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Algeria's Political Landscape: What Travelers and Business Visitors Should Understand

Algeria's Political Landscape: What Travelers and Business Visitors Should Understand

You don't need to be a political scientist to visit Algeria, but understanding the political context enriches your experience and helps you navigate conversations. Algerians are deeply political people — politics is a common topic of discussion, and ...

American Samoa Travel Guide: The USA's Most Remote Territory and Most Pristine Island

American Samoa Travel Guide: The USA's Most Remote Territory and Most Pristine Island

American Samoa is an unincorporated territory of the United States in the South Pacific Ocean, approximately 2,600 miles southwest of Hawaii. Its approximately 55,000 residents are US nationals (not citizens by birth, in a legal distinction that co...

North Macedonia Travel Guide: Everything You Need to Know About the Balkans' Most Overlooked Country

North Macedonia Travel Guide: Everything You Need to Know About the Balkans' Most Overlooked Country

North Macedonia is a small, landlocked country in the southern Balkans bordered by Albania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Kosovo. It was part of Yugoslavia until 1991, spent the following 25 years in a diplomatic standoff with Greece over its name (r...

Portugal's Oldest Places: A Guide to the Ancient Sites Every Visitor Should See

Portugal's Oldest Places: A Guide to the Ancient Sites Every Visitor Should See

Portugal is one of the oldest nation-states in Europe — its borders have remained essentially unchanged since 1139 AD — and its physical landscape tells a much longer story. Here are the ancient and historic sites that every visitor seriously interes...

Kuwait Travel Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Visit

Kuwait Travel Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Visit

Kuwait is a small, oil-rich emirate at the northwestern tip of the Persian Gulf — bordered by Iraq to the north and Saudi Arabia to the south. With a population of around 4.8 million (of whom roughly 70% are expatriates), Kuwait is one of the world's...

America's Most Mysterious Places: From Sedona Vortexes to Skinwalker Ranch

America's Most Mysterious Places: From Sedona Vortexes to Skinwalker Ranch

The United States is a young country built on ancient geology, indigenous spiritual traditions, frontier mythology, and a national character that has always been captivated by the unknown. The result is a remarkable inventory of places that generate ...

The Netherlands by Bike: Why the Dutch Built the World's Best Cycling Infrastructure

The Netherlands by Bike: Why the Dutch Built the World's Best Cycling Infrastructure

There are 23 million bicycles in the Netherlands — more than one for every person. Every day, Dutch people cycle 14 million kilometres collectively. The country has over 35,000 kilometres of dedicated cycle paths. This is not a quirk of Dutch charact...

Travelling Chad: Saharan Dunes, Camel Caravans, and the Ennedi Plateau

Travelling Chad: Saharan Dunes, Camel Caravans, and the Ennedi Plateau

Chad is not a destination for the casual traveller. It has limited infrastructure, a complex political history, and requires serious logistical planning to visit responsibly. It is also, for adventurous travellers willing to put in the work, among th...

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....

What You Cannot Do in Qatar: A Traveler's Honest List

What You Cannot Do in Qatar: A Traveler's Honest List

Qatar has made remarkable efforts to welcome international visitors — particularly during the 2022 FIFA World Cup and beyond. But it remains a conservative Islamic monarchy with strict laws that are genuinely enforced. Here's an honest, practical gui...

Is Eswatini Safe to Travel? An Honest Safety Guide

Is Eswatini Safe to Travel? An Honest Safety Guide

Eswatini — the small landlocked kingdom formerly known as Swaziland, surrounded by South Africa and Mozambique — rarely makes international headlines except during its annual Reed Dance. For most travelers, it's an afterthought between Kruger Nationa...

Estonia: 7 Things That Will Genuinely Surprise You About This Country

Estonia: 7 Things That Will Genuinely Surprise You About This Country

Estonia is easy to overlook on a map. Small, northern, tucked between Latvia and the Gulf of Finland — it sounds like a footnote to more famous European destinations. That's a mistake. Estonia is one of the most surprising, quietly extraordinary coun...

Business Travel in Brazil: What You Need to Know Before Your First Trip

Business Travel in Brazil: What You Need to Know Before Your First Trip

Brazil is the ninth-largest economy in the world by nominal GDP, the largest in Latin America, and the most important business destination on the continent. It has a diversified industrial base, a massive consumer market of 215 million people, deep n...

San Marino: Where Is It, Why It Exists, and Why You Should Visit

San Marino: Where Is It, Why It Exists, and Why You Should Visit

If you draw a circle on a map of Italy midway between Bologna and Rimini, about 20 kilometres inland from the Adriatic coast, you will find a small mountain with a tiny country on top of it. San Marino — the Most Serene Republic of San Marino, offici...

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...

South Sudan: The World's Youngest Country and Its Complex Story

South Sudan: The World's Youngest Country and Its Complex Story

On 9 July 2011, South Sudan officially separated from Sudan and became the world's newest independent nation. After decades of civil war between the predominantly Christian and animist south and the Arab Muslim north — a conflict that had cost an est...

