Travel bucket list: best holiday ideas

Destination inspiration featuring Mexico's Copper Canyon and historic Southwell

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The Copper Canyon by train

El Chepe railway passes through the Copper Canyon

El Chepe railway passes through the Copper Canyon

(Image credit: eskystudio/Shutterstock)

Winding over Mexico's Sierra Madre mountains from the Pacific coast to the city of Chihuahua, the "legendary" El Chepe railway passes through the Copper Canyon, a series of ravines and gorges that rival the Grand Canyon in their beauty and grandeur. It's a glorious journey, said Adrian Bridge in The Daily Telegraph – and there's now a particularly splendid train in which to make it. Launched five years ago, the Chepe Express is "a joy to the eye", with its deep-green and royal-blue carriages, and offers "comfortable" accommodation including a glass-domed observation car in first class. Spend a day or two in Posada Barrancas, to explore the canyon on foot, by horse and via zip wire, and take the train from nearby Divisadero to El Fuerte, the most "dramatic" stretch of track, affording a series of "incredible" views.

Southwell's historic treasures

Southwell Minster in Nottinghamshire

Southwell Minster in Nottinghamshire

(Image credit: Nahlik/Shutterstock)

It is home to just 7,000 people, but the Nottinghamshire market town of Southwell was an important place in the Middle Ages, and harbours historical riches that belie its diminutive size. Chief among them is its "magnificent" minster, said Neil Clark in the Daily Mail, a huge Romanesque church with an unusually "friendly" air. Sir John Betjeman held that there was no ecclesiastical building more beautiful, and Sir Nikolaus Pevsner dedicated a 1945 monograph to the exquisitely naturalistic gothic carvings of foliage, animals and green men in its octagonal Chapter House. But there's much else to see in Southwell too, including the Saracen's Head – the inn where Charles I spent his last night as a free man – and the Southwell Workhouse, the best-preserved 19th century workhouse in the country.

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A family holiday in Austria's lake district

Wolfgangsee lake in Austria

Wolfgangsee lake in Austria 

(Image credit: saiko3p/Shutterstock)

With its soaring peaks and "crystal clear" waters, Austria's lake district – the Salzkammergut – is a delightful place for a multi-generational family summer holiday, said Neil Fisher in The Times. Book a farmstay such as Hauslhof, where the Hinterbergers accommodate guests in several cabins and in a "well laid-out" apartment in their own house. There is plenty of fauna to keep children happy (including miniature ponies and even an occasional fawn), and a garden overlooking a big lake, the Wolfgangsee. Last month, locals in picturesque Hallstatt, nearby, protested against mass tourism (the village is believed to be the model for Arendelle in Disney's "Frozen", a curse that brings 10,000 visitors a day in high season). But there are much quieter lakeside towns to visit, lake beaches where there is good swimming, and no end of lovely hiking trails. See hauslhof.com

A short stay in Burlington

Burlington is the most populous city in Vermont

Burlington is the most populous city in Vermont 

(Image credit: Sean Pavone/Shutterstock)

"Sitting on Lake Champlain and framed by the Green Mountains and New York's Adirondacks", Burlington – the most populous city in Vermont, with just 45,000 residents – attracts weekend visitors for its beauty, its farm-to-table food and its "progressive sensibility", said Kristina Samulewski in The New York Times. A new crop of bars and restaurants has opened up recently to add to the stallholders at the farmers' market, many of them artisans who "embody Vermont geniality". To work off your lunch, you could walk or cycle along the eight-mile Burlington Greenway, which leads to Waterfront Park, with its wonderful lake views. As well as being home to Ben & Jerry's ice cream, Vermont is famed for its many breweries – more per capita than any other state, it is said – so it makes sense to visit one of them. Just behind Waterfront Park, Foam Brewers has a range of its own beers on sale, and also hosts music events, DJ nights, gigs by local and touring bands, art openings and other events. 

Wallingford: Agatha Christie's tranquil home

The historic market town Wallingford in Oxfordshire

The historic market town Wallingford in Oxfordshire 

(Image credit: Alexey Fedorenko/Shutterstock)

In 1934, Agatha Christie had just caused a sensation with "Murder on the Orient Express" and was in search of somewhere to escape her fame. She found it in Wallingford, a tranquil market town on the Thames in Oxfordshire. The Queen of Crime acquired the five-bedroomed Winterbrook House – and lived "a life of relative anonymity" there for the next 40 years, under her married name of Mallowan. The town, with its cobbled streets and 19th century corn exchange, still has a "quiet gentleness", said Angela Epstein in the Daily Mail. However, it is no longer keeping its famous former resident "under wraps". A corner of the town's museum is devoted to her life, and there are themed walking tours that take in her grave. The River Thames is the other great attraction: there is a little beach along a straight stretch of it just outside the town; there is also an open-air pool by the river. 

Something for everyone in Jutland

Lokken Beach in north Jutland

Lokken Beach in north Jutland

(Image credit: Lars Meinel/Shutterstock)

Although often overlooked by travellers heading to Copenhagen, the Jutland peninsula is remarkably easy to get to and "offers something for all the family", said David Nikel in Forbes. With its deep Viking roots, the area is a treasure trove for history buffs. And while it may lack the "dramatic scale" of some Nordic beauty spots, it has a fabulously diverse landscape that takes in wild beaches, dense forest and expansive heathlands. In season, there are numerous festivals to enjoy. For culture vultures, there is also the city of Aarhus, with its lively arts scene, or Aalborg, which is one of the oldest towns in Denmark. And for children there is, of course, Legoland.

East African adventure: gorillas, Masai Mara and Zanzibar

A silverback mountain gorilla in Rwanda

A silverback mountain gorilla in Rwanda

(Image credit: Onyx9/Shutterstock)

Go on an East African adventure with Wayfairer Travel's new 11-day "Gorillas, Masai Mara & Zanzibar" package which takes in three jewels of the region: Rwanda's Parc National des Volcans, Kenya's Masai Mara and the coastline of Zanzibar. The undoubted highlight of the trip is a trek up into the Virunga Volcanoes, where guests will spend one magical hour with the last of the mountain gorillas. After the gorilla trek, take a tour of Rwanda's capital city Kigali before flying to Kenya for a classic big five safari in the Masai Mara. Here guests can enjoy game drives, guided walks and authentic cultural experiences. The trip will conclude with relaxation on the beautiful beaches of Zanzibar. From £7,550 per person; wayfairertravel.com

A garden in Northumberland

Belsay Hall, Castle and Gardens in Northumberland

Belsay Hall, Castle and Gardens in Northumberland

(Image credit: English Heritage )

One of England's loveliest Greek-revival buildings, Belsay Hall in Northumberland, has recently been subject of a refurbishment costing £3.4m – a fair chunk of which has gone on restoring its glorious grounds, said Sean Newsom in The Times. In its formal gardens, the landscape designer Dan Pearson has conjured "soft, billowing clouds of colour" that evolve through the spring and summer. More striking still is the celebrated quarry garden, created in the early 19th century. A deep, winding canyon seething with an extraordinary array of subtropical plants (some with leaves "the size of upturned golf umbrellas"), it is like "a glasshouse with the roof blown off" – a magical sight amid the surrounding farmland. Combine your trip with a visit to Cragside, another house with a remarkable garden, set above a gorge. 

Sierra de Guadarrama: hiking with Hemingway

Sierra de Guadarrama in Spain

Sierra de Guadarrama in Spain

(Image credit: JMN/Cover/Getty Images)

The mountains of the Sierra de Guadarrama were the site of the fierce Spanish Civil War battles that inspired Hemingway's 1940 novel "For Whom the Bell Tolls". Today, they're a popular escape from Madrid, only 30 miles away, said James Patterson in The Sunday Times – and yet you can still walk for hours here in solitude. On one of The Natural Adventure's self-guided, Hemingway-themed hiking trips, you'll stay at good hotels and enjoy daily luggage transfers as you make your way from the "huge" palace-monastery of El Escorial to the historic city of Segovia. En route you'll pass by various reminders of the war, including the "pharaonic" tomb of General Franco, and the Puente de la Cantina, on which Hemingway is said to have modelled the bridge that his pro-Republican hero, Robert Jordan, plans to destroy. A six-night trip costs from £645pp, excluding flights; thenaturaladventure.com

Lake Mergozzo: Lake Maggiore's little sister

Lake Mergozzo in Italy

(Image credit: Juergen Wackenhut/Shutterstock)

The great mountain lakes of northern Italy (Maggiore, Como, Garda) are among the country's best-known draws. But little Lake Mergozzo – a couple of miles from Maggiore – sees relatively few visitors, and has "an authenticity that will delight even the most seasoned of Italophiles", said Kiki Deere in The Daily Telegraph. Its main town, Mergozzo, is "charming", and nearby is Piccolo Lago, a restaurant with two Michelin stars and a glass dining room commanding "gorgeous" views of the lake. There's hiking and cycling to enjoy in the surrounding mountains (don't miss the hamlet of Montorfano, with its Romanesque church), and some pleasant places to stay, including Casa Castagna 1620, a townhouse with five guest rooms, and Casa della Capra, where the owners offer art workshops, food tours, cycling trips and more.

A lonely walk on Chesil Beach

St Catherine’s chapel overlooking Chesil Beach in Dorset

St Catherine’s chapel overlooking Chesil Beach
(Image credit: Mark Godden/Shutterstock)

An 18-mile “ribbon of wilderness” that stretches along the Dorset coast, Chesil Beach has been immortalised in fiction, from Thomas Hardy’s “The Well-Beloved” to the eponymous Ian McEwan novella. Its loose shingle makes it difficult – indeed, potentially “ankle-shredding” – to walk here. Some think it “monotonous”, too, said Oliver Smith in the FT, but I found the beach “calming”, with its pebbles “raked by wind and tide” like in a Zen garden. Particularly “eerie” is the eight-mile stretch between Portland and Abbotsbury, where a lagoon separates the beach from the mainland, so there’s no way off but to walk on or walk back. It tends to be lonely going, and perhaps made only more haunting by the sight of the abandoned medieval chapel, St Catherine’s, perched on a hill at the Abbotsbury end, like “a lighthouse for souls”. 

