Istanbul, Turkey
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Istanbul, Turkey

We arrived in Istanbul at the start of Kurban Bayramı, the festival of Eid al-Adha, ready for a few days of sunshine, good food and ambling aimlessly. This was my second visit to the city and my partner's first. The first time I came, back in 2018, I had travelled with a large group of friends. We spent our days happily getting lost, eating far too much and falling in love with the city one neighbourhood at a time. Istanbul left a deep impression on me then, and for years afterwards I found myself talking about it so often that my partner was understandably curious to see what all the fuss was about.

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Camino de Santiago Part 4: The End
Camino, Spain, Travel F Camino, Spain, Travel F

Camino de Santiago Part 4: The End

To walk the Camino is to walk towards yourself. The Camino has a romantic mythology around it and, honestly, I think it deserves to. It should be romanticised. It is transformative in the truest sense of the word. At least, it was for me. As long as you understand that the romance also involves handwashing your socks in a sink every evening and hanging your underwear off your backpack to dry, you will absolutely find it romantic.

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Camino de Santiago Part 3: Crossing Galicia
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Camino de Santiago Part 3: Crossing Galicia

The mornings always began early on the Camino. Up at dawn, usually before the sun had fully risen, quietly packing our bags in semi-darkness before slipping back onto the trail. Leaving Viladesuso that morning, from the guesthouse overlooking the ocean where we had spent the night, the route began with a familiar kind of comfort.

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Camino de Santiago Part 2: Spring
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Camino de Santiago Part 2: Spring

Arriving in Viana do Castelo felt like a genuine breath of fresh air after the ordeal of the previous 24 hours. Set at the mouth of the Lima River, the city has one of the most beautiful medieval centres on the route, all grand squares, tiled facades and winding streets that lead out towards the water. After days of tiny villages and long solitary stretches of coastline, it felt lively in exactly the way I needed.

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San Sebastián, Spain
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San Sebastián, Spain

San Sebastián had taken on an almost mythical quality in my head. It’s one of those Narnia-like places that every food-loving friend speaks about with complete certainty as the ultimate destination. I’d wanted to go for years, but with that came a real fear it wouldn’t live up to the hype. Thankfully, it did. Completely.

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Bar Nestor, San Sebastián
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Bar Nestor, San Sebastián

When somewhere is as hyped as Bar Nestor, I get nervous. Restaurants spoken about in near-mythical terms rarely live up to the expectations that build around them. But my best friend Liz had assured me, with the same reverence she usually only reserves for Korean BBQ, that the steak here was the best she had eaten anywhere in the world.

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Lake Annecy, France
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Lake Annecy, France

When I was looking for day trips from Lyon, a friend suggested Annecy. I had only a vague sense of it, somewhere near the Alps, somewhere picturesque. It didn’t take long to realise that Lake Annecy is definitely worth a trip in its own right.

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Lyon, France
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Lyon, France

Lyon is often called the gastronomic capital of France, built around its traditional bouchon lyonnais culture. We decided early on that this trip would lean fully into that. Less museums, more meals. The culture, this time, was the food.

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Jinxi Water Town, China
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Jinxi Water Town, China

After the most extraordinary adventure across China, our final days softened into something quieter in Jinxi. We stayed with family, settling into the gentle rhythm of a water town that has endured for over 2,500 years. Less visited than its neighbouring towns, Jinxi is peaceful, unhurried and has the charming energy of a countryside village.

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Chengdu, China
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Chengdu, China

For somewhere so vast, modern and developed, Chengdu has a calmness to it. Life feels slower. People are open, warm and generous with their time. You’ll find huge, glossy shopping malls, but also quiet teahouses, shaded streets and small pockets of tradition tucked into the middle of it all. It’s a city of contrasts in the best way.

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Wulong, China
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Wulong, China

Leaving Chongqing for the Wulong Karst National Geology Park felt like stepping out of the city and into something much older and quieter. The drive takes around three hours, and it’s worth paying attention the whole way. Chongqing’s dense skyline gives way to mountains and then these dramatic limestone formations.

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Chongqing, China
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Chongqing, China

Chongqing is a punch to the senses. It doesn’t build gradually or ease you in. It arrives all at once in light and heat and movement, a city that seems to hum from the ground up. Neon cuts through the haze, towers rise out of the mountains and everything feels heightened. The spice sits in the air as much as on the tongue. The warmth comes from both the people and the climate, which in summer is almost unrelenting. It is one of my favourite places on earth.

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Shanghai, China
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Shanghai, China

I spent months fretting ahead of our trip to China. In truth, I think it was because I had never been so excited about going anywhere in my life. That kind of anticipation has a way of turning on you; I became convinced that something would go wrong. The visa would be rejected, the flights cancelled, the rains would set in and undo it all. I almost wouldn’t let myself feel excited about what I knew felt like a dream.

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Galway, Ireland
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Galway, Ireland

The four of us had 24 hours in Galway. It became a bit of a challenge, how much food and fun we could fit in before catching the last flight home. Waking up for work on the Monday afterwards was painful, but completely worth it.

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Girona, Spain
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Girona, Spain

An impulsive decision to book a girls’ trip to Girona, based entirely on one video we saw, turned out to be an excellent idea. We had no real plans beyond eating as much as possible and talking endlessly over cold white wine which, in hindsight, was exactly the right approach.

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Tuscany, Italy
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Tuscany, Italy

After a wonderful few days in Rome, we took the train down to Florence to begin our time in Tuscany. I’d always wanted to visit, and it really was as charming as I’d hoped. We checked into a beautiful apartment right in the centre and headed straight back out into the late afternoon light. 

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Rome, Italy
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Rome, Italy

The first time I visited Rome, it was fleeting. Just a few hours carved out of a longer trip, a brief encounter that felt incomplete almost as soon as it began. Even then, it was clear the city required more time than I had given it. This time, we returned with intention. A few slow days to walk, to eat and to let the place reveal itself.

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Seville, Spain
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Seville, Spain

We took a short three day trip to Seville in April, mainly in search of some sun after a particularly bleak stretch of weather at home. It was my first time in Andalusia, and I immediately loved the warm and slow pace of the region.

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