Has any of you?

Has any of you PrepHoleists explored the world?
I mean old school around the globe backpacking, not flying to Ibiza or driving down to Tijuana for 2 weeks.

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  1. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Ive been to all 50 states and 46 countries, backpacking is stupid though.

  2. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Yeah I've done some of it but mostly backpacking/hitchhiking through cities.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      I stopped counting after I hit 40 countries. Most of that was as a penny-pinching overlanding backpacker.
      Longest continuous trip was when my wife and I drove our 4wd from Alaska to Argentina, that took a while.

      These days our holidays tend to be a bit more luxe although we did just get back from a month in the Himalayas which brought back memories of our uni student holidays. Doesn't matter how much you're willing to spend if there's nothing in the village to spend it on.

      How was it? Does it make sense to try that as a single dude or loneliness would be crippling?
      Any life changing experiences during your journey?

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >Does it make sense to try that as a single dude or loneliness would be crippling?
        Youre going to meet more interested women and interesting people than you will ever otherwise. The loneliness comes from losing touch when you leave.

        >Any life changing experiences during your journey?
        Bro. Imagine you are suddenly in a completely new and alien environment surrounded by alien lifeforms. The entire thing is a life changing experience.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >How was it? Does it make sense to try that as a single dude or loneliness would be crippling?
        Backpacking in general or the Pan-American drive specifically?
        The former I'd say go for it, the latter probably not.
        My longest backpacking trip was 10 months going from London to Indonesia back when I was 17/18, and while it wasn't entirely solo (my gf came out to meet me in Venice and Malaysia+Indonesia, and a couple of mates joined me in E Europe) I was on my own for at least 7 months of the trip. That is, I was alone in that I hadn't made plans to travel with anyone before I started. In many areas it's extremely easy to meet people along the way and we'd often end up travelling together for a while, longest was about a month with one of the girls I met in India and then we reunited for a couple of weeks in Cambodia+Laos. Sometimes this was an intentional effort on my part (I wanted to rent a houseboat in India but couldn't afford to do so on my own so I approached random people until I had a group), sometimes it was just by chance (some of the trails in Nepal are pretty busy and you'll often find yourself eating/sleeping at the same guesthouses as everyone else who walks at a vaguely similar pace). Stay in hostels, make an effort to talk to people and you'll be fine. That's assuming you're travelling through appropriately touristic areas of course, there's a fairly well-trod backpacker trail through certain parts of India, Nepal and SE Asia where you'll find a lot of solo backpackers all looking for company but if you step away from that trail then it can be much quieter and potentially lonelier. It's not just about the amount of tourists but the type, some places are busy but busybwith tourists rather than travellers.

        A long driving trip like the one I did with my wife would potentially be much lonelier as you'd have fewer opportunities to meet people.

        >Any life changing experiences during your journey?
        Nah.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          [...]
          How was it? Does it make sense to try that as a single dude or loneliness would be crippling?
          Any life changing experiences during your journey?

          Good read. To add...
          Most cities "on the beaten path" there's a backpacker district, where you can find other backpackers. Just sit at a bar or restaurant or in the hotel lobby and strike up a conversation. I've always been pretty introverted, but still ended up constantly talking to people along the way.
          You'll want to, because its an experience often stressful and it helps to have other westerners to talk to, never mind having friends and fun.

          And yeah if you prefer you can go off on your own, stay at locals hotels and go to cities that are ignored by backpackers and be the only white guy within 50 miles. That's also an experience worth having in your life, but it can get old and quite alienating after a while.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          (me)

          [...]
          Very nice, bros.

          [...]
          >is a young mans thing
          This is an important point and since you mentioned it, do you think early 30s is too old to "go see the world"?
          I've visited a few countries but they were short trips, the most I've spent away from home was 3months working abroad.
          Now I can could go for like 2months but I question if I'm too old for the backpacking game and should focus on other stuff rather than being the loner 30yo at hostels.

          [...]
          [...]
          Do it.