Svalbard in the summer

Midnight sun on Longyearbyen waterfront in Svalbard

Midnight sun on Longyearbyen waterfront in Svalbard
(Image credit: Kylie Nicholson/Shutterstock)

In winter, Norway’s Svalbard archipelago is the place to go for husky sledding, snowmobiling and seeing the Northern Lights. In summer, these Arctic islands feel very different, said Anna Murphy in The Times. Delicate wildflowers emerge from the scree beneath their “vast buttressed cliffs”, and the lightness of the nights lends a dreamlike quality to every view. Summer also offers the chance to see polar bears, as the ice pack melts and the animals head onto land to hunt. On the main island, Longyearbyen, the Isfjord Radio Adventure Hotel makes for a stylish but adventurous stay. As well as the bears, there are walruses, Arctic foxes, reindeer and whales to spot. Boat trips afford fabulous views of calving glaciers, and back at the hotel there’s haute cuisine on offer, and a “remarkable” sauna set on rocks beside the ice-cold sea. Original Travel has a six-night trip from £3,295pp, including flights; originaltravel.co.uk

A weekend in Cincinnati

Cincinnati in Ohio is a ‘deeply American’ city

Cincinnati in Ohio is a ‘deeply American’ city

(Image credit: Agnieszka Gaul/Shutterstock)

Located in the heart of North America and now “super accessible”, thanks to new British Airways flights from Heathrow, Cincinnati makes a good starting point for a road trip. But it’s worth spending a bit of time in this “brawny, historic, sometimes handsome, deeply American” city, said Sean Thomas in the Daily Mail. You could watch a game at the stadiums of the Cincinnati Reds or the Bengals, and try the “infamous” Cincinnati chili (spaghetti with chili, cheddar, chocolate and more) at the Findlay food market. Stay in Over-the-Rhine, a “historic, boozy, gritty yet up-and-coming neighbourhood” with good boutique hotels. And don’t miss the American Sign Museum (“brilliant in a pure Americana-in-neon way”) or the Freedom Centre, a “seriously moving” tribute to the slaves who once fled here from Kentucky. 

The great wilderness of Bhutan

Punakha Dzong in Bhutan

Punakha Dzong in Bhutan
(Image credit: Kashyap Shantanu/Shutterstock)

Travel company The Luminaire has launched a nine-day experience exploring the great wilderness of Bhutan, the Buddhist kingdom in the eastern Himalayas. Guests will be guided through Bhutan’s pristine landscapes by expert environmentalists and participate in the work of the local conservationists preserving the kingdom’s rich biodiversity. Activities include descending into the valley of Punakha to the Mo Chhu (Mother River) to explore it by raft, visiting the Unesco-protected Boudhanath Stupa, and sustainable foraging for wild edible orchards. From £16,990 per person based on two travellers and including all accommodation, activities, transfers and some meals; theluminaire.com

Heavenly views in the Hebrides

Castle Stalker in Scotland

Castle Stalker is set on a tidal islet on Loch Laich, an inlet off Loch Linnhe
(Image credit: ZibiZ Photo/Shutterstock)

There can be few more wonderful spots from which to contemplate the Inner Hebrides than the village of Portnacroish, said Antonia Quirke in The Sunday Times – and now there’s a great new place to stay on the hillside just above it. An “uncluttered” studio made of glass and cedar, Stormhouse South commands “breathtaking” views down Loch Linnhe to Castle Stalker (the island fortress seen at the end of “Monty Python and the Holy Grail”), and the isles of Lismore and Mull beyond. It feels “very remote”, but lies within easy reach of Oban and Fort William, and still closer to some decent eateries, including The Old Inn in Appin and The Pierhouse Hotel in Port Appin. Lismore – an “utterly lovely” island with a “bohemian, almost Mediterranean” air – is ten minutes away by ferry. A five-night stay costs from £1,750 for two.

Fort Myers: a historic resort town in Florida

Fort Myers beach in Florida

Fort Myers beach in Florida
(Image credit: Earl Marshall Nicholson/Shutterstock)

Set on Florida’s southwest coast, an hour from Tampa, Fort Myers offers a “refined” taste of the state, said Mark Porter in the Daily Mail, with some fabulous beaches, and “no Mickey Mouse in sight”. Henry Ford and Thomas Edison had neighbouring summerhouses here (now a single museum), and the high street is still “grandly porticoed” today, and home to restaurants such as The Veranda (all “lacquered teak and ceiling fans, fresh seafood and old money”). Stay at the “stylish” Luminary Hotel, and at the ’Tween Waters resort on nearby Captiva, one of a string of sandy barrier islands shadowing the coast. From there, you can go on a cycle tour of the “Ding” Darling Wildlife Refuge (but watch out for alligators), and kayak in Pine Island Sound, where manatees can be seen.

A bear-spotting trip in the Fagaras Mountains, Romania

Brown bears in Romania

Brown bears in Romania
(Image credit: Cristian Zamfir/Shutterstock)

Romania’s Fagaras Mountains are among the best places in Europe to see bears – and sightings are even more likely if you stay in the “stylish” hides run by Foundation Conservation Carpathia, said Mark Stratton in The Daily Telegraph. Bankrolled by a Swiss billionaire, this NGO owns 66,000 acres of the region’s forests, and is working to establish a national park almost ten times larger – roughly the size of the Lake District. The hiking in the area is “glorious”, and there’s “cosy” visitor accommodation including a guesthouse, a glampsite and two hides, one (the four-bed Comisu) overlooking an Alpine meadow, and the other (Bunea, with six beds) set in a forest glade. Bears are regular visitors to both sites, and there’s much other wildlife to spot, including wild boar, wolves, lynx and bison, recently reintroduced to the area. Journeys with Purpose has a four-day guided tour from €2,450pp, excluding flights; journeyswithpurpose.org

Cape May: New Jersey’s seaside jewel

Cape May in New Jersey

Cape May in New Jersey
(Image credit: FotosForTheFuture/Shutterstock)

Known as the “Queen of the Seaside Resorts”, Cape May in New Jersey was the summer playground of presidents in the 19th century, and still makes for a “serene and sophisticated” escape from the nearby cities of Philadelphia and New York, said Cathy Toogood in The Daily Telegraph. The town’s huge, golden beach is the main attraction, but it also has a lively arts scene, wild surroundings and beautifully preserved Victorian architecture (much of it painted in “cheerful shades of cornflower blue, lemon, pink and sage”). Sign up for a historic street tour (the Cape May MAC trolley tour is among the best), ride a “railbike” out along the tracks of the old seashore railroad, past beautiful salt marshes and wildflower meadows, and be sure to take a whale-watching boat tour in Delaware Bay, where sightings are “extremely common”. 

Cycling around Camembert

The French village of Camembert

The French village of Camembert
(Image credit: Josef Sobotka/Shutterstock)

For lovers of cheese and gentle cycling, it’s the perfect trip, said Chris Allsop in The Times – a journey through the “rumpled” heart of Normandy taking in three villages that have lent their names to some of the region’s finest fromage. Hire an e-bike from Locvélo at the Ouistreham-Caen ferry port and head first for Camembert, whose local museum offers tastings. Next comes Livarot, where a tour of Graindorge Fromagerie is not to be missed. And the final stop is Pont l’Évêque – beyond which the pretty seaside towns of Deauville and Honfleur lie within easy reach. The route takes you through “a haze of hamlets overflowing with geranium-filled flower boxes”, and there are other “boutique” producers of cheese (such as La Ferme de l’Instière) and cider (such as Bellou Manor) to visit along the way. See normandie-tourisme.fr and locvelo.fr

The secrets of Orford Ness

The Black Beacon on Orford Ness

The Black Beacon on Orford Ness
(Image credit: Chrislofotos/Shutterstock)

A 12-mile spit of shingle and reed marsh caught between the River Alde and the sea, Orford Ness in Suffolk is a National Trust nature reserve of “stark” and “fragile” beauty. But the hulking remains of concrete buildings across it testify to a darker past, said Simon Ingram in The Sunday Times – as a testing ground for some of the 20th century’s key military technologies, including radar and the atomic bomb. These structures – from the windmill-like Black Beacon to the “sinisterly derelict” Control Room – lend a surreal and unsettling edge to any visit, and there’s an excellent exhibition, “Island of Secrets”, for anyone interested. Still, “shingle, sky and sea” are powerful presences too, and so is resurgent nature, with sea pea and sea campion “enlivening the stones”, and many animals to spot, including hares, otters and a rich array of birds.

A culinary journey through the fjords of Norway

Fjords in west Norway

Fjords in west Norway
(Image credit: pelorusx.com)

Experiential travel company Pelorus has launched “A Taste for Adventure”, a foodie journey through the fjords of west Norway created in partnership with luxury travel operator 62°NORD and culinary experience company SKANDL. The five-day package features masterclasses led by chefs from Michelin-starred restaurants, accommodation at 62°NORD properties Union Øye or Storfjord Hotel, immersive dining experiences and activities including Nordic fishing, foraging, and food preparation techniques. Available from March to November, “A Taste of Adventure” starts from £100,000 for a group of six guests travelling for five days. This includes all experiences, accommodation at Union Øye or Storfjord Hotel, logistics planning, domestic transport, and dining experiences. International flights are not included. pelorusx.com

Wildlife spotting in Mull

Tobermory is the main town on the Isle of Mull

Tobermory is the main town on the Isle of Mull
(Image credit: Apostolis Giontzis/Shutterstock)

Mull, the second-largest of the Inner Hebrides, is “less afflicted by coach-tour logjams” than Skye and has “whopping wildlife”, said Paul Bloomfield in The Daily Telegraph. “Massive golden and white-tailed eagles, wingspans topping two metres, soar above glens grazed by magnificent red deer”; “minke breach waves to the west, joined by bottlenose dolphins and harbour porpoises”. “Somewhat smaller but no less charismatic are the otters and seabirds around Mull’s coast and offshore islands”, particularly Staffa, which is famed for the extraordinary polygonal basalt pipes of Fingal’s Cave. Between taking all this in, you could visit the “venerable” Tobermory Distillery, or “savour a dram in the Mishnish, the legendary live-music pub”. There is “real local spirit”, and Tobermory – familiar to viewers of the children’s BBC TV show “Balamory” – has the kind of “rainbow-hued harbour for which postcards were invented”. 

