Thursday, July 2, 2026

The 7 New Wonders of the World: Which is the Best? (You Decide)

In 2007, over 100 million people around the world cast their votes to decide which human-made structures deserved a place on the most coveted list in travel. The result was the New Seven Wonders of the World — a roll call of the most breathtaking, historically significant and architecturally extraordinary places on the planet.

We’ve been lucky enough to visit several of them over the years, and we’ve spent a lot of time thinking about this question. But rather than give you our verdict and leave it there, we want to hear from you. More on that in a moment.

First, let’s take a tour of all seven — because each one has a story worth telling.


1. Machu Picchu, Peru

Perched at 2,430 metres above sea level in the Peruvian Andes, Machu Picchu is one of those places that genuinely defies expectation. You can read about it, see the photographs, watch the documentaries — and still nothing quite prepares you for the moment the clouds part and the full scale of this 15th-century Inca citadel reveals itself.

Built around 1450 and abandoned less than a century later during the Spanish conquest, Machu Picchu was unknown to the outside world until American historian Hiram Bingham stumbled upon it in 1911. The site covers roughly 80,000 acres of mountain terrain, with stone temples, agricultural terraces and residential quarters arranged with extraordinary precision — and without the use of mortar, wheels or iron tools.

The classic approach — a four-day trek along the Inca Trail — remains one of the great travel experiences in South America. But the train journey through the Sacred Valley from Cusco is a worthy alternative, and the Aguas Calientes hot springs at the base of the mountain make for a restorative end to the day.

Best for: Hikers, history lovers, and anyone who wants to feel genuinely small.


2. The Great Wall of China

Stretching over 21,000 kilometres across northern China — from the eastern shores of Bohai Bay to the Gobi Desert in the west — the Great Wall is less a single structure than a vast network of walls, towers and fortifications built across more than 2,000 years of Chinese history.

The most visited sections near Beijing (Badaling and Mutianyu) are spectacular but busy. For a more atmospheric experience, the unreconstructed sections at Jiankou or Jinshanling reward those willing to make a little more effort — crumbling watchtowers, wild vegetation reclaiming the stonework, and views that stretch to the horizon with barely another soul in sight.

The wall was never truly a single defensive line so much as a series of regional barriers, expanded and connected over centuries by successive dynasties. Walking a stretch of it, particularly on a clear autumn day, is to walk through layer upon layer of Chinese history.

Best for: Those who want scale — and lots of it.


3. The Colosseum, Rome, Italy

Few buildings in the world carry quite the same weight of history as the Colosseum. Completed in 80 AD under Emperor Titus, this elliptical amphitheatre once held up to 80,000 spectators who came to watch gladiatorial combat, animal hunts and public spectacles on a scale that wouldn’t be matched for over a millennium.

Standing in the arena itself — where the sand once covered a labyrinthine network of tunnels housing animals, gladiators and stage machinery — is genuinely stirring. The engineering is as impressive as anything the ancient world produced, and the fact that it survived two millennia of earthquakes, stone-robbing and neglect makes it all the more remarkable.

Rome, of course, offers considerably more than the Colosseum — the Forum, the Palatine Hill, the Pantheon, and more excellent food than you could eat in a month — but the Colosseum remains the city’s most iconic image for very good reason.

Best for: History enthusiasts, architecture lovers, and first-time visitors to Rome.


4. The Taj Mahal, India

Built between 1631 and 1648 by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan as a mausoleum for his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal, the Taj Mahal is perhaps the most recognisable building on earth — and one of the very few that lives up entirely to its reputation.

The symmetry is extraordinary. The white marble changes colour with the light — pale gold at dawn, brilliant white at midday, soft rose at sunset, silvery grey by moonlight. The inlaid semi-precious stonework, the calligraphy, the reflecting pool, the surrounding gardens — every element was conceived as part of a unified whole, an expression of grief and devotion rendered in stone.

It’s worth going early, before the crowds arrive, and taking time to walk the full gardens rather than heading straight for the mausoleum. The rear view of the Taj from the riverbank — less photographed and far quieter — is arguably the most beautiful perspective of all.

Best for: Romance, architecture, and a genuinely moving experience.


