Thursday, April 30, 2026

Four Holidays in One: Our Epic 14-Night Journey Through Colombia

Right Now Is the Best Time to Discover the Americas

Something rather wonderful is happening in the travel world. Alongside Africa and Asia, the Americas — Central and South — have emerged as one of the most compelling regions on earth for travellers who want something genuinely extraordinary. Ancient civilisations, extraordinary biodiversity, vibrant living cultures, world-class food, and landscapes so diverse they feel almost implausible — the Americas have it all. And Colombia, sitting at the crossroads of South America’s Andean highlands, Caribbean coast, Amazon basin, and Pacific shore, has it in extraordinary concentration.

This is why, as part of our exciting expansion into the Americas, Colombia was an obvious and irresistible choice. And why, having explored it in depth, we can tell you with complete confidence: this is one of the most remarkable countries on earth.

Colombia also has one of the most dramatic and heartening travel stories of the past two decades. A country that once made international headlines for all the wrong reasons has transformed itself into one of South America’s most dynamic, welcoming, and rewarding destinations. In 2026, Bogotá was officially named the world’s most authentic city for travellers according to the Travel Authenticity Index — analysing over 1.3 million reviews across 140+ cities. That is not a small thing. It reflects a country that has found its confidence, opened its doors, and is ready to show the world what it has always quietly known: that Colombia is extraordinary.


Four Holidays in One: Why Colombia Is Unlike Anywhere Else

Here is the thing about Colombia that strikes every traveller who visits for the first time: it doesn’t feel like one country. It feels like several.

Within a single two-week trip, you can find yourself in a high-altitude Andean capital buzzing with world-class museums, street art, and one of Latin America’s most exciting restaurant scenes. Then in the deep Amazon rainforest, navigating black-water channels by canoe, watching pink river dolphins surface beside the boat, and sleeping in a jungle lodge while caimans glide silently past on the waterway below. Then in a highland valley of improbable beauty, hiking through mist and wax palms on the steep slopes of a UNESCO-recognised coffee landscape. And finally on the Caribbean coast, in one of the most gloriously preserved colonial cities on earth, where Afro-Colombian rhythms pulse from flower-draped balconies and the sunsets over the sea are the kind that make you reach for words you don’t quite have.

That is exactly what our 14-night journey through Colombia offers. Four worlds. One country. And a trip that our guests consistently describe as feeling like four holidays packed into one extraordinary adventure.

Let us take you through each one.


Region 1: Bogotá — The World’s Most Authentic City

Bogotá sits at 2,600 metres above sea level in the heart of the Colombian Andes, ringed by green peaks that catch the clouds and give the city an atmosphere unlike any other capital in Latin America. It is a city of seven to eight million people — sprawling, complex, endlessly surprising, and buzzing with an energy that was recently recognised as the most genuinely local, authentic, and unfiltered of any city on earth.

The historic heart of Bogotá is La Candelaria — a neighbourhood of colonial churches, cobblestone streets, and university cafés, where street artists have turned entire building facades into extraordinary murals, and where some of the finest museums in all of Latin America sit within walking distance of each other.

The Museo del Oro is unmissable. Named by National Geographic as one of the most important museums in the world, it houses over 34,000 gold pieces and artefacts from Colombia’s pre-Hispanic indigenous cultures — a collection so extraordinary that the famous “Golden Raft” alone, a tiny masterpiece depicting a Muisca chief surrounded by his nobles on a ceremonial lake offering, is worth the entire journey. The Botero Museum, free to enter, contains not only the exuberant, oversized figures of Colombia’s most celebrated artist Fernando Botero — considered the most recognised and widely quoted living Latin American artist — but also a remarkable collection of international works including Picasso and Renoir.

But Bogotá’s culture extends far beyond its museums. The city hosts more than 18,000 public and private cultural events every year — from the world’s largest free music festival, Rock al Parque, to intimate jazz concerts, food festivals, and a dining scene that has quietly become one of the most exciting in the Americas. Chef Leonor Espinosa’s restaurant Leo — recently ranked among the World’s 50 Best Restaurants — serves a tasting menu that journeys through Colombia’s extraordinary biodiversity, using ingredients from indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities across the country. It is as close as you can get to eating the whole of Colombia in a single sitting.

Beyond the city itself, the extraordinary Salt Cathedral of Zipaquirá — an underground cathedral built inside the tunnels of a working salt mine, 200 metres below ground — sits less than an hour from the capital. And the Paloquemao market, where Bogotá feeds itself from long before dawn, is one of those experiences that recalibrates your entire sense of what abundance looks like.

Bogotá is the Colombia that most travellers skip too quickly. It rewards those who slow down.


Region 2: The Amazon — Into the Lungs of the Earth

From Bogotá, a two-hour flight south takes you to Leticia — a small, friendly frontier town on the banks of the Amazon River at the southernmost tip of Colombia, where three countries converge: Colombia, Peru, and Brazil. You can walk across the border for ceviche in Peru and a caipirinha in Brazil, and return to Colombia before sunset. Nowhere else on earth is quite like it.

But Leticia is really a gateway, not a destination. The destination is the rainforest.

From the town, you travel by boat — the only way in — through channels of the Amazon River into the Amacayacú National Natural Park and the indigenous communities of Mocagua and San Martín de Amacayacú, where the jungle closes in on both sides of the water and the sounds of the forest take over. Howler monkeys announce themselves from the canopy. Macaws and toucans move between the trees. The air is thick, warm, alive with the weight of biodiversity — Colombia’s Amazon region alone is home to over 3,000 distinct species of fish, 195 species of mammals, and more plant species than most continents.

The days in the Amazon are extraordinary in their variety. You wake to dawn chorus — a symphony of birds and insects so layered and complex it takes several mornings to begin to distinguish individual voices. Guided canoe tours take you through narrow channels draped in green, past trees whose roots rise from the water in elaborate buttresses. Anacondas rest on banks. Poison dart frogs — vivid red and blue, impossibly small — sit on leaves at the water’s edge. Fishing for piranhas in the afternoon sun turns out to be surprisingly companionable, the small, fierce fish snapping at the bait with startling efficiency.

And then there are the pink river dolphins. The boto, or Amazon river dolphin, is one of those creatures that seems too extraordinary to be real — pink-skinned, long-beaked, deeply intelligent, surfacing beside the boat with a gentleness that belies its strength. Encountering them in the wild, in their river, on their terms, is one of those moments that stays with a traveller.

Night walks in the Amazon are extraordinary in their own right — the jungle transforming entirely after dark, torchlight finding tarantulas, caimans floating with red eyes at the waterline, and the extraordinary sounds of a forest that never truly sleeps.

The days here are unhurried and immersive in a way that no other experience on the trip quite matches. There is no WiFi. There is no phone signal. There is only the river, the jungle, and an astonishing quantity of life.