          >do you think early 30s is too old to "go see the world"?
          Not at all. I stayed in a couple of hostels at the start of my most recent SE Asia trip (I had some extra time off before my wife could join me) and it didn't all that different at 26 than it did at 17. I can't imagine it would feel any more different at 30 or 36.

          If you're still self-conscious, during our most recent Nepal trip we spent 9 days rafting down one of the rivers and that was a real mixed group of ages and situations (solo travellers, couples, friends, one teen girl with her parents). Being a 30 something dude in that group wouldn't have raised an eyebrow.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >Does it make sense to try that as a single dude or loneliness would be crippling?
        Youre going to meet more interested women and interesting people than you will ever otherwise. The loneliness comes from losing touch when you leave.

        >Any life changing experiences during your journey?
        Bro. Imagine you are suddenly in a completely new and alien environment surrounded by alien lifeforms. The entire thing is a life changing experience.

        Adding to my

        [...]
        Good read. To add...
        Most cities "on the beaten path" there's a backpacker district, where you can find other backpackers. Just sit at a bar or restaurant or in the hotel lobby and strike up a conversation. I've always been pretty introverted, but still ended up constantly talking to people along the way.
        You'll want to, because its an experience often stressful and it helps to have other westerners to talk to, never mind having friends and fun.

        And yeah if you prefer you can go off on your own, stay at locals hotels and go to cities that are ignored by backpackers and be the only white guy within 50 miles. That's also an experience worth having in your life, but it can get old and quite alienating after a while.

        If you have any ability with women, you will meet more backpacking than any other way. Its a huge hookup culture and the women tend to be a lot more interesting than your average, selection bias and all.
        I'd say yes absolutely the loneliness is losing touch, and its not so bad for a few months, but if you stay years you really just get unglued from everyone back home and need to basically restart all those relationships when you return, often as a very changed person. Many friends will be lost, and you'll likely gravitate into different social circles.
        It depends how long you go, but if its years then its going to totally change the way you see the world and your home culture (reverse culture shock is an acquired taste and the cherry on top at the end IMO).

        Especially if its not Europe you're going to, which can just be an extended party with baguettes.
        I would extremely highly recommend NOT doing Europe for this. You will have plenty of time (and more money) to do that when you're older.
        Living off a scooter or motorcycle for 6-12mo is a young mans thing, and most fathers wouldn't risk it later on (or be able to take time off). Your savings will also go waaaay further in Asia (most of it) than Italy.
        A decade ago, it was about $35/day in Asia, $100 in Europe or Japan. You can of course get very penny pinching either place, but I'm guessing its a bit more now either way. So 3 months in Europe or 9 in Asia... Asia's the bigger experience too. I wish I'd seen more of it and am jealous of the cross country anons that traveled end to end.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Staying in shared accommodation when possible is a great way to not be lonely

  3. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I've walked around the whole island of Oahu.

  4. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I plan to do pic related to the Himalayas on a CRF300L that i bought last summer. Before that some European touring so i can get experience with luggage and etc.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >I plan to do pic related to the Himalayas on a CRF300L
      Based , i was thinking about buying a crf300l and doing some touring in my country too get some experience and then hit europe

  5. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Spent 6mo backpacking SE Asia before settling down to live there 4 years.
    Did get to do some baller PrepHole trips, saw wild mustangs and wild water buffalo, elephants gibbons, macaqueshits, some other rare goats or w/e. Got caught in a swarm of jellies once. Spent a lot of time swimming in s China sea. Spent a night camping amidst brush fires and katabaric winds, lived apparently.
    Was dope, would recommend.
    Ask any qs you like

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Thru-hiked the PCT in 2018. Hitchhiked Most of the East Coast. Lived Guam for a year. Walked Okinawa North to South. Drove coast to coast Australia. Lived on Kodiak Island for 3 years fishing salmon. Seining and set-netting.

      Very nice, bros.

