Staying for free all around the world


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Finding Shangri-la. Searching for paradise on earth. With the help of dark chocolate & Marmite.

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Staying for free all around the world

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Sunday, May 25, 2008

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It started in New Hampshire, but it could have been Bombay or Instanbul.

It lets people staying with strangers - in their own homes. And it is happening all over the globe, providing a cheap night's accommodation and a chance to meet the locals.

What is it? Couch-surfing.

According to Wikipedia, Couchsurfing is:

The CouchSurfing Project is a free international Internet-based hospitality service, and currently the largest hospitality exchange network. As of April 2008, it had more than 500,000 members in 226 countries and territories. From various indicators it can be estimated that many members were actively using the website, with 40 percent offering their couches to host travelers (with another 22 percent saying "maybe" and others who are traveling at the moment).

Members use the website, initially designed by founder Casey Fenton, to coordinate accommodations. It features extensive profiles, and uses an optional credit card verification system, a personal vouching system, and personal references to increase security and trust. There are many other features on the site, such as interest discussion groups, meeting functionality, live chat and more.

So how does it work? Again, from Wikipedia:

Membership in the organization is free and is obtained simply by registering on the website. The core activity of the organization is exchange of accommodation. Acting as a host, a member offers the possibility of accommodation at his or her leisure; it is not required, but obviously it is encouraged. Acting as a surfer (guest), a traveller may search for and request accommodation at his or her destination. Accommodation is entirely consensual between the host and surfer, and the duration, nature, and terms of the surfer's stay are generally worked out in advance to the convenience of both parties. It is also expected to be free; no monetary exchange takes place except under certain circumstances (e.g. the surfer may compensate the host for food).

There are three methods to ensure security and trust, which are all visible on member profiles for potential hosts and surfers to see prior to arranging anything with each other:

1. Personal references, which hosts and surfers could leave for each other at their option after having used the service.

2. An optional credit card verification system, which allowed members to "lock in" their name and address by making a credit card payment and entering a code that CouchSurfing mails to the billing address. This also allows CS to recuperate some costs by requiring a fee for verification. For fairness the verification fee is based on a sliding scale, taking into account the Purchasing power parity and Human Development Index of the country of residence.

3. A personal vouching system, whereby a member that had been vouched for - originally starting with the founders of the site - might in turn vouch for any number of other members he or she knew or had met through CouchSurfing, and trusts.

Volunteers within the project often arrange meetings or camps which are events that last several days and bring people together.

Since June 2006, the website has been run in large part by CouchSurfing Collectives, which are groups of CouchSurfers who get together in a chosen city to develop and improve CouchSurfing. The first three Collectives took place in Montreal, Vienna, and New Zealand.

Members who wish to volunteer for various tasks on the site and help spread the word about CouchSurfing in general may become ambassadors. Ambassadors must be verified and actively promote the CouchSurfing spirit among members and to the public. In addition to promoting use of the site, they greet new members, help with questions and other administrative tasks, and more, all on a volunteer basis.

Here's an article from Times Online about the new phenomena:

From Times Online

April 8, 2007

The Top 5 couchsurfing websites

It's cheap, it's sociable, but would you stay in a stranger's home? Sally Howard reports from a futon in New York

Woman lying on couch in sleeping bag

My friends and coworkers say I'm nuts having you here, of course," laughs Elizabeth, the straight-talking, 26-year-old Californian stranger in horn-rimmed specs who's my host for a spring city break in New York. "Inviting a complete unknown off the internet to stay in my small apartment... they say you're out to rob me. But there would be much easier ways to do that, wouldn't there?"

Hospitality networks - communities set up to enable travellers to share the home of a foreign host - are nothing new. Launched by the Denmark-based American Bob Luitweiler in 1949, the United Nations-recognised Servas (www.servas.org ) had the lofty aim of realising Gandhi's maxim: "The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others." But Servas, and its contemporary Pasporta Servo (www.tejo.org/eo/ps ), a hospitality community for speakers of Esperanto, functioning as something of a foreign-exchange programme for adults, required a lengthy registration process, membership fee and minimum four-week notice period of a home stay.

Then, networks like the Hospitality Club, which now has 250,000 members in 207 countries, found a happy home on the web. Less formal propositions, these sites were largely the purlieu of backpackers and gap-year travellers, attracted by the twin benefits of saving precious cash and "living like the locals".

But it was in 2004, with the launch of The CouchSurfing Project, that a verb was coined and a mainstream travel trend born. Couchsurfing.com was the brainchild of Casey Fenton, an American web consultant who, after buying a bargain flight to Iceland, realised that he had no interest in spending his hard-earned greenbacks on "rotting in a hotel all weekend playing Mr Tourist". After a bout of beard-scratching, Fenton alighted on the idea of using the random networking potential of the internet to spam a couple of thousand Reykjavik students, asking whether they'd put him up on their sofas and show him around their home city. The same year, Fenton launched the CouchSurfing Project. The website broadened its focus to online chat and a shared passion for travel, and with several thousand recruits joining the project's 200,000 registered users each week, Couchsurfing.com is now an undisputed phenomenon.

"The people who come to stay with us come from all walks of life," says Elizabeth later, as she hands me a cup of camomile tea. "We've had a gay German couple in their fifties, lots of thirtysomething couples, as well as younger travellers. With the older surfers, it's as if they're looking for something a bit different to the anonymity of a hotel." Elizabeth, a nurse, and her boyfriend, Alex, 28, a PhD student (pictured, left), typically house two or three couchsurfers a month, "although, being in New York, we get so many requests".

I have the distinction of being their first couchsurfer to elicit a profuse round of apologies before even setting my knapsack down on the well-padded beige futon. It's 11pm on the day of my arrival and for the previous three hours I had been left sitting in an overpriced Upper West Side Italian restaurant, pushing polenta around my plate and tipping back house merlot.