Region 3: The Coffee Region — Colombia’s Most Beautiful Landscape

From the deep Amazon to the Andean highlands — the contrast could not be more dramatic, or more exhilarating.

The Eje Cafetero, or Coffee Region, is a UNESCO-recognised cultural landscape stretching across the departments of Caldas, Risaralda, and Quindío in the heart of Colombia. It is, quite simply, one of the most beautiful places we have ever visited anywhere in the world: a landscape of steep green hillsides draped in coffee plants, misty cloud forests, rushing rivers, and brilliantly coloured colonial towns whose churches and plazas and painted timber facades seem almost too photogenic to be real.

The gateway to all of it is Salento — a small, spectacularly charming town of around 7,000 people, its streets lined with balconied colonial buildings painted in every shade of ochre, terracotta, sky blue, and emerald green. The central plaza, framed by wax-palm-lined hills and surrounded by cafés serving the finest coffee you have ever tasted in your life, is one of those places where you sit down for fifteen minutes and realise two hours have passed.

From Salento, vintage Willys jeeps — the iconic Colombian farm vehicles that have been rattling these mountain roads since the 1940s — take you into the Cocora Valley, and what you find there is one of the great natural spectacles of the Americas.

The Quindío wax palm is the national tree of Colombia. It grows nowhere else on earth in these concentrations. And it is enormous — the tallest palm species in the world, reaching heights of up to 60 metres, with a slender, solitary trunk that seems to go on forever before exploding into a feathery crown so high above your head that you have to tilt back to see it. To walk through the Cocora Valley at dawn, the valley floor still wrapped in mist, the palms rising from the cloud like something from a fairy tale — this is an experience that even the most well-travelled guests consistently describe as one of the most beautiful things they have ever seen.

The hike through the valley takes five to six hours at a gentle pace, moving through cloud forest, crossing streams on rope bridges, climbing to viewpoints that open out across the valley, and eventually descending back through the palms as the mist burns off in the morning sun. It is magnificent.

But the Coffee Region is more than scenery. The coffee itself — grown on family-owned fincas whose owners have been tending these slopes for generations — is among the finest in the world. A farm tour here is not a tourist experience tacked onto a commercial operation. It is a conversation with a family who has spent their lives understanding the relationship between altitude, rainfall, volcanic soil, and bean. You pick, you process, you roast, and then you drink — fresh, medium-roasted Colombian coffee in the place it was grown — and you understand, perhaps for the first time, what “coffee” is actually supposed to taste like.

The Eje Cafetero is also home to extraordinary bird life, thermal springs, and the snow-capped peaks of Los Nevados National Park — whose glaciers and high-altitude páramos offer hiking for the more adventurous. The region manages to be simultaneously deeply relaxing and endlessly stimulating. We could stay for a month.


Region 4: Cartagena and the Caribbean Coast

The final chapter of the Colombia journey is the most theatrical.

Cartagena de Indias — founded in 1533 by Spanish conquistadors who used it as the primary port for shipping gold and silver from the New World back to Europe — is one of the great colonial cities of the Americas. Simón Bolívar, during the Wars of Independence, awarded it the title it bears to this day: La Heroica. The Heroic City. Walk its streets and you understand exactly why.

The Walled City is a UNESCO World Heritage Site — a labyrinth of cobblestone streets, 400-year-old churches, flower-draped balconies, hidden courtyards, and pastel-painted mansions that glow in the Caribbean sun with a golden, almost theatrical perfection. The imposing walls themselves — built over two centuries to protect the city from pirates including Sir Francis Drake and the British Admiral Vernon — stretch for 11 kilometres around the old city, and walking them at sunset, with the Caribbean Sea turning pink on one side and the terracotta rooftops of the old town glowing on the other, is one of those moments that feels almost scripted in its beauty.

But Cartagena is much more than its colonial architecture. It is a city of Afro-Colombian culture in its fullest, most vibrant expression — a place shaped by five centuries of African, Indigenous, and Spanish influences weaving together into something entirely its own. The palenqueras — women from the nearby community of San Basilio de Palenque, Colombia’s first free African town founded by escaped enslaved people in 1603 — move through the streets in brilliant skirts and headscarves, balancing bowls of tropical fruit on their heads, their presence a living reminder of the history that built this city and the resilience of the people who survived it.

Getsemaní, the neighbourhood just outside the walls, is Cartagena’s creative soul — its streets covered in vivid murals, its plazas filled with music and dancing until late, its cafés and bars giving the city its Afro-Caribbean heartbeat. This is the neighbourhood that Gabriel García Márquez, Cartagena’s most famous literary son, might have imagined in Love in the Time of Cholera — magical, sensory, alive.

A day trip to the Rosario Islands — a chain of coral islands in the Caribbean, an hour by boat from Cartagena — offers turquoise water and white sand so fine it squeaks. Snorkelling through the coral reveals fish of extraordinary colour. And a boat excursion to El Totumo — a small mud volcano an hour north of the city where you float effortlessly in warm, mineral-rich grey mud while farmers from surrounding villages rub your shoulders with great enthusiasm — is one of those experiences that is so strange, and so Colombian, and so entirely delightful that you find yourself grinning about it for the rest of the trip.

The Caribbean food of Cartagena is a discovery entirely of its own: cazuela de mariscos (a creamy seafood stew with coconut milk, shrimp, mussels, and fish), arroz con coco (rice cooked in coconut milk), fresh ceviche, and the extraordinary abundance of tropical fruits — maracuyá, guanábana, lulo, corozo — that appear in juices and desserts and cocktails throughout the city. It is richer, spicier, and more deeply Caribbean than the food of the Colombian interior, and it is wonderful.

Cartagena is the perfect ending to a journey through Colombia. You have seen the country’s intellectual heart, its ancient wilderness, its coffee-growing soul, and now its sun-drenched, music-filled, historically resonant Caribbean face. You leave feeling that you have genuinely, thoroughly understood a place — which is the greatest thing travel can offer.


Practical Notes

Getting there: Fly into Bogotá (El Dorado International Airport), which is well connected from the UK and Europe via a single stop. Fly home from Cartagena, or return to Bogotá for onward connections.

The Amazon: Reached by a two-hour domestic flight from Bogotá to Leticia. No roads go there — the forest and river are the only way in.

The Coffee Region: Fly or take a comfortable coach from Bogotá to Pereira or Armenia, and continue to Salento by road. The journey itself is spectacular.

Cartagena: Served by its own international airport with direct connections to Bogotá and several international destinations.

Best time to visit: Colombia’s Caribbean coast (Cartagena) is best from December to April. The Amazon and Coffee Region are excellent year-round, though drier months vary by region. We’ll always advise you on the optimal timing for your journey.


