent guests in the village and educated the villagers about their own connection to nature and invited to join spiritual rituals to reconnect with ones own spirituality.

The music and the dancing was a truly beautiful experience and you could sense the love for nature they shared and transported in their rituals.

These beautiful handmade maracas we have taken with us as a souvenir. It will always remind us what we have been privileged to learn from the Tupinambá and the inhabitants of Piracanga.

Living in Piracanga was very enriching. We learned not only with our heads but also with our hearts. This place has me believe that a utopia on earth is possible and humanity can reconnect with nature.

I can write so much more about it, but I have decided to dedicate an extra entry to the aspects of the sustainable life we have experienced in Piracanga and what has inspired us to change our customs permanently.

I hope this post has inspired you and shown you that zero-waste and zero-impact living is not only possible but if done right, it can indeed be extraordinarily beautiful.

Sending you love,