London is changing after the lockdown, 10 Downing Street changes, and the death of Queen Elizabeth II. The city offers culture, history, art, and nightlife for everyone.
1. London
Morioka, Iwate, is disregarded. It is mountainous and a few Shinkansen hours north of Tokyo. Walkable downtown Morioka. Modern hotels, ancient ryokan, and winding canals are in the city.
2. Morioka
Kilmartin Glen's misty sun rises over 800 ancient sites over millennia. Stonehenge in Scotland's rugged west coast sans tourists.
3. Kilmartin Glen
Auckland is usually considered the entry point for the rest of New Zealand’s natural attractions, but travelers just passing through can miss that it’s also the culinary capital
4.Auckland
With its low-slung Modernist design and recently returned 26-foot "Forever Marilyn" statue, this is midcentury nostalgia. The desert and dark skies are now the main attraction.
5.Palm Springs
Adelaide is a short drive from Kangaroo Island, a zoo without gates. Southern Ocean Lodge burned three years ago. Reconstruction makes the island more appealing.
6.Kangaroo Island
Protecting Europe's last undammed river, the Vjosa, is hard. After a decade of proposed developments threatened its unregulated flow, nature, and old towns, Albania declared the Vjosa untamed River National Park in June.
7. Vjosa River
Accra's cuisine scene is divided into "chop bars" that serve cheap, traditional dishes like fufu (pounded cassava, green plantains, or yams) with tomato-based hot soup and fancier restaurants that sell foreign food.
8.Accra
Aurora travelers are optimistic after years of low solar activity. Auroras increase with solar flares and CMEs. Solar activity will peak in 2025, according to Keo Scientific aurora researcher Trond S. Trondsen. Sunspots rise faster than expected.
9.Tromso
After 2.5 years of epidemiological isolation, Bhutan adopted a "high value, low volume" tourism policy in September. Bhutan's "sustainable development fee" rose to $200 from $65 per day, but package tours are no longer needed.
10. Bhutan