Ready to Experience Colombia for Yourself?

This journey is one of the most ambitious and rewarding itineraries we offer anywhere in the Americas. The combination of Bogotá’s authenticity and cultural depth, the raw wildness of the Amazon, the otherworldly beauty of the Coffee Region, and the Caribbean warmth of Cartagena creates a trip that genuinely feels like four holidays — each one extraordinary in its own right, and together forming one of the finest South American adventures available.

Colombia is a country that has worked hard to welcome the world. And the world is beginning to notice.

Get in touch with the Untravelled Paths team today to find out more, request a detailed itinerary, or simply ask us anything about what to expect. And if you’d like a proper conversation about the trip, we’d be delighted to schedule a Zoom call with one of our team — just say the word and we’ll find a time that works for you.

Colombia is waiting. It is magnificent. And it is time to go.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Four Holidays in One: Our Epic 14-Night Journey Through Colombia appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/colombia-14-night-journey-untravelled-paths/

Stepping Into the Wild: Costa Rica’s Most Extraordinary Wildlife Experiences

We’ve Just Arrived in the Americas and We’ve Started With Costa Rica!

Something rather exciting has been happening at Untravelled Paths HQ. After years of bringing you extraordinary adventures across Africa, Europe, and Asia, we’ve officially expanded into the Americas. And when it came to choosing our very first destination in this magnificent part of the world, there really was only one contender.

Costa Rica.

Right now, Central and South America represent one of the most compelling regions on the planet for the kind of travel we care about: genuine wildlife, extraordinary landscapes, remarkable biodiversity, and experiences that simply cannot be found anywhere else. The Americas are having a moment, global travellers are waking up to the extraordinary depth and diversity on offer from the rainforests of the Amazon to the peaks of Patagonia. And Costa Rica, that small but staggeringly rich country on the sliver of land connecting two great continents, sits at the very heart of it.

Consider the numbers. Costa Rica covers less than 0.03% of the Earth’s surface, yet it is home to approximately 5% of all the world’s known species. Five per cent. In a country you can drive across in a few hours. More than 500,000 species: birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, insects, and marine creatures share this extraordinary place. The government has protected over 26% of its territory as national parks and reserves, making it one of the most ecologically committed nations on earth.

Why now? Because this is still the moment to go. Costa Rica’s wild places remain genuinely wild. The wildlife experiences here are among the most accessible on the planet and you don’t need to trek for weeks to find them. And the country’s extraordinary infrastructure for eco-tourism means you can have adventures that feel remote and genuinely immersive whilst still sleeping well and eating beautifully.

Our brand new Costa Rica adventure takes in five remarkable destinations: the vibrant capital San José, the canal-laced wilderness of Tortuguero, the volcanic landscapes of La Fortuna, the surf-washed Pacific coast of Tamarindo, and the legendary cloud forests of Monteverde. Each one is extraordinary in its own way. Together, they tell the story of one of the most biodiverse places on earth.

Here’s what awaits you.


San José: Your Gateway to the Wild

First impressions matter, and San José delivers. Costa Rica’s capital is a vibrant, energetic city that serves as the perfect introduction to this remarkable country — a place to absorb the culture, eat extraordinarily well, and begin to understand the nature that surrounds it on every side.

The city sits in the Central Valley, ringed by volcanoes and draped in a spring-like climate year-round. It is a city of colour, noise, flavour, and genuine warmth. The covered Mercado Central bustles with life; the Teatro Nacional, an extraordinary piece of 19th-century European architecture transplanted into the tropics, stands in elegant contrast to the mountains in the distance; and the neighbourhoods of Barrio Amón and Barrio Otoya reveal a colonial past in their ornate facades and tree-lined streets.

But San José is also a wildlife destination in its own right. The city’s butterfly gardens and wildlife rescue centres introduce you to the animals you’ll encounter throughout the trip; sloths, toucans, iridescent morpho butterflies, and more. The nearby Braulio Carrillo National Park, a vast cloud forest reserve just 30 minutes from the city, offers a first glimpse of the extraordinary ecosystems that make Costa Rica so special.

Arriving in San José is the moment the adventure begins. By the time you leave for Tortuguero, you’ll already be hooked.


Tortuguero: Costa Rica’s Little Amazon

There are no roads into Tortuguero. To reach it, you travel by boat through a network of canals, channels, and jungle waterways that wind through one of the most biodiverse landscapes in Central America. And that journey, gliding past towering trees draped in epiphytes, watching caimans on sunlit banks and herons standing motionless in the shallows, is itself one of the great wildlife experiences of the trip.

Tortuguero, whose name translates simply as “region of turtles”, is a narrow sandbar village on Costa Rica’s northeastern Caribbean coast, enveloped by nearly 200,000 acres of protected jungle, rainforest, swamps, and lagoon. The national park is home to 138 mammal species, 442 bird species, 118 reptile species, and 58 amphibian species, packed into a labyrinth of habitats that earned it the nickname “Costa Rica’s Little Amazon.”

On early morning canal boat tours, you drift beneath the canopy as the forest wakes around you. All three of Costa Rica’s monkey species; howler, spider, and white-faced capuchin move through the treetops above. Three-toed sloths hang in improbable positions from the branches. Spectacled caimans glare from the water’s surface. The basilisk lizard, nicknamed the “Jesus Christ lizard” for its extraordinary ability to sprint across the surface of the water and vanishes before you can properly register what you’ve seen. Toucans and green macaws call from somewhere in the canopy.

And then there are the turtles.

Tortuguero is one of the most important green sea turtle nesting sites in the entire Western Hemisphere. Between June and October, approximately 22,000 green sea turtles haul themselves up these beaches to lay their eggs in the sand. Witnessing this at night and standing quietly on the dark beach as a massive, ancient creature emerges from the surf and begins the slow, determined process of securing the next generation, is one of the most profoundly moving wildlife experiences available anywhere on earth. Leatherback and hawksbill turtles also nest here, and the conservation work of the Sea Turtle Conservancy, which has been studying and protecting these animals since 1959, means that every night tour contributes directly to their survival.

Tortuguero is also one of the few places in Costa Rica where jaguars patrol regularly, particularly during turtle nesting season when eggs and hatchlings provide easy meals. Camera traps regularly confirm their presence. Sightings are rare, but knowing they are out there in the darkness adds a genuine, thrilling wildness to the experience.


La Fortuna: In the Shadow of a Volcano

The perfectly conical peak of Arenal Volcano is one of the most beautiful and iconic sights in all of Costa Rica. Rising to 1,670 metres above the lush Northern Highlands, Arenal dominates the landscape from every angle, appearing and disappearing behind clouds, catching the light in ways that shift from moment to moment throughout the day. It is one of those rare natural landmarks that genuinely earns the word “majestic.”