      [...]
      Adding to my [...]
      If you have any ability with women, you will meet more backpacking than any other way. Its a huge hookup culture and the women tend to be a lot more interesting than your average, selection bias and all.
      I'd say yes absolutely the loneliness is losing touch, and its not so bad for a few months, but if you stay years you really just get unglued from everyone back home and need to basically restart all those relationships when you return, often as a very changed person. Many friends will be lost, and you'll likely gravitate into different social circles.
      It depends how long you go, but if its years then its going to totally change the way you see the world and your home culture (reverse culture shock is an acquired taste and the cherry on top at the end IMO).

      Especially if its not Europe you're going to, which can just be an extended party with baguettes.
      I would extremely highly recommend NOT doing Europe for this. You will have plenty of time (and more money) to do that when you're older.
      Living off a scooter or motorcycle for 6-12mo is a young mans thing, and most fathers wouldn't risk it later on (or be able to take time off). Your savings will also go waaaay further in Asia (most of it) than Italy.
      A decade ago, it was about $35/day in Asia, $100 in Europe or Japan. You can of course get very penny pinching either place, but I'm guessing its a bit more now either way. So 3 months in Europe or 9 in Asia... Asia's the bigger experience too. I wish I'd seen more of it and am jealous of the cross country anons that traveled end to end.

      >is a young mans thing
      This is an important point and since you mentioned it, do you think early 30s is too old to "go see the world"?
      I've visited a few countries but they were short trips, the most I've spent away from home was 3months working abroad.
      Now I can could go for like 2months but I question if I'm too old for the backpacking game and should focus on other stuff rather than being the loner 30yo at hostels.

      thinking about going some 2000 miles on a 20 year old bike, however dumb that might be. Strictly backpacking, do you take planes, buses or hitchhike as transportation?

      I plan to do pic related to the Himalayas on a CRF300L that i bought last summer. Before that some European touring so i can get experience with luggage and etc.

      Do it.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >is 30 too old?
        Not inherently.
        The issues are when you have a family, spouse, career, mortgage, etc, there's a lot that's going to prevent you from taking 6+ months off to traipse around Asia. You also miss out on the romantic fun.
        Physically and mentally, there's nothing wrong with doing it at 30, or 50 even. I'd suggest doing it mid-20s as best, you're more mature then to appreciate the experience more, but not everyone can make that work.
        There's plenty of guys older than 30 out there, though they tend to be expats.
        But 30 is pretty young still, and I doubt any of the college aged backpackers are going to care. Especially in Asia where they might feel more comfortable having someone more adult with them. It won't be an issue, but maybe you won't be up for the crazy party schedules and all nighters any more. But that's not really the point, like I said, you should get more out of it than younger kids do.
        Of all my life decisions, this was probably the biggest and best. Even if you only have 2 months just do it. I guarantee you'll want to save up and do a second, longer trip after.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >

        thinking about going some 2000 miles on a 20 year old bike, however dumb that might be. Strictly backpacking, do you take planes, buses or hitchhike as transportation?

        (You)
        >

        I plan to do pic related to the Himalayas on a CRF300L that i bought last summer. Before that some European touring so i can get experience with luggage and etc.


        >Do it.
        I really want to but my b***h of a bike is too unreliable. c**t keeps dying randomly in the street.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >This is an important point and since you mentioned it, do you think early 30s is too old to "go see the world"?
        Don't cuck yourself with some imaginary obstruction. It really depends. If you have a wife, kids, etc., then you will have a harder time finding several months of free time. Probably not for you at that point anyways, although it isn't set in stone either that you can't leave for months if you arrange everything. If you're relatively free, I do not see why not. Physically you're still fine with going sleepless or roughing it out, assuming you're fit and not some pot bellied nerd, and if you could frick in your 20's, you can probably still frick even then, especially while travelling when girls are all more liberal with who they sleep with, if romantic adventures is what you had in mind. I've worked in hostels, and I've seen a lot of people in their 50's extensively travelling for long term. By then yes, you have aged, won't be as fit, hook ups are largely thing of past, etc. I even saw some guy in his 60's travelling a lot and sleeping in hostels, some people are just built different. If you want real adventures, don't wait for some permission to come and say "You're still young enough!". People in their 30's out there travelling don't give a frick at all. I've met many older guys, think of 35+, who had great time socializing at the hostel I was working at. If you're interesting, can talk and not come off as some sort of a creep by acting desperate or weird, you will be fine. In this day and age it's easier than ever to still stay fit and youthful for a long time, so take advantage of it. Stop being so inhibited.