Madeira’s year-round charms

Camara de Lobos on Madeira island

Camara de Lobos on Madeira island
(Image credit: Serenity-H/Shutterstock)

“Madeira has a subtropical climate and boasts year-round sunshine,” said Daniel Lavelle in The Guardian, so “there’s never a bad time to visit”. The island is the emerged top of a dormant volcano, and its fertile soils have produced a lush landscape. There is an abundance of trails, caves, beaches and taverns to explore; and outside Funchal, the capital, “it’s all reasonably priced”. Nearly every bar serves drinks with a hearty portion of “pickled lupin beans, monkey nuts, and occasionally chicken wings and salted fish”, which means you “could probably eat a day’s fill here for the cost of a pint in the West End”. There are, of course, piña coladas and sun loungers for those who want them, but the island has far more to offer than that: “in fact, it has a little something for everyone”.

A road trip in northern Spain

Cabo Vilan lighthouse on the ‘Coast of Death’ in Spain

Cabo Vilan lighthouse on the ‘Coast of Death’ in Spain
(Image credit: Migel/Shutterstock)

“As monikers go,” said Sarah Gordon in The Times, “the Coast of Death isn’t the most welcoming, which is a shame, because there are few stretches in Spain that offer such pristine beauty.” On this serrated coastline in the north of the country, thousands of ships have been wrecked, and fishermen still battle rough seas to provide kitchens with octopus, barnacles and scallops. And yet the Costa da Morte also has “quiet beaches of powdery white sand, sleepy villages, rustic restaurants and a clutch of new boutique hotels”. The best way to explore it is to take a road trip: start at the village of Buño, once a centre in the region’s pottery trade, then “wend your way along coastal roads, dipping into empty beaches such as Soesto or stopping at dramatic lookout points including Punta da Barca”. You may even find that the Coast of Death is remarkably “full of life-affirming experiences”.

Glorious moorland in Yorkshire

Heather covers the North York Moors in Yorkshire

Heather covers Yorkshire in a ‘hallucinogenic haze of pinks and purples’
(Image credit: Helen Hotson/Shutterstock)

“Yorkshire’s ‘God’s Own Country’ boastfulness can be annoying, but when it comes to moorland heather, there’s no contest,” said Helen Pickles in The Daily Telegraph. From August until September, it coats the North York Moors in a “hallucinogenic haze of pinks and purples”. You can see it from the roadside, or enjoy it in a more immersive way on foot. Several walks start from Rosedale Abbey, including a circular walk via Lastingham, where the Norman church, St Mary’s, has a “splendidly preserved crypt”. A more ambitious walk is the 109-mile Cleveland Way, which “encircles much of the moors” and starts in Helmsley. There’s wildlife to see too, and “as it’s Yorkshire” there’s always a reviving pint or cup of tea not far away.

Exploring Stockholm’s archipelago

Stockholm’s archipelago spans more than 650 square miles

Stockholm’s archipelago spans more than 650 square miles
(Image credit: Valkird/Shutterstock )

Stockholm’s archipelago is “astounding”, said Ingrid K. Williams in The New York Times. “Shaped like a fan spreading out from the capital into the Baltic Sea, this watery region spans over 650 square miles”, and comprises somewhere between 24,000 and 30,000 islands and islets. These are rarely visited by foreign tourists, but for Swedes they are “a quintessential summer destination”. Many islands are accessible by ferry, bus or car, “but the vast majority can be reached only by motorboat or sailboat, which one can rent with or without a skipper”. A recommended stop is Svartsö, which has a good, seasonal restaurant, and glamping options (you’ll need to reserve a tent well in advance). “With so many islands, so many things to do and see”, the hard part of visiting the archipelago is often just deciding how to spend your time.

In the saddle in Kyrgyzstan

Horse riding in Kurumduk valley, Naryn province, Kyrgyzstan

Horse riding in Kurumduk valley, Naryn province, Kyrgyzstan
(Image credit: imageBROKER.com/Alamy Stock Photo)

With its “Heidi-esque” mountain scape and its hospitable – and horse-centric – nomadic culture, Kyrgyzstan is a joy to explore in the saddle, said Sarah Siese in House & Garden. On one of Alexandra Tolstoy’s 11-day riding tours, guests sleep in “spacious” tents and eat “appealing” food (such as pumpkin dumplings and fresh river trout) prepared by a local mother-and-daughter team. The tour starts in the capital, Bishkek, where there are trips to the Osh Bazaar (“a jamboree of delicious colours, textures and smells”) and the National Museum of Fine Arts. The riding starts a day’s journey away in the Sary-Chelek Nature Reserve, a “charmed” region in the Tian Shan mountains. There’s much cantering through meadows of wild flowers, and a bit of crossing of “waist-high rivers”, and jagged passes. Equally wonderful are the meals shared with local people in their yurts, and don’t miss the chance to watch a game of ulak tartysh – a polo-style contest with a headless goat carcass for a ball. From $5,700pp, excluding flights; alexandratolstoytravel.com

Unplugged ‘digital detox’ escape in north Wales

‘Marley’ cabin in north Wales

‘Marley’ cabin in north Wales
(Image credit: Unplugged)

If you feel that it’s time to put down the mobile, log off social media and embrace all things nature, then maybe a “digital detox” is in order? Unplugged, which provides digital detox cabins, has recently unveiled “Marley”, its first cabin in Wales and 18th in its portfolio. Located in the Dee Valley area of outstanding natural beauty, Marley is “sustainably built, runs on solar power and is fitted with panoramic windows”, said the Manchester Evening News. This allows guests to “wake naturally, swap blue light for starlight, and enjoy north Wales’s luscious, rolling green hills”. Visitors staying at the “off-grid retreat” have the option to “lock their phones in a lockbox” for the duration of their stay and swap them for an “old school” Nokia mobile, with games like “Snake” included. There’s also an “instant camera with film and a physical map to explore the area’s scenic surroundings”. Minimum of three nights start from £390 per cabin; unplugged.rest

Balloon safari across the Serengeti

See the Serengeti’s iconic wildlife from a hot air balloon

See the Serengeti’s iconic wildlife from a hot air balloon
(Image credit: Paul Joynson-Hicks/Aardvark Safaris)

Aardvark Safaris, in partnership with Serengeti Balloon Safaris and Wayo Africa Fly Camps, is offering its first ever balloon safari across the stunning Serengeti National Park from 1-7 November 2023. Starting and finishing in Arusha, this safari adventure “takes to the skies each day to traverse the Serengeti”, said TravelMole, and includes four nights fly-camping in “star cocoon tents”. Each morning, guests will be flown by hot air balloon to a new wilderness spot from where they can explore and discover the area with both walking safaris and traditional wildlife drives. Highlights include panoramic views while flying up to 2,000ft above the Serengeti and close-up wildlife encounters while flying at grass level. Available through Aardvark Safaris from £7,995 per person, based on two sharing, the price includes all transfers, four nights full-board fly-camping, two nights b&b at Rivertrees Inn Arusha, four extended balloon flights, guided walking and 4x4 safaris, all drinks on safari, guided activities in Arusha, and return internal flights from Arusha to Serengeti. aardvarksafaris.com

Touring hidden Vietnam

Motorbike tours with Vintage Rides in Vietnam

(Image credit: vintagerides.travel)

A motorbike tour with Vintage Rides is an “exhilarating” way to explore the “vast” landscapes and remote villages of northern Vietnam, said Charlie Thomas in the FT. A strong sense of “camaraderie” always develops on this operator’s 12-day group trips, and the welcome from local people is invariably warm and enthusiastic. Within an hour of leaving the busy capital, Hanoi, you’re in the deep countryside, often riding narrow, unpaved tracks unsuited to larger vehicles. Some of the accommodation is spartan, but food is superb, including plenty of “incredibly fresh and spicy” bowls of pho. And the scenery is wonderfully varied, with “jagged mountains” giving way here and there to emerald plains where farmers in their nón lá conical hats work the rice paddies surrounded by dizzyingly strange towers of karst limestone. The trip costs from €3,430pp; vintagerides.travel

A poetry cure in Shropshire

The Poetry Pharmacy in Bishop’s Castle, Shropshire

The Poetry Pharmacy in Bishop’s Castle
(Image credit: visitshropshire.co.uk)

Set in the hills of Shropshire, the “bohemian” market town of Bishop’s Castle is a delightful place, with its vertiginous streets of multicoloured houses and fine cafés. So too is its Poetry Pharmacy, said Ian Belcher in The Sunday Times – a former ironmonger’s shop where the writer Deborah Alma (the resident “pharmacist”) prescribes poems, from John Donne to Seamus Heaney and beyond, to help people banish the blues. There’s a café downstairs where the “terrible puns” (cups of T.S. Eliot, slices of Philip Parkin) might make you smile, and a consulting room with a chaise longue from which customers share their happiest memories with Alma, who then tailors her recommendations accordingly. The “cosy” Castle Hotel has a one-night Poetry Package from £299 for two, including consultations; thecastlehotelbishopscastle.co.uk

Lakeside safari in Zimbabwe

Fothergill safari camp in Zimbabwe

Fothergill safari camp in Zimbabwe
(Image credit: fothergill.travel)

Created 70 years ago by the damming of the Zambezi, Lake Kariba is the world’s largest artificial reservoir – but though man-made, its surroundings are wonderfully wild. On its southern shore, in Zimbabwe, a new safari camp, Fothergill, has given the area its first luxury accommodation, said Lisa Grainger in The Times. Occupying a 20,000-acre private concession abutting the Matusadona National Park, it has a good chef, “friendly, knowledgeable” guides, and “spacious” tents with private decks. A “wildlife paradise” in the 1970s, Matusadona was ravaged by poaching, but is recovering fast under the stewardship of the NGO African Parks. There is lion, elephant and much other big game to see, and the avian life, from “iridescent” sunbirds to the lake’s “iconic” fish eagles, is spectacular. Mavros Safaris has 10 nights from £6,300pp, including domestic flights; mavrossafaris.com

Glamping in the wilds of Utah

A view over Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah

Adventurers and stargazers will enjoy glamping in the Bryce Canyon National Park
(Image credit: Kiyoshi Tanno / Getty Images)

Known for its immense sandstone chasms and the hoodoos (cathedral-like rock spires) that tower within them, Utah’s Bryce Canyon National Park is a paradise for adventurers, says Samantha Falewée in Travel + Leisure. Go to hike, bike, climb and more, and consider staying at Under Canvas Bryce Canyon, a new glamping retreat set on a 700-acre site nearby. It has safari-style tents with king-size beds and “full en-suite” bathrooms, and “outdoor rec” areas where people sip almond-milk lattes around campfires. Staff are a helpful source of information on local adventure tour operators, including Western Canyons Trailrides (for excellent horseriding trips) and Zion Guide Hub, which offers activities such as canyoneering – an experience liable to leave you with “a childlike sense of elation”.

