Welcome to my blog!
My name is Sami Godlove and I am currently the Central Oregon Field Coordinator for the nonprofit Oregon Wild. I previously spent 18 months on a post-undergrad journey around the world. On this blog you will find everything from landscape and adventure photography, to travel tips and advice from personal experience, my own essays and introspective commentary on travel and place, and the conservation work I am passionate about.
I come from a family that has been infected by a severe hereditary epidemic of the pathogen known as the ‘travel bug.’ Before this particular trip, I had visited a total of 13 countries around North America, Central America, East Asia and Southeast Asia. I credit this passion for travel to my parents–who met backpacking in New Zealand and have made travel a part of their lives ever since. Other hobbies of mine stem from my childhood growing up in Bend, Oregon, where I spent winters skiing the snow-blanketed volcanic slopes of the Cascades and summers hiking, biking, and kayaking the various trails, rivers, and lakes in the area.
I recently graduated from the The College of Idaho with a Liberal Arts degree in Environmental Studies and a minor in Journalism. Many of the photos I take and posts I write reflect my areas of study in conservation biology and sustainability. Where I’m still in the process of determining the path I aim to pursue in life, I know travel and writing will always be a part of it. The current trip I am embarking on began as a dream when I was a freshmen and gradually took shape as I researched more and worked odd jobs over the summers (like working in a salmon processing plant in Alaska!) in order to save up for the voyage of a lifetime.
Thanks for visiting my page! Let this website be your guide and inspiration to finally buy that ticket and take the trip of your dreams, or–if you’re my mother–to keep track of my adventures and make sure I am staying clear of trouble.