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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.

Which US State Has the Best Indian Food? An Honest Breakdown

Which US State Has the Best Indian Food? An Honest Breakdown

Indian food is among the world's most complex, regional, and deeply spiced cuisines. In the United States, it's also one of the most unevenly distributed. Depending on where you live, "Indian food" might mean an extraordinary 40-item menu drawing fro...

Australian Food Guide: From Meat Pies to Modern Bush Tucker

Australian Food Guide: From Meat Pies to Modern Bush Tucker

Australia's food scene has undergone a revolution. What was once dismissed as "steak and shrimp on the barbie" has become one of the most diverse, innovative, and multicultural culinary landscapes on the planet. From Melbourne's laneway cafés to Sydn...

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...

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 ...

Health and Medical Tips for Traveling to Algeria

Health and Medical Tips for Traveling to Algeria

Algeria's healthcare system is a mix of public and private facilities. In major cities, medical care is adequate for routine issues; for serious emergencies, facilities can be limited. Here's what American travelers need to know to stay healthy befor...

Is Uganda Good for Tourists? Honestly, Yes — Here's What to Expect

Is Uganda Good for Tourists? Honestly, Yes — Here's What to Expect

Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda When most people think of East African safaris, they think of Kenya or Tanzania. Those are fantastic countries — but they are not Uganda. Uganda is different. It is greener, wilder, less touristy, and of...

Everyone Loves Americans — They Just Can't Stand Our Government: How the World Really Sees Us

Everyone Loves Americans — They Just Can't Stand Our Government: How the World Really Sees Us

If you have spent any time traveling outside the United States, you have probably noticed something interesting. People will tell you — sometimes to your face, always politely, occasionally with a beer in hand — that they love Americans but canno...

Mauritius: The Island That Does Everything Quietly and Brilliantly

Mauritius: The Island That Does Everything Quietly and Brilliantly

You already have an image of Mauritius in your head: pristine beaches, turquoise lagoon, luxury resorts. That image is accurate. What most people miss is everything else — the volcanic interior, the deep cultural hybridity, the food, the history,...

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...

Antigua and Barbuda: What Is Actually There (And Why It's Worth Going)

Antigua and Barbuda: What Is Actually There (And Why It's Worth Going)

Antigua and Barbuda is a two-island nation in the Eastern Caribbean, sitting between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. It's small — Antigua is about 108 square miles, Barbuda about 62 — but within that size it packs more variety than many...

Rwanda in 2026: Is It Safe? And What Should You Actually See?

Rwanda in 2026: Is It Safe? And What Should You Actually See?

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...

Can You Still Travel to Israel in 2026? What to Know Before You Go

Can You Still Travel to Israel in 2026? What to Know Before You Go

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. ...

What Every Traveler Should Know Right Now — April 2026

What Every Traveler Should Know Right Now — April 2026

Travel in 2026 looks different from even two years ago. Here's what's worth knowing before your next trip. Passport Processing: Plan Ahead US passport processing times have improved from the post-pandemic backlog, but routine processing still t...

Is Idaho Good for Travel? Yes — and Here's Why It's America's Best-Kept Secret

Is Idaho Good for Travel? Yes — and Here's Why It's America's Best-Kept Secret

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...

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 ...

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 ...

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...

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 ...

Doing Business in Slovenia: Why This Small EU Country Is One of Europe's Best-Kept Investment Secrets

Doing Business in Slovenia: Why This Small EU Country Is One of Europe's Best-Kept Investment Secrets

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...

Dracula Was Real: Why Romania's Vampire Legend Draws Millions of Tourists Each Year

Dracula Was Real: Why Romania's Vampire Legend Draws Millions of Tourists Each Year

Romania has built an entire tourism industry around a myth that was invented in London, based loosely on a 15th-century warlord who almost certainly never left Transylvania. The stranger truth is that the reality behind the legend — the landscape, th...

Burundi's Hidden Gems: Coffee Farms, Lake Tanganyika, and What No One Tells You

Burundi's Hidden Gems: Coffee Farms, Lake Tanganyika, and What No One Tells You

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...

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...

What Every American Traveler Should Know Before Visiting Serbia

What Every American Traveler Should Know Before Visiting Serbia

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...

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Everything You Need to Know About the Caribbean's Hidden Sailing Paradise

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Everything You Need to Know About the Caribbean's Hidden Sailing Paradise

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...

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...

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...

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...

Bangladesh: The Country You're Overlooking and Probably Shouldn't

Bangladesh: The Country You're Overlooking and Probably Shouldn't

Bangladesh receives fewer than half a million international tourists per year. For context: Bali alone receives over five million. The country is not on most radar screens, and it's worth asking why — because what Bangladesh has is genuinely remarkab...

Mongolia: What Happens When You Travel to the Emptiest Country on Earth

Mongolia: What Happens When You Travel to the Emptiest Country on Earth

Before anything else, the scale. Mongolia is the 18th-largest country in the world. It has roughly 3.3 million people. That gives it the lowest population density of any country on earth that isn't principally Antarctica. Large portions of it have no...