Family trip to Gothenburg

The Liseberg amusement park in Gothenburg

Gothenburg city is celebrating its 400th anniversary this year
(Image credit: Johner Images / Getty Images)

Founded in 1621, Gothenburg, Sweden’s second city, is celebrating its 400th anniversary late owing to the pandemic. It’s a great time to visit with children, says Rhonda Carrier in The Guardian, as the festivities planned through the year include lots of fun things for them to do. You can also explore its canals on a self-drive electric boat, and swim in the new open-air swimming pools in its former docklands. There is also the Liseberg amusement park. It was the city’s gift to itself on its 300th birthday, but it has been much modernised since. It has a superb array of rides, a newly opened hotel (the Liseberg Grand Curiosa) with “quirky” features including a spiral slide between the top floor and the lobby, and two family friendly museums, the Världskulturmuseet (devoted to world culture) and the Universeum (devoted to science).

Africa House at Royal Malewane

Africa House at Royal Malewane

(Image credit: theroyalportfolio.com)

Located in South Africa’s Greater Kruger National Park, Royal Malewane “mixes up colonial and contemporary style”, said The Telegraph, with “gourmet cuisine” and “stellar service”. “Spectacular” wildlife sightings are “right on the doorstep” of this intimate boutique lodge and the “first-rate” guides are among the “most experienced in Africa”. Royal Malewane is home to a range of accommodation and facilities, including luxury safari lodges, private bush villas and luxury bush spas. Africa House, a stunning exclusive-use bush villa, has reopened after being redesigned by owner Liz Biden. The villa features six bedrooms for up to 12 guests and private services include a chef, guide, tracker and up to two safari vehicles. There’s also a courtyard, pool table and games, a long room and a swimming pool. Rates at Africa House start from £15,140 per night inclusive of private services and game drive vehicle; theroyalportfolio.com

A ride along an Irish branch line

A family of four cycle along an old railway line turned bicycle lane in Ireland

The 25 mile Limerick Greenway is a delightful trail for walkers and cyclists
(Image credit: Limerick Greenway)

From County Mayo to County Waterford, sections of Ireland’s abandoned railways are being transformed into delightful off-road trails for walkers and cyclists. Among the latest of these upgrades is the Limerick Greenway, says Pól Ó. Conghaile in National Geographic Traveller, which follows a 25-mile stretch of the old Limerick to Tralee line in the southwest of the country. Wending through green fields and copses (including Tullig Wood, “a rare splash of native Irish woodland”), it offers easy cycling on smooth Tarmac, and passes plenty of “stop-the-bike attractions”. Among these are impressive feats of Victorian railway engineering such as the Barnagh Tunnel and Ferguson’s Viaduct, and the historic towns of Abbeyfeale and Newcastle West, where you might visit The Silver Room, a restaurant that offers a tasting board of local produce, including Cahill’s cheese and Tournafulla black pudding.

An idyll in the high Alps

Chalets perched on the side of a mountain in the Alps

Camp, glamp or book a hotel stay in tranquil Val d’Hérens
(Image credit: Roman Drits / Getty Images)

It’s in a “sublimely beautiful” corner of Switzerland; it is not far from “upscale” resorts such as Verbier and Zermatt; and it was well known to British travellers at the dawn of Alpine tourism in the late 19th century. Yet the Val d’Hérens is quite unspoiled by modern development, says Gemma Bowes in The Times. On a family summer walking holiday, you might divide your time between the “classic” Grand Hôtel & Kurhaus in Arolla (where the “wood-panelled” interiors have “barely been modernised”, but dinner is “a fine-dining extravaganza”), and nearby Camping Arolla, said to be Europe’s highest campsite, at 1,950m. Its “glamping” bell tents are luxurious and it has a café with “proper coffee”, but its setting is “pristine” – strike out in any direction and chances are you’ll experience “love at first hike”.

A Taiwanese street scene

Diners sit at outdoor tables at a restaurant in Tapei

Late-night restaurants are a microcosm of urban Taiwan
(Image credit: gogottephotography / Stockimo / Alamy Stock Photo)

Noisy, late-night restaurants with outdoor seating on long tables, rechao (or “hot stir fry”) joints emerged in Taiwan in the 1990s when the island grew prosperous and people sought new ways to relax. Today, they’re a common sight, says Clarissa Wei in Afar magazine. The food they serve can be excellent, with dishes from across Taiwan, China and Japan, and frequent use of local ingredients such as ferns, maqaw (a lemony spice) and the pickled seeds of the birdlime tree. But it’s “unfussy”, and the joy of the rechao is also social and atmospheric, involving free-flowing beer, the raucous chatter of friends, the homely glow of paper lanterns, and the sticky heat of summer nights. In short, these eateries are a “glorious” microcosm of modern urban Taiwan, and an essential stop on any visit.

Walking with sheep in Wales

Sheep wander across the Brecon Beacons

Wander the Brecon Beacons with flocks of rare sheep breeds
(Image credit: Matt Botwood (CStock) / Alamy Stock Photo)

Most sheep scarper when you approach – but not the flock on Aberhyddnant Farm in the Brecon Beacons. Tamed as lambs by father-daughter team Paul and Nicola Matthews, these sheep jump for joy at the sight of human beings, says Kerry Walker in National Geographic Traveller, and will even accompany you, en masse, on long strolls around the surrounding hills – hence the name of the family business, Jacob Sheep Trekking. The flock is made up of a variety of rare breeds (from “hardy” Jacobs to Breton Ouessants, the world’s smallest sheep, and Blacknoses, the “cutest”), and a diverse array of characters (Socks is a “diva”; Jester, a “born leader”), and they all make for delightful and “affectionate” walking companions. The farm also offers other experiences – such as lambing and “shear-a-sheep” days – as well as accommodation in “historic” cottages and bell tents in a private wood.

The history of denim in Nîmes

The amphitheatre in Nîmes at sunrise

Nîmes is famed for being the birthplace of denim
(Image credit: Frederic Prochasson / Getty Images)

There are plenty of reasons to visit Nîmes, including its Roman buildings (the finest intact outside Italy), its charming medieval cityscape, and its striking contemporary art museum. But among its most distinctive claims to fame is as the birthplace of denim, or serge de Nîmes, says Mark Jones in the FT. Manufacture of the “hard-wearing” cotton twill began here in the 17th century (the earliest swatches are showcased in the city museum), but ceased in the early 20th, just as it took off in the US. This year, however, a locally born entrepreneur, Guillaume Sagot, has opened a small workshop producing it. Book ahead for one of his informative tours, then visit his shop, Ateliers de Nîmes (ateliersdenimes.com) where jeans cost €180 – “not too pricey” given the quality of his denim, which is made with soft, unglued, single-strand threads, “in defiance of mass-production techniques”.

Less visited Italian coastlines

An aerial view of the Italian coastline, Costa delgi Dei

Costa degli Dei is a remarkable 35-mile stretch of the Italian coastline
(Image credit: Fabrizio Villa / Getty Images)

The Amalfi Coast is glorious, but south of it lie other lovely stretches of the Italian shore where accommodation is more affordable and you’ll see fewer foreign tourists, says Kiki Deere in The Daily Telegraph. Among them are the coasts of Cilento and Basilicata, and – not far from the tip of the Italian toe – the Costa degli Dei, a “ruggedly beautiful” 35-mile stretch of the Calabrian coast which is punctuated by delightful hidden coves. Perched spectacularly on sea cliffs, the “bijou” town of Tropea commands fine views of the Santuario di Santa Maria dell’Isola (a monastery on a rocky island). There’s “fantastic” snorkelling and kayaking to enjoy nearby, and the region’s cuisine is “divine”. Among the best places to stay is Villa Paola, a hotel with double rooms costing from £250 per night; VillaPaolaTropea.it

Wales’s ‘island of lost souls’

Puffins on Skomer Island

Thousands of puffins nest on Skomer Island every summer
(Image credit: Joel Sharpe / Getty Images)

A “short, bumpy” boat trip from Martin’s Haven in Pembrokeshire, the island of Skomer is home to the largest seabird colony in southern Britain, says Kerry Walker in National Geographic Traveller. On the 3.5-mile walk around its coast, you’ll see puffins “diving in and out of burrows like wind-up toys” – more than 38,000 of them nest here in summer, and the number keeps increasing. But there are plenty of other species too, including the biggest concentration of Manx shearwaters on Earth. Stay overnight at the island’s hostel, the Old Farm, in August, and you’ll witness these nocturnal birds setting off across the Atlantic in their tens of thousands. It’s one of the world’s great wildlife experiences. Fledglings look for any high point, including nearby human heads, to get airborne, and the sound of their cries is “spine-tingling” – hence Skomer’s nickname, “the island of lost souls”.

Rafting Albania’s wild rivers

The Vjosa river in Albania

Albania is a ‘European Garden of Eden’
(Image credit: imageBROKER.com GmbH & Co. KG/Alamy Stock Photo)

Large parts of Albania resemble a “European Garden of Eden”, with “ravishing” mountainscapes unspoiled by development; and its rivers are particularly beautiful. On a Much Better Adventures group tour, you can explore them with Endri Hoxha, a member of the country’s national rafting team, said Sean Newsom in The Sunday Times. The Vjosa, held to be “the last truly wild European river west of Russia”, is grandest, but even more “striking” is the Osumi, which passes through 16 miles of sheer-sided canyons laced with waterfalls and “trailing tendrils of ivy”, like a vision from the “Avatar” films. Rafting their turbulent waters can be terrifying at first, but when the anxiety dissipates, you’ll wonder at the majestic beauty of it all. A five-night trip costs from £766pp, excluding flights.

Belém: the Amazon's culinary capital

Market stalls in Belém, Brazil

Market stalls in Belém
(Image credit: James Davis Photography/Alamy Stock Photo)

Perched at the mouth of the Amazon, the city of Belém has perhaps the most distinctive cuisine in Brazil, said Tomé Morrissy-Swan in National Geographic Traveller. At Ver-o-Peso – Latin America’s largest open-air market – you can see an amazing range of local ingredients: huge river fish, leaves such as the “mouth-numbing” jambú, and fruits including honey-scented tucumã and “sour, gummy” bacupari. Street stalls in the old town (which has “striking” colonial buildings, many in “slow decay”) serve dishes such as unha (coriander-infused crab croquettes) and tacacá (a prawn soup made with jambú and fermented cassava, or tucupi). Several of Belém’s chefs have won nationwide acclaim for their sophisticated modern takes on local culinary traditions. Don’t miss Thiago Castanho’s restaurant Remanso do Peixe, or Saulo Jennings’ Casa do Saulo, set in a colonial-era mansion with “stunning” river views.

