How to write a travel blog? : Basic information for your travel blog
Every trip is full of incredible emotions for a tourist or traveler. We often want to share our impressions about the places and places we have seen and discovered during our travels. The best way to do this is to write a travel blog.
However, in order for the travel blog to be interesting and readable, it is necessary to pay attention to some nuances.
1. Write more complete and interesting than other articles! One of the main values that can be given to the reader of a travel blog is to collect all the useful, reliable and relevant information on one page. There is nothing more tiring than choosing a place to rest, getting the necessary information one by one, browsing dozens of sites with conflicting information. Yes, the description of a city can consist of 30-50 thousand characters. However, if the writing is interesting and complete, people will not stop reading from the second paragraph.
2. Write about your personal experience! Articles based on experience in a completely free style are often more practical than articles of the type "About Baku", "About Rome".
3. Do your research! Analyzing the pages in TOP (the ones written in the first 10 or 20 in the search results) and semantics (what people type in google about the destination) will help you with this. Keywords can be particularly informative.
4. Get the rare facts! In fact, the best thing a non-travel writer can do is to choose information carefully and present it correctly. For example, Jules Verne, the founder of experimental geography in literature, never traveled. A travel writer can do more, but gathering reliable facts is a must.
5. Write today! Until you open a new Word file, you can never imagine how quickly what you saw will be forgotten. A week later, only the photos help rebirth the experience. There is a big difference between two articles written by the same person one week later.
6. Share your impressions! As a non-travel writer, you prepare an initial sketch. What can you do differently than a non-travel writer? Impressions, experiences, comparison, analogies. Everything that comes to mind when traveling in new places. The bone-chilling cold of the cave where you descend without a jacket. The shock of buying a parking ticket equal to your weekly vacation budget. Milky pink sunset on the beach. At night, falling to the islands in a few minutes: it was just light, and now you are going home from the coast in the dark ... All this will add additional information to the texts, and most importantly, emotions. But they need to be written. Emotions disappear quickly. You won't remember half of it tomorrow.
7. Be objective! At this point, I'm ready to sympathize with the guidebook authors. One way or another, they should be tolerant and as positive as possible when describing each city. Well, they can't take it and write: “This is a dirty port city. There is an unbearable smell of stale fish in the streets. Garbage is removed irregularly, so the streets look untidy." They can't do that because it wouldn't be very ethical. And also because most of them have not been to this city and are just rewriting. You write, you have seen, you know!
8. Plan! For example, if you have to perform the task of describing all the museums of the Old City, you need to calculate how many km the area is. In general, you should plan in advance what you need to do during this time.
9. Ask the locals! They know better where to swim, dine, see and try.
10. Share all the situations you come across while traveling! Problems encountered by tourists and travelers: we turned the wrong way, got on the wrong bus, arrived too late and did not have time (the first day in the city, the time we could not get), etc. Describe all the nuances and do not let others make the same mistakes. This will save the reader time, effort and money and make your text useful.
11. Describe the details! The moment you see "cozy narrow streets" in your text, take a closer look at the photos and think about how to convey the uniqueness of the place more accurately. Architectural style? Facade color? Material used in construction? The width of the houses? Family seats at the doors? What do you see that can't be found anywhere else? Light? Flowers? What should be added to the text to match just this one point on the map?
12. Collect photo facts! If you are not a professional, the Maiden's Castle building in your photos will certainly pale in comparison to the professional work. On the other hand, non-standard road signs, inscriptions, names of establishments, exact directions to enter the museum in the shortest queue will be interesting and meaningful.