5. Chichén Itzá, Mexico

The great Maya city of Chichén Itzá, in the Yucatán Peninsula, is dominated by El Castillo — the step pyramid of Kukulcán, which rises 30 metres above the surrounding jungle and demonstrates a level of astronomical precision that continues to astonish researchers today. At the spring and autumn equinoxes, the angle of the sun creates the illusion of a serpent descending the staircase — a phenomenon that draws thousands of visitors twice a year.

Beyond El Castillo, the site encompasses the Great Ball Court (the largest in Mesoamerica, where the acoustic properties allow a whisper at one end to be heard clearly at the other), the Temple of the Warriors, and the Sacred Cenote — a natural sinkhole used for ritual offerings.

Chichén Itzá can feel busy during peak season, and visitors are no longer permitted to climb the pyramid. But the scale of the complex and the sophistication of Maya civilisation it represents make it one of the most fascinating archaeological sites in the Americas.

Best for: History, archaeology, and travellers with a genuine curiosity about pre-Columbian civilisations.


6. Christ the Redeemer, Brazil

At 38 metres tall, arms outstretched 28 metres wide atop the 700-metre Corcovado mountain, Christ the Redeemer has been watching over Rio de Janeiro since 1931. It is simultaneously a feat of Art Deco engineering, a deeply held religious symbol, and one of the most iconic images in the world.

The views from the summit — over the city, the bays, Sugarloaf Mountain, and the Atlantic beyond — are extraordinary on a clear day. The statue itself is impressive up close in a way that photographs don’t quite capture, and the engineering story behind its construction (the soapstone tiles were each individually shaped and shipped from Portugal) is remarkable.

It’s worth being honest, though: Christ the Redeemer is primarily a viewpoint with a monument attached. The experience is wonderful, but it lacks the historical depth of several others on this list.

Best for: First-time visitors to Rio, photographers, and those with a head for heights.


7. Petra, Jordan

Petra — the ancient Nabataean city carved directly into the rose-red sandstone cliffs of southern Jordan — is one of those very rare places that manages to exceed even the highest expectations. The approach through the Siq, a narrow 1.2-kilometre gorge with walls rising 80 metres on either side, builds the anticipation masterfully. Then, as the gorge narrows to its tightest point, the Treasury appears in a sliver of light — and the effect is nothing short of spectacular.

But the Treasury is just the beginning. Beyond it lies an entire city — the Street of Facades, the Royal Tombs, the Byzantine Church, the Great Temple, and at the far end of the valley, the monastery of Ad Deir, reached by 850 rock-cut steps and rewarding the effort with a façade even larger than the Treasury and views across the desert that stretch for miles.

Petra was the capital of the Nabataean Kingdom, a sophisticated civilisation of traders who controlled the incense routes between Arabia, Egypt and the Mediterranean. At its peak, the city was home to 30,000 people. Today, only around 15% of the site has been excavated — the rest remains buried under the desert.

Jordan itself is a gem — Wadi Rum, the Dead Sea, Aqaba, Jerash — and Petra is its crown.

Best for: Everyone. Genuinely. We haven’t met a person who came away disappointed.


So Which is the Greatest Wonder of Them All?

Every single one of these places deserves its place on the list, and choosing between them is genuinely difficult. Machu Picchu has the drama. The Great Wall has the scale. The Colosseum has the history. The Taj Mahal has the beauty. Chichén Itzá has the mystery. Christ the Redeemer has the view. And Petra has something that’s hard to put into words — a sense of discovery, of stepping into another world entirely.

We’ve shared our thoughts — now we’d love to hear yours. Which of the Seven New Wonders of the World do you think deserves the top spot? Cast your vote below.



We’d love to know your answer — and if you’ve visited any of them, tell us about it in the comments below. And if this list has given you itchy feet, take a look at our small group tours to some of the world’s most remarkable destinations. We can’t promise wonders — but we’ll do our best.


Explore the world differently with Untravelled Paths. Small groups, big experiences and places you won’t find in the brochures.

Written by James Chisnall

The post The 7 New Wonders of the World: Which is the Best? (You Decide) appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/new-wonders-of-the-world-best/

Kotor vs Dubrovnik: Why We Think Montenegro’s Old Town Wins

If you’ve been scrolling through holiday inspiration for the Adriatic, chances are Dubrovnik keeps popping up. Croatia’s “Pearl of the Adriatic” has had the marketing machine and a certain dragon-themed TV show behind it for the best part of a decade. But just an hour or so down the coast, tucked into one of the most dramatic bays in Europe, sits a town that does almost everything Dubrovnik does, and does it with a fraction of the crowds and none of the queues. We’re talking about Kotor.

