America’s coastal areas don’t have a monopoly on great beaches . . . or groovy beach towns.
21.07.2023 - 07:48 / roughguides.com
You crowned buzzing Osaka the coolest city of 2017, favouring it over the likes of Santiago and Bristol.
Pounding nightlife, glittering canalsides and an ever-diversifying food scene all help this city's cool credentials. Oh, and did we mention it's the birthplace of ramen noodles?
If that's not enough, be sure to check out all the other reasons Osaka should be on your travel radar.
Narrowly pipped to the post by Osaka, Santiago's thriving arts scene and spectacular location earned it second place.
Oft overlooked in years gone by, seen as a mere base for exploring Chile's natural sights, the capital has now entirely reinvented itself.
And a new direct flight route from the UK means it's even easier for British travellers to come and enjoy the city's cultural offerings.
We think lovely Porto has lived in Lisbon's shadow for too long, and our readers obviously agree. You voted Porto the most underrated destination of 2017.
Rising visitor numbers and new flight routes suggest the city won't be a secret for much longer.
Whether it's for its delicious local wine, burgeoning food scene or local creatives, Porto is sure to be big news next year. Watch this space...
The little-touristed country of Georgia is your runner-up.
With its wild, mountainous landscapes and dramatic coastlines, it's little wonder that Georgia is opening up as an adventure travel destination to watch. The rugged Caucasus range offers great trekking, while the compact capital, Tbilisi, with its fantastic modern art museum, is also starting to get noticed.
Make the trip before the rest of the world does too.
Glasses clinked around the UK when the Lake District became Britain's newest UNESCO World Heritage Site in July. And now you've voted it your favourite back-on-the-radar destination for 2017.
Nevertruly off the radar, the sprawling Lake District sees millions of hikers, boaters and birders each year – but the accolade served as a gentle reminder of all the national park has to offer. So pull on those hiking boots and make the most of the Great British outdoors.
The enchanting Middle Eastern country of Jordan takes the runner-up spot.
The new Jordan Trail, which launched in 2017, beats a 400-mile path through some of the country's wildest parts, putting it firmly back on the map. Add to that the time-worn temples of Petra and the vast expanses of Wadi Rum and it's no wonder that Jordan is top of your travel lists once more.
If you're planning a trip, be sure to read our guide to the destination.
This year's solar eclipse, touted as one of the greatest in American history, was your favourite event of 2017.
Millions of people across the States, from west coast to east, turned out to gaze up at the eclipse, whose path extended across the entire country.
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America’s coastal areas don’t have a monopoly on great beaches . . . or groovy beach towns.
Looking for a new museum to add to your travel to-do list? TripAdvisor (SmarterTravel’s parent company) has released the Travelers’ Choice Top 25 Museums of 2018, including the top 10 worldwide and the top 10 in the United States, with some surprising frontrunners. The findings also highlight bookable ways to see each winner—think VIP tours and scavenger hunts—with some offering the added perk of allowing you to skip the lines to get in.
It’s the rare year during which no one dies in a commercial jet airline crash. For whatever reasons, 2017 was such a year.
AirHelp, the online service that files complaints against airlines on behalf of passengers entitled to compensation for air delays or cancellations, knows a thing or two about air travel. Because it’s hard for the average person to understand air passenger rights and pursue a legal claim when they’ve been wronged, AirHelp is always going toe-to-toe with airlines and airports—and reveals once a year which ones that treat their passengers for the better (or worse).
In this time of isolation, businesses and individuals around the world are sending out messages of hope. Discover, in photos, how we’re keeping our spirits up during the COVID-19 pandemic.
For the sixth year in a row, Finland has claimed the top spot in the World Happiness Report. The annual report, compiled by the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, surveys residents in over 150 countries to determine which nations are the happiest.
Soon after the turn of the 20th century, rumors began making their way west that man-eating lizards, 10 feet long and weighing up to 350 pounds, with fearsome talons, chain mail scales, and serrated teeth dripping with venom, had been found living on a remote Indonesian island. The source of the reports was Lieutenant Jacques Karel Henri van Steyn van Hensbroek, a Dutch colonial officer, who revealed the existence of Varanus komodoensis, the world's largest extant reptile, in 1910. But it was a 1926 American Museum of Natural History expedition to capture live specimens, led by a flamboyant Vanderbilt scion named William Douglas Burden, that caused interest in the creature to explode in popular culture. Burden's gripping account, Dragon Lizards of Komodo, inspired his friend Merian C. Cooper to dream up the primordial Skull Island for his classic 1933 film, King Kong. Civilization was steaming forward, and yet, in that era, the map still seemed to hold places that hid ancient secrets.
In Willemstad, the capital city on the island of Curaçao, the waterfront is dotted with buildings the color of tropical fruit: mango orange, banana yellow, kiwi green. Paired with the bright blue water in nearby bays, it’s almost a full kaleidoscope of color. Originally, the structures were limestone white, but an 1817 law forbade white facades on buildings to protect islanders’ eyesight from the bright reflections of the Caribbean sun – but locals joke that it was a money-making bid on behalf of the island’s only paint supplier.
At the southernmost tip of South America is the region of Patagonia, spread between Chile and part of Argentina. The region is one of the most extreme on earth, with huge mountains, rushing rivers, massive glaciers, rare wildlife, and the remnants of volcanos so tall they’re often shrouded in weather patterns different from those at the base. It’s extremely undeveloped and wild, thanks to federal protections from the two countries.
Train travel in the United States may not be as common or practical as in other parts of the world, but that does not mean it’s nonexistent — far from it. There are high-speed trains operating on the coast of Florida; there are Amtrak trains that will take you through some of the nation’s most beautiful national parks; there is a train in Colorado that runs at the bottom of a 1,200-foot-deep gorge and one that goes through California’s most celebrated wine region; and there are trains in Alaska that will take you for the ride of a lifetime through the most spectacular scenery — in glass-ceiling cars, no less!
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is one of the world’s most incredible natural wonders – it’s the largest structure ever built by living things and is visible even from space. For millennia, this glorious underwater world has blazed with colour, sheltering some of the earth’s most spellbinding ocean-dwelling creatures. But the unnaturally rapid increase in the earth’s temperature is putting this vast ecosystem under increasing threat.
Kyūshū, the most southerly of Japan’s four main islands, is pretty much left alone by tourists. Yet, the island – only a bullet-train ride from Tokyo – is one of the country’s culinary hotspots. Proximity to mainland Asia and historical legacies from trade with the British, Dutch and Portuguese has led to a fusion of styles. You can see this in the Chinese- and Korean-inspired ramen soups, Nagasaki’s famous castella cakes and the Fukuoka-style yakiudon noodles, which are typically served with a dash of Worcestershire sauce.