La Fortuna, the small but lively town at Arenal’s eastern foot, is the adventure capital of Costa Rica. The surrounding landscape offers extraordinary wildlife alongside an almost comically comprehensive list of activities: hanging bridges through the rainforest canopy, night walks to find red-eyed tree frogs and kinkajous, river safaris along the Río Peñas Blancas, waterfall hikes, kayaking on Lake Arenal, and at the end of it all, soaking in geothermally heated hot springs under a sky full of tropical stars.

The wildlife around La Fortuna is exceptional. The hanging bridges of Mistico Park take you through primary rainforest at canopy level, where toucans and monkeys move through the trees at eye level and the perspectives on the forest are unlike anything you get from the ground. Night walks reveal the extraordinary nocturnal world of the cloud forest: red-eyed tree frogs (one of the most photographed creatures in Costa Rica, for very good reason) perched on leaves, sleeping sloths, fer-de-lance vipers, and the extraordinary sounds of insects and amphibians that form the rainforest’s night-time soundtrack.

The river safaris along the Río Peñas Blancas offer some of the finest wildlife watching in the region from the water. Caimans, river otters, Jesus Christ lizards, and a dazzling variety of bird species; including kingfishers, herons, anhingas, and the occasional osprey, make every journey down the river a new discovery. Howler monkeys announce themselves long before you see them, their extraordinary calls rolling through the trees like something out of prehistory.

And then, as the day winds down, you lower yourself into a pool of thermal water heated by the volcano beneath your feet, and Costa Rica delivers one of its quieter but equally extraordinary pleasures.


Tamarindo: Pacific Sunsets and Sea Turtles by Moonlight

Tamarindo is where the jungle meets the Pacific Ocean, and the result is one of the most beautiful and beguiling coastlines imaginable. A lively, surf-oriented town on the Guanacaste coast, Tamarindo sits within the Guanacaste province’s extraordinary tropical dry forest ecosystem, a landscape that is drier and more open than Costa Rica’s Caribbean and highland forests, but every bit as rich in wildlife.

The beaches here are legendary for surfing, and the warm, consistent waves of the Pacific attract learners and experienced surfers alike. But wildlife enthusiasts will find equal reason to fall in love with this stretch of coast.

Just north of Tamarindo lies Playa Grande, part of the Las Baulas National Marine Park, one of the most important leatherback sea turtle nesting sites on the Pacific coast of the Americas. The world’s largest sea turtle, leatherbacks can grow to over two metres in length and weigh as much as 900 kilograms. Watching one haul herself up the beach in the darkness, leaving tracks as wide as tyre treads in the sand, is an experience that stays with you permanently. Olive ridley sea turtles also nest along the nearby beaches, and guided night tours, strictly regulated to protect the animals and take small groups to witness the nesting with minimal disturbance.

The estuary at Tamarindo is a wildlife spectacle all of its own. Boat tours through the mangrove channels reveal American crocodiles lazing on sunlit banks (entirely ignoring the boats), howler monkeys crashing through the canopy overhead, herons and egrets fishing the shallows, and magnificent frigatebirds circling high above with wingspans of up to two metres. In the surf itself, brown pelicans dive-bomb the breaking waves in search of fish and one of those small, daily spectacles of the Costa Rican Pacific coast that you never quite get used to, however many times you see it.

Out on the water during snorkelling excursions to the Catalina Islands, you might find yourself sharing the sea with giant manta rays and sea turtles surfacing for air among the waves. The marine biodiversity of this coast is as extraordinary as anything on land.

Tamarindo is also a wonderful place simply to be. The sunsets here are staggering, vast, warm, photographic events that colour the sky over the Pacific in shades of orange and pink that seem almost impossibly vivid. After a day of wildlife and adventure, there are few finer places to watch the day end.


Monteverde: Where the Mist Holds Miracles

The road to Monteverde climbs steeply through the mountains, the air growing cooler and damper as you ascend, until suddenly the lowland heat is behind you and you are somewhere else entirely. Somewhere quieter, greener, and stranger. Somewhere that smells of moss and wet earth and something indefinable that is the cloud forest announcing itself.

Monteverde is one of the most celebrated natural destinations in Costa Rica, a high-altitude cloud forest that protects one of the most intact and biodiverse ecosystems on the planet. Less than 0.26% of the earth’s land surface is covered by tropical cloud forest. Monteverde is one of the finest examples that remains. The mist that clings to the canopy here is not just atmospheric, it is functional, feeding the forest directly through the leaves and sustaining entire watersheds across Costa Rica.

The biodiversity within the reserve is extraordinary: over 100 species of mammals, more than 400 species of birds, 120 types of amphibians and reptiles, and 420 species of orchids have been recorded here. Spider monkeys, howler monkeys, agoutis, and two-toed sloths move through the forest, and the night walks reveal a world of armadillos, tarantulas, and the extraordinary Hoffman’s Two-toed Sloth rustling in the canopy above.

But there is one creature that draws travellers to Monteverde from the farthest corners of the earth: the Resplendent Quetzal.

The quetzal was sacred to the Maya and the Aztecs, who used its tail feathers, which can grow to a full metre in length on the males in the headdresses of kings and priests. Today it is considered one of the most beautiful birds on earth, its iridescent emerald body and brilliant crimson breast making it almost impossible to believe it’s real. Spotting one in the mist-draped canopy of the Monteverde cloud forest, guided by a naturalist who knows exactly where to listen for its call and which fruiting wild avocado trees it favours, is one of those wildlife moments that travellers describe in awed, quiet terms for years afterwards.

The hanging bridges of Monteverde are extraordinary in their own right, elevated walkways that take you through the forest at canopy height, offering perspectives on the ecosystem that ground-level hiking simply cannot deliver. And the zip-lines, which send you flying above the forest canopy with the cloud forest stretching in every direction below, manage to be both an adrenaline experience and one of the finest views in Costa Rica simultaneously.

Monteverde is where the trip ends. It is also, many of our guests tell us, where they decide they need to come back.


The Best Time to Visit

Costa Rica has two distinct seasons: the dry season (December to April) and the green season (May to November). Both have their charms, but for wildlife, the seasons each offer different rewards. Sea turtle nesting in Tortuguero peaks between July and October. Quetzal sightings in Monteverde are best between January and May. The dry season offers clearer skies and easier travel, while the green season brings lush landscapes, fewer crowds, and the extraordinary spectacle of the rains arriving each afternoon like clockwork.

We offer departures across the year and will always advise you on the best timing for your particular interests. Whatever time you choose, Costa Rica will not disappoint.


Ready to Step Into the Wild?

This is our first Costa Rica adventure, and we are very proud of it. Every destination, every lodge, every guide has been chosen with the same care and attention that we bring to all of our Untravelled Paths experiences.

