Flying nomads: an interview with Jan and Jay Roode

Posted on 19 November 2012

Jan and Jay Roode are aviators, photographers, travellers, conservationists and Getaway bloggers. Having collectively travelled to over 56 countries the couple are content only when free to wander the skies in their Jabiru 430 or explore life on the ground in their trusty Land Cruiser.

I got itchy feet as I interviewed Jay about their amazing adventures around the world.

 

When did the travel bug first bite?

Makgadikgadi, Botswana

The travel bug first bit when I was a teenager paging through books on Africa published by pioneering female photographers Angela Fischer and Mirella Riccardi. I silently vowed to myself that I would try to follow in their footsteps. I worked as a student at a fleamarket for years saving money for my first solo adventure – an African overland from Victoria Falls to Nairobi. Since then wanderlust got its claws into me and exploring the world has become an obsession.

How did you get into photography?

I got my first camera when I was in primary school but it only really became an all consuming passion when I started to travel in earnest with my husband Jan, who is also a passionate photographer. Our travels took us to such magnificent places that we could not keep it for ourselves, we wanted to share these awe-inspiring places and experiences, and so our love for travel photography was born.

What do you love about travelling in Africa?

There is no where else in the world that speaks to my heart like Africa does; the smell of the earth after a thunderstorm, the sound of crickets and frogs in the dusk, the deep hoot of a Eagle owl in the dead of night. It literally gives me goosebumps just thinking about it. Africa is more alive than anywhere else I have been. Its biodiversity and great wildernesses leave me breathless everytime I venture into them.

What has travel taught you?

To quote Lao Tzu “A good traveler has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving”. Travel for me is not about rushing from one place to another and fitting in as many sights as I can; it is about immersing myself in a place and in a culture. Travel, I find is both an internal and external journey and one that continually reminds me to embrace the vibrance and abundance of life. Most importantly travel has taught me to let go of my prejudices and stubborn ideas about the world and just “live and let live”.

What is your favourite destination so far?

Torres del Paine National Park, Chile

This is a hard one! There are so many places that have touched my soul. I suppose my top ones would be; Torres del Paine National Park in Chilean Patagonia, Half Moon island in the South Shetlands, Namibrand Nature Reserve (read about why NamibRand is Namibia’s best-kept secret here) and Ibo island in Mozambique.

What’s been your best travel experience?

Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia

The ones that stand out are; driving over the surreal desert landscapes of the Bolivian Altiplano, catching a fishing boat deep into the Beagle Channel in Argentina and watching the sun rise over the Andes, flying over the Bazaruto Archipelago in Mozambique, having a pod of killer whales swim under my rubber duck in the Terror and Erebus Gulf on the Antarctic peninsula, driving with a Bushman as a guide on my roof rack in Damaraland, but I suppose my best travel experiences involve people and their unerring capacity to surprise me with their warmth, hospitality and kindness.

What are the first three things you always pack?

My camera, duct tape and ear plugs.

What’s been your biggest travel disaster?

Vietnam. We arrived in Saigon without doing much planning which normally works in our favour, but not this time! The idea was to hire a car or motorbike and drive the length of Vietnam but to our dismay tourists are not allowed to hire cars or touring bikes. We ended up catching cockroach infested trains the whole way and to top it all off I had a severe reaction to my malaria medication which included such pleasures as hallucinations and night terrors.

Where do you go when you need complete ‘time out’?

We go to a small grass hut in the middle of a rural village in Vilankulo, Mozambique. Here life is simple – a place that reminds me of how little I need to be happy.

What’s the passport stamp you’re most proud of?

Antarctica: our passports were stamped at the Argentine research station on mainland Antarctica.

Window or aisle?

Boeing or Jabiru? Our plane is so small that each seat is both a window and aisle seat. When it comes to larger aircraft, I prefer a window seat, I love to look outside and even in the dark of night, imagine the world beneath me.

What’s your favourite special place to stay?

I prefer underneath the wing of our plane, with only silence as my travel companion. The closer I sleep to the earth the more ‘real’ it feels, I need to be connected to the places I visit. I hope that answers the question.

What’s your best journey?

Our best journeys have been our flying expeditions over Africa. All of them have been indescribably beautiful but the one that stands out was our expedition up the coastline of Mozambique. We landed at obscure rural airfields, camped out under the wing, met oil men and missionaries, hitched into town and embraced serendipity. Flying over the UNESCO World Heritage site of the Ilha de Mocambique and landing on Ibo Island were some of the highlights.

What’s next on your bucket list?

Ethiopia – legends of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba draw me on….

 

Read about Jan and Jay Roode’s adventures on the Getaway blog here. 

For more photos by Jan and Jay Roode check out their website www.skyhawkphotography.com

All photos by Jan and Jay Roode

 

Patagonia, Chile

 

Getting stuck in Bolivia

 

Torres del Paine National Park, Chile

 

Torres del Paine National Park

 

 




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