Chausey: an island idyll in the Channel

Grand Île in Chausey, France

Grand Île is only a mile long
(Image credit: Hemis/Alamy Stock Photo )

Few people in Britain have heard of Chausey, perhaps because it is under French jurisdiction, yet this little huddle of Channel islands to the south of Jersey is a great place to “let your soul hang”, said Andrew Eames in The Sunday Telegraph. An hour by ferry from Granville, south of Cherbourg, the main island, Grand Île, is only a mile long, but is surrounded by 364 other granite islets, many so “low-slung” that they “could be mistaken for a trick of the light”. Grand Île itself is sometimes overwhelmed by day-trippers in summer, but in springtime its three “glorious” beaches are often uncrowded, and there’s solitude to be found on a walk around its coast. Many of the island’s “neat” stone houses are now holiday lets, and there’s a single hotel – Hôtel du Fort et des Îles – which serves good seafood.

Tarifa’s wild and windy beauty

Playa de los Lances in Tarifa, Spain

Playa de los Lances in Tarifa
(Image credit: Ken Welsh/Alamy Stock Photo)

Tarifa in the far south of Spain has a wild coastline made up of sweeping, pale beaches, sand dunes and “rock-strewn” hills. The area has long been popular with backpackers and kitesurfers, said Bridget Harrison in The Times – but more recently a “well-heeled crowd” has been attracted to its “laid-back beachy vibe”. It’s not a good place for sunbathing – the wind is relentless – but there’s riding, hiking, biking and water sports to enjoy. Tarifa itself has a beautiful old town with Moorish city walls, excellent tapas bars and “upmarket surfy boutiques”; there are “impressive” Roman ruins beside the nearby Bolonia beach, and Tangier is a ferry hop away. Among the area’s most stylish hotels are La Residencia and The Lances, and there’s an “exquisite” new five-bedroom holiday let, Villa Punta Paloma, that sits on a headland.

Horezu: a potters’ town in Romania

Horezu ceramics in Romania

Horezu ceramics in Romania
(Image credit: robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo)

As interest in ceramics has grown, pottery from Horezu, in Romania, has started to appear in “trendy design-orientated” stores around the world – but its production has been the lifeblood of this small town for three centuries or more, said Chantel Tattoli in The New York Times. Today, some 50 artisans have studios there, and all of them work with the timeworn methods for which Unesco recognised Horezu pottery as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2012. Clay is taken from a single hill nearby; paint, in muted hues, is made with minerals found in the area; and designs, including rooster, serpent and fish patterns, have traditional roots. In the UK, you can see the work at Casa De Folklore in London, but nothing is likely to fire your enthusiasm for it as much as a trip to Horezu itself.

Ennerdale: rewilding in the Lakes

Ennerdale Valley in the Lake District

Ennerdale Valley in the Lake District
(Image credit: AJTFoto/Alamy Stock Photo)

It has been 20 years since work began to rewild Ennerdale, one of the Lake District’s “quietest” valleys – and the results are wonderful to behold, said Helen Pickles in The Daily Telegraph. Founded by local landowners, including the National Trust and Forestry England, the Wild Ennerdale project has taken steps including planting native trees and introducing black Galloway cattle, which break up the ground, creating space for wild flora to take root. Species such as the green woodpecker and the marsh fritillary butterfly, once extinct in the area, have returned; others, from the “jolly-sounding” bilberry bumblebee to the spectacular peregrine falcon, are flourishing; and now there’s talk of reintroducing beavers. Last year, the valley was designated a “super” National Nature Reserve. If you are planning to stay locally, there is accommodation at the Fox and Hounds, a traditional Lakeland inn. wildennerdale.co.uk

A glitzier version of Menorca

Pont d’en Gil in Menorca

Pont d’en Gil in Menorca
(Image credit: Michele Falzone/Alamy Stock Photo)

Long known as “a haunt of British pensioners”, Menorca is the sleepiest of the Balearic islands. But in recent years, its “elemental” landscape, quaint old towns and slow pace of life have attracted “a new set of wanderers”, said Stephanie Rafanelli in Condé Nast Traveller – and it has seen a new wave of creativity to match. Go for its natural beauty (notably in the Camí de Cavalls, its 115-mile coastal path), but don’t miss its art galleries (such as LoAC and Hauser & Wirth, which both opened in 2021), burgeoning wine scene (including the pioneering Binifadet estate) and excellent restaurants (look up Sa Punta, Ses Forquilles, Quitapenas and Smoix). There’s also any number of attractive new boutique hotels and renovated farmhouse lets to choose from, with Son Blanc, Es Bec d’Aguila, Torre Vella, Cristine Bedfor and Menorca Experimental among the best.

Lucca: a Tuscan city’s easy charm

The city of Lucca in Tuscany, Italy

The city of Lucca in Tuscany
(Image credit: StevanZZ/Alamy Stock Photo)

“An almost faultless combination of the usual Italian temptations” – art, architecture, food and wine – Lucca is a gem among Tuscan cities, said Tim Jepson in The Sunday Telegraph. It has “glorious” churches, of which San Michele, with its elaborate Romanesque facade, is perhaps the most exquisite; excellent old restaurants (such as Buca di Sant’Antonio, in business since 1782); and “elegant” shops. Encircling it all are broad, tree-lined city walls that you can walk or cycle along, enjoying magnificent views. With an “easygoing charm”, the city makes for a delightfully relaxing short break. But if staying a little longer, you could tour some of the many “exceptional” villas and gardens nearby (Villa Reale and Villa Torrigiani can be strongly recommended), or visit the seaside resort of Viareggio, 20 minutes away by train.

A lovely mile of England’s coast

Valley of the Rocks near Lynton in north Devon

Valley of the Rocks near Lynton in north Devon
(Image credit: Tony Mills/Alamy Stock Photo)

Once the England Coast Path has been completed (which should be in a couple of years), the UK will have some 10,000 miles of accessible coastal trails. Having walked 1,000 of the most glorious myself, I’m often asked to name the winning stretch, said Paul Bloomfield in The Sunday Times – and my answer is always the South West Coast Path, which meanders for 630 miles between Minehead in Somerset and Poole in Dorset. If pressed for time, head straight for Lynton on the Exmoor coast, and take the cliff path westwards from the top of its funicular railway to Woody Bay. Passing through the Valley of the Rocks (north Devon’s “Little Switzerland”) and the “idyllic, brook-babbled” Lee Abbey estate, the route is neither particularly tough nor exceptionally remote, but there’s no doubt in my mind that this is “Britain’s most beautiful coastal mile”.

Zibo: China's new barbecue hotspot

The city of Zibo in China

The city of Zibo in China
(Image credit: Wirestock, Inc./Alamy Stock Photo)

A once-obscure manufacturing hub 270 miles south of Beijing, Zibo has risen in just a few months to become China’s hottest tourist destination, said Vivian Wang in The New York Times. And it’s all down to two things: barbecues and the power of social media. The city is home to 4.7 million people, yet it received 4.8 million visitors in March alone, not long after the local BBQ technique – you grill your meat on skewers then wrap it with condiments in tortilla-like pancakes – began trending on social media. Keen to please, the authorities have set up a “Barbecue Experiential Ground” the size of 12 football fields, with hundreds of grills, and even far-flung suburban eateries are doing a roaring trade. Tourists queue for hours, and few seem to mind the wait: everyone agrees that, while Zibo cuisine is wonderful, the city’s “liveliness”, after three years of Covid lockdowns, is a pleasure more piquant still.

The Brando: an exclusive eco-resort in French Polynesia

The Brando is an ‘ultra-polished’ island hideaway

The Brando is an ‘ultra-polished’ island hideaway

The brainchild of actor Marlon Brando and property developer Richard Bailey, The Brando is a self-sustaining eco-resort which is on the path to becoming carbon zero. Located on the South Pacific atoll of Tetiaroa, the resort has long been a pioneer in sustainability for the luxury travel industry, with initiatives including its own ecostation for marine biologists, the use of renewable energy and the creation of an organic garden, with all food waste transformed into compost within 24 hours. There are 35 private beach villas ranging from one- to three-bedrooms, all with private pools, and the resort also recently launched a partnership with famed French chef Jean Imbert. Other facilities include a traditional Polynesian holistic healing spa and guests can also enjoy guided nature excursions to learn all about the island’s birds, wildlife and sea life. The resort may lie just 30 miles north of Tahiti, but it “may as well be worlds away for its privacy and unspoiled beauty”, said Condé Nast Traveler. This “ultra-polished” island hideaway is “a love song to the South Pacific”. The Brando is “one of the most exclusive resorts in the world” and it features “one of the most beautiful and serene wellness centres I’ve ever seen”, said The Luxury Travel Expert. Celebrity guests who have stayed here include Leonardo DiCaprio and the Obamas. Villas start from $3,500 per night on an all-inclusive basis; thebrando.com

Sun-drenched Montenegro

Budva old town in Montenegro

Budva old town in Montenegro
(Image credit: Carmen Gabriela Filip/Alamy Stock Photo)

Sandwiched between Croatia, Albania and Serbia, Montenegro is “one of the best sun magnets in southern Europe” – and it takes less than three hours to fly there from Gatwick, said Nick Redman in the Daily Mail. In the north of the country, “mountains plummet to fjord-like jade inlets suggestive of New Zealand or Norway”, while the south’s “broad, blonde sands are reminiscent of Turkey”. It has some fine towns, too. Budva, with its “lichen-spattered old-stone ways, red roofs and stout churches”, is worth a visit, and evokes the medieval Venetian Republic that once held sway. Unesco-listed Kotor has a dramatic position, “wedged between soaring peaks and a deep bay”. To sample some of Montenegro’s finest wines, visit the family-run vineyard Savina, where you’ll sip glasses of “pink grenache” on a terrace overlooking the silver Adriatic, and feel “the magic of the Med” seeping into you. montenegro.travel

Rotterdam’s urban cool

The skyline of Rotterdam with Euromast tower and Erasmus Bridge

The skyline of Rotterdam with Euromast tower and Erasmus Bridge
(Image credit: Frans Lemmens/Alamy Stock Photo)

Rotterdam has long been Europe’s biggest industrial port; but these days it’s also a hub of “avant-garde architecture”, and so filled with excellent art institutions that it’s become an “essential European cultural stop”, said Seth Sherwood in The New York Times. To get your bearings, go up the Euromast, a tower that has superb views of the city from its stylish café, and consider a cruise of Rotterdam’s canals. The city is “awash” with experimental restaurants, including Fermin, which “gets clever with fermented, pickled and wood-fired dishes”, and In de Keuken van Floris, where you feel as though you’re dining in an “enchanted forest”. Rotterdam was heavily bombed in the Second World War, but after a few days you’ll agree that what it lacks in historical buildings, it more than “makes up for with contemporary urban cool”.