On the plus side, Elizabeth and Alex don't inhabit the sagging Harlem tenement coloured in by my wild imagination beneath the cover of an airline blanket. My couch lives in a noble American townhouse on a tree-lined street in the shade of the monolithic American Museum of Natural History.

I also wonder, as I stare into the dazzle of Elizabeth and Alex's mile-wide smiles, whether I should blame myself for my long spell battling the gaze of a rank of insistent waiters. True, there was no sign of the promised key waiting beneath the plastic plant pot on the stoop, but perhaps I shouldn't have foolishly sent a text to announce my arrival. Texting an American, as I well knew, is only marginally more effective than attaching your message to the back of a baffled city pigeon. Americans simply don't do texting.

So, what is the couchsurfing etiquette? "We're super-flexible, but there are a few rules," says Elizabeth. "We want surfers to be comfortable, but not too comfortable. It's nice when there's a gesture, like bringing us a gift from your home country, or taking us out to dinner.

"And staying two or three nights is cool; longer gets a bit awkward. We do get the eccentrics, of course, like the Austrian couple who said they were travelling to help each other through depression, then vomited out their entire life stories in 90 minutes. But mostly, it's positive."

What's in it for Elizabeth and Alex? "Well, it's always cool to meet people, especially Europeans - we see enough of Americans. And we're hoping to go travelling next year, touring all of our couchsurfers."

On the other side of the Atlantic, Jane and Phil Ballard of Ely, Cambridgeshire, also offered themselves as hosts in the hope of meeting "a few interesting souls", but their experience was less positive. "We put up various surfers," says Jane, 55, "and worked hard to give them a good time. Some asked us to visit them (and some even meant it), and we have a gaudy collection of photographic calendars and plastic dolls to show for their visits. Then we had a bad experience with an American. She persuaded us to delay our own holiday to accommodate her, told us her time of arrival at the station and then failed to turn up. She e-mailed a week later, saying she'd felt 'a bit tired' and had decided to stay in London. That did it for me."

For the couchsurfing newbie, navigating the website in search of a potential couch can also be a darkly unpredictable business - profiles of seedy-looking, bare-chested gents go unpoliced, and introductory straplines such as "I have the ability to synthesise some compounds and I can separate drugs from bile, plasma and urine" can do unfortunate things to the browser's own bile. But the couchsurfing site does offer some safeguards, such as a system (similar to eBay's) of users vouching for each other online and a higher verification level (for £13), where a letter is sent to the host's home address requiring a postal reply.

The site also makes an effort to lessen the risk of surfing mishaps with its stern admonitions to book a hotel as backup and to avoid staying with unverified members or lone males if you're a single female traveller.

None of this dissuades a growing number of Elizabeths and Alexes, though: "Even if you did end up peeing on the rug, I doubt I'll be put off," smiles Elizabeth. "The beauty of sites such as this is that they make the web world real, and make us take a leap of faith - you're rewarded in finding out that human beings are generally a pretty cool bunch."

www.couchsurfing.com A professional-looking site, with numerous functions, thataims to "create deep and meaningful connections that cross oceans, continents and cultures".

www.globalfreeloaders.com An Australian hospitality network, with the antipodes particularly well represented.

www.hospitalityclub.org One of the web originals, aiming to "bring people together". Duration of stay and specifics (such as food) are set out before your stay.

www.stay4free.com A global "free accommodation network" based in Holland.

www.travelhoo.com Another of the early web outfits. Also offers a travel partner-finding service. Sign up to surf

The above was from http://travel.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/travel/holiday_type/gap_travel/article1622344.ece

There is a downside to all this though, go to my next posting to find out if you are a victim.

http://www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/happysheep/shangri-la-la/1211729280/tpod.html?tweb_UID=happysheep


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Cloning experiment on show in south China | Quake helps China's Team Spiritshow all entries
 (show entry-less map pins)

81.Volunteers at the Sichuan earthquake in China - Chengdu, China May 24, 2008 ( This entry has 3 photos 3 )
82.Hold-ups in earthquake aid - Chengdu, China May 24, 2008 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
83.Staying for free all around the world - Concord, United States May 25, 2008 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 )
84.Are you are moocher? - London, United Kingdom May 25, 2008 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )
85.Science behind recent quakes in China - Chongqing, China May 26, 2008 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )
86.What about the pandas? - Chengdu, China May 26, 2008 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
87.China hits back with T-shirts - Beijing, China May 26, 2008 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
88.Direct flights between Taiwan and China - Taipei, Taiwan May 26, 2008
89.Not quite Tupperware or Amway - got yours - Los Angeles, United States May 26, 2008
90.More aftershocks - Chengdu, China May 26, 2008
91.Beer with chilli - chilli in beer - Chilli Beer - Mexico City, Mexico May 26, 2008 ( This entry has 3 photos 3 )
92.how are earthquakes measured? - Chengdu, China May 26, 2008 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )
93.Foreign aid after quake - Chengdu, China May 26, 2008 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )
94.Greater freedom around earthquake - Chengdu, China May 26, 2008
95.Impact of quake on tourism - Chongqing, China May 26, 2008
96.China's earthquake response - faster than Katrina? - New Orleans, United States May 27, 2008
97.Quake response - New Orleans, United States May 27, 2008
98.More on earthquake response - Chengdu, China May 27, 2008
99.So that's why there was an earthquake! - San Francisco, United States May 28, 2008 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
100.More rumbling on its way - Chengdu, China May 28, 2008

Cloning experiment on show in south China | Quake helps China's Team Spiritshow all entries
 (show entry-less map pins)
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