Travel Blog
City-by-city travel guides with attractions, food, budget, and the best time to visit each one.
Oregon's high-desert outdoor capital — a 100,000-person Cascade-Mountains-and-Deschutes-River town with 30+ breweries (more per-capita than any US city), Mount Bachelor skiing, and the famous Smith Rock climbing gym
8 min readWisconsin's Great Lakes peninsula — 480 km of Lake Michigan-and-Green-Bay shoreline, 11 historic lighthouses, 250+ Door County cherry orchards, and 5 state parks on the 'Cape Cod of the Midwest'
8 min readMichigan's no-cars island in Lake Huron — 500 permanent residents, no motor vehicles allowed since 1898, the Grand Hotel's 660-foot front porch, and the world's only place where you can ride a bicycle on a Victorian-era car-free island
8 min readRhode Island's Gilded Age summer capital — a 24,000-person colonial port and yachting center on Aquidneck Island, with 11 historic 'summer cottages' (read: 70-room mansions) from the Vanderbilts, Astors, and Belmonts, and the famous 5.6km Cliff Walk
8 min readVermont's ski-and-foliage capital — a 4,300-person Green Mountain village beneath 4,395-foot Mount Mansfield (Vermont's highest peak), home to Stowe Mountain Resort and the famous Trapp Family Lodge (yes, the Sound of Music Trapps)
8 min readShowing 201–205 of 205 articles
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