If Costa Rica has been on your list, and it really should be, there has never been a better time to go. We’d love to tell you more about the trip, walk you through the itinerary, and help you understand whether this is the adventure for you.

Get in touch with us today to find out more or to start planning your trip. And if you’d like to have a proper conversation about the experience, we’d be delighted to schedule a Zoom call with one of our team, just let us know and we’ll find a time that works for you.

Pura vida, as the Costa Ricans say. It translates as “pure life.” Spend two weeks in this country and you’ll understand exactly what they mean.

Written by Jackson Cornish

The post Stepping Into the Wild: Costa Rica’s Most Extraordinary Wildlife Experiences appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/costa-rica-wildlife-adventure-untravelled-paths/

From Glaciers to Vineyards: Ten Reasons Argentina Belongs on Your Bucket List

Why Argentina feels like five countries in one is something you don’t fully appreciate until you’re actually in it. This is a place that stretches from Parisian-style boulevards in Buenos Aires to the wild, wind-scoured edges of Patagonia, from quiet delta waterways to vine-covered hillsides overlooking the Andes. It has a strong, unmistakable sense of identity wherever you go — whether it’s the world-class Malbec, the extraordinary beef, the tango that pulses from every corner of the capital. But what really makes Argentina special is that it isn’t polished, and it doesn’t try to be. It’s a little unpredictable, occasionally chaotic, and entirely, irresistibly alive. The kind of unpredictability that’s been unsettling the English since 1986 — gracias, Diego.

Argentina is one of travel’s best-kept secrets. And it’s time it was on your radar.


1. Lose Yourself to Tango in Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires is the birthplace of tango, and experiencing it here — in the city where it was born, in a candlelit milonga with the bandoneón sighing in the corner — is something no recording or performance elsewhere ever quite replicates. Head to one of the city’s legendary tango venues for an evening of live music, extraordinary dancing, and almost certainly a very good glass of Malbec. If you’re feeling adventurous, take a lesson. You will be terrible at first. You will love every second.

The atmosphere of Buenos Aires in the evenings — the heat, the music leaking from doorways, the dancers on the pavement of San Telmo — is one of those things that stays with you permanently.


2. Stand Before the Perito Moreno Glacier

Down in Patagonia, at the edge of the world, one of the most extraordinary natural spectacles on the planet is quietly going about its business. The Perito Moreno Glacier — part of the Los Glaciares UNESCO World Heritage Site near El Calafate — is one of only a handful of glaciers on earth that is still advancing rather than retreating. It is vast, it is ancient, and it is the most extraordinary shade of blue you have ever seen.

You can walk across it with crampons on a guided ice hike, or take a boat across the lake to see its 60-metre ice face up close. Either way, the moment when a chunk of ice the size of a house calves off the face and crashes into the turquoise water below — with a sound like a cannon shot — is an experience you will not forget as long as you live.


3. Spend a Sunny Afternoon in Mendoza’s Vineyards

Mendoza, in the foothills of the Andes, is one of the world’s great wine regions — and visiting it is one of travel’s great pleasures. This is the home of Argentine Malbec, and the combination of high altitude, intense sunshine, and mineral-rich Andean meltwater produces wines of remarkable depth and character.

Spend an afternoon cycling between vineyards — the landscape of vine-covered slopes and snow-capped mountains in the distance is almost absurdly beautiful — stopping at family-run bodegas to taste and talk with the people who make the wine. Round off the day with a traditional asado at a local estancia: a long, unhurried Argentine barbecue under the sky, where the beef is extraordinary and the conversation even better.


4. Explore the Neighbourhoods of Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires rewards those who walk slowly and look carefully. Each of the city’s neighbourhoods has its own completely distinct character, and together they add up to one of the most endlessly interesting cities in South America.

La Boca is vivid, loud, and painted in every colour imaginable — the famous Caminito street is a riot of corrugated iron buildings daubed in reds, yellows, and blues, with tango dancers performing for passers-by in the afternoon sun. Recoleta is elegant and tree-lined, home to the extraordinary Recoleta Cemetery where Eva Perón is buried alongside generations of Argentina’s great and good in mausoleums of astonishing grandeur. Palermo is the city at its most relaxed — parks, markets, boutiques, and cafés where you could spend an entire afternoon doing precisely nothing and feeling entirely justified. And San Telmo, perhaps the most characterful of all, comes alive on Sunday mornings with street markets, antiques, tango, and the kind of atmosphere that makes you want to cancel your onward flights.


5. Lakes, Mountains and Magic in Bariloche

When you arrive in Bariloche — Argentina’s most beautiful lake district town, nestled between snow-capped peaks and impossibly blue glacial lakes — take the chairlift up to the summit of Cerro Campanario. It is a short ride, but the view from the top has been named one of the most beautiful panoramas in the world. Lake Nahuel Huapi stretches out below you, ringed by mountains, its surface reflecting the sky in different blues depending on the time of day. Take your time up here. You’ve earned it.

And once you’ve had your fill of that view, there is an entire landscape of extraordinary tranquillity waiting below. The Lakes District — stretching south from Bariloche through San Martín de los Andes and Villa La Angostura — is a world of alpine forests of araucaria and lenga beech, mirror-still lakes that reflect the mountains perfectly, and a pace of life that feels like the whole world has agreed to stop rushing for a while. Hike, kayak, fish for trout in rivers as cold and clear as glass, or simply sit on a terrace with a plate of locally smoked fish and a glass of Patagonian wine as the mountains turn pink in the evening light. In winter, the same landscape becomes one of South America’s finest ski destinations. In every season, it is one of the most restorative places we know.


6. Take a Day Trip to Colonia del Sacramento

Here is something that surprises most first-time visitors to Buenos Aires: one of the most charming day trips from the city doesn’t involve Argentina at all.

A short ferry crossing across the Río de la Plata — roughly an hour from Buenos Aires’ port — delivers you to Colonia del Sacramento, a small Portuguese colonial town on the Uruguayan shore that feels as though someone pressed pause several centuries ago and simply forgot to press play again. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and its Barrio Histórico — the old quarter — is one of the best-preserved examples of early colonial urban planning in South America.

The streets here are cobbled and narrow, lined with low whitewashed houses whose bougainvillea spills onto the pavement in fuchsia and orange. Old cannons still point towards the river from the ramparts. A solitary lighthouse, built in the ruins of a 17th-century convent, offers views across the wide, coffee-coloured Plata in every direction. The Portón de Campo — the original city gate, flanked by the remains of the colonial walls — frames the old town perfectly against the river and the sky.