At Untravelled Paths, we’ve built our reputation on finding the destinations that haven’t yet been flattened by mass tourism, and Kotor is a brilliant case in point. Here’s why we think it deserves a place on your itinerary ahead of its more famous Croatian neighbour and why, if you’re choosing between the two, Kotor should win.

1. The Setting Is, Genuinely, More Spectacular

Dubrovnik’s Old Town sits proudly on the coast, walls rising straight out of the Adriatic. It’s beautiful, no question. But Kotor has something Dubrovnik simply can’t offer: the Bay of Kotor itself.

Often (if slightly inaccurately) described as Europe’s southernmost fjord, the bay is a winding, fjord-like inlet flanked by sheer limestone mountains that plunge straight into the sea. Kotor’s Old Town sits at the very back of this bay, wrapped by medieval walls that climb 260 metres up the mountainside behind it. Nothing in Dubrovnik quite matches the sense of scale and drama you get sailing into Kotor, or hiking up to the Fortress of San Giovanni for a view over those famous terracotta rooftops and the bay beyond.

2. Fewer Crowds, More Charm

This is the big one. Dubrovnik has become something of a cautionary tale in overtourism circles. On a busy summer’s day, several enormous cruise ships can dock at once, sending thousands of day-trippers pouring through the Pile Gate all at the same time. The city has introduced visitor caps and crowd-control measures in recent years precisely because the Old Town, beautiful as it is, simply cannot cope with the volume of people trying to squeeze through its narrow marble streets.

Kotor gets cruise ships too, it’s not entirely undiscovered. But its Old Town is a fraction of the size, and outside of a few pinch-points around peak season, you can still wander its stone squares, sit at a café on Cathedral Square, or explore the backstreets without feeling like you’re in a queue. For a small-group escorted tour, that matters enormously, it’s the difference between genuinely experiencing a place and simply photographing it.

3. Better Value for Money

Montenegro hasn’t (yet) seen the price inflation that’s crept into Dubrovnik, where a coffee with a view can set you back the same as a full meal elsewhere in the Balkans. Accommodation, dining and guided experiences in and around Kotor tend to offer noticeably better value, without any compromise on quality. Your money simply goes further, which is why we’re able to build such rich, immersive itineraries around it.

4. A Gateway to So Much More

Here’s where Kotor really pulls ahead: what’s on its doorstep. From Kotor, you’re perfectly placed to explore some of Montenegro’s most breathtaking landscapes without ever getting back on a plane. Wind your way up the old Austro-Hungarian road for hairpin views back down over the bay. Head south along the coast to the photogenic islet of Our Lady of the Rocks near Perast, or the beach town of Budva. Venture inland to Lovćen National Park, further still to the turquoise waters of Lake Skadar or even the famous Durmitor National Park. Dubrovnik’s surroundings are lovely, but they don’t offer anywhere near this variety within such easy reach.

For anyone joining one of our small-group Balkans tours, this is exactly the kind of depth we build our itineraries around, not just ticking off a famous Old Town, but properly getting under the skin of a region.

5. It Still Feels Like a Discovery

Perhaps the biggest difference is intangible. Dubrovnik, for all its beauty, can feel like a place you’ve already seen a thousand times on Instagram before you arrive. Kotor still has that spark of discovery about it, the feeling of finding somewhere brilliant that most people haven’t got round to yet.

That won’t last forever. Montenegro is very much on the up, and Kotor is increasingly finding its way onto more travellers’ radars. But for now, it still offers that rare thing: a genuinely beautiful, historic, walkable Old Town that hasn’t lost its soul to tourism.

So, Which Should You Choose?

If you’ve only got a day and you’re already in Croatia, Dubrovnik is still absolutely worth a visit, it earns its reputation. But if you’re deciding where to actually base a trip, or which coastal gem deserves more of your time, we’d choose Kotor every time. Fewer crowds, better value, a more dramatic setting, and so much more to explore right on its doorstep.

It’s exactly the kind of destination we love building trips around at Untravelled Paths: somewhere with real history and beauty, that hasn’t yet been overrun. And as with all our trips, every booking helps plant trees through our partnership with the World Land Trust, so you can explore Montenegro’s landscapes while helping protect others too.

