In your application? You mean covering letter? Or was there space to write all that in the company's application form/ site?
It was an online application so there was no covering letter, and if I remember correctly (it was several years ago), there were different sections which asked for specific information regarding how you met the job description and you needed to give examples of when in your life you had used all the skills they asked about - so I was able to integrate my travelling and things into those answers.
And then in the interview I could expand on them - so when I was asked about working in a team, I could use the example of working together with my friends to climb a 14,000 ft volcano in Guatemala... in the middle of the night... and helping each other when we struggled to keep going. In her application and interview, one of my colleagues used examples of being a scuba diving instructor in Australia one summer.
It was those kinds of examples that we believe got us the job over other people (apparently they had 400 applications for only about 20 vacancies), whereas another girl who was more qualified in meteorology than me didn't get the job and we think it was because she didn't have any interesting examples of using her skills - all of her examples were related to working on academic projects at university and she didn't really have anything non-academic that she could expand on.
So, when applying for a job as a meteorologist, in my case I had:
- undergrad degree in physics
- postgrad degree in seismology/geophysics
- no knowledge of meteorology (other than from high school)
- 10 years of customer service experience (retail)
- experiences of living on my own in the US for 18 months, travelling around the US with friends, spending a month in Guatemala climbing volcanoes, spending 6 weeks travelling in South America
So while I had no experience in the field of meteorology itself, I got the job over people with masters degrees in meteorology, and I believe that was because of my non-academic experiences (some of those people with masters degrees didn't even get an interview).