Why Do Chinese People Travel to Lesotho? The Surprising Answer

Why Do Chinese People Travel to Lesotho? The Surprising Answer

When people ask why Chinese nationals travel to Lesotho, the assumed answer is usually tourism — and then the follow-up question is an incredulous "but why Lesotho?" A tiny, landlocked mountain kingdom completely surrounded by South Africa, with a po...

Suva: Fiji's Capital City and the Pacific's Hidden Urban Gem

Suva: Fiji's Capital City and the Pacific's Hidden Urban Gem

When most people picture Fiji, they picture white sand, turquoise water, and overwater bungalows. Suva, the capital, gives you something completely different — and arguably more interesting. It is a real working city with a market, a museum, a vibran...

Sana'a: Capital of Yemen, Cradle of One of the World's Oldest Cities

Sana'a: Capital of Yemen, Cradle of One of the World's Oldest Cities

At an elevation of 2,300 metres above sea level and with a recorded history stretching back over two and a half millennia, Sana'a is among the most remarkable capital cities in the world. It is the capital of Yemen — a country that sits at the southw...

Andorra's Population: Who Actually Lives in Europe's High Mountain Micro-State?

Andorra's Population: Who Actually Lives in Europe's High Mountain Micro-State?

Andorra may receive 8 million visitors per year, but the people who actually live there year-round number only around 77,000 — making it one of Europe's least populous sovereign states. The story of who lives in Andorra, how they got there, and what ...

Canal Street: The Grand Thoroughfare of New Orleans in the 1900s

Canal Street: The Grand Thoroughfare of New Orleans in the 1900s

Canal Street at the turn of the 20th century was one of the most impressive commercial boulevards in the United States. At 171 feet wide — one of the widest streets in the country, a width that required two sets of streetcar rails and still left room...

Is Mali Safe to Visit? An Honest 2025 Assessment for Travelers

Is Mali Safe to Visit? An Honest 2025 Assessment for Travelers

Mali occupies a profound place in world history. Timbuktu — the ancient Saharan city that became synonymous with farthest remoteness in European imagination — was, in the 14th century, a city of 100,000 people, an Islamic scholarly capital, and a com...

Wild Horses on the Beach in the USA: Where to Find Them, How to See Them, and Why They're There

Wild Horses on the Beach in the USA: Where to Find Them, How to See Them, and Why They're There

There are places on the American East Coast where you can walk along the ocean and see horses — genuinely wild, unmanaged, government-protected horses — grazing in the dunes, standing belly-deep in the surf, or trotting across the sand with the Atlan...

Why You Should Go to Cameroon: Africa in Miniature Awaits

Why You Should Go to Cameroon: Africa in Miniature Awaits

Cameroon is called "Africa in miniature" — and the nickname earns its keep. Within the borders of a single country you'll find dense equatorial rainforest home to gorillas and forest elephants, an active stratovolcano that towers over the Atlantic co...

Can You Visit Syria in 2026? The Most Honest Answer Possible

Can You Visit Syria in 2026? The Most Honest Answer Possible

Syria was, before 2011, one of the most underrated travel destinations in the Middle East: a country of extraordinary ancient cities, exceptional food, and some of the most significant historical sites on earth. The civil war that began in 2011 devas...

How Cheap Is Sri Lanka Really? A Traveler's Honest Breakdown of Costs

How Cheap Is Sri Lanka Really? A Traveler's Honest Breakdown of Costs

Sri Lanka is often mentioned in the same breath as Thailand and Vietnam as one of Southeast Asia's (technically South Asia's) great budget destinations. And it is genuinely affordable — for accommodation, food, local transport, and attractions, you...

Khartoum: What Was Once Africa's Most Fascinating Capital — And What It Is Now

Khartoum: What Was Once Africa's Most Fascinating Capital — And What It Is Now

Before anything else, the geography demands acknowledgment: Khartoum sits at the exact point where the Blue Nile — rushing blue-gray from the Ethiopian Highlands — meets the White Nile, which has traveled pale and sluggish from Lake Victoria in Ugand...

Heydar Aliyev International Airport: Why Baku's Gateway Is One of the Coolest Airports in the World

Heydar Aliyev International Airport: Why Baku's Gateway Is One of the Coolest Airports in the World

Most airports are infrastructure — something you pass through to get somewhere else. A few airports are, genuinely, destinations. Heydar Aliyev International Airport in Baku, Azerbaijan is in a third category: a building that makes you stop before yo...

Canada is Not What You Think: 10 Things That Genuinely Surprise Visitors

Canada is Not What You Think: 10 Things That Genuinely Surprise Visitors

Canada has a branding problem. Not a bad one — "nice, clean, polite, cold, hockey" is perfectly respectable — but it understates the country dramatically. Canada is enormous, geologically weird, historically complex, and home to some of the world's m...

Hong Kong Apartments: Can You Actually Live in a Big Space There?

Hong Kong Apartments: Can You Actually Live in a Big Space There?

Hong Kong has a global reputation for tiny apartments. You've probably seen the viral photos: shoebox studios the size of a parking space, bunk beds stacked in what were originally industrial storage units, "coffin homes" where elderly residents re...