The pace of Colonia is its greatest gift. This is a town built for wandering without purpose, for sitting in a square with a cortado and a pastry and watching absolutely nothing happen very slowly. Little museums dot the old quarter — charming, slightly eccentric, and gloriously unhurried. The restaurants along the waterfront serve fresh Uruguayan fish and the excellent local Tannat wine, which holds its own rather well against its famous Argentine neighbour across the water.

Colonia is proof that the best day trips are sometimes the ones that take you somewhere you didn’t expect to find yourself — and that the Río de la Plata has something extraordinary on both of its shores.


7. Witness the Power of Iguazú Falls

No visit to Argentina is complete without standing at the edge of Iguazú Falls and accepting that you had absolutely no idea. You thought you knew what a waterfall was. You didn’t.

Iguazú is not one waterfall but 275 individual cascades spread across nearly three kilometres of the Iguazú River at the border with Brazil. The roar of the water is felt as much as heard. The spray rises in permanent clouds above the canopy. The famous Garganta del Diablo — the Devil’s Throat — is an 82-metre horseshoe cataract of such overwhelming power that most visitors stand before it in complete, stunned silence.

Beyond the falls themselves, the surrounding national park is extraordinary — a subtropical rainforest teeming with toucans, coatis, hundreds of species of butterflies, and, if you’re very fortunate, the tracks of a jaguar in the riverbank mud.


8. Argentina’s Food and Wine Culture

Let’s be honest: one of the very best things about Argentina is the eating and drinking. This is a country with a food culture of genuine depth and pride — not the kind that needs a Michelin star to justify itself, but the kind that has been refined over generations at family tables, estancia fires, and corner parrillas (grills) in cities and small towns alike.

The centrepiece is, of course, the asado. An Argentine asado is not simply a barbecue — it is a social ritual, an art form, and a statement of identity. The asador (grill master) tends the fire with unhurried care, placing cuts of beef over the embers at precise distances and angles, guided by knowledge passed down rather than written down. The result — bife de chorizo, tira de asado, mollejas (sweetbreads), morcilla (blood sausage) — arrives at the table in unhurried waves, eaten slowly with bread, chimichurri, and the kind of red wine that makes you wonder why you ever drink anything else. An asado is not dinner. It is an afternoon.

Buenos Aires has meanwhile emerged as one of the most exciting restaurant cities in South America. The dining scene spans every register — from the extraordinary tasting menus of celebrated chefs working with native Patagonian ingredients to the neighbourhood parrillas where a perfectly grilled steak and a carafe of Malbec cost less than a sandwich in London. The empanada — a half-moon pastry stuffed with beef, onion, and spice, baked or fried, slightly different in every province — is Argentina’s great everyday food: eaten standing up, wrapped in paper, at any time of day.

And then there is the wine. Mendoza’s Malbec is the variety that put Argentine wine on the world map, but the country’s wine culture extends far beyond a single grape. Torrontés — a uniquely Argentine white variety, floral and aromatic — grows beautifully in the high-altitude vineyards of Salta. The Patagonian wine regions of Neuquén and Río Negro produce Pinot Noir and Chardonnay of striking elegance. And the Valle de Uco, south of Mendoza at over 1,000 metres altitude, is producing some of the most exciting red wines in the southern hemisphere.

A visit to an Argentine bodega is an experience in its own right: the scale of the vineyards, the drama of the Andean backdrop, the warmth of the welcome, and the wines themselves — poured generously, explained with passion, and accompanied by food that makes the glass taste even better. It is one of those experiences that turns people who thought they knew about wine into people who realise, happily, that there was more to learn.

Argentina feeds and waters its visitors extraordinarily well. This alone would be reason enough to come.


9. Experience Football the Argentine Way

Football in Argentina is not a sport. It is a religion, a passion, an expression of identity so profound that it shapes the entire culture. Attending a match in Buenos Aires — even a mid-table league encounter — is an experience unlike anything else in sport: the noise, the colour, the songs that seem to involve every single person in the stadium singing simultaneously.

The Superclásico between Boca Juniors and River Plate is the most intense football rivalry in the world — two clubs from the same city, separated by class and geography and decades of deeply felt mutual feeling. A stadium tour of La Bombonera — Boca’s famously atmospheric ground — is worth doing even if football leaves you cold. Once you’re inside, it almost certainly won’t.


10. Share a Mate and Understand Argentina

There is no better way to understand Argentina than through its most beloved ritual: mate. This is not a drink so much as a social institution — a way of being together, of slowing down, of saying without words that you have time for the people in front of you.

Mate is made from the dried leaves of the yerba mate plant, brewed in a hollow gourd and drunk through a metal straw called a bombilla. It is passed around a group — from person to person, refilling each time — in a ritual of shared hospitality that has been central to Argentine life for centuries. It is slightly bitter, slightly grassy, and deeply, warmly human. Accept it if it’s offered. It means you’re welcome.


Argentina Is Waiting — Are You Ready?

Argentina is the kind of destination that gets hold of you. It is too big to see all at once, too complex to fully understand in one trip, and too extraordinary to visit only once. The glaciers, the vineyards, the tango, the football, the falls, the wide Patagonian sky — each one alone would be worth the journey. Together, they make Argentina one of the most remarkable travel experiences on earth.

At Untravelled Paths, we know Argentina well — its rhythms, its character, its hidden corners, and the moments that make it genuinely unforgettable. Get in touch with our team today and let’s start planning your Argentine adventure. And if you’d like to talk it through properly, we’d be delighted to schedule a Zoom call — just say the word.

Written by Jackson Cornish

The post From Glaciers to Vineyards: Ten Reasons Argentina Belongs on Your Bucket List appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/argentina-travel-guide-untravelled-paths/

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Top Highlights of a Sahara Desert Trip in Morocco

We have just returned from one of the most extraordinary family adventures of our lives, a sweeping journey through Morocco, from the labyrinthine streets of Marrakesh all the way to the golden dunes of the Sahara Desert. And we can tell you with absolute certainty: this is a destination that will ignite your children’s curiosity, expand their worldview, and leave the whole family buzzing with stories for years to come.

If you’re a family who believes that the world is the greatest classroom, that real learning happens when you’re haggling over spices in a souk, sleeping beneath a canopy of desert stars, or watching a camel caravan silhouette against a blazing sunset – then Morocco is calling your name.

From ancient kasbahs and verdant oases to jaw-dropping gorges and spectacular mountain passes, Morocco is a feast for the senses and a masterclass in history, culture, and geography. Whether your children are five or fifteen, this country has the rare gift of making every single one of them feel genuinely awestruck.

Here are our top ten highlights from this magical journey, lovingly compiled for families ready to embrace world schooling at its very finest.


1. Get Lost in Marrakesh’s Medina

There is truly nowhere quite like the Medina of Marrakesh. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, this ancient walled city is an intoxicating blur of colour, sound, and scent. Narrow alleyways twist and turn past riads draped in bougainvillea, snake charmers hold court in Djemaa el-Fna square, and the call to prayer echoes across terracotta rooftops at dusk.

