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Mike
Mike

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Coding Out of a Van in New Zealand

We all know about remote jobs and how productive you can still be outside of an office setting. But what about working remotely? And I mean really remotely.

I have been traveling the world for the past 6 months, working remotely as a Software Engineer. Currently I have been in New Zealand for the past couple months, traveling the islands, taking tons of pictures, and working remotely - all from the comfort of my campervan. Striving for that ultimate work/life balance, optimizing any free time to go exploring, and to enjoy my passion of photography.

I get asked quite often how I'm able to work on the road, and how I deal with keeping connected. I figured I'd share my experience so far and what's unique to coding remotely! I won't bore you with the details of utilizing slack for communication, and how to deal with timezones as I'm sure every digital nomad article out there touches on that. Instead, I'll share the quirks and challenges that I deal with on the road - from finding places to work at to searching for the next place to spend the night.

Places to work

When you're on the road...the road is your workplace! I find a balance between coffee shops, libraries, or even just out of the campervan very flexible.

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And you get to work out of some pretty awesome places:

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(ok this is actually in Melbourne, Australia, but it'd definitely one of the coolest libraries I've been to).

But it's not all picturesque. I've definitely had some late nights in airports, buses, and hostels trying to hotfix some bugs.
or when it's rainy outside and you're confined to the campervan...

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Internet

This is a TOUGH one. When you're mobile, you're relying on public wifi (cringe 😬. Don't worry, I practice safe public wifi usage.) and tethering off of your mobile phone if you have signal.

For security concerns and speed, I tried to always tether off my phone. In New Zealand, pay-as-you go phone plans average about $70-80NZD (~$50USD) for 40-50GB. However once you run out, additional data becomes astronomical. I've seen $20NZD for every GB extra!

Needless to say, rationing of data became very real and I have a new appreciation towards the movement of towards Progressive Web Applications and keeping things RAIL - that is to make the web smaller, faster, and more efficient.

I ended up hopping network providers every time I ran out of data. Also have my US sim card (Google Fi) for emergency data.

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(sim card graveyard)

Places to spend the night (or just work from).

New Zealand is one of the easiest places to live in a campervan - Freedom Camping.

All over the country are designated camping spaces where you can freely park, camp, and sleep from! These spaces most often have amenities such as toilets, dump stations (for your van), and sometimes have free wifi!

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I found these sites the best to hunker down and get some long hours of work done without any distractions.

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(Yeah, thats a freedom camping site. Cellular signal was great too!)

There are also a number of paid campgrounds with showers, kitchens, secured wifi (sometimes unlimited), and common lounging areas. I do recommend these for when you want a little bit of "luxury".

The Work-Life balance

This may seem like a lot of effort, just to travel - and you're right it is. In fact, I'm quite exhausted just typing all of this out! While coding and Software Engineering are my professional passions, photography and hiking are my personal passions. Traveling to the ends of the earth, waking up at 2am to hike to the top of the mountain just to catch the sunrise. It's what keeps my mind fresh and helps to bring new ideas to my life and career.

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Quick plug for my instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pixelsight/

It's a journey not for everyone, but hopefully I've inspired some of you to try and find that work-life balance, no matter how extreme it is! Thanks for reading!

Oldest comments (34)

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sebalinares profile image
Sebastian Linares L.

Wow, this was kind of an "inception" for me, lol. Loved the photos in your IG 👏🏽📸

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

Haha thank you!

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florincornea profile image
Cornea Florin

Woow, awesome lifestyle!

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spuccia profile image
spuccia

What a wonderful job!

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drewtownchi profile image
Drew Town

Great pictures! NZ is one of my must visits. I can't say camper life is necessarily for me but I could probably do a few days in one. 😊

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

Thanks! I'd definitely give it a go for a few nights. NZ is very spread out and the campervans allow you to visit remote places. That being said, there are some quite luxurious campervan/RV options and some nice resort-style campsites with amenities.

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richzendy profile image
Edwind Richzendy

Awesome! thanks for sharing your experience, how about the social relationships there? why you don't use co-working places?

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

I've got some friends luckily in the Auckland area. Aside from that, I've been meeting a ton of tourists from around the world and hanging with them for a few days to a week at a time. I probably have 20+ connections from Germany alone so far!

Co-working It's a bit tricky in New Zealand as there are not many large cities aside from Auckland, Christchurch, and Wellington. And keeping mobile for photography is one of my motivations in staying in a van. I did do quite a bit of co-working in Australia when I was more city-based.

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chris_bertrand profile image
Chris Bertrand

Awesome! kudos for doing it, and for writing this post! Inspirational!

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

Thanks! Just hoping to inspire a few!

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damntrecky profile image
Nick Ardecky

Great share. I can only imagine how good "CamperMate" sounds being said with an accent... I'm from the states.

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

Oh yeah, it's even better when you extend that mate. CamperMaaaaate.

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crongm profile image
Carlos Garcia ★

My experience is not as extreme as yours, but a job that lets you work remotely or "from home" is a beautiful benefit. I live in Mexico and I've had the chance to travel my country and work from different big cities, small towns, the beach, and I even got to travel abroad, know different places, and keep working anywhere. I even got to visit Sweden!

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

Glad to hear it! The world is too large to stay in the same spot for too long.

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kingo55 profile image
Robert Kingston

Nice photo up on Roy's peak!

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mikeschultz profile image
Mike

Thanks! Woke up at 2am to hike that to catch the sunrise...but was worth it!

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dana94 profile image
Dana Ottaviani

Very inspirational, thanks for sharing.