Fancy seeing the Bay of Kotor for yourself? Get in touch with our team to find out more about our small-group escorted tours and tailor-made trips to Montenegro and the wider Balkans.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Kotor vs Dubrovnik: Why We Think Montenegro’s Old Town Wins appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/kotor-vs-dubrovnik/

Friday, May 22, 2026

The Untravelled Paths Bucket List: 30 Experiences Worth Planning Your Year Around

We’ve been running small group trips to lesser-known corners of the world for nearly two decades. In that time, we’ve learnt something important: the experiences that stay with people aren’t always the obvious ones. They’re rarely the famous landmarks at midday in August. They’re the morning you woke early and had something magnificent entirely to yourself. The meal that went on for hours. The moment the landscape did something you simply hadn’t expected.

This list is our attempt to distil eighteen years of travel into thirty of the most extraordinary things we think a person can do. We’ve organised them into three categories: Great OutdoorsLocal Flavour, Into the Wild and Once in a Lifetime – though in truth, the best experiences tend to be all three at once.

Every single one is bookable. Every single one is guaranteed to run. And every single one is waiting for you to stop putting it off.


🌿 Great Outdoors: where the world takes your breath away

1. Wild swimming in Lake Bled before the tour groups arrive, Slovenia

Yes, the photographs are everywhere. But they don’t capture what it feels like to be in the water, looking up at the island church, the castle-topped crag and the Julian Alps framing it all, in the silence of a summer morning before 8am. Slovenia rewards the early riser in ways most destinations simply cannot match and our itinerary is built around being in exactly the right place at exactly the right time.

Explore our Slovenia experiences →

2. Zip-lining over the dramatic depths of Tara Canyon, Montenegro

Tara Canyon is the deepest river gorge in Europe, over 1,300 metres from rim to river in places, and crossing it by zip line is one of those experiences that makes you briefly forget everything else. The view is extraordinary; the rush is real. It’s the kind of activity that makes group travel genuinely bond people, and it sits perfectly within our Montenegro itinerary.

Explore our Montenegro experiences →

3. Walking the ancient walls of Kotor Old Town at golden hour, Montenegro

The fortification walls above Kotor climb almost vertically from the medieval old town to a hilltop fortress, with the Bay of Kotor spreading out below you as you rise. At golden hour, when the bay catches the last of the afternoon light and the mountains turn deep green, it’s one of the most beautiful views in Europe. And it costs nothing but the climb.

Explore our Montenegro experiences →

4. Gliding through the Albanian Alps on the spectacular Koman Ferry, Albania

The Koman Ferry crosses a vast reservoir carved between mountains so steep and so close together that the water below barely sees the sun. It’s one of the most jaw-dropping ferry journeys in Europe, largely unknown, completely unhyped, and a perfect metaphor for why Albania deserves to be on your radar before the rest of the world catches up.

Explore our Albania experiences →

5. Trekking across the border from Albania into Montenegro through the Accursed Mountains, Albania & Montenegro

The Prokletije range, known locally as the Accursed Mountains, straddles the border between Albania and Montenegro in one of the most remote and spectacular landscapes in the Balkans. Our crossing combines boat travel and on-foot trekking through terrain that genuinely feels like the end of the world. It’s adventure travel at its most elemental, and the sense of achievement at the other side is enormous.

Explore our Albania experiences →

6. Taking a refreshing dip in the emerald pools below Kravica Waterfalls, Bosnia & Herzegovina

Kravica is Bosnia’s open secret — a horseshoe of cascades dropping into a series of vivid green pools that look more Caribbean than Balkan. Swimming here, with the falls thundering around you and the sun coming through the trees, is one of those travel experiences that is simply and straightforwardly joyful. No backstory required. It features on our Bosnia itinerary for good reason.

Explore our Bosnia experiences →

7. Marvelling at Georgia’s extraordinary monastery settings in the Greater Caucasus, Georgia

Georgia has a habit of placing its ancient monasteries in locations of almost theatrical natural drama – perched on clifftops, tucked into gorges, or clinging to mountain ridges with the Caucasus rising behind them. Gergeti Trinity Church above Stepantsminda, with Mount Kazbek as its backdrop, is perhaps the most famous. But there are others, and our Georgia itinerary takes you to the ones that stop you in your tracks.