For children, the Medina is an extraordinary living history lesson. From the ornate architecture of the Bahia Palace to the towering minaret of the Koutoubia Mosque, every corner tells a story spanning centuries. Let them lead the way through the souks, getting a little lost is entirely part of the magic.

World Schooling Moment: Research Moroccan history and Islamic architecture with your children before you go. Spotting the intricate geometric tilework in person after studying it at home is a genuinely spine-tingling experience.


2. Barter in the Souks

Forget passive shopping, the souks of Marrakesh are a full-contact sport, and children absolutely love it. Divided into distinct areas for leather goods, spices, ceramics, textiles, lanterns, and jewellery, the souks have been a bustling trading hub for over a thousand years.

Haggling is not just expected here, it’s a social ritual, a dance of offer and counter-offer that often ends with mint tea and warm handshakes. This is real-world maths, communication, and cultural exchange all rolled into one glorious, chaotic experience. Encourage your little ones to try their hand at negotiating for a small trinket. The pride on their faces when they seal a deal is priceless.

Top Tip: Start by offering around half the asking price and smile the whole way through. The atmosphere is wonderfully friendly, vendors enjoy the game as much as you do.


3. Taste the Local Cuisine

Moroccan food is a revelation – rich, aromatic, and deeply comforting. Slow-cooked tagines layered with saffron, cinnamon, preserved lemons, and tender meat. Fluffy couscous piled high with roasted vegetables. Bastilla, a sweet and savoury pigeon pastry dusted with icing sugar, that will genuinely make you question everything you thought you knew about pastry. And don’t even get us started on the msemen (flaky flatbread) served warm with argan oil honey.

Eating with Moroccan families or at traditional establishments is a wonderful way to understand the country’s history and its beautiful blend of Berber, Arab, and Andalusian influences. Even the fussiest of young eaters tend to find something they love, the mild spicing of most dishes makes it wonderfully family-friendly.

Must Try: A traditional harira soup to start, a lamb tagine with apricots for the main, and a glass of fresh-squeezed orange juice from the square – pure, blissful heaven.


4. Enjoy the Belly Dancing

For an evening that will have everyone talking long after you’re home, a dinner with live belly dancing is absolutely unmissable. We wholeheartedly recommend Comptoir Darna – a legendary Marrakesh venue that perfectly blends Moroccan elegance with vibrant, joyful entertainment.

Set in a stunning riad-style space with soaring ceilings, candlelight, and tables swathed in rich fabrics, Comptoir Darna serves beautiful Moroccan-French cuisine whilst talented performers take to the floor. The belly dancing is mesmerising, all flowing silks and hypnotic rhythms, and the fire dancers that follow are nothing short of spectacular. Children and adults alike will be absolutely transfixed.

Book Ahead: Comptoir Darna is deservedly popular. Reserve your table well in advance, especially during peak season, to avoid disappointment.


5. Explore the Famous Ait Ben Haddou

Rising dramatically from the Ounila River, the ancient ksar of Ait Ben Haddou is one of Morocco’s most iconic sights, and one of the most spectacular things you will ever lay eyes on. This fortified mud-brick village, another UNESCO World Heritage Site, has been continuously inhabited for centuries and looks precisely as you might imagine an ancient Silk Road trading post to look.

You may well recognise it, Ait Ben Haddou has starred in countless films and television series, from Lawrence of Arabia to Game of Thrones. For children who love history, archaeology, or adventure stories, walking through its ancient gates and climbing to the granary at the top for panoramic views is an absolutely breathtaking experience.

World Schooling Moment: Research the Silk Road trade routes before your visit. Standing in a genuine caravanserai stop brings ancient geography utterly and completely to life.


6. Relax in Skoura Oasis

After the sensory whirlwind of Marrakesh, the Skoura Oasis feels like stepping into a dream. A lush, palm-fringed valley stretching through the arid landscape of the Drâa region, Skoura is home to thousands of date palms, rose gardens, and ancient kasbahs half-swallowed by the earth.

Hire a local guide and wander on foot or by bicycle through the palmery, discovering hidden irrigation channels (known as khettaras), ancient fortified homes, and the famous Kasbah Amridil. The pace here is gloriously slow, the air is clean, and the light in the late afternoon turns everything a warm, burnished gold. It is an ideal spot to pause, breathe, and simply be present.

Top Tip: Stay at a riad within the palmery if you can, waking up to birdsong and palm fronds swaying outside your window is an absolute joy.


7. Marvel at the Impressive Todra Gorge

Prepare to feel delightfully small. The Todra Gorge is a narrow canyon carved over millennia by the Todra River, its sheer rock walls soaring up to 300 metres on either side, sometimes narrowing to just a few metres across at the base. Walking through it for the first time is genuinely jaw-dropping – the scale is almost incomprehensible, and the interplay of light and shadow on those rust-red walls is simply stunning.

For adventurous families, there are guided rock climbing routes up the canyon walls (with professional guides and equipment), as well as wonderfully refreshing wading in the river that trickles along the gorge floor in the dry season. The geology lesson practically teaches itself here – children will naturally start asking questions about how rivers carve through rock, and why the colours change with the light.

Best Timing: Visit in the morning for the most dramatic light filtering down into the gorge. Midday can get busy with tour groups, so arriving early gives you the full magical effect.


8. Camel Ride into Your Camp for Sunset

This is the moment. The one that will live rent-free in your family’s memory for the rest of your lives. As the afternoon heat softens to a golden warmth, you mount your camels (far more comfortable than they look, we promise!) and begin a gentle plod across the Erg Chebbi dunes towards your overnight desert camp.

The dunes of Merzouga are extraordinary – sweeping waves of orange sand, sculpted by the wind into perfect crescents, stretching as far as the eye can see. As you ride, the sun begins its spectacular descent, painting the sky in shades of amber, rose, and violet. Arriving at your luxury tent camp beneath a sky erupting with stars, with a traditional Berber dinner and live drumming awaiting you, is one of those travel experiences that stops being a holiday and starts being a life memory.

World Schooling Moment: Teach your children to navigate by the stars using the remarkably clear Saharan sky. Without light pollution, the Milky Way is visible in extraordinary detail.


9. Quad Bike Amongst the Sand Dunes

For families with older children or teenagers, quad biking across the Sahara dunes is an adrenaline rush unlike any other. Racing up the steep face of a massive sand dune, pausing at the peak to take in that endless golden horizon, then bombing back down, it is gloriously exhilarating and the children will talk about it for months.