        tl;dr
        Your age won't out you as a loser, your mentality will.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >hook ups are largely thing of past
          >Stop being so inhibited.
          I love it when people subtly and unconsciously send contradicting messages.

          You're like 5 years late to airbnb, most of the listings are overpriced as shit these days and hotels easily beat them price wise for short term if you're going to pay for a room. If long term, you're ripping yourself off by not going through booking with someone directly or through local agencies. I paid €540 + <100€ bills per month for a city center studio (was splitting with my gf, so effectively €300 per month) in Valencia, while similar Airbnb's were all at least 1100€ monthly much further away from city center and with worse appliances and furniture.

          t. someone who actually travels a lot

          Is it possible to travel around Europe without staying at hotels/bnbs, camping only? Or most places are too overregulated to make it practical?

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            I never said hook ups are a thing of past.

            And yes, it is possible, but you won't be using open fires or anything like that. Just stealth camp in outskirts of cities. If you're rural, it's easy. Technically illegal, but you'd have to be pretty dumb to get caught. The limit is when you get too smelly so at some point you will visit a hostel for that. I guess you could get around it by booking a place, arriving early, storing your bags and asking to use the bathroom. Usually they will also have showers. If not prepaid you can shower, take your bags and block your card before they can charge you. Not sure why you'd go through all that trouble for a shower when hostels are usually less than 20€ in most places.

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              Personally have never stayed in a dorm and wouldn't unless I was imprisoned or conscripted, but they have bathing facilities, so yeah maybe get a room every other day just for the shower or ask if they'll discount you for that and try your hand at stealth camping for super discount backpacking. Also get that thrill of semi-illegal each day, spice of life.
              Its not America so you won't get shot for trespassing, just ganked by gyppos in your sleep.
              Seems like a lot of places have woods nearby you can stealth in with a bivvy bag. Might not work for Paris or London, but the charm of Europe is in its small cities and towns anyway, not the metros, which are increasingly messy and full of refugees. See the tourist checklist attractuons in those and get out.
              My best memories are of smaller spots like Mont du st Michel or Florence or amalfi. I found larger cities to be a bit of a letdown, and the Nth castle, palace, or cathedral doesn't add much new value after a point.
              But I'm from Chicago, so I'm used to big metros and world class museums. Might be different I'd you're from KC or Kenya.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                You don't sound like you've actually been to Europe.

                >gipsies
                Gipsies don't randomly roam in the forest. You can find them in train stations and tourist hotspots where they will scam or pickpocket dumb tourists, not some bush.
                >paris or london
                Can work, just takes more time. Vagrant Holiday basically did it, although the closest I've been to really testing limits is in some park in middle of Venice.
                >refugees
                Unironically mostly Ukrainians these days and they're good people. Back in 2015 it was pretty bad, now much less so as many went back. Again, they won't be sleeping in random bushes. They're usually close to city center, near by some volunteer or government center where they get supplies like blankets, etc.

                Stop reading /misc/ as a guide and actually visit. Outskirts are only bad if you wind up in some legit shit tier neighborhood, usually it's just industry or boring housing lots.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                I've been. Didn't care for the cities. Rest was obvious tongue in cheek that your autism couldn't decode apparently.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                You just sound like a boomer waffling about things you have no idea about. Don't give moron advice if you don't want to be called out on it.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                >doubling down on angry autism.
                Enjoy sleeping in Parisian ditches with the Kenyans and algerians then lol, exactly the sort of riffraff I don't want to deal with on vacation, hence why I don't do dorms and avoid hostels, and just stay in vineyards and nice bnbs instead.
                t. le pol boomer ledditor waffler xyzlabel

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                I only read more waffle. It's past bed time, gramps.