Explore our Georgia experience →

8. Standing at the edge of the Perito Moreno Glacier as it calves into the lake below, Argentina

Most glaciers in the world are retreating. Perito Moreno advances, grinding forward into Lago Argentino until it breaks under its own weight, sending vast chunks of ice crashing into the turquoise water below. You wait. You watch. You hear it groan and crack. Then the roar, and the wave. It is a spectacle of geological theatre unlike almost anything else on earth, and it is one of the highlights of our Argentina itinerary.

Explore our Argentina experience →


🍷 Local Flavour: where culture gets under your skin

9. Hunting for truffles in the Slovenian forest, then sitting down to a homestead meal, Slovenia

Slovenia is one of Europe’s great culinary secrets and the truffle forests of the country’s interior are among its best-kept. Our truffle hunting experience puts you in the woods with a local expert and a highly trained dog, followed by a meal back at the farmhouse using ingredients from the land around you. It’s the kind of experience that food writers queue up for. On our itinerary, it’s just Tuesday.

Explore our Taste of Slovenia experience →

10. Walking across the Stari Most at dusk as the old city comes to life around you, Bosnia & Herzegovina

The rebuilt 16th-century Ottoman bridge arching over the Neretva in Mostar is beautiful at any hour but at dusk, when the stone glows amber and the call to prayer drifts across the water, it becomes something more. Bosnia is complex, layered and profoundly moving in ways that few European destinations manage. Our seven-day itinerary gives you the time to actually understand it, rather than merely pass through.

Explore our Bosnia experiences →

11. Celebrating Halloween inside the real Dracula’s Castle in Transylvania, Romania

Bran Castle, which inspired Bram Stoker’s gothic fortress, perches on a rocky bluff above the Transylvanian countryside with the kind of architectural menace that simply cannot be manufactured. Visiting on Halloween, when the castle leans into its legend with theatrical abandon, is one of those experiences that manages to be simultaneously ridiculous and genuinely memorable. And we mean that as the highest possible compliment.

Explore our Halloween Dracula experience →

12. Wandering the cobalt alleyways of the Blue Pearl of Chefchaouen, Morocco

The medina of Chefchaouen is painted almost entirely in shades of blue, a tradition that gives the mountain town an atmosphere of dreamlike calm that is unlike anywhere else in Morocco, or indeed the world. Every alleyway is a photograph. Every doorway a story. Getting genuinely lost here, without a map and without a plan, is one of travel’s purest pleasures, and it features on our Morocco itinerary.

Explore our Morocco experience →

13. Being stopped in your tracks by a flamenco performance in the heart of Seville, Spain

Flamenco in Seville isn’t a tourist attraction, it’s a living, breathing art form that emerged from the city’s soul. Watching it performed by serious artists in an intimate setting. The stomp of heels on a wooden floor, the extraordinary physical control, the emotional charge of the singing – is an experience that bypasses the rational brain entirely. You don’t need to understand it. You just feel it.

Explore our Spain experience →

14. Spending time among the ancient tribes of the Omo Valley, Ethiopia

The lower Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia is home to some of the most culturally distinct peoples on earth — the Mursi, Hamar, Karo and Dassanech among them, many of whom continue to live according to traditions that have remained largely unchanged for centuries. Visiting with genuine respect, through guides with deep community relationships, is one of the most profound and humbling things we offer.

Explore our Ethiopia experiences →

15. Arriving at the Chichicastenango market before the tour buses, Guatemala

Thursday and Sunday markets in Chichicastenango are among the most visually extraordinary in the world – handwoven Mayan textiles, copal incense smoke drifting up the church steps, traders who have been coming here for centuries. By mid-morning the tour groups have arrived and the spell changes. Arrive at dawn, as our Guatemala itinerary does, and it belongs entirely to you.

Explore our Guatemala experience →

16. Rolling pasta dough with local nonnas in the backstreets of Bari, Italy

The women of Bari Vecchia have been making orecchiette by hand on their doorsteps for generations – a living culinary tradition in the middle of an ancient town. Learning from them directly, in their homes, with flour on the table and a glass of something local close at hand, is the kind of travel memory that sits completely outside the reach of any guidebook. Slow, joyful and entirely real.

