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Born in Copenhagen. A camera in one hand, a road map in the other. This is not a story about tourism — it's about the itch you can't scratch until you go.
Before budget flights and solo adventures, there were family car trips. Packing into the car and heading for Germany, the Harz mountains, cities you could reach without a flight. My mum made sandwiches for the road — homemade, carefully wrapped. The windows down. The road ahead.
That was the first taste of it. Movement. Going somewhere. Seeing something different out of the window.
Then came Greece. First the easy version — all-inclusive with friends, airport to sunbed to airport. But Greece pulled me back. Again and again. Until the all-inclusive fell away and the real thing began: renting scooters, driving coast to coast, finding the island beneath the tourist surface. Highway on a scooter. Risky. Probably stupid. Absolutely worth it.
Long before any travel content, there was a Video 8 camcorder and a teenager filming Copenhagen's skate scene. Raw footage of tricks, slams, friends — Danish subculture movies made for the love of it. No audience. No algorithm. Just documenting what was real.
That never left. The urge to point a camera at something worth remembering. Filming and photography were never a career plan — they were just how I saw the world. Still are.
The subjects changed. The instinct didn't.
"Everyone talked about travelling more.
Then adult life came in the way.
One day I said: enough waiting."
There's a point in life where everyone around you talks about travelling but nobody actually goes. Adult life, schedules, excuses. The trips stay as dreams in group chats.
I stopped waiting. I started looking for cheap flight tickets — seats other people couldn't use, sold at a discount. Location was secondary. Opportunity was first. That approach led to Shanghai — a city I hadn't particularly planned to visit. It was a revelation.
Then Tokyo. Then London. The method was the same each time: find the ticket, figure out the rest. It rewired how I think about travel. You don't need the perfect plan. You need to go.
California road trips. Manhattan. Ukraine, Russia, Poland — driving across Eastern Europe. Work took me to the USA, China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore. Every trip added a layer. Every place taught something the previous one hadn't.
Travel for work and travel for yourself are completely different things. Work travel showed me the airports and the meeting rooms. Personal travel showed me everything else — the markets, the backstreets, the food that has no menu, the people who have no reason to talk to you but do anyway.
I wanted more of the second kind.
2021. Post-Covid. A 14-day trip to Rio de Janeiro that became 21 days because leaving didn't make sense. Brazil had something the other places didn't — a scale and rawness that was hard to describe without a camera rolling.
I came back in 2022. Then again at the end of 2023 — this time for two years. A white 4x4 called Blanca Beast. 12,500 kilometres of Brazilian road. Coastlines, Amazon backroads, border towns, waterfalls, carnaval, local fishing villages.
It stopped being a holiday somewhere along the way and became a life. A project. A document of a country that most people only see in highlight reels.
In 2025 I returned to Denmark for nine months — then turned around and went straight back.
Travel, for me, is about culture — tasting food that doesn't exist anywhere else, meeting people with no reason to let you in who do anyway, watching animals in landscapes that make you feel small in the best possible way.
And filming it. Always filming it. From a Video 8 camcorder in a Copenhagen skatepark to a drone above the Amazon river — the instinct is the same. Point the camera at the real thing. Don't dress it up. Let people see what's actually there.
That's what No Journey Too Far is. Every destination I've ever been to has one thing in common: I almost didn't go. And I've never once regretted going.
Stay updated on my latest adventures and travel stories! Follow me on YouTube, Instagram, and my Facebook for exciting content and travel tips.