How I write here
I write for the traveller, not the search engine.
I want this site to be useful before it is anything else. If a page needs 300 words, I will not stretch it to 1,500. If a topic needs more room, I will give it room. The point is to help someone plan a real trip, not to satisfy a content checklist.
I still care about the boring technical parts that make a website work: clear pages, fast loading, sensible links, readable titles and pages that search engines can find. But that work belongs in the background. If a sentence sounds like it was written for a ranking tool instead of a person, it should not be here.
Where the advice comes from
Some pages come from old trips, notes, routes, food memories and the kind of practical advice that used to move between travellers in hostels and bus stations. Some pages need current research, because prices change, borders change, booking habits change and old advice can quietly become bad advice.
I do not pretend to have been everywhere. If I write about a place from research rather than memory, I should not dress it up as a personal story.
Money and links
This site may use affiliate links later, but not during the first building phase. For now I want the body of the site to exist first: useful pages, a clear voice and enough trust that a reader can tell what kind of place this is.
When commercial links appear, they should help with a real travel task. They should not decide the route, the advice or the tone.