  6. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Thru-hiked the PCT in 2018. Hitchhiked Most of the East Coast. Lived Guam for a year. Walked Okinawa North to South. Drove coast to coast Australia. Lived on Kodiak Island for 3 years fishing salmon. Seining and set-netting.

  7. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    thinking about going some 2000 miles on a 20 year old bike, however dumb that might be. Strictly backpacking, do you take planes, buses or hitchhike as transportation?

  8. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I don't want to get mugged and murdered by thirdworlders, so I just play in the woods in my own country.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      What country are you from?

  9. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    What’s so good about pretending to be a poorgay in poorgay countries? you know they know you know you’re a foreigner who’s far richer than they could ever be, yet you still LARP. What’s the use?

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >imagining scenarios to get upset about and projecting them onto a healthy discussion so you can throw a minor fit publicly
      What sort of mental illness is this now

  10. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Currently making my own hot air balloon and stocking up provisions for my intercontinental trip

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Epic

  11. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Eurogay here... Im interested in backpacking USA something like peanut and butter falcon film

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      No clue what that film is.
      Just realize the US is huge, and there's a lot of it that's just empty as the Sahara.
      I'd say backpack the west coast, Vancouver to San Diego, maybe swing by phoenix then Utah, Denver, Yellowstone, tons of amazing parks out there.
      East coast isn't as good, and Midwest has a few highlights but is mostly empty.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Check the film you will like it.
        What about florida to texas and lobster in luisiana.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          Not that anon but from living in those areas most of it is just repetitive, flat and boring. I'd imagine going Vancouver to San Diego would be nicer because you'll notice the difference as you travel vs. going through the south, where the only thing that will change is the fact that you're in a new state.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          That anon
          Other nta is right. There's not a huge difference in most of the territory between Florida and tx. It gets gradually dryer, that's it.
          Also its thee poorest part of the country with zero attractions outside a few streets in Nola.
          If you want to include Fl, go Maine Boston NYC Philly DC Asheville (area) to Miami and the keys.
          Tx isn't that interesting, its like the southernmost great plains state. There's a few neat spots, but for tourism its mogged by the other coasts and rockies.

  12. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Did Beijing to Morocco basically overland, traveled a bunch.
    I would advise to plan several months where you have no commitments afterwards, then if you feel like it just carry on.

    It's challenging in a number of ways, i certainly didn't enjoy all of it but you take that on balance

  13. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    At a minimum give yourself a week or two to decompress afterwards.

    Also I think most middle aged people aren't doing the hostel thing because they can afford actual hotels and tour guides. Now with airbnbs everywhere for basement pricing there's less reason to do hostels. But you miss out on the socializing aspect, and world chain hotels have very different vibes and travelers.
    Guides can be worth the money, but its also nice to just explore on your own and be alone in the world for a bit blowing on the breeze.

    I basically didn't plan anything out past 3 days on my trip. I often showed up places without a hotel or any clue what to do, other than I saw it on a map.
    Can't say how free that felt, just wandering at whim through a distant continent. Miss it.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      You're like 5 years late to airbnb, most of the listings are overpriced as shit these days and hotels easily beat them price wise for short term if you're going to pay for a room. If long term, you're ripping yourself off by not going through booking with someone directly or through local agencies. I paid €540 + <100€ bills per month for a city center studio (was splitting with my gf, so effectively €300 per month) in Valencia, while similar Airbnb's were all at least 1100€ monthly much further away from city center and with worse appliances and furniture.

      t. someone who actually travels a lot

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Was talking about Asia primarily
        Still prefer a good bnb over a hotel
        Went to Italy couple years back
        All bnbs and vinyard stays
        So much quieter and more "authentic" than another fricking hilton
        Got to by myself at an urban farm in some raised walled terrace overlooking Campania for like $25/ night as a cheapo option
        Or pay $100 yo be surounded by tourists and children at the Marriott
        Worth

  14. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Lived in Europe for a year, had a blast. Beautiful woods and mountains and rivers, and some truly picturesque old little towns.