The ancient Greeks in Sicily

The hilltop city of Noto in Sicily

The hilltop city of Noto in Sicily
(Image credit: Alvaro German Vilela/Alamy Stock Photo)

“While just about every ancient civilisation left its prints on Sicily – Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Byzantines – the Greeks’ were arguably the most indelible,” said Kate Maxwell in the Financial Times. Greek remained the lingua franca during Roman times, and there are still communities in Sicily that speak a Greek dialect. Road-tripping between the island’s ancient sights is great fun, and along the way you can take in some Baroque delights – in the hilltop city of Noto, for instance, there is Palazzo Castelluccio, which is a “dead ringer” for the palazzo described in Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s “The Leopard”. If glamour is your goal, begin or end at the San Domenico Palace, the Four Seasons hotel in Taormina that was used in the TV series “White Lotus”. It’s unexpectedly family friendly. Doubles from €1,900 per night, including breakfast; fourseasons.com

Monsanto: a spectacular Portuguese village

The village of Monsanto in Portugal

The village of Monsanto in Portugal
(Image credit: robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo)

Sitting on a hilltop deep in the interior of Portugal, overlooking a valley “strewn with enormous boulders”, Monsanto is among the country’s most spectacular villages, said Jade Braham in The Daily Telegraph. Its “higgledy-piggledy” streets twist “like rabbit warrens” around and under boulders, and boulders weighing up to 200 tons form the roofs of some of its houses. In 1938, the autocratic Salazar regime named it the country’s “most Portuguese village” owing to its long history and rugged looks, and recently its fortress (built by the Knights Templar in the 12th century) has featured in the hit HBO series “House of the Dragon”. But its fame has not spoiled its peace, its “uniquely medieval charm” – or the beauty of the surrounding countryside, which lies in the Geopark Naturtejo, an area recognised for its richly distinctive geological heritage.

Lancashire’s culinary delights

Parkers Arms at Newton-in-Bowland

Parkers Arms at Newton-in-Bowland
(Image credit: John Davidson Photos/Alamy Stock Photo)

Not so long ago, most restaurant menus in Lancashire didn’t extend far beyond “chicken in a basket”. But today, the county is a gastronome’s dream, said Anthony Peregrine in The Times – and nowhere more so than in the villages of the Forest of Bowland. Chef Stosie Madi (born in Senegal of Lebanese heritage) “bagged top spot” in the 2023 national gastropub awards for the Parkers Arms at Newton-in-Bowland, with cooking that will make you “swoon”. The Freemasons in nearby Wiswell won bronze; its seven-course tasting menu is a “marvel of terrific tastes and textures”. Another “leader in the Lancashire renaissance” is The Cartford Inn at Little Eccleston. And the area is also peppered with excellent food producers, such as Mrs Kirkham’s, a cheesemaker in Goosnargh, and the fabulous Wild Fox gin distillery at Inglewhite. Bowland and Bay offers food tours from £125 a day

Looking for the Wicker Man in Scotland

Kirkcudbright in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland

Kirkcudbright was used in the filming of a number of scenes in The Wicker Man
(Image credit: David Lyons/Alamy Stock Photo)

With its mixture of police procedural, occult horror, softcore eroticism and folksy song-and-dance routines, “The Wicker Man” is an odd brew. But the film – 50 years old this year – still unsettles, and the beauty of its setting only adds to its weird power, says Richard Mellor in The Sunday Times. It was mostly filmed in the southwestern corner of Dumfries and Galloway, and a tour of its locations there takes you all over this lovely and little-visited area. Among the highlights is the town of Kirkcudbright, where, having located the former sweet shop that features in the film, you might also visit elegant Broughton House, once home to the painter Edward Atkinson Hornel. The old pilgrimage site of St Ninian’s Cave is splendidly rugged; pretty Wigtown has more than a dozen excellent bookshops; and there’s a remarkably “exotic” range of plants at Logan Botanic Garden, the setting for our first encounter with Christopher Lee’s mysterious local squire, Lord Summerisle. findingthewickerman.co.uk

A lakeside holiday in Hungary

The Benedictine Monastery of Tihany

The Benedictine Monastery of Tihany
(Image credit: Zoltan Gabor/Alamy Stock Photo)

An hour’s drive from Budapest, Lake Balaton has long been a popular place to escape the city in the summer, says Jamie Fullerton in The Sunday Telegraph. In the communist era, it saw a surge of “trade-union organised tourism”, and many of the “dreary, blocky” holiday units that were constructed back then are still standing. But they don’t ruin the lake – Central Europe’s largest – and although Balaton is not in the Como league “for aesthetics”, it makes for a “serenely enjoyable” stop on any tour of the country. There are pretty villages on its shores (Tihany, with its “thatched-roof cottages”, reminded me of the Cotswolds), and some smart modern places to stay (the Liszkay Vineyard Estate is positively “luxurious”). If you do visit, do be sure to take a dip in the “sulphur-tinged”, “bath-warm” water of nearby Lake Hévíz – the world’s largest swimmable thermal lake.

Bonaire: birdwatching in the Caribbean

Flamingos on the island of Bonaire

Flamingos on the island of Bonaire
(Image credit: Simon & Michael Ganz/Alamy Stock Photo)

Most visitors go to Bonaire for the beaches, or the excellent scuba diving. But this Dutch Caribbean island is also “a birding wonderland”, says Betsy Andrews in Condé Nast Traveller. Located just 50 miles off the coast of Venezuela, it is a breeding ground for American flamingos and a “critical” stopover for migrating shorebirds during the winter. But even on a summer visit, I saw 64 of the 245 species that have ever been spotted here. Any tour should include the Washington Slagbaai National Park (a 14,000-acre reserve with a “desert-like” heart – the island is unusually arid for the region); the salt pans of the island’s south; and the ponds into which Bonaire’s waste water is pumped after treatment, which are not a typical tourist attraction, but wildly popular with the island’s avian residents. bonairebirdtours.com

A wine tour in northern Greece

Kir-Yianni winery in northern Greece

Kir-Yianni winery
(Image credit: Per Karlsson/BKWine 2/Alamy Stock Photo)

Not so long ago, “the only Greek wine most Brits had heard of was retsina”, with its pine resin perfume. But it has others that are increasingly winning admirers abroad, and many of these wines come from Naoussa, says Nina Caplan in The Times. Spread across the slopes of the Vermio Mountains, of the Central Macedonia region, it’s a beautiful area known for reds made from the indigenous xinomavro grape, some of which are “absolutely gorgeous”. You might stay in the nearby city of Thessaloniki (known for its excellent restaurants and wine bars, including Alea and Blé Vin), and spend a few days pottering about between wineries (don’t miss Thymiopoulos, Kir-Yianni, Dalamara or Foundi) and visiting ancient sites, including spectacular Pella, the birthplace of Alexander the Great. See visitnaoussa.gr and northern-greece.com

Suva: a South Seas metropolis

Suva city centre in Fiji

Suva city centre in Fiji
(Image credit: Yuen Man Cheung/Alamy Stock Photo)

Most tourists in the South Pacific spend their time on deserted beaches and in “bucolic” villages – but the port of Suva, the capital of Fiji and the region’s largest city, is worth a visit too, says Tom Downey in The New York Times. Surrounded by “cloud-topped” mountains, it is home to 100,000 people, mostly of Indian, Chinese or indigenous iTaukei descent – a rich cultural mix reflected in its great restaurants. Its elegant old town was laid out by the British and includes a “lively” cricket pitch and the famous Grand Pacific Hotel. There’s a “bustling” market, plenty of bars where you can try kava (a ritual drink with “mellowing” effects), a newly opened Centre for the Arts (at the time of my visit showcasing the work of “young, local street photographers”), and an excellent museum with exhibits including part of the rudder of HMS Bounty.

Handling eagles in Wales

A golden eagle flying overhead at the British Bird of Prey Centre

A golden eagle flying overhead at the British Bird of Prey Centre
(Image credit: Mike O’Carroll/Alamy Stock Photo )

Located at the National Botanic Garden of Wales in rural Carmarthenshire, the British Bird of Prey Centre was founded in 2018 to educate visitors about the UK’s raptors. Its latest attraction, the private, three-hour Eagle Experience, does so in a particularly hands-on – or talons-on – way, says Ian Belcher in The Sunday Times. Participants get to put on a leather gauntlet and “fly” three of the world’s most majestic predators – a golden eagle, a white-tailed sea eagle, and a European eagle owl called Popeye. It’s physically demanding: Aquarius the sea eagle weighs 5.2kg and has a 7½ft wingspan. But the “majesty” of the birds as they take flight is mesmerising, and the chance to play the “classic British eccentric” and take Popeye for a walk around the gardens is not to be missed. The experience costs from £200 for participants and £50 for spectators; britishbirdofpreycentre.co.uk

George Town’s spicy delights

Kapitan Keling mosque in George Town, Malaysia

Kapitan Keling mosque in George Town, Malaysia
(Image credit: chrispictures/Alamy Stock Photo)

Founded by the British in 1786, the Malaysian port of George Town has “a magic all its own”, says Simon Elegant in The New York Times. Its historic heart – a Unesco World Heritage site – is a square mile of “twisting alleys” lined with “wonderfully photogenic” buildings, some of which are now good boutique hotels (try Seven Terraces, The Edison, or the Jawi Peranakan or Cheong Fatt Tze mansions). But as appealing as the local architecture is the food, which mixes Malay traditions with influences from China, India and Indonesia. Among the best places to try this Peranakan cuisine are BaBa Phang, Ceki, Winn’s Café, and Auntie Gaik Lean’s Old School Eatery – a homely diner so good it earned a Michelin star last year. The “tangy-sour” taste of tamarind features in many dishes, and the nutmeg juice is a spicy delight.