Explore our Dolce Vita Puglia experience →

17. A long, unhurried lunch in a vineyard with Mount Etna smouldering on the horizon, Italy

Sicily’s volcanic soils produce wines of extraordinary character, and the vineyards on Etna’s slopes, with the active volcano as a constant, magnificent presence – make for one of the most dramatic lunch settings on earth. Add the food, the wine, the light and the complete absence of any reason to hurry, and you have a very good afternoon indeed.

Explore our Italy experience →


🦁 Into the Wild: Immerse yourself in nature

18. Drifting through the Danube Delta by boat as thousands of birds rise around you, Romania

The Danube Delta is one of Europe’s largest and best-preserved wetlands, a labyrinth of channels, reed beds and lakes that is home to over 300 species of birds and a way of life that has changed remarkably little in centuries. On a small boat in the early morning, with pelicans overhead and the sound of the water all around you, it’s one of the most quietly extraordinary places we visit.

Explore our Danube Delta experience →

19. Walking alongside elephants on the Garden Route, South Africa

Being on foot in the presence of elephants – really on foot, in their space, moving with them at their pace, is an entirely different experience to watching them from a vehicle. The scale, the intelligence and the extraordinary calm they project at close quarters is something you cannot prepare for. Our South Africa experience puts you here in the company of expert rangers who understand these animals deeply.

Explore our South Africa experiences →

20. Meeting the penguin colony at Boulders Beach, South Africa

African penguins on a beach a few miles from Cape Town, entirely wild, entirely unbothered by the people who come to see them, waddling between the granite boulders and sunbathing on the sand. It is completely incongruous, completely charming, and one of those wildlife encounters that nobody who sees it ever quite gets over. It features on our South Africa itinerary, and it never gets old.

Explore our South Africa experiences →

21. Sitting in a bear hide in the Carpathian forest, waiting for Europe’s largest predator to appear, Romania

Romania’s Carpathian Mountains are home to the largest brown bear population in Europe outside of Russia. Observing them from a purpose-built hide at dusk – patient, quiet, genuinely uncertain whether one will appear, and then it does, is one of those wildlife encounters that documentaries can suggest but never fully replicate. The silence of the forest beforehand is part of the experience.

Explore our Brown Bear experience →

22. Watching a green sea turtle come ashore to nest, by torchlight, on a Caribbean beach, Costa Rica

Tortuguero National Park, reachable only by boat or small plane, is one of the world’s most important green turtle nesting sites. Being guided to the beach after dark to watch a turtle weighing well over a hundred kilograms haul herself ashore, dig her nest and lay her eggs is an experience of almost primal quiet and wonder. It’s on our Costa Rica itinerary, and nothing quite prepares you for it.

Explore our Costa Rica experience →


✨ Once in a Lifetime: the experiences that change you

23. Floating silently above the fairy chimneys of Cappadocia in a hot air balloon at sunrise, Turkey

As the sun crests the horizon over Cappadocia’s surreal volcanic landscape, dozens of balloons rise from the valley floor and drift in near-silence above the fairy chimneys and ancient cave formations below. The scale is extraordinary; the quiet is unexpected; the light is everything. It belongs on every serious traveller’s list, and it features on ours for very good reason.

Explore our Turkey experiences →

24. Following a mobile safari camp deep into the Okavango Delta on the trail of the Big Five, Botswana

A mobile safari in Botswana is as close as modern travel gets to genuine wilderness immersion. Your camp moves with the wildlife – no fences, no fixed infrastructure, no other guests visible on the horizon. Just you, your guide, and one of the most biodiverse ecosystems on the planet. Seeing a lion in the wild for the first time, properly in the wild, does something to your nervous system that you simply don’t expect.

Explore our Botswana experiences →

25. Descending into the Danakil Depression, one of the most extreme landscapes on earth, Ethiopia

The Danakil Depression in northern Ethiopia is one of the hottest, lowest and most geologically active places on the planet. Acid lakes of vivid yellow and green, salt plains that stretch to the horizon, and lava lakes that glow orange in the dark. It looks like another world because, in almost every meaningful sense, it is. Visiting requires preparation, nerve, and a guide you trust absolutely. We know just the people.

