Discover
Unpacked by Afar
Unpacked by Afar
Author: Afar
Subscribed: 121,893Played: 584,491Subscribe
Share
Description
Unpacked by Afar tackles one tricky topic in travel each week. Whether you want to hack your points and miles, figure out where to travel next, or need advice on an ethical dilemma, we're your expert travel guides. Because the travel world is complicated. We're here to help you unpack it.
139 Episodes
Reverse
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For Menton, that means looking beyond Cannes and Nice to discover a quieter corner of the French Riviera—one with candy-colored buildings, a three-Michelin-starred restaurant, and lemons so sweet you can eat them like apples.
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Jenn Rice, a food and travel writer who fell hard for Menton after a birthday dinner at Mirazur. Jenn shares why this town of 30,000—perched where France meets Italy—deserves a spot on your list. From a subtropical microclimate that produces IGP-protected citrus to affordable hotels with sea views and a culinary scene shaped by one very busy chef, Menton offers all the glamour of the Riviera without the flash.
Plan Your Menton Getaway
(First, explore our France travel guide.)
Stay
—Book a room at Hotel Napoléon, right across from the sea and walking distance to old town—rooms with terrace patios and views of the candy-colored buildings start around $200/night even in summer
—Check out the newly renovated Villa Genesis, an older villa refurbished by Hotel Napoléon
—Try Hotel Gabriel, a newly renovated boutique option with a more modern, hip vibe
Eat and Drink
—Splurge on dinner at Le Mirazur, the three-Michelin-starred restaurant from chef Mauro Colagreco—it starts with a tour of his garden overlooking the sea and mountains, and yes, you'll eat a lemon like an apple
—Pick up sandwiches, lemon cake, and the famous lemon panettone (in season) at Mitron Bakery in old town, which uses the same artisanal