    Crazy story though, I actually met a pornstar in Germany and we ended up having sex in a castle courtyard after spending a night drinking together while her friend filmed it. I used to have the video bookmarked on my old laptop after she posted it but this was almost a decade ago. Her stage name was like “Anal Baby” or something but I can’t remember it exactly and the titles of all her videos were in German. You used to be able to find it, but I shit you not a lot of her content ended up getting pulled because she got in trouble for filming herself jerking off in a church.

    Europe has some incredible beautiful landscapes, especially in the Alps, but god damn something in the water there turns people into a different kind of crazy.

  15. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    No. I've left Idaho like 4 times in my life. I have bills to pay and mouths to feed. Can't exactly explore the world when you need to be in an office 5 days out of the week your entire life with no breaks.

  16. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    i travelled through panama, colombia, ecuador and peru on buses and a boat (instead of trying to cross the darien), i was a degenerate then and was taking full advantage of easy and affordable cocaine and a <21 drinking age, but i wish i had hiked more. cotopaxi and quilotoa were absolutely beautiful.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Tell us more.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        my trip was a lot of bus rides feom city to city, usually coming down from coke, napping and then admiring the landscape around me. one of the rides was 28 hours mostly through beautifully stratified rocks and desolate mountain roads. cotopaxi is a mountain that people usually climb but i just did a day hike, it kinda looked like the surface of mars. quilotoa is a volcanic crater with a lake in it, great little hike, i got lost and saw a small village on the slope and when i was done i got shitfaced on canelazo and tried to sing with the locals at a bar. i would recommend the boat trip if you want to get between colombia and panama and have a couple days. i was in a pontoon boat with a bunch of yuros visiting islands, playing dutch drinking games and lying on the net between the pontoons looking out at the ocean. we had a line attached to the boat that caught a decent sized fish and we had sashimi, fried egg sacs and fried fish that day.

  17. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I'm going to Kenya in 2 weeks, but i'll be staying in the hotel and having fun with a lady-friend I know there.

    Might take her on safari, and the KFC franchises in Kenya are very fast -- the food is delivered within 15 minutes via motorbike. That is all.

  18. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    All over. Seven continentsnthe real deal. Took 3 months off and solo motorcycled Africa from Antonanarivo to Kinshasha on a Kawasaki old bike in the jungles and nearly was murdered, run over and bitten to death. Malarone drove me literally pathologically insane. Skirting the Congolese war was a nightmare. But Galapogos, Aussie outback, Alaska etc. Been there done that andnI've probably had my fill. It's true that a lot of the fun isnin the planning. Once you're actually out therenwithout support it can be truly horrrifying. No joke.

    t.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >Kawasaki old bike in the jungles and nearly was murdered, run over and bitten to death
      My dude you can't just say this and leave us hanging. Post more about it. Photos would be neat.

      my trip was a lot of bus rides feom city to city, usually coming down from coke, napping and then admiring the landscape around me. one of the rides was 28 hours mostly through beautifully stratified rocks and desolate mountain roads. cotopaxi is a mountain that people usually climb but i just did a day hike, it kinda looked like the surface of mars. quilotoa is a volcanic crater with a lake in it, great little hike, i got lost and saw a small village on the slope and when i was done i got shitfaced on canelazo and tried to sing with the locals at a bar. i would recommend the boat trip if you want to get between colombia and panama and have a couple days. i was in a pontoon boat with a bunch of yuros visiting islands, playing dutch drinking games and lying on the net between the pontoons looking out at the ocean. we had a line attached to the boat that caught a decent sized fish and we had sashimi, fried egg sacs and fried fish that day.

      Based.

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