Local operators in Merzouga offer guided quad bike tours of varying lengths and difficulty levels, all with proper safety briefings and helmets. Younger children can often ride on the back with an adult, and for the truly little ones, sand sledging down the dunes is every bit as thrilling. Either way, nobody leaves the Sahara without at least a little sand in their shoes and a massive grin on their face.

Top Tip: Book through your riad or camp accommodation to ensure you’re using a reputable, safety-conscious operator. Early morning or late afternoon tours offer the best temperatures and the most beautiful light for photos.


10. Take in the Breathtaking Scenery of the Atlas Mountains

No Morocco road trip is complete without crossing the Atlas Mountains, the dramatic spine of North Africa that separates the Atlantic coast from the Sahara. Whether you take the legendary Tizi n’Tichka pass (at 2,260 metres, Morocco’s highest paved mountain road) or the equally spectacular Tizi n’Tinifft, the drive is a glorious sequence of hairpin bends, vertiginous drops, and panoramic views that will have everyone pressed against the windows.

The High Atlas is also home to Berber villages perched improbably on cliffsides, terraced barley fields in shades of vivid green, and snow-capped peaks well into spring. A stop in a traditional Berber village for mint tea with a local family is an unparalleled cultural exchange – genuine, generous, and deeply moving. The mountains remind you, beautifully, that the very best moments in travel are almost always the human ones.

World Schooling Moment: The Berber (Amazigh) people have one of the world’s oldest continuous cultures. Learning a few words of Tamazight, the Berber language, before your visit will delight every local you meet.


Final Thoughts: Is Morocco Right for Your Family?

Absolutely, resoundingly, yes. From the first step into Marrakesh’s Medina to the last lingering look at those Saharan stars, Morocco is a country that gives itself to you fully, generously, and with extraordinary warmth. It is, without question, one of the finest destinations in the world for families who believe that travel is the greatest teacher of all.

The memories you will create here – bartering in a souk, riding a camel into a desert sunset, watching your child’s eyes widen at the top of the Todra Gorge, are the kind that bind families together for a lifetime. Morocco isn’t just a holiday. It’s a chapter in your family’s story. And it’s one we think you’ll treasure forever.

Go. The Sahara is waiting.


Have you been to Morocco with your family? We’d love to hear your highlights in the comments below! And if you’re planning a trip, drop us a question – we’re happy to help.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Top Highlights of a Sahara Desert Trip in Morocco appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/top-highlights-of-a-sahara-desert-trip-in-morocco/

The Silver Lining: Where to Travel Amid Global Disruption

With global aviation facing unprecedented disruption, we take a look at which parts of the world are flying smoothly, and where your next adventure should take you.

If you’ve been keeping an eye on the news lately, you’ll know that the escalating conflict in the Middle East has sent shockwaves through global aviation. Airspace closures, jet fuel shortages and widespread flight cancellations are affecting millions of travellers, but here’s the thing: the disruption is far from universal. Large parts of the world remain completely unaffected, and in many ways, right now is an excellent time to explore them.

So, where should you be looking? Let’s break it down.


Central & South America: The World’s Sweet Spot Right Now

If there’s one region that’s emerged from the current global situation looking better than ever, it’s Latin America. Central and South America sit entirely outside the affected airspace corridors, and crucially, the Americas are far less dependent on Middle Eastern jet fuel supplies than Europe or Asia. The result? Flights are operating normally, prices remain competitive, and these destinations are as accessible as ever.

Think about it: whether you’re dreaming of the misty cloud forests of Costa Rica, the extraordinary colonial architecture and volcanic landscapes of Guatemala, or the vast, dramatic scenery of Argentina, none of these destinations are touched by the current disruption. Routes from the UK fly westward across the Atlantic, completely bypassing the affected region.

These aren’t just safe bets logistically, either. Latin America offers some of the most extraordinary travel experiences on the planet – vibrant cultures, breathtaking natural landscapes, world-class food and wine, and the kind of warm, genuine hospitality that stays with you long after you’ve returned home. If you’ve ever thought about exploring this part of the world, there has never been a better moment to make it happen.


North America & the Caribbean: Equally Well Placed

North America and the Caribbean are in a similarly strong position. The United States is one of the world’s largest producers and exporters of jet fuel, meaning it’s largely insulated from the supply chain pressures affecting Europe and Asia. Transatlantic routes between the UK and North America are operating without disruption, and the Caribbean remains easily accessible via well-established flight paths that bear no relation to Middle Eastern corridors.

Whether it’s the wide open landscapes of Canada, the cultural richness of Mexico or the white-sand beaches of the Caribbean islands, this entire region is currently one of the most reliable parts of the world to travel to.


Europe: Still Worth Exploring, With a Caveat

Closer to home, intra-European travel remains largely unaffected in terms of airspace, European skies are open and operating normally. However, it’s worth being aware that some European airlines are beginning to feel the pinch of higher fuel costs and the early stages of supply pressure. Some carriers have already trimmed schedules and a small number of routes have been cut. For now, European city breaks and short-haul trips remain a solid option, but keeping an eye on airline announcements over the coming weeks is wise.


Where to Think Carefully Before Booking

The regions that are genuinely disrupted right now are those that depend heavily on the Middle East, either for airspace transit or jet fuel supply.

Asia-Pacific has been hit hardest. Routes between Europe and destinations like Japan, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore and Australia traditionally pass through the Gulf corridor, and many airlines have been forced into lengthy reroutes or outright suspensions. Asia-Pacific countries are also the most dependent on Middle Eastern oil for jet fuel production, meaning physical shortages are already being felt in some hubs.

The Middle East itself is obviously the most severely affected, with airspace closures across Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Qatar, the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

East Africa can also be impacted depending on routing, as some flights transit Gulf airspace on their way south.


What About Fuel Costs and Ticket Prices?

Even in regions where physical fuel shortages aren’t a concern, it’s worth knowing that rising oil prices are affecting airlines globally. Some carriers have begun trimming less profitable routes and pushing up fares to offset higher operating costs. The practical upshot? If you’re planning to travel in the coming months, particularly over the summer, booking sooner rather than later is genuinely good advice. Prices are more likely to rise than fall in the short term.


The Bottom Line

The world is still very much open for business, and extraordinary travel experiences are absolutely there to be had, you just need to know where to look. Central and South America, North America and the Caribbean are the standout choices right now: unaffected by airspace closures, insulated from the fuel supply crisis, and offering some of the most remarkable destinations on earth.

At Untravelled Paths, we specialise in taking you somewhere genuinely special, and right now, we’re particularly excited about what Latin America has to offer. If you’d like to find out more about our new Central and South American experiences, we’d love to hear from you. Get in touch at info@untravelledpaths.com and let’s start planning your next adventure.

Written by James Chisnall

The post The Silver Lining: Where to Travel Amid Global Disruption appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/the-silver-lining-where-to-travel-amid-global-disruption/