Danube Delta: an avian spectacular in Romania

Pelicans at sunrise in the Danube Delta, Romania

Pelicans at sunrise in the Danube Delta, Romania
(Image credit: Calin Stan/Alamy Stock Photo)

The Danube Delta, an “enormous aquatic labyrinth” where Europe’s second-longest river flows into the Black Sea, is heaven for birdwatchers, says Mike Unwin in The Daily Telegraph. On a ten-day wildlife tour with Naturetrek, you’ll spend time in Romania’s Carpathian Mountains before boarding a boat to explore the delta in the company of an experienced ornithologist. In the warmer months, it feels “pure African Queen”, with its “shimmering blue lagoons” and lush secret channels where kingfishers flash and flit. And in the early autumn, you’ll see countless birds starting their annual migration south, from the “tiniest travellers” (wood warblers, whinchats and more) to spectacular raptors (honey buzzards, red-footed falcons and so on) and huge pelicans – a breathtaking sight as they gather in vast vortices, hundreds-strong, at the outset of their great journey. Trips cost from £1,895pp; naturetrek.co.uk

An epic rail journey across Norway

A train departs Finse station for Bergen

A train departs Finse station for Bergen
(Image credit: John Bentley/Alamy Stock Photo)

The rail line from Oslo to Bergen, is one of Norway’s main economic arteries, principally patronised by “stressed business folk”, says Oliver Smith in The Sunday Times. But the six-and-a-half-hour trip takes you through wild and varying landscape, from the lakes of Norway’s east to the west’s “salty fjords”. In the centre, you travel across the Hardangervidda, a “primeval mountain plateau” along a route that feels as “daring” now as it did in 1909, when the tracks were laid. Among the best places to break the journey are Geilo, a centre for outdoor activities; Myrdal, from which the Flåm Railway descends some 900 metres to a “sublime” fjord; and Finse, where part of "The Empire Strikes Back" was filmed during a blizzard in 1979. See vy.no and greatrail.com for tickets and tour packages.

Seeking out sea cows in Florida

Manatees: Florida’s ‘most captivating residents’

Manatees: Florida’s ‘most captivating residents’
(Image credit: mauritius images GmbH/Alamy Stock Photo)

Forget Minnie and Mickey – Florida’s “most captivating residents” are the manatees, or sea cows, that inhabit its inland waterways and coastal areas, says Jacqui Agate in The Sunday Times. Last year was a bad one for these “placid giants”, as algal blooms threatened the seagrass beds on which the creatures feed. Conservation groups are currently struggling to solve the problem. For the best chance of spotting a manatee, head out on a boat trip with Flamingo Adventures in the Everglades National Park, or with Paradise Boat Tours in Bradenton, where the animals can be seen “frolicking” around Anna Maria Island, a barrier isle with “white powder” beaches. The snorkelling tours on offer in Crystal River are more controversial; if you go, choose a “responsible operator” such as Explorida, and keep your distance to avoid stressing the animals.

Olhão: an unsung town in the Algarve

Olhão in the Algarve, Portugal

Olhão in the Algarve, Portugal
(Image credit: Jacek Sopotnicki/Alamy Stock Photo)

Parts of the Algarve are overwhelmed by tourism – but not the fishing port of Olhão, says Amanda Hyde in The Daily Telegraph. A quick bus ride from Faro, the regional capital, it is a glorious historic town of grand churches and crumbling mansions, with a “lively local scene” (including a busy fish market and a profusion of “packed, no-nonsense” cafés) that makes it a great place for an affordable off-season break. You could stay at Pure Formosa, a stylish hotel where rates start at about €45, and eat at the “swish” but inexpensive seafood restaurants along the shore, including the excellent Cestaria. The nearby islands of the Rio Formosa have some fabulous beaches, along with Roman ruins and lagoons where flamingos gather – all accessible by ferry for as little as €2.20 per leg. 

Skating in the Finnish wilds

Tour skating in Finland

Tour skating in Finland
(Image credit: RJH_Images/Alamy Stock Photo)

In a poll after Finland was named the world’s happiest nation last year, 87% of Finns cited time spent in natural surroundings as the reason. Among their most enjoyable outdoor pursuits is tour skating, or long-distance ice skating in the wild, says James Stewart in The Times. Try it with Responsible Travel, which offers five-day guided trips with accommodation in a spa lodge and an “arty” design hotel. There’s a training day near the city of Tampere on Lake Näsi, where everyone from toddlers to pensioners come to skate, ski and sledge together. And then you drive east through glorious countryside to the vast Lake Saimaa for some wilder skating amid “rocky pine-clad islets” in Linnansaari National Park. It’s not risk-free (small cracks in the ice can impede movement and cause falls), but it’s magical when it goes well – like “swishing through a Finnish fairy tale”.

Heavenly hiking in Death Valley

Artist’s Palette in Death Valley National Park

Artist’s Palette in Death Valley National Park
(Image credit: Gogolesque/Alamy Stock Photo)

Death Valley and many of its landmarks (Desolation Canyon, Dante’s View, Badwater Basin and so on) could hardly sound more forbidding. But this huge US national park is packed with sublime sights, says Elaine Glusac in The New York Times. Go outside the summer months (when it becomes a “blast furnace”), and either stay at the “palm-ringed” Inn at Death Valley, or hire a camper van in nearby Las Vegas. Many of the park’s most striking sights – including salt flats and sand dunes set against a backdrop of snow-capped peaks – lie in its southern half. You can hike through canyons that “channel deep into the rocky wilderness”, and take the road past Artist’s Palette, where volcanic mineral deposits “drench the hills in violet, pink, yellow and green”. And don’t miss the chance to watch the sunset at Zabriskie Point, a famous viewpoint “surrounded by lava-striped badlands”.

A brewery in Botswana

Okavango Craft Brewery

(Image credit: Okavango Craft Brewery/Facebook)

There can be few tastier ways to help with conservation in Botswana than a trip to the Okavango Craft Brewery, says Sue Watt in The Daily Telegraph. Located in Maun, the “sleepy” gateway town to the Okavango Delta, it arose from the work of a local NGO, Ecoexist, that aims to minimise the sometimes deadly encounters between elephants and farmers in the area. Farmers are encouraged to move their crops away from the animals’ migratory paths, and are given training in protecting their fields and increasing their yields – and the brewery sweetens the deal by buying up their surplus millet, with which all its beers are made. With names linked to the area and its inhabitants (such as Old Bull Stout, and the non-alcoholic Mock Charge), they’re remarkably good, and increasingly found at safari camps across the Okavango. okavangocraftbrewery.com

Harvest of riches on Chios

Nea Moni Byzantine monastery in the mountains of Chios, Greece

Nea Moni Byzantine monastery in the mountains of Chios, Greece
(Image credit: Bob Gibbons/Alamy Stock Photo)

The fifth-largest of the Greek islands, Chios is “made for touring”, says Dana Facaros in National Geographic Traveller, thanks in part to its rich architectural heritage. Central to its history and its modern economy are the gum mastic trees that thrive on its southern hills, producing a resin that has been prized since antiquity for its medicinal properties and unique flavour. Among the fortified villages built to protect the harvest, two – Mesta and Pyrgi – are particularly “spectacular”, and the recently opened Chios Mastic Museum is excellent. The town of Kambos is also lovely, with its stone mansions, many built by the island’s medieval rulers, the Genoese. And the 11th century monastery of Nea Moni – a Unesco World Heritage Site – houses some of the finest mosaics of the Middle Byzantine period, otherwise known as the Macedonian Renaissance.

Dominica: a wild Caribbean island

Soufriere Bay in Dominica

Soufriere Bay in Dominica
(Image credit: robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo )

With its “exuberantly beautiful” rainforest, towering mountains and natural hot springs, Dominica is the wildest and most rugged of all the Caribbean’s small islands, says Chris Haslam in The Sunday Times. There’s fabulous (if tough and often muddy) hiking to enjoy, especially on the Waitukubuli Trail, a 14-section, 115-mile path that crosses the island. Alternatively, take to the waves with local guide Wes Moses, who has recently launched the Waitukubuli Sea Trail, a seven-day, 40-mile kayaking adventure along the leeward coast, where the diving is also superb, with accommodation in guesthouses along the way. For a luxurious stay, check in at Secret Bay. This resort’s huge clifftop villas feel like “cloudforest-canopy” treehouses, so lush are their surroundings, and the volcanic island’s only white-sand beach lies a ten-minute swim away.

Accra's booming art scene

The ADA Contemporary Art Gallery in Accra

The ADA Contemporary Art Gallery in Accra

Ghana’s art scene is booming, says Ellen Himelfarb in National Geographic Traveller. You can see work by some of its brightest young stars in London, Paris and elsewhere – but there’s much more on display in the West African country’s own capital, Accra. Galleries have “multiplied and flourished” in the city since 2016, when the Lebanese émigré Marwan Zakhem opened its first major art venue, Gallery 1957. Among other indispensable stops are the artists’ collective Artemartis (where you might come across Accra’s “newest art darling”, Araba Opoku), the ADA Contemporary Art Gallery (conveniently located below the city’s first members’ club, Front/Back), and Noldor Artist Residency. The latter is located in the old township of Labadi, which is also home to the studios of “local superstar” Amoako Boafo, and Serge Attukwei Clottey, known for his “epic, multicoloured wall-hangings”.

The mixed appeal of Kalkan

The Turkish resort of Kalkan

The Turkish resort of Kalkan
(Image credit: DPK-Photo/Alamy Stock Photo)

Not long ago, it was a “picture-perfect fishing village”, but Kalkan has “expanded exponentially” in recent years. The surrounding hillsides are now crowded with villas, and parking is a “nightmare”; and yet this Turkish resort hasn’t lost its “magic”, says Annabelle Thorpe in The Times. Its public beach has grown “longer and prettier”, and it now has pleasant beach clubs too, as well as hundreds of restaurants, and “glamorous” nightlife spots. The nearby beach of Kaputas is “stunning”, but often crowded. Head instead for Patara, where Roman ruins sit beside an unspoilt, 22km stretch of sand with nothing but a “ramshackle” beach bar to disturb the peace. And visit the villages set amid “spectacular” forested peaks behind the town, including Bezirgan, where brunch in the flower-filled garden of Sahika Bahce is a delight.

