Find lodomap, tips, and destination info
30 posts found
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, ...
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...
The Grand Canyon is 277 miles long, up to 18 miles wide, and over a mile deep. More than six million people visit Arizona every year to see it — and a surprising number of them show up completely unprepared. Here's everything you need to know to ...
By almost any metric, Norway is one of the safest travel destinations in the world. It consistently ranks in the top 5 of the Global Peace Index. Violent crime rates are extremely low. Corruption is minimal. The rule of law is robust. Pick-pocketing ...
Cyprus is the third-largest island in the Mediterranean, located at its eastern end — closer to Beirut than to Athens, closer to Turkey than to Italy, but very much a European Union country with European standards of infrastructure, food, and safe...
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...
Rwanda is a country that demands you update your understanding of Africa. In 1994, it experienced one of the worst genocides in modern history — approximately 800,000 people killed in 100 days. Thirty years later, it is one of the fastest-growing e...
If you're planning a trip to Israel and wondering whether it's actually feasible right now — the answer is: it depends on where you're going and what your government recommends. As of April 2026, the situation is complex but not uniformly dangerous. ...
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...
Brunei Darussalam occupies a small enclave on the island of Borneo, surrounded on three sides by the Malaysian state of Sarawak and open to the South China Sea on the north. With a population of approximately 450,000 and oil reserves that have made i...
Connecticut is the third smallest US state by area and, measured by median household income and GDP per capita, historically one of the wealthiest. It sits between New York City and Boston, a geography that has always defined what it is: a sophistica...
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...
Mount Elbert rises to 14,440 feet above sea level in the Colorado Sawatch Range, making it the highest point in Colorado, the highest peak in the Rocky Mountains, and the second highest summit in the contiguous United States after California's Mount ...
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 ...
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...
Hawaii is, by most measures, one of the safest family travel destinations in the United States — low violent crime, excellent medical infrastructure, universal English, and an abundance of genuinely child-friendly activities. It is also a place where...
Between 1850 and 1920, over 1.3 million Swedes emigrated to the United States — at one point representing the third-largest immigrant group after Germans and Irish. They settled predominantly in the Upper Midwest (Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa...
LoDo or, Lower Downtown Denver is the roughly 25-block area bounded by the Platte River to the west, Larimer Street to the north, 20th Street to the east, and Speer Boulevard to the south. It is today Denver's most densely packed dining and nightlife...
Slovenia is a country of 2.1 million people at the crossroads of Central Europe — bordered by Austria, Italy, Croatia, and Hungary. It joined the EU in 2004, adopted the euro in 2007, and has since developed one of the most stable, transparent, and b...
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...
In the center of Salt Lake City, Utah, stands one of the most recognizable religious landmarks in the Western Hemisphere: Temple Square, a 35-acre complex that serves as the global headquarters and most sacred site of the Church of Jesus Christ of La...
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...
Americans who make it to Serbia almost universally say the same thing afterward: they wish they had gone sooner, and they wish they had stayed longer. This is a country that operates almost entirely outside the standard Western European tourist circu...
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...
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...
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...
Denver earns its reputation for outdoor adventure, but once the sun drops behind the Rockies, the Mile High City shifts gears entirely. The club and bar scene here has matured dramatically over the past decade — driven by a young transplant populatio...
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 ...
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...