Explore our Extreme Ethiopia experience →

26. Watching the sun set and rise over the Sahara from a private desert camp in the dunes, Morocco

The Erg Chebbi dunes near Merzouga reach 150 metres – tall enough to make you feel genuinely small. Arriving by camel at dusk, watching the light drain from the sand through gold to deep red to purple, then lying on your back in total silence as the Milky Way unfurls overhead, and waking before dawn to see the whole thing reverse in the morning light. Two moments, one desert, and no adequate words for either.

Explore our Morocco experiences →

27. Watching the Northern Lights ripple across the sky from a heated glass-roofed cabin in Finnish Lapland, Finland

The Aurora Borealis is one of those sights that people consistently describe as making them cry – not from sadness, but from sheer overwhelm. Lying in a heated glass-roofed cabin in Finnish Lapland, warm and horizontal, watching green and violet light move across the sky directly above you, is about as close to a perfect travel experience as we know how to offer. Our Lapland itinerary puts you there.

Explore our Lapland experience →

28. Driving a dog sled through a silent Arctic forest as the sun comes up over the snow, Finland

The dogs are extraordinary – muscular, focused, trembling with energy before the run and completely transformed once moving. Through birch forest, across frozen lakes, in temperatures that somehow feel exhilarating rather than unpleasant. The silence between the sound of the runners on snow is total. It is one of the most alive feelings available to any traveller. It is also, it turns out, rather addictive.

Explore our Lapland experience →

29. Sleeping in open-sided accommodation deep in the Colombian Amazon, with the jungle all around you, Colombia

Wall-less sleeping platforms in the Amazon – open to the night sounds, the humidity and the extraordinary cacophony of the forest after dark, is one of those experiences that forces the nervous system to recalibrate entirely. It is not comfortable in any conventional sense as you’re protected by a tight industrial strength mosquito net. It is, however, one of the most immersive and memorable things we offer, and guests who do it rarely stop talking about it.

Explore our Colombia experience →


30. The one you’ve been meaning to book for two years

Every person who travels seriously has a list – the one they update quietly over the years, adding things overheard at dinner parties and read in the back pages of magazines. The experience that haunts them slightly. The one they keep meaning to book and never quite do. Consider this a gentle nudge. Every trip on this list is guaranteed to run the moment you book it. We never cancel. So the only thing standing between you and any of the above is the decision to go.

Browse all our experiences →


Ready to start planning?

Every experience on this list is real, bookable and guaranteed to run once you’re confirmed. Our groups are small, our guides are local, and our itineraries are built around the kind of moments that make a trip worth remembering for the rest of your life. Drop us a line and let’s get started.

Written by James Chisnall

The post The Untravelled Paths Bucket List: 30 Experiences Worth Planning Your Year Around appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/bucket-list-travel-experiences-untravelled-paths/

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Why Slovenia Should Be on Your Radar Instead of Switzerland

Same stunning scenery. A fraction of the price. And a whole lot more besides.

Switzerland is magnificent. Nobody is going to argue with that. The snow-capped Alps, the crystal-clear lakes, the immaculate villages – it is, without question, one of Europe’s most iconic destinations. But here’s the thing: it is also eye-wateringly expensive, increasingly crowded, and, whisper it, a little predictable.

So what if we told you there’s a country that gives you virtually everything Switzerland offers, throws in an Adriatic coastline, serves food and wine that rivals northern Italy, runs with the quiet efficiency of Austria, and costs a fraction of the price?

Meet Slovenia. Europe’s best-kept secret and quite possibly its greatest underrated travel destination.


1. The Price Difference Is Extraordinary

Let’s start with the numbers, because they really are remarkable. Switzerland consistently ranks as one of the most expensive countries in the world for travellers, with average daily costs that can leave even seasoned holidaymakers wincing. A coffee in Zurich. A glass of wine in Geneva. A hotel in Zermatt. It all adds up, and adds up fast.

Slovenia, by contrast, offers outstanding value without ever feeling budget. You’ll find beautifully designed boutique hotels, exceptional restaurants, well-maintained roads and hiking trails, and a tourism infrastructure that feels genuinely world-class – all at prices that are typically 50 to 70 per cent lower than Switzerland. Families, couples, and solo travellers alike will find that their money goes considerably further here, leaving more in the kitty for experiences rather than simply keeping up with the cost of being there.

For travellers who want the Alpine dream without the Alpine price tag, Slovenia is quite simply unbeatable.


