Note that lunches and dinners are not included in the price of this tour. These guided tours are part of National Geographic Traveler's 50 Tours of a Lifetime for for the outfitters' commitment to authenticity, immersion, sustainability, and connection.
All rights reserved. Share Tweet Email. Read This Next Did hallucinogenic booze fuel politics in ancient Peru? A discovery in a 1,year-old Wari outpost suggests that powerful, communal intoxicants may have helped foster alliances. For decades, one man appeared to dominate the trade. Which type of test is best? And how long should you isolate or quarantine? Experts weigh in to help clear confusion. Pig brain cells may have cured a sea lion's epilepsy.
Science Pig brain cells may have cured a sea lion's epilepsy The transplant in an animal named Cronutt points toward a new strategy to treat the disease. But many questions remain. Go Further. Animals Giraffe populations are rising, giving new hope to scientists. Animals Wildlife Watch Bird flu deaths trigger Israeli hunting ban. Animals Rescues of rare Philippine eagles soar during the pandemic. Animals Wildlife Watch In Indonesia, orangutan killings often go unpunished.
Environment Planet Possible The prince, the mayor, and the U. Environment A rising tide is drowning Indonesian villages—and their dead. Environment Planet Possible A national 'climate corps'? California is leading the way. Environment Planet Possible How small changes to our diet can benefit the planet. Ferguson aimed to end segregation—but codified it instead. Home to the rugged Dinaric Alps, one of the last primeval forests in Europe, and white water galore, Bosnia is heaven for adrenaline junkies.
This adventure combines Class 2 to 4 runs on three rivers—the Tara, known as the Grand Canyon of the Balkans; the emerald green Neretva; and the Vrbas, host of the World Rafting Championships—with cultural forays into Sarajevo, Banja Luka, and Mostar. This trip digs into the cultural heritage of Bulgaria, from the era of the Thracians, who venerated Dionysus and originated the legend of the musician Orpheus, to the present day.
Listen to a chamber concert at the ancient Serdica amphitheater in Sofia. Make banitza—phyllo filled with cheese—in the riverbank village of Gabrovo, and taste the fruit of thousands of years of winemaking. Kathy and Charley Wood were inspired to show off the Provence they got to know after their own six-month sabbatical here. Take lunch at the family-owned winery, Domaine Faverot, sample cheese at a goat farm near Saignon, and explore ancient caves that were once quarters of the Knights Templar, none of which are usually open to the public.
Icebergs the size of semis, simmering volcanoes, gray lava flats, and white ice fields: Tiny Iceland is jam-packed with topographic wonders ideal for family adventures. Wandering the museums and old towns of Warsaw and Krakow is like walking through the pages of a European history book.
Tour the Gothic Wawel Cathedral, the coronation and burial site for Polish monarchs since the 14th century. Sample nalweki—herbal-infused vodka—at an artisanal distillery in the countryside, and learn the trick to making pierogi during a private lesson. The maritime history of this Portuguese archipelago in the middle of the North Atlantic has long overshadowed the inland wonders of waterfalls, extinct volcanoes, elusive birds like the Azorean bullfinch , and geysers and fumaroles.
This trek through three of the nine volcanic islands does them justice. If you truly, madly, deeply wanted to be an astronaut, this special itinerary lets you play the part. The trip culminates back in Moscow as you watch a live satellite feed at Mission Control of the Soyuz spacecraft docking with the International Space Station.
These guided tours are part of National Geographic Traveler's 50 Tours of a Lifetime for for the outfitters' commitment to authenticity, immersion, sustainability, and connection. All rights reserved. Share Tweet Email. Read This Next Did hallucinogenic booze fuel politics in ancient Peru? A discovery in a 1,year-old Wari outpost suggests that powerful, communal intoxicants may have helped foster alliances. For decades, one man appeared to dominate the trade. Which type of test is best?
And how long should you isolate or quarantine? Experts weigh in to help clear confusion. Pig brain cells may have cured a sea lion's epilepsy. Science Pig brain cells may have cured a sea lion's epilepsy The transplant in an animal named Cronutt points toward a new strategy to treat the disease.
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