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Chile is one of the most geographically extraordinary countries on earth — a sliver 4,300km long and nowhere more than 180km wide, stretching from the driest desert on the planet in the north to the sub-Antarctic wilderness of Patagonia in the so...
You already have an image of Mauritius in your head: pristine beaches, turquoise lagoon, luxury resorts. That image is accurate. What most people miss is everything else — the volcanic interior, the deep cultural hybridity, the food, the history,...
Ethiopia is unlike anywhere else in Africa — and arguably unlike anywhere else on earth. It has its own calendar (currently in the 2010s while the rest of the world is in 2026), its own writing script, its own time system, its own Orthodox Christ...
Japan consists of 6,852 islands, of which 421 are inhabited. The four main islands — Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Shikoku — account for approximately 97% of the total land area. The remaining 6,800+ are an extraordinary archipelago of volcanic peaks...
Alabama is the 22nd largest US state, bordered by Tennessee to the north, Georgia to the east, Florida and the Gulf of Mexico to the south, and Mississippi to the west. It is a state whose national reputation is dominated by its civil rights history ...
Mexico is the world's 10th largest country by area, home to 130 million people, 35 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and some of the most extraordinary cuisine, natural landscapes, and pre-Columbian history on the planet. It is also the subject of travel ...
Denver International Airport opened in 1995, ran 16 months behind schedule, cost $4.8 billion (more than double the original estimate), and immediately began generating conspiracy theories that have never quite stopped. Here's what's actually true — ...
Monaco is 2.02 square kilometres — roughly the size of New York's Central Park — and contains the highest concentration of millionaires per capita on Earth. The average apartment price is €48,000/m². A standard main course at the Hotel de Paris costs...
The 1960s were the golden age of American travel. The Interstate Highway System was brand new. Jet passenger service had just become mainstream. America was prosperous, optimistic, and eager to explore. Here's where people actually went — and why it ...
Iceland is a country literally being built by fire — it straddles the Mid-Atlantic Ridge where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates are pulling apart. Eruptions here are not rare historical events; they are a regular part of the landscape'...
There are special places on Earth. And then there is Madagascar — a world so biologically isolated that evolution took its own extraordinary path here for 88 million years. About 90% of the wildlife you'll encounter exists nowhere else on the planet....
For a country of roughly nine million people, Austria produces a remarkable concentration of goods that are either unique to Austrian craft tradition or produced here with a quality and heritage that no competitor has replicated. Shopping in Vienna —...
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...
The annual sakura season is arguably the most famous recurring natural spectacle in the world. For two to three weeks each spring, Japan's cities, rivers, roads, and temple grounds disappear beneath a soft canopy of pale pink and white flowers. The q...
Andorra's cuisine is the food of mountain people — practical, calorie-dense, built from what the high Pyrenean landscape provides, and enriched by the Catalan, French, and Spanish traditions that surround it on all sides. It is not a cuisine of inter...
Uzbekistan is one of the most architecturally extraordinary countries on earth. The Silk Road cities that pass through it — Samarkand, Bukhara, Khiva — were, for centuries, among the most important cities in the world: hubs of commerce, Islamic schol...
The famous Japan loop — Tokyo, Hakone, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka — is famous for a reason. It's extraordinary. But Japan is the kind of country where every corner you don't reach on the first trip becomes the reason for the second one. Here are the places t...
Somewhere beneath the scrubby, cracked asphalt of what used to be Route 61 in Centralia, Pennsylvania, an underground coal seam has been on fire since 1962. Smoke still seeps through fissures in the ground. The earth radiates warmth underfoot. In win...
This is not a comfortable article to write — and it shouldn't be read as an attack on the people of West Virginia, who are resilient, proud, and dealing with circumstances largely shaped by forces outside their individual control. But the data is una...
Wyoming is the 10th largest state in the US by area and the smallest by population — with just 580,000 residents, it has fewer people than the city of Memphis, Tennessee. Most Americans know it as the home of Yellowstone and maybe a cowboy hat or two...
Paris's food and drink scene operates on a different level from almost anywhere else in the world — a city of 2.1 million people with over 40,000 restaurants, bars, and cafés, ranging from three-Michelin-star temples of French gastronomy to nine-tabl...
Paris has been the most visited city on Earth for much of the past century — and it consistently earns that status. The Ville Lumière is, quite simply, one of the greatest cities ever built: a 2,000-year accumulation of architecture, cuisine, art, fa...
There are hotels in Paris — and then there are hotels where you pull open the curtains in the morning and the Eiffel Tower fills the window. If you're investing in a Paris stay and want the full cinematic experience, this guide covers the finest luxu...
If you're renting a car to explore beyond San Juan — and you should be — understanding Puerto Rico's petrol station landscape will save you several headaches. Here's the practical guide. Fuel Grades and Prices Puerto Rico uses the same fuel syste...
Norwegian food is a product of its geography and climate. Long, dark winters encourage preservation — curing, smoking, drying, fermenting. The North Sea and Norwegian Sea provide an extraordinary abundance of fish and seafood. Dairy farming thrives i...
The Northern Lights — aurora borealis — are caused by charged particles from the sun colliding with gases in Earth's upper atmosphere, producing curtains and ribbons of coloured light across the night sky. Norway, sitting directly beneath the auroral...
Germany's Romantische Straße (Romantic Road) is one of Europe's most celebrated scenic drives — a 460km route through the heart of Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg connecting the Franconian wine region to the foot of the Bavarian Alps. It passes medieva...
Wrocław (formerly the German city of Breslau) is one of Central Europe's most interesting cities — not just for its jaw-dropping Gothic and Renaissance market square, but for the layered, complicated history carved into every stone of this place that...
Auschwitz-Birkenau — the network of Nazi German concentration and extermination camps near the Polish town of Oświęcim — was the site of the murder of approximately 1.1 million people, 90% of them Jewish, between 1940 and 1945. Visiting is a solemn a...
There is a place in southwestern Bolivia where the earth becomes a mirror. After rain, a thin layer of water transforms a 10,582-square-kilometre expanse of salt into a near-perfect reflection of the sky — clouds floating below your feet, horizon dis...