Best Traveling With Family and Friends Quotes

Introduction

I (Paul Heller) love collecting the Best Traveling With Family and Friends Quotes for my Fifty Plus Nomad blog. I spend hours searching to find quotes that:

  • Reflect how I feel about a place or a travel-related issue
  • Add a new or interesting perspective to a discussion about a place or issue, even if I don`t agree with the author’s viewpoint.
  • Make me laugh, cry, or smile.
  • Perfectly capture a place, emotion, or issue.

I don’t include quotes about unknown places or travel experiences.

All my blog posts lead with a quote relevant to the post’s subject. I frequently post quotes on my Facebook group: Long Term Traveling and Living Abroad Over 50.

In addition, I have added several previously unseen quotes I discovered while putting together this page.

I hope you enjoy these quotes as much as I enjoyed putting them together.

Let me know if you have any additional quotes to add to this page.

9 Traveling with Friends Quotes

Life is about doing things that don’t suck with people who don’t suck.”
John Green, Paper Towns

“To have friends coming in from afar, how delightful!”
Confucius

“Good company in a journey makes the way seem shorter.”
Izaak Walton

“A journey is best measured in friends, rather than miles. 
Tim Cahill

“You never travel alone. The world is full of friends waiting to know you.
Anonymous

“Only the people you don’t know well enough seem normal. Every person you know well enough is odd, weird, and different. This is called friendship!”
Anonymous

“If you want to go fast go alone. If you want to go far go together.”
African Proverb

“There is a whole world out there. Pack your backpack, your best friend and go.”
Anonymous

“Friends that travel together, stay together.”
Anonymous

4 Love and Travel Quotes

Travel is like love, mostly because it’s a heightened state of awareness, in which we are mindful, receptive, undimmed by familiarity and ready to be transformed. That is why the best trips, like the best love affairs, never really end.
Pico Iyer

Why should a relationship mean settling down? Wait for someone who won’t let life escape you, who’ll challenge you and drive you towards your dreams. Someone spontaneous who you can get lost in the world with. A relationship, with the right person, is a release, not a restriction.”
Beau Tapin

“Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around.”
Leo Buscaglia

“Come let us be friends for once. Let us make life easy on us. Let us be loved ones and lovers. The earth shall be left to no one.”
Yunus Emre, Turkish poet

9 Family Travel Quotes

“The greatest legacy we can leave our children is happy memories.”
Og Mandino.

“Traveling in the company of those we love is home in motion.”
Leigh Hunt

“In the end, kids won’t remember that fancy toy you bought them, they will remember the time you spent with them.”
Kevin Heath

“A road trip is a way for the whole family to spend time together and annoy each other in interesting new places.
Tom Lichtenheld

“There are no perfect parents and there are no perfect children, but there are plenty of perfect moments along the way.”
Dave Willis

“Actually, the best gift you could have given her was a lifetime of adventures.”
Lewis Carroll

“Build traditions of family vacations and trips and outings. These memories will never be forgotten by your children.”
Unknown

“When you travel with your children you are giving them something that can never be taken away – experience, exposure and a way of life.”
Pamela T. Chandler

“Time is precious. Waste it wisely.'”
Unknown

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Want More Traveling With Family and Friends Quotes?

Check out these posts from Wapiti Travel (travel with friends), Livingoutlau (family),

Additional Posts About Long-Term Travel From Fifty Plus Nomad

Paul Heller has been a lifelong avid traveler and language learner and teacher, Even as a child, he told Santa Claus that he wanted to visit all the children worldwide. At seven years old, Paul wanted to retire to Mexico. At eight, he memorized the name, capital, location, and some facts about every country worldwide. At twelve, he found a book "Lonely Planet: Southeast Asia on a Shoestring" and started developing his own itinerary for a future round-the-world trip. He remained obsessed with travel; after getting a Master’s Degree in Public Administration from the University of Southern California and working as an administrator, He spent his vacations going to different countries around the globe studying language, touring, and volunteering. In 1994, he quit his job and lived in Russia as a volunteer English instructor. He discovered that he loved teaching languages. In 2004, he decided to make a living out of his travels and founded a community of people who love to travel just like him. He developed 5 three-hour classes about living and traveling long-term worldwide which he taught in over 50 adult education programs throughout the US. After his parents passed, he realized his dream of traveling around the world; cruising and touring some of the most remote places like the North Atlantic, Patagonia, and Oceania; and learning new languages (he knows Spanish, Italian, French, and Russian). Paul encourages everyone to learn foreign languages. He knows that it can be frustrating and slow but that anyone can learn a language if they put in the work and, most importantly, learning a language is well worth the time and effort because it opens up a whole new set of people, ideas, and cultures. He is currently spending the next chapter of his life in Mérida, México. He is excited about using this blog and his classes and workshops to inspire and equip fellow Fifty Plus Nomads with the language, cultural, and psychological skills necessary to be successful and happy long-term travelers and expats over 50.

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