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South America Shopping Guide: What to Buy in Brazil, Colombia, and Peru

South America Shopping Guide: What to Buy in Brazil, Colombia, and Peru

South America is a great destination for shopping, particularly if you are interested in things that are produced locally rather than imported and relabelled. Brazil, Colombia, and Peru stand out for the quality and authenticity of what they offe...

Machu Picchu and the Inca Empire: History, Mysteries, and How to Visit

Machu Picchu and the Inca Empire: History, Mysteries, and How to Visit

Nearly 600 years after its construction and 113 years after its re-introduction to the outside world by Hiram Bingham, Machu Picchu remains unexplained in ways that continue to fascinate. Not unexplained in the tabloid sense — the Inca built it, prob...

Alabama Travel Guide: Civil Rights History, Gulf Coast Beaches, and the South's Most Misunderstood State

Alabama Travel Guide: Civil Rights History, Gulf Coast Beaches, and the South's Most Misunderstood State

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 ...

Where Americans Loved to Travel in the 1960s

Where Americans Loved to Travel in the 1960s

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 ...

Denver's 16th Street Mall: The History Behind Colorado's Most Famous Boulevard

Denver's 16th Street Mall: The History Behind Colorado's Most Famous Boulevard

Walk the length of Denver's 16th Street Mall today and you'll pass chain restaurants, hotel lobbies, coffee shops, street performers, and the constant swoosh of free mall ride buses. It's pleasant and busy — Denver's version of a downtown promenade. ...

Viking Age Norway: History, Myths, and Where to Experience It Today

Viking Age Norway: History, Myths, and Where to Experience It Today

The Viking Age — broadly defined as the period from the first recorded Norse raid (Lindisfarne Monastery, 793 AD) to the Battle of Hastings (1066 AD) — transformed medieval Europe and established Norse seafarers as the most wide-ranging explorers of ...

Tiny Town Colorado: America's Smallest Railroad Town

Tiny Town Colorado: America's Smallest Railroad Town

Tiny Town is a miniature village in the foothills of Colorado, located in Jefferson County about 25 miles southwest of Denver off US Highway 285. It's one of those charming American roadside attractions. The History Tiny Town was built by Geo...

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...

Earthquakes in Chile: Everything a Traveler Needs to Know Before Going

Earthquakes in Chile: Everything a Traveler Needs to Know Before Going

Let me be honest with you right upfront: Chile has earthquakes. A lot of them. The country averages over 8,000 seismic events per year, and roughly one significant quake (magnitude 7+) every decade. If that scares you — stick around, because by t...

The Real Story Behind Budweiser: Did the American Beer Steal Its Name from the Czech Republic?

The Real Story Behind Budweiser: Did the American Beer Steal Its Name from the Czech Republic?

Walk into any bar in the Czech city of České Budějovice — known in German as Budweis — and order a Budweiser. You'll get a crisp, full-bodied Czech lager that has been brewed here since 1895. It has nothing to do with the American beer you might know...

The Galápagos Islands: Darwin, Evolution, and One of the World's Great Wildlife Encounters

The Galápagos Islands: Darwin, Evolution, and One of the World's Great Wildlife Encounters

In September 1835, a 26-year-old naturalist named Charles Darwin stepped ashore on the Galápagos Islands and began making observations that would, over the following decades, reshape humanity's understanding of life on Earth. Nearly 200 years later, ...

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...

Laramie, Wyoming in the 1940s: Why People Came and Should I Visit Now?

Laramie, Wyoming in the 1940s: Why People Came and Should I Visit Now?

Laramie is 7,165 feet (about 2,200 meters) above sea level in southeastern Wyoming, with the Laramie Mountains to the east, and the Medicine Bow Mountain Range to the west. Why People Came to Laramie in the 1940s The Union Pacific Railroad ...

Denver Union Station: From Wild West Railroad Hub to the Heart of a Modern City

Denver Union Station: From Wild West Railroad Hub to the Heart of a Modern City

Denver Union Station opened in 1881 and immediately established itself as one of the most important railroad junctions in the American West. At its peak, 80 trains a day passed through its platforms. Today, after a $500 million regeneration, it's the...

