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What It's Actually Like to Be an American Walking Around Iran: Culture Shock, Hospitality, and Everything In Between

What It's Actually Like to Be an American Walking Around Iran: Culture Shock, Hospitality, and Everything In Between

You land in Tehran. You walk out of the airport into a country that your government tells you not to visit, that your media portrays as hostile, and whose leaders regularly chant "Death to America" on television. You're nervous. And within 30 minutes...

How Long Would It Take to Walk Every US State? (And Who Has Actually Done It)

How Long Would It Take to Walk Every US State? (And Who Has Actually Done It)

The continental United States is roughly 2,800 miles wide and 1,600 miles tall. Walking it — really crossing every state on foot — is one of those challenges that sounds like a thought experiment but has, in fact, been done. Several times. By people ...

The Buckhorn Exchange: Denver's Oldest Restaurant and Its Wild History

The Buckhorn Exchange: Denver's Oldest Restaurant and Its Wild History

Denver has no shortage of great restaurants, but none of them come close to matching the history of the Buckhorn Exchange. Open since 1893, it's the oldest restaurant in Denver, Colorado, and one of the most unusual dining experiences.

Is Lebanon Safe to Travel in 2026?

Is Lebanon Safe to Travel in 2026?

***The advice of the UK FCDO, US State Department, and most European foreign ministries as of May 2026 is Level 4 "Do Not Travel" for Lebanon.*** Lebanon entered 2026 in a way that its residents describe as "the new normal" which is to say, be...

What Dutch People Actually Think About Tourists (And How to Be a Better Tourist)

What Dutch People Actually Think About Tourists (And How to Be a Better Tourist)

The Netherlands, and Amsterdam in particular, is heavily touristed but unfortunately it has resulted in disruptive and disrespectful behavior due to a prevailing perception that "anything goes." "Amsterdam Is Not a Theme Park" In 2023, ...

Best Time to Visit Cuba: Weather, Seasons, Hurricanes, and Month-by-Month Guide

Best Time to Visit Cuba: Weather, Seasons, Hurricanes, and Month-by-Month Guide

Cuba has a tropical wet and dry climate with two distinct seasons, and knowing "whether" or not to go during certain times of the year can make or break your trip. This month-by-month guide covers Cuba's weather, hurricane risk, tourist seasons, and ...

Is Algeria Safe for American Travelers in 2026?

Is Algeria Safe for American Travelers in 2026?

Many people associate Algeria with the civil conflict of the 1990s called the "Black Decade" or Algerian Civil War but that era is over. But, modern Algeria, while not without challenges, is safer than its reputation would suggest. Current US Sta...

Safety Guide for Travelers in the United States

Safety Guide for Travelers in the United States

General Safety The United States is generally safe for tourists, but like any country, it's important to stay aware of your surroundings and take standard precautions. Emergency Numbers Dial 911 for all emergencies (police, fire, ambulance). Thi...

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

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

Singapore defies easy description. It is a city, a country, and an island all at once — a place where a 10-minute taxi ride takes you from a gleaming financial district to a Hindu temple festooned with carved gods to a Chinese opera house to a Mal...

Romania Health Guide for Travelers: What You Need to Know Before You Go

Romania Health Guide for Travelers: What You Need to Know Before You Go

Romania is a great destination, from Transylvania's forested mountains, the monasteries of Bucovina, to the Danube Delta, but like any destination, it comes with health considerations worth understanding. Is Romania Safe to Visit (Health-Wise)? Y...

Cyprus: 9 Reasons You Should Actually Go

Cyprus: 9 Reasons You Should Actually Go

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...

Italy's Hidden Side: 8 Places Most Tourists Never Find

Italy's Hidden Side: 8 Places Most Tourists Never Find

Italy has a well-worn tourist trail: Rome, Venice, Florence, the Amalfi Coast, Cinque Terre. They're famous for a reason, and they're worth seeing. But Italy is a country of 20 regions and thousands of years of layered history. What follows are ei...

5 Must-See Places in Brunei You Would Never Expect from the World's Most Oil-Rich Tiny State

5 Must-See Places in Brunei You Would Never Expect from the World's Most Oil-Rich Tiny State

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...

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.

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 ...

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...

Is Grenada Safe? The Real Crime Statistics and What Travelers Actually Experience

Is Grenada Safe? The Real Crime Statistics and What Travelers Actually Experience

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: Petra, Wadi Rum, and Why This Middle Eastern Kingdom Surprises Every Visitor

Jordan: Petra, Wadi Rum, and Why This Middle Eastern Kingdom Surprises Every Visitor

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 ...

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...

Can You Actually Rent a Place in Vatican City? The Truth About Living There

Can You Actually Rent a Place in Vatican City? The Truth About Living There

Vatican City is the world's smallest internationally recognised state — 44 hectares, 800 permanent residents, and no airport, no railway station open to the public, and no conventional accommodation sector. There are no hotels within the Vatican's wa...

Which Japanese City Has the Most Cherry Blossoms? The Sakura Capital Debate

Which Japanese City Has the Most Cherry Blossoms? The Sakura Capital Debate

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...

Bihar, India: The Birthplace of Buddhism and One of the Most Overlooked States in Asia

Bihar, India: The Birthplace of Buddhism and One of the Most Overlooked States in Asia

Most people could not find Bihar on a map. This is a significant oversight in world cultural geography, because Bihar is where some of the most important events in Asian and world history took place — and where the physical traces of those events can...

Nelson, New Zealand: The Sunniest City You've Never Made Plans to Visit

Nelson, New Zealand: The Sunniest City You've Never Made Plans to Visit

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 ...

The Dominican Republic for American Tourists: What Nobody Tells You Before You Go

The Dominican Republic for American Tourists: What Nobody Tells You Before You Go

More Americans visit the Dominican Republic than any other Caribbean island — millions per year, most of them landing at Punta Cana International Airport, getting on a shuttle, and spending their entire trip inside a Barceló or Hard Rock all-inclusiv...

Why Japan Is One of the Safest Countries in the World — And What Still Requires Caution

Why Japan Is One of the Safest Countries in the World — And What Still Requires Caution

Japan's reputation as one of the world's safest countries for travelers is not exaggerated. It's built on real data, deep cultural values, and a daily social contract that most visitors immediately register — even if they can't fully explain it. Walk...

Japan Beyond Tokyo: The Places That Ruin Every Country That Comes After

Japan Beyond Tokyo: The Places That Ruin Every Country That Comes After

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...

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...

Taiwan in 7 Days: The Island That Fits an Entire World Into One Trip

Taiwan in 7 Days: The Island That Fits an Entire World Into One Trip

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 ...

Why Laos Is the Best Country in Asia to Do Absolutely Nothing

Why Laos Is the Best Country in Asia to Do Absolutely Nothing

You could spend a week in Laos and have nothing to show for it — no certificates climbed, no tours completed, no bucket-list check marks. You'd have a sunburn from sitting on a riverboat. A notebook half-filled with things you noticed. A slow accumul...