Shrewsbury’s starring role

Old Market Hall in The Square in Shrewsbury

Old Market Hall in The Square in Shrewsbury
(Image credit: Ian Dagnall/Alamy Stock Photo)

It is one of the UK’s most splendid historic towns, but Shrewsbury sees far fewer visitors than it deserves. Perhaps its role in the BBC’s new adaptation of Great Expectations will change that, says James Stewart in The Sunday Times. With its “fantastical” mix of historic architectural styles, Shropshire’s county town features in the six-part series as a worthy stand-in for Dickensian London. For tourists, its attractions include a handsome medieval castle (restored in the 18th century), an excellent food market, and Wyle Cop, a street that boasts the country’s longest uninterrupted stretch of independent shops. Stay if you can in the Town Walls Tower – a medieval watchtower recently opened as a holiday let by the National Trust – and visit nearby Attingham Park, a Georgian house whose grounds were landscaped by Humphry Repton.

Wine tasting in 'Sideways' territory

Vineyards near Los Olivos in Santa Ynez Valley, California

Vineyards near Los Olivos in Santa Ynez Valley, California
(Image credit: robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo)

Perhaps best known as the setting of the hit film "Sideways", the Santa Ynez Valley is “one of California’s most intriguing wine regions”, said David Amsden in Condé Nast Traveller. Fifty years since its first vineyards were planted, it is still dominated by independent producers, and offers “the thrill of discovery” as well as “back-road charm” with its quirky small towns, lively tasting rooms and flourishing restaurant scene. Stay at Skyview or Hotel Ynez (both “chicly reimagined” motels), The Ballard Inn or the (“exquisite”) The Inn at Mattei’s Tavern. Good places to eat include the “French-inspired” Bell’s (recently awarded its first Michelin star) and Bar Le Côté, “arguably the hottest restaurant in the Valley these days”. Be sure to plan your itinerary in advance – some of the best vineyards offer visits, tastings and guided hikes by appointment only.

Seaside holidays on Bulgaria's Black Sea coast

Albena in Bulgaria

Albena in Bulgaria
(Image credit: Sorin Colac/Alamy Stock Photo )

With dependable sunshine, pretty towns and “miles and miles” of golden sand, Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast is perfect for a family summer holiday, says Rudolf Abraham in The Sunday Telegraph. It’s much cheaper than the Med, and likely to be a bit cooler too. The resort town of Albena – purpose-built in the 1960s – makes for a relaxing base, with its gently sloping beach, forested surroundings and extensive facilities. There are wilder beaches nearby – including Bolata (in the Kaliakra Nature Reserve), and Tyulenovo, which has “breathtaking” cliffs. The neighbouring city of Varna has good restaurants, museums and archaeological sites, including Europe’s fourth-largest Roman baths. And – further afield – the fishing port of Sozopol, which is “crammed” with 19th century wooden houses, and the attractive town of Nessebar (known for its Byzantine churches) are also worth a visit.

Bear spotting in Finland

Brown bears in Vartius, Finland

Brown bears in Vartius, Finland
(Image credit: Minden Pictures/Alamy Stock Photo)

The forests of Finland are home to roughly 2,000 European brown bears, and there’s a smattering of hides from which you can watch them “eat, court and play”, says Phoebe Smith in The Guardian. Guests at the Bear Centre in Vartius – just over a mile from the Russian border – can safely wander along marked trails by day, looking out for birds including eagles, woodpeckers and multiple species of owl. By night, guides will lead them to their own individual hides, which vary from “very basic” to “luxurious”, with huge picture windows, kitchenettes and showers. Daylight hours are longest in June and July; August and September offer the best chance of seeing cubs; and October brings with it the possibility of early snow. Wolves and wolverines often put in an appearance too. See bearcentre.fi

Aruba: a Dutch island in the Caribbean

There are around 40 beaches on the island of Aruba

There are around 40 beaches on the island of Aruba
(Image credit: Alan Curtis/Alamy Stock Photo)

The Caribbean island of Aruba has long been popular with Dutch and American visitors, and now it looks set to see more British travellers too, with the launch of new British Airways flights from Gatwick – the first direct year-round service from the UK, says Claire Dodd in The Times. A largely autonomous part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, like its neighbours Bonaire and Curaçao, it is located just 18 miles off the coast of Venezuela, but its climate is unusually arid for the region. Don’t let that put you off, however. The island has “all the powder-soft white-sand beaches (about 40, in fact), glittering translucent seas and swaying palms you could want”. And its culture is interesting, too, with a unique, Portuguese-based creole language – Papiamento – and a vibrant art scene, centred in its second city, San Nicolas.

A loop around Lake Michigan

Oak Street and North Avenue beaches on Lake Michigan in Chicago

Oak Street and North Avenue beaches on Lake Michigan in Chicago
(Image credit: Ian Dagnall/Alamy Stock Photo)

It isn’t one of the US’s most famous road trips, but the drive around Lake Michigan is among the most charming, says Chris Leadbeater in The Daily Telegraph, taking you deep into “a rustic America of orchards, sand dunes and small-town cheer”. You need two weeks to do the whole 900-mile loop at a leisurely pace, and more if you want to explore the cities along the way – notably Chicago and “underrated” Milwaukee. Plan to linger on Wisconsin’s bucolic Door Peninsula, and particularly in beautiful Whitefish Bay; relish the splendour of the Straits of Mackinac, where Lakes Michigan and Huron meet under a “classic” suspension bridge; and don’t rush your journey down the lake’s eastern shore, where the state of Michigan is at its most “genteel” in the likes of Traverse City and “elegant” Grand Haven.

Enticing Eastbourne

Eastbourne Pier and beach

Eastbourne Pier and beach
(Image credit: John Bentley/Alamy Stock Photo )

It has a sedate reputation, but Eastbourne has enjoyed something of a renaissance in recent years, making it “ever more enticing as a weekend escape”, says Lisa Johnson in The Sunday Times. Its “trump card” is the Towner gallery, decorated since 2019 with a “razzle-dazzle colour-block mural” by the German artist Lothar Götz. This year it celebrates its centenary with some “excellent” exhibitions, and hosts the Turner Prize from September. The neighbourhood of Little Chelsea is also worth a visit for its “chic” cafés (such as Skylark) and independent shops. Stay at the vast 19th century Grand Hotel, or at the Port, a newish boutique property with a “highly regarded” restaurant. And strike out on the South Downs Way, over the Seven Sisters cliffs, to beautiful Cuckmere Haven, where there’s another good hotel, Saltmarsh Farmhouse.

Fabulous bathing in Iceland

GeoSea in Húsavík, north Iceland, overlooks Skjálfandi Bay

GeoSea overlooks Skjálfandi Bay
(Image credit: Alex Ramsay/Alamy Stock Photo)

With countless natural springs and limitless geothermal energy, Iceland is a land of hot water, and bathing in it is “part of the culture”. Even the smallest villages have public hot tubs – but still more appealing are the “architect-designed” pools that have appeared across the country in recent years, says Toby Skinner in Condé Nast Traveller. Among the best is Geosea, in Húsavík: from its cliff-side infinity pools you might spot humpback whales in Skjálfandi Bay. Vök Baths has turf-roofed buildings, and six-sided pools that float in Lake Urridavatn, into the icy waters of which you can plunge between soakings. Forest Lagoon is like a “discreet glassy modernist home” set amid woods near the city of Akureyri. And most “splashy” is the “futuristic” Sky Lagoon, where the 75-metre infinity pool has “dramatic” views of Reykjavík – particularly pretty at night.

Culinary treats in Tel Aviv

A market in the Kerem HaTeimanim neighbourhood of Tel Aviv

A market in the Kerem HaTeimanim neighbourhood of Tel Aviv
(Image credit: Marek Slusarczyk/Alamy Stock Photo )

Thanks to the migrants it has welcomed from around the world since the 1920s, Tel Aviv is one of the world’s great food cities, says Oded Oren in National Geographic Traveller, with many eateries specialising in traditional styles of cooking you can’t find elsewhere. The “intoxicating scents” of Jewish-Yemenite food drift through the narrow streets of Kerem HaTeimanim, where tiny restaurants serve “hearty” dishes such as cow’s feet soup with lemon and hilbe (a fenugreek condiment). Around Levinsky Market, you can try Balkan treats including borekas (savoury pastries) and schmaltz herring. Eastern European spots nearby offer pork chops “smothered” in fresh garlic, as well as cholent, a stew of beef, legumes and eggs. And among the other highlights of any tour are the hummus joints of Jaffa, where there’s also fantastic seafood on offer.

Finding peace on Patmos

The Greek island of Patmos

(Image credit: Westend61 GmbH/Alamy Stock Photo)

The Greek island of Patmos has long been a place of “spiritual solace”, says Rachel Howard in House & Garden. It was here, most likely, that Saint John “rattled off” the Book of Revelation, and in the 11th century a Byzantine emperor bequeathed the whole place to monks. These days, it’s a glamorous party spot in high season, popular with “aristocrats, interior designers, fashion editors and their muses”. But it has not been ruined by development, and in spring or autumn it is very peaceful. Stay at Pagostas, a small guesthouse with “spare but richly textured” interiors, in the island’s labyrinthine old town. Strike out on “long walks to remote hermitages”, or for “rousing dips in empty coves”. See pagostas.com and walkinginpatmos.com

Living it up in Porto

The city of Porto in Portugal (PxHere)

(Image credit: PxHere)

“If you can’t feel pleased with your lot in Porto, then something’s amiss,” says Nick Hammond in The Daily Telegraph. Portugal’s second city is a “heady delight” of fabulous wines, great food, churches, towers and townhouses “stacked high” above the Douro River. A brief epicurean break there should naturally involve plenty of port, the fortified wine to which the city gave its name. Cockburn’s and Graham’s are among the venerable houses offering tours and tastings, and the latter’s restaurant, Vinum, can also be heartily recommended. For good seafood in “homely” surroundings, try O Gaveto in Matosinhos, and the “tiny, wonderful” Taberna dos Mercadores. And be sure to visit some of the nearby vineyards of the Douro Valley, such as the “Eden-like” Quinta do Vesúvio, and the Quinta do Bomfim, whose restaurant is overseen by the Michelin-starred chef Pedro Lemos.

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