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Destinations


For the Rusty Traveler That Has Been Quarantined All Year
At the start of 2020, I had high hope and dreams. You know how the story goes, because we all did. 2019 changed us and walking into the new year we were all optimistic and ready to be showered in blessings…lol.


One of my best days was someone’s worst
Hiking there was surreal for the broke, naive girl who used to work her ass off while trying to find ways to travel the world. Another “I can’t believe I’m really here,” moment for sure. And more immediately, it was a nice reward after hiking for close to 4 hours uphill. Let’s just say my body was suffering while my brain was on cloud 9.


Skydived Next To A Volcano
Normally I’d be ecstatic to arrive in a place like this, but as a tired traveler ready to go home who also had a bad head-cold, initially


New Zealand
New Zealand is a country of scale — glaciers, ancient forests, volcanic highlands, and fiords carved over millions of years. It rewards the willingness to slow down and let each place settle on its own terms. Fiordland & Milford Sound Fiordland is one of the least disturbed landscapes on Earth. Milford Sound — cut by glaciers over millions of years, walled by sheer cliff faces that plunge directly into the water — is its most dramatic point. We design access that moves past t


South Africa
From wide savannahs and open plains to the cold Atlantic coastline shaped by wind and kelp, South Africa is defined by scale and contrast. Safari days focus on animal movement across varied terrain, while Cape Town and its surrounds bring the journey to the coast — through ocean experiences, food culture, inland mountains, and nearby winelands. Kruger National Park Few wildlife destinations on Earth can match Kruger for sheer variety and scale. We work with guiding teams whos


Namibia
The oldest desert in the world. A coastline strewn with shipwrecks. Rock art carved by people who were here thousands of years before us. The light here is unlike anywhere else in Africa, and the landscapes shift from red dune to white salt pan to Atlantic coastline in ways that are difficult to prepare for. Namibia is not a country that announces itself. It reveals itself slowly, and stays with you long after. Dawn on the Dunes The white clay pan at Deadvlei — ringed by dune


Iceland
A place of genuine contrast — glaciers and volcanoes, hot springs and cold seas, vast open landscapes still being shaped by what lies beneath them. It sits on a fault line between two tectonic plates, and it shows. Few places on Earth feel this raw, or this alive. The journeys we design here move through that full range — from ice and lava to ocean and highland — combining active exploration with moments of stillness in some of the country's most remote and affecting settings


Japan
Few places hold the old and the new in such close balance. Ancient craft traditions still practised by the families that invented them. Temples and post towns largely unchanged across centuries. And alongside all of this — some of the most contemporary design, architecture, and culture anywhere on Earth. The two exist without contradiction, often within the same street. Most visitors see the big cities, and leave having experienced one version of Japan. Beyond those familiar
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