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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...
In the far south of Poland, where the country meets Slovakia, the Tatra Mountains rise abruptly from the rolling Carpathian foothills to form the only genuinely alpine landscape in Central Europe north of the Alps. The Polish Tatras — a 175 square ki...
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...
Most people picture desert when they think of Algeria — and yes, the Sahara covers 80% of the country. But Algeria's natural diversity goes far beyond sand dunes. From lush coastal forests to snow-capped mountains to volcanic rock formations that loo...
Canada is the second largest country in the world by area — 9.98 million km², slightly larger than the entire continent of Europe — and has a population of approximately 40 million people. That ratio of land to people produces a country where 90% of ...
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...
Idaho is the 14th largest US state and sits between Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Montana. It is most famous nationally for potatoes (it produces about 30% of the US crop) and for being the state most people struggle to locate precis...
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...
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 ...
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...
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, ...
Jordan is the Middle Eastern country most Western travellers approach with the least expectation and leave with the most enthusiasm. It is small (roughly the size of Indiana), almost entirely desert, with very few natural resources — and it contains ...
Arizona is the fourth largest state in the US and one of the most misunderstood. Most people's mental image is red sand, cacti, and the Grand Canyon. The reality is a state of extraordinary ecological and cultural diversity — here are the things that...
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 — ...
The pub in Ireland predates the nation itself. For centuries it served as the community centre, the post office waiting room, the wake venue, and the only heated place to meet in a wet country. That history hasn't gone away. Walk into the right pub o...
Burundi sits in the heart of Africa's Great Rift Valley, wedged between Rwanda, Tanzania, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Most itineraries skip it entirely. That is exactly the point. The Coffee You've Never Heard Of Burundian coffee is...
Indonesia is the world's largest archipelago nation — 17,508 islands, 270 million people, and a geography that makes getting from one place to another a fundamentally different logistical challenge than in any continental country. What has emerged fr...
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...
Denver's Cherry Blossom Festival — formally the Sakura Matsuri — is one of the largest Japanese cultural celebrations in the American interior. Hosted annually by the Japan-America Society of Colorado, the event brings together Japanese-American heri...
There are not many places in the world where the country and its capital share an identical name — Montenegro and its capital Podgorica come to mind, though they are distinct. Djibouti is different: the capital city of Djibouti is simply called Djibo...
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...
Nepal's monkeys are not a wildlife sighting — they are a participant in daily Nepali life. In Kathmandu Valley and throughout the hills, rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) move through temples, rooftops, and forest edges as naturally as the forest does...
Germany is a nation of travelers. With a strong passport, generous vacation entitlements, and one of Europe's highest standards of living, Germans collectively take hundreds of millions of trips per year — and the destinations they choose, the amount...
Switzerland has 26 cantons, and most international tourists visit a handful: Geneva, Zürich, Lucerne, the Bernese Oberland, Zermatt and the Matterhorn. Uri — the small, largely German-speaking canton at the center of the country, around the southern ...
Most New Zealand itineraries follow a predictable path: Auckland, Rotorua, Wellington, Queenstown, Milford Sound. It's a fine itinerary. But travelers who deviate from it — who take the ferry across Cook Strait and drive west at the top of the South ...
Armenia adopted Christianity as its state religion in 301 AD — over a decade before the Roman Empire. That fact is a useful introduction to what kind of country this is: ancient in a way that isn't metaphorical, shaped by history with a weight that's...
Vietnam does not ease you in. You land in Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City and immediately the motorbikes, the heat, the smell of pho and exhaust, the honking, the sellers, and the sheer density of it all hit at once. Some people love it immediately. Some p...
Taiwan is one of those destinations that people put off because they're not quite sure what it is — not fully China, not quite Japan, its own complex and fascinating thing. Then they go, and they can't stop talking about it. The food alone justifies ...
Before traveling to the Middle East, safety is the first question most people ask — and for Oman, the answer is genuinely reassuring. The Global Peace Index regularly places Oman among the top 10% safest countries in the world. Crime against tourists...
Most people planning a Middle East trip think of Dubai's towers or Jordan's Petra. Far fewer think of Oman — and that's one of the things that makes Oman so extraordinary. It's a country that hasn't been over-explained, over-touristed, or turned into...