2. The Food and Wine Will Genuinely Surprise You

One of the most delightful discoveries awaiting first-time visitors to Slovenia is just how seriously the country takes its food and wine. Bordering Italy to the west, Slovenia has absorbed centuries of culinary influence from its neighbour, and the results are spectacular.

The Vipava Valley and the Karst region produce wines, particularly orange wines and robust reds, that are earning genuine international acclaim. Slovenian olive oil from the Istrian coast has won global awards. The country’s chefs are creative, ingredient-led, and deeply proud of their local produce, which ranges from wild mushrooms and truffles to freshwater fish, cured meats and outstanding cheeses.

Ljubljana, Slovenia’s charming capital, has a restaurant scene that punches well above its weight, with several establishments that would hold their own in any major European city. For food and wine lovers, Slovenia is not a compromise on Italy – it is a magnificent alternative with its own distinct and deeply rewarding identity.


3. The Infrastructure Is Quietly Impressive

One of the reasons Switzerland commands such a premium is its legendary infrastructure, the trains that run to the second, the spotless roads, the impeccable organisation. What many travellers don’t realise is that Slovenia offers a remarkably similar experience.

Having been part of the former Yugoslavia’s most prosperous republic, and having joined the European Union in 2004, Slovenia has developed infrastructure that feels much closer to Austria than to the Balkans. Roads are excellent, public transport is reliable, signage is clear, and the country is exceptionally well set up for tourism. Hiring a car and exploring independently is an absolute pleasure, and the compact size of the country, it is roughly the size of Switzerland’s Canton of Bern, means that you can cover an enormous amount of ground in a relatively short time.


4. The Mountain Scenery Is Every Bit as Spectacular

Here is perhaps the most important point of all for anyone considering Slovenia as an alternative to Switzerland: the landscapes are genuinely, breathtakingly stunning.

The Julian Alps in the north-west of the country offer dramatic mountain scenery that stands comparison with anything the Swiss Alps have to offer. Triglav National Park, home to Mount Triglav, Slovenia’s highest peak and a symbol of national pride, is a hiker’s paradise of glacial valleys, waterfalls, limestone plateaus and soaring peaks. In winter, ski resorts such as Kranjska Gora and Vogel offer excellent skiing without the queues and costs of their Swiss counterparts.

And then there is Lake Bled. Quite possibly one of the most photographed places in Europe, with its fairytale island church and clifftop castle reflected in impossibly turquoise water, Bled is the image that has put Slovenia firmly on the map for many travellers and rightly so. Lake Bohinj, nearby and considerably less visited, offers an equally beautiful but altogether more peaceful alternative for those who prefer their scenery without the selfie sticks.


5. It Even Has a Coastline

This is the detail that tends to genuinely surprise people. Switzerland, for all its magnificence, is landlocked. Slovenia is not.

The Slovenian Riviera, a short but utterly charming stretch of Adriatic coastline, offers the towns of Piran, Izola and Koper, each with its own distinct character and Venetian architectural heritage. Piran in particular is one of the most beautifully preserved medieval coastal towns in the whole of the Mediterranean, a labyrinth of narrow streets, elegant squares and waterfront restaurants that feels like stepping into another era.

It is a small coastline, certainly but it is a magnificent one, and it adds a dimension to a Slovenian holiday that Switzerland simply cannot match.


6. It Is Still Pleasingly Undiscovered

Slovenia welcomed around 6.5 million tourists in 2024. Switzerland, by comparison, welcomed over 39 million. That difference in visitor numbers is felt at every level of the travel experience – in the queues at popular sites, in the ease of finding accommodation, in the sense of space and authenticity that Slovenia consistently delivers.

This is a country that has not yet been overwhelmed by mass tourism. Its people are warm and welcoming, its culture is vibrant and proud, and its natural environment is treated with genuine care and respect. Slovenia was named European Green Capital and has long been celebrated for its commitment to sustainable tourism – an increasingly important consideration for the modern, conscious traveller.


The Verdict

Switzerland will always have its place. But for travellers who want Alpine grandeur, exceptional food and wine, world-class infrastructure, a sparkling Adriatic coastline and extraordinary value, all wrapped up in one of the most compact and perfectly formed countries in Europe, Slovenia is not just a reasonable alternative to Switzerland.

It is, in many ways, the better choice.

Explore our Slovenia journeys →

The post Why Slovenia Should Be on Your Radar Instead of Switzerland appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



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