CouchSurfing

Chummer3

Member
www.couchsurfing.com -> check it out

This is a site where people from around the world put up their "couches" for people to crash for free. Instead of staying at a hostel, you can search for people in the city you are staying at that are willing to let you stay at their house for a night or few days or whatever. Most people take their guests out to local bars or restaurants, along with showing them around town. The Michigan Daily wrote an article a few days ago about it:

After a long day of sight-seeing while traveling in Ireland, LSA

junior Jacqueline Lantz did not retreat to a hotel or a hostel, but to

a mattress in the kitchen of a stranger's floor. Lantz is a member of a

network of couch surfers - people who travel the world while relying

solely on the hospitality of the movement's other adherents.

Once a practice reserved only for old friends, family and drunken

nights, crashing couches has been revolutionized by websites like

www.couchsurfing.com - which, along with adding the convenience of

online planning, introduces a communal aspect to what would otherwise

just be finding a roof to cover your head.

The goal of what has been coined as the "Couch Surfing Project" by

the website's creators is less to save travelers a few bucks than to

create international bonds between people who otherwise would never

have met. For some University students who seek a "going abroad" or

"crossing the country" experience for less money in a fraction of the

time, spending a few nights on the couch of strangers can be an

intensive encounter with another culture.

The couch surfing website is structured much like a typical social

networking site, but with a heavy emphasis on travel. Members post

pictures, their basic information and extra tidbits like "missions"

(one surfer's mission is "To get out of the black hole that is my

hometown," while another's is "To have great people sleep on my couch,

or guest bed if you look clean enough"), as well as extraordinary

things they've seen or done, languages spoken and a personal travel map.

What members dubbed the most critical component of a couch surfing

profile, though, is the references that other members write to vouch

for (or against) a surfer after either hosting or being hosted by him

or her.

For Walter Graf, an Engineering and LSA junior who has used the

website, members' responses to his couch requests have varied based on

location. When trying to couch surf in Cologne, Germany, Graf said he

sent out at least 20 requests with no response, whereas other times

he's only sent out a few and almost all responded yes.

What makes the Couch Surfing Project so unique, though, is that members are rarely just in it for the cheap sleep.

"The social aspect is huge," Lantz said.

It's understood that hosts serve as their guest's personal tour

guide at least for a short time, giving them a local look into the

city. They go out to bars and restaurants, see the sites, and hang out

at home together.

Graf said that hosts are happy to spend time with their guests - in fact, they even expect it.

"It's not just a 'show up late at night and leave super early in the

morning' thing," he said. "They want something out of it, too. They

want to meet new people and talk."

The mode of travel offers a purer and simpler way to experience

foreign culture than foreign exchange programs that are tethered by

down payments and obligatory program events. Often, hosts will

introduce their guests to their group of friends, which could with the

right finesse become the surfer's friends - a beneficial commodity in

the realm of boundless world travel.

And even though the travel arrangements are founded on such limited

information, the results as shown in comments on the website are

overwhelmingly positive for both surfers and hosts. Rarely are negative

reviews telling of theft or unsafe situations encountered.

"I've gotten along very well with all the people I've stayed with," Graf said.

LSA junior Jenny Zhang, who couch surfed through eastern Europe with

her boyfriend, said she thinks the success rate of couch surfing is so

high because so far everyone involved in the project is of the same

congenial mindset.

"The people that open up their homes are usually the same type of people," she said. "They're very warm and welcoming."

Lantz echoed that sentiment, and added that the fact that the site

is relatively under wraps might play a role in its success. While she

encourages more people to participate, she's also concerned that couch

surfing might get too big for its own good.

"So far it's been sort of a closed off, sort of a tight-knit

community, so I'm afraid it might start to attract the wrong crowd,"

she said.

In the movement's current manifestation, lodging is without charge,

but many guests try to show their host appreciation in whatever ways

they can.

Lantz, who surfed couches in Ireland with her best friend from

college, always made dinner for her hosts and made sure to leave the

place spotless. Along with picking up the bar or dinner tab, some

guests will even help around the house to say thanks. Lantz and her

friend helped one host paint the ceiling.

And thanks to the wonders of e-mail and social networking websites,

many hosts and guests continue to keep in touch with each other long

after the couch has cleared. Lantz exchanges e-mails about once a week

with a group of people she stayed with in Ireland.

Ann Arbor denizens and University students are opening up their

homes to strange travelers, too. On the couch surfing website, there

are currently 81 listings of people in the Ann Arbor area who are

willing to share a couch.

Zhang and Graf have each received four requests for a couch. For

Zhang, two of them simply didn't work out, and one of them she rejected

because the person didn't have enough information on his couch surfing

profile.

"I felt it was kind of creepy," she said.

But Zhang and her boyfriend hosted a man from California who had an

interview with the School of Dentistry. Though his time here was short,

Zhang showed him around Main Street and State Street. They lunched at

the iconic Blimpie Burger and wound up at BD's Mongolian Barbecue for

dinner.

While the Couch Surfing Project has served to promote the movement

via the Internet, other University students still take the traditional

"mysterious drifter" approach to securing a temporary bed.

Between papers and exams, LSA senior Zach Shell travels alone to

college campuses across the country, by Greyhound buses, with no plans

on what to do or where to sleep. He's been to about 21 campuses to date.

Shell explores the city and campus during the day, meeting people

along the way, and then goes out at night. He says he's probably surfed

about 50 couches, always by simply asking a college student he's just

met if he can crash there.

He said it's all about having faith in the good will of people.

"It's mostly people trying to help you out. That's the whole theory

behind the whole thing," he said. "The confidence that I have in doing

this is that if I'm a college student and you're a college student,

you're going to try to put me up, and if you're not the next person

will."

He's stayed with everyone from his waitress at Olive Garden to a

group of guys in the Christian Men's Housing at the University of

Washington.

"It's just how you deal with it and who you meet along the way,"

said Shell. "I like having no idea where I'm sleeping that night

because I have to find it somewhere."

Even though Shell has had his failures - including spending the

night in jail, going to sleep in a park and waking up in the flatbed of

a pickup truck as well as getting $900 stolen from him by the roommate

of one of his hosts - he says that the people he meets and the stories

he collects are worth it.

 
is so sick i heard. kind of sketchy...but ive heard of friends having really good experiences with it.
 
wow i could just see so many things going badly...

i say pay the $50 to stay at a shitty hotel where you won't get raped/murdered
 
That's sounds pretty legit. I'd like to try it sometime. The whole reviews thing seems like it would make it a good deal safer.
 
y'all holler me up, although i don't have a couch, or a living room for that matter, I've got a few extra blankets and pillows and some primo real estate beside our base board heater. chea
 
Just bumping this from way back because I recently joined and was wondering if any other NS'ers are on it. I haven't experienced it firsthand but will likely be trying it out a few times this summer when I road trip.
 
I've met a few people that do it. It's not sketchy, people have ratings and feedback and stuff. It seems fun (and a cheap way to travel).
 
or more....

that is such a good idea tho, there should be a new forum created. the couchsurfing forum. and i think thats a extremely great idea, especially with a website like this thats a fairly tight knit community of people all with similar interests/hobbies/idea's
 
youve obviously never stayed in a south seattle hotel. i swear to fucking god youll find a few needles on the ground, and a passed out junkie in the closet. id way rather sleep on some college kids couch, i got a big knife.
 
Probably just more butt peeing... But yeah I have a couch in Breckenridge that I wouldnt mind loaning to some newschoolers...
 
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