The secret to becoming a travel writer
is simple. All you need to do is WRITE. Write with color, pay attention
to detail, and above all write with enthusiasm. You’ll soon build up a
catalog of clips. And eventually there’ll come a day when you won’t even
have to look for assignments. Editors will be asking you to visit the Cape
Verdes and other far-flung shores. (Yes I had to look up the islands on
a map, too.)
Now, I won’t pretend I set out to
become a globe-trotter. Back in 1988, all I was seeking was a way to earn
some money. Writing seemed to offer a solution - and I soon
discovered I had a knack for telling a story. In fact, the first piece
I ever wrote got published by an English newspaper.
That was real estate related, but
you could say it was travel-related too. It was a humorous tale about my
search for a bargain cottage in Ireland. I’d had to travel over three western
counties to find it.
Whilst I was building up my clip
file, I traveled around Ireland some more. I got factual real estate pieces
published in English newspapers and with International Living – they all
involved traveling somewhere in Ireland. I wrote about Irish pilgrimages,
horse-fairs and oyster festivals - and after getting published in England
sold the same stories to American and Australian publications.
For a local publication, the Irish
Press, I wrote about a Buddhist monk in county Cavan, a biodynamic therapist
in county Mayo, coal-pit closures in county Leitrim and an 11-year-old
seannachie (storyteller) who’d won major prizes at festivals.
So here’s my first piece of advice.
Start out by writing about your own
city or locality. It’s definitely one of the easiest and most cost-effective
ways to kick start your career. What fascinating events or festivals are
happening? Has a new restaurant opened? Are there any interesting people
you could profile? Whether you live in Nebraska or Hawaii, there’s a whole
swathe of regional and local publications that are always hungry for new
stories and fresh slants.
And think of it this way. Ireland
is my home, but it’s a foreign destination for many of the editors I write
for. Even way back when, I guess they regarded me as a travel writer!
Someone who lives in West Virginia
may regard New York, Chicago and San Francisco as fairly exotic destinations.
Just because you’re writing about your own home town doesn’t mean you’re
not a travel writer.
How to turn your compost into gold...
But let’s rewind and go back to the
early 1990s. Given my own experiences of worm-infested compost heaps, you’d
think I’d have run a mile from anything to do with organic gardening. But
no. I traveled down to county Kildare near Dublin to write a story for
the Irish Press about WWOOFing – working weekends on organic farms.
Second piece of advice...write about
what you know. It doesn’t necessarily have to be travel related - though
if you can tie it in, that’s great. You might be knowledgeable about antiques,
fishing – even beer. (Any micro-breweries in your area?)
When you’re starting out, the most
important thing is to build up clips – to show editors that you can tell
a story.
Write for web magazines, small publications
– anywhere you can place your story. They might not pay a lot, but you
have to be realistic. You’re unlikely to get an assignment to investigate
the vineyards of New Zealand from a prestigious dollar a word travel magazine
until an editor has some proof that you can write.
The importance of relationships
By this time I’d had around half
a dozen pieces published by the Irish Press. And I’d managed to scrape
together enough money for a jaunt to Portugal and Spain. Would they be
interested in articles on Lisbon and northern Portugal for their travel
section? Indeed they would. For those two articles I got paid around the
dollar equivalent of $350.
I asked Columbia if they would like
a story about the Spanish pilgrimage city of Santiago di Compostela.
I was going to be there on the Feast of St James, the city’s major feast
day. Columbia is a Catholic U.S. publication and they’d already published
my story about the annual pilgrimage to Croagh Patrick, Ireland’s holy
mountain. The editor said ‘’send it in.’’ He offered me $500 with more
money for photos.
International Living? Would they
be interested in Portuguese real estate? I got another ‘yes’. Another $300
in the bag.
With those four assignments, my trip
to Spain and Portugal almost paid for itself. (15 years ago, those countries
were incredibly cheap to visit.) But I just wish I’d known then what
I know now. Back in those days, I didn’t have a clue about the freebies
and perks that are readily available to travel writers!
So third piece of advice. Build up
a relationship with editors. Once you’ve had one article published, go
back to them with an idea for another story...and another...and another.
Once they know that you can come up with the goods, they’ll think of you
when a juicy assignment comes up.
That’s how I landed my first-ever
all expenses paid trip. I’d had Irish travel-related stories published
by an English newspaper, the Daily Telegraph. One day, completely out of
the blue, the editor asked me if I’d be interested in going on assignment
– to the jungles of Borneo. Rather than a staff writer, they wanted a freelancer
who had never been to Asia before...someone who would see things ‘’with
fresh eyes’’.
Would you have turned down an offer
to meet head-hunters and orangutans... to snorkel in the South China Sea...
to loll about on a hammock in the Shangri-La hotel sipping gin slings?
Welcome to the desperately hard life
of a travel writer...
| Steenie Harvey gets paid to visit
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do the same, join our Get Paid to Travel teleconference, and we'll show
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