What You Didn't Know About Arizona (That Changes How You See It)

What You Didn't Know About Arizona (That Changes How You See It)

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...

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...

Armenia: The Oldest Christian Country in the World Is Also One of the Most Underrated in Europe

Armenia: The Oldest Christian Country in the World Is Also One of the Most Underrated in Europe

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...

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...

Littleton, Colorado: The Underrated Denver Suburb That Deserves a Closer Look

Littleton, Colorado: The Underrated Denver Suburb That Deserves a Closer Look

When people think of Colorado, they think of Denver's craft beer scene, Aspen's ski slopes, and Boulder's crunchy-tech energy. Few think of Littleton — and that's exactly what makes this city of 47,000 people just 10 miles south of Denver's downtown ...

LoDo Denver: 10 Wild Facts About the Coolest Neighborhood You've Never Fully Explored

LoDo Denver: 10 Wild Facts About the Coolest Neighborhood You've Never Fully Explored

It's just 25 blocks. But those 25 blocks contain more history, more craft beer, more hidden gems, and more genuine cool than most entire cities. Welcome to LoDo — Lower Downtown Denver — and here's why it deserves a serious spot on your travel radar....

Is North Korea Open to Tourists in 2026?

Is North Korea Open to Tourists in 2026?

For most of its post-war history, North Korea continues to operate tightly controlled tourism for foreign visitors. Western tourists travel through specialist agencies, most famously, the Beijing-based Young Pioneer Tours, on strictly supervised grou...

The Beach Where "Jaws" Was Filmed: Is Martha's Vineyard Worth Visiting Today?

The Beach Where "Jaws" Was Filmed: Is Martha's Vineyard Worth Visiting Today?

In the summer of 1974, Steven Spielberg descended on a small island off the coast of Massachusetts with a mechanical shark and a crew that had no idea they were about to make cinema history. Jaws, released in June 1975, became the first blockbust...

Hamburg: Europe's Greatest Port City

Hamburg: Europe's Greatest Port City

Hamburg is Germany's second largest city and, by historical wealth, arguably its most important. It is a city-state — one of three in Germany (alongside Berlin and Bremen) — meaning that Hamburg city and Hamburg state are the same political entity.

Mexico Travel Guide 2026: Beyond the Resorts — The Real Country and How to See It

Mexico Travel Guide 2026: Beyond the Resorts — The Real Country and How to See It

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 ...

Utah's Temple Square: The World's Most Famous Mormon Landmark Explained

Utah's Temple Square: The World's Most Famous Mormon Landmark Explained

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...

Delaware: The First State, the Best-Kept Secret, and Why You Should Finally Visit

Delaware: The First State, the Best-Kept Secret, and Why You Should Finally Visit

Delaware is the second smallest state in America by area and one of the most overlooked. Sandwiched between Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, with a narrow sliver of Atlantic coastline, it tends to get bypassed by travelers heading to bigger, l...

Where Do Germans Travel in 2025? The Statistics, Trends, and Top Destinations

Where Do Germans Travel in 2025? The Statistics, Trends, and Top Destinations

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...

How People Got Around Los Angeles in the 1940s — And How It Explains Everything About the City Today

How People Got Around Los Angeles in the 1940s — And How It Explains Everything About the City Today

Everyone knows Los Angeles as a car city. Five-lane freeways, parking minimums, the 405 at rush hour, the assumption that no one walks anywhere. But this wasn't always the case — and the story of how Los Angeles transformed from one of the world's be...

Best Day Trips from Paris: Versailles, Giverny, Champagne, and Beyond

Best Day Trips from Paris: Versailles, Giverny, Champagne, and Beyond

One of Paris's often-overlooked advantages is what surrounds it. Within a 2-hour radius of the city lies some of France's — and Europe's — most extraordinary destinations: a palace built by the Sun King to outshine every royal residence in history, t...

10 Places You Must See in Puerto Rico

10 Places You Must See in Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico is a small island — 100 by 35 miles — that contains an almost implausible amount of geographic and cultural variety. Rainforest and desert. Atlantic surf and Caribbean calm. 500-year-old walled cities and modern food markets. Glowing bays...