I have not quit my job to travel, so my comment is only partially relevant.
However at the beginning of the pandemic, when the company decided to become fully remote, we terminated our lease and started exploring the Pacific Northwest of the USA.
For last year or so we moved every week around 300 miles to a new city to explore it. If we like it, we stay longer. If we don't, we move faster. We work from the hotel rooms and Airbnbs, which proved to be less challenging we initially thought.
I spent last 15 years mostly in California, so this trip opened my eyes to the "rest" of the country which I greatly underestimated before.
However at the beginning of the pandemic, when the company decided to become fully remote, we terminated our lease and started exploring the Pacific Northwest of the USA.
For last year or so we moved every week around 300 miles to a new city to explore it. If we like it, we stay longer. If we don't, we move faster. We work from the hotel rooms and Airbnbs, which proved to be less challenging we initially thought.
I spent last 15 years mostly in California, so this trip opened my eyes to the "rest" of the country which I greatly underestimated before.