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Saint Kitts and Nevis: Why You've Never Heard of This Caribbean Country (And Why That Changes Everything)

Saint Kitts and Nevis: Why You've Never Heard of This Caribbean Country (And Why That Changes Everything)

Saint Kitts and Nevis is a two-island federation in the Leeward Islands of the Caribbean — Saint Kitts (176 km²) and Nevis (93 km²) — with a combined population of approximately 55,000 people. It is the smallest sovereign state in the Western Hemisph...

Is Grenada Safe? The Real Crime Statistics and What Travelers Actually Experience

Is Grenada Safe? The Real Crime Statistics and What Travelers Actually Experience

Grenada — a three-island nation (Grenada, Carriacou, and Petite Martinique) in the southeastern Caribbean — is consistently cited as one of the safest destinations in the region for tourists. The nuanced answer is: safer than most, not without risk, ...

Dominica: The Caribbean Island That Refused to Be Ruined by Tourism

Dominica: The Caribbean Island That Refused to Be Ruined by Tourism

Dominica (not to be confused with the Dominican Republic) has made a deliberate bet against mass tourism: it has no large resorts, no cruise-ship promenade, and no pumped-up party beach. What it has instead is a volcanic island so geologically active...

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Everything You Need to Know About the Caribbean's Hidden Sailing Paradise

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Everything You Need to Know About the Caribbean's Hidden Sailing Paradise

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines — SVG to those who visit regularly — is the kind of place that competes for very little mainstream attention and is quietly delighted about it. While the northern Caribbean buzzes with cruise ship terminals and resort...

Cuba Travel Guide 2026: Best Destinations, Costs, and Insider Tips

Cuba Travel Guide 2026: Best Destinations, Costs, and Insider Tips

Cuba is unlike anywhere else in the Caribbean. A country where 1950s American cars roll past colonial palaces, and where salsa dancing, or Casino spills out of open doorways. If you're planning a Cuba trip, this guide covers things you need to know t...

Honduras Travel Guide 2026: What You Actually Need to Know Before You Go

Honduras Travel Guide 2026: What You Actually Need to Know Before You Go

Honduras is one of Central America's most misunderstood countries by international travellers. The reputation — highest homicide rates in the western hemisphere during the early 2010s, gang violence, poverty — overshadows the reality of a country wit...

What Is El Salvador Best Known For? A Traveler's Introduction

What Is El Salvador Best Known For? A Traveler's Introduction

El Salvador — the smallest country in Central America and the only one without a Caribbean coastline — has a reputation that often precedes it: violence, gangs, emigration. That reputation, while rooted in a painful history, is increasingly outdated....

Guyana's Rupununi: Wilderness Travel in South America's Last Frontier

Guyana's Rupununi: Wilderness Travel in South America's Last Frontier

Guyana is the kind of place that serious nature travellers seek and almost no one else finds. It covers 215,000 square kilometres of northeastern South America and is 80% intact tropical forest — one of the highest percentages in the world for a coun...

Colombia Travel Guide 2026: What's Changed and What to Expect

Colombia Travel Guide 2026: What's Changed and What to Expect

Colombia's transformation is one of travel's genuinely extraordinary stories. A country that western tourists were firmly advised against visiting in the 1990s and early 2000s has become one of South America's most compelling destinations — drawing m...

Is Cuba Safe? An Honest Safety Guide for Travelers in 2026

Is Cuba Safe? An Honest Safety Guide for Travelers in 2026

One of the most common questions about Cuba: is it safe? The short answer is yes — Cuba is one of the safest countries in Latin America and the Caribbean for travelers. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. But "safe" doesn't mean "no ris...

Puerto Rico's Jungle: El Yunque, and Are There Venomous Snakes or Spiders?

Puerto Rico's Jungle: El Yunque, and Are There Venomous Snakes or Spiders?

Puerto Rico is not just beaches. The northeastern corner of the island is covered by El Yunque National Forest — the only tropical rainforest in the entire United States National Forest system. It receives up to 200 inches of rain per year, suppo...

Antigua and Barbuda: What Is Actually There (And Why It's Worth Going)

Antigua and Barbuda: What Is Actually There (And Why It's Worth Going)

Antigua and Barbuda is a two-island nation in the Eastern Caribbean, sitting between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. It's small — Antigua is about 108 square miles, Barbuda about 62 — but within that size it packs more variety than many...

Jamaica Beyond the Beach: Reggae History, Rum Bars, and the Real Island Culture

Jamaica Beyond the Beach: Reggae History, Rum Bars, and the Real Island Culture

Jamaica is the most musically significant small island in the world. From a landmass smaller than Connecticut, it produced reggae, ska, rocksteady, dancehall, and dub — genres that reshaped global popular music across five decades. Most visitors spen...

Is It Hard to See Sloths in Panama When You Travel?

Is It Hard to See Sloths in Panama When You Travel?

Panama is one of the most biodiverse countries on Earth — a narrow land bridge between two continents where species from North and South America overlap. Among the most coveted wildlife sightings for visitors are sloths. Here's everything you need to...

Trinidad and Tobago: Two Islands, One Nation, Infinite Character

Trinidad and Tobago: Two Islands, One Nation, Infinite Character

Trinidad and Tobago sits at the southernmost end of the Caribbean island chain, just 11 kilometres from the Venezuelan coast. It is a constitutional republic, has been independent since 1962, and is one of the wealthiest nations in the Caribbean — no...

LGBT Puerto Rico: How Safe and Welcoming Is the Island?

LGBT Puerto Rico: How Safe and Welcoming Is the Island?

Puerto Rico earns its reputation as the most LGBT-friendly destination in the Caribbean. As a US territory, it carries the full weight of federal anti-discrimination law and the landmark Obergefell v. Hodges (2015) Supreme Court ruling legalising sam...

Coffee Culture in Puerto Rico: A Serious Traveller's Guide

Coffee Culture in Puerto Rico: A Serious Traveller's Guide

Puerto Rico has been growing coffee since the 18th century. At its peak in the late 19th century, Puerto Rican coffee was served at the Vatican and to the royal families of Europe. The island's mountainous interior — the Cordillera Central — creates...

Why Visit Puerto Rico? 10 Reasons to Go Right Now

Why Visit Puerto Rico? 10 Reasons to Go Right Now

Puerto Rico sits in a unique position among Caribbean destinations: it offers the richness of Latin Caribbean culture — the food, the music, the Spanish architecture, the warmth of the people — wrapped in the practical ease of a US territory. No pass...

Gyms and Fitness in Puerto Rico: Where Locals Work Out

Gyms and Fitness in Puerto Rico: Where Locals Work Out

Puerto Rico takes fitness seriously. The island has a strong gym culture, a passionate CrossFit community, and the kind of outdoor training environment — ocean swims, beachside runs, year-round warmth — that makes staying active feel like a pleasure ...

San Juan, Puerto Rico: The Complete City Guide

San Juan, Puerto Rico: The Complete City Guide

San Juan is Puerto Rico's capital and its beating heart — a city where 500-year-old Spanish fortresses tower over turquoise water, streets painted in pastel blues and yellows wind between rum bars and coffee shops, and the Atlantic crashes against th...

Guam: America's Tropical Secret in the Pacific — Who Lives There, What's Going On, and Why You Should Visit

Guam: America's Tropical Secret in the Pacific — Who Lives There, What's Going On, and Why You Should Visit

Quick quiz: What is 30 miles long, sits in the western Pacific Ocean, has stunning tropical beaches, World War II history everywhere you look, a unique indigenous culture, and belongs to the United States? If you said Guam, congratulations — y...

The Dominican Republic for American Tourists: What Nobody Tells You Before You Go

The Dominican Republic for American Tourists: What Nobody Tells You Before You Go

More Americans visit the Dominican Republic than any other Caribbean island — millions per year, most of them landing at Punta Cana International Airport, getting on a shuttle, and spending their entire trip inside a Barceló or Hard Rock all-inclusiv...

5 Things You MUST Know Before Coming to Puerto Rico

5 Things You MUST Know Before Coming to Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico rewards visitors who arrive prepared. Most first-time visitors make the same set of avoidable mistakes — staying only in San Juan, not renting a car, eating only at tourist restaurants, or being surprised by the heat and the language. The...

LGBT Spaces and Events Beyond Gay Bars in Puerto Rico

LGBT Spaces and Events Beyond Gay Bars in Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico's LGBT community is one of the most visible, organised, and culturally embedded in the Caribbean and Latin America. Beyond the bar and club scene, the island has queer-affirming spaces, organisations, events, and a cultural fabric that m...

Suriname: South America's Most Diverse and Least Visited Nation

Suriname: South America's Most Diverse and Least Visited Nation

Suriname is South America's smallest sovereign nation, its only Dutch-speaking country, and one of the continent's most ethnically diverse societies on Earth. It is also one of the most overlooked destinations in a hemisphere full of overlooked desti...

Cuba's Best Beaches and Natural Wonders: From Varadero to the Untouched Keys

Cuba's Best Beaches and Natural Wonders: From Varadero to the Untouched Keys

Cuba floats in the Caribbean with over 5,700 km of coastline, more than 300 beaches, and thousands of coral keys (cayos) — many of them completely uninhabited. Whether you want a resort beach with a cocktail in hand or an empty white-sand stretch acc...

Cuban Culture: Music, Art, and the People Who Make Cuba Unforgettable

Cuban Culture: Music, Art, and the People Who Make Cuba Unforgettable

Ask anyone who's been to Cuba what they remember most, and the answer is almost never a beach. It's the music pouring from a doorway at 2 p.m. on a Tuesday. The old man rolling a cigar who tells you his life story in rapid Spanish. The couple dancing...

Cuban Food Guide: What to Eat, Where to Eat, and What It Actually Costs

Cuban Food Guide: What to Eat, Where to Eat, and What It Actually Costs

Cuban food has a reputation problem. For years, travelers repeated the same line: "the food in Cuba is terrible." That was partly true — decades of Soviet-era rationing and limited ingredients created a monotonous dining scene. But that Cuba is disap...

3 Countries Where You Can Get Citizenship Relatively Quickly

3 Countries Where You Can Get Citizenship Relatively Quickly

While second citizenship is typically acquired by birth or through length of residence, a small number of countries have changed their policies to offer citizenship in exchange for investment or residency. Here are three of the most accessible and cr...

Where to Stay in Cuba: Casas Particulares, Hotels, and the Best Neighborhoods

Where to Stay in Cuba: Casas Particulares, Hotels, and the Best Neighborhoods

Where you stay in Cuba shapes your entire experience. The island has two distinct accommodation worlds: government-owned hotels (often overpriced and underwhelming) and casas particulares (private homestays that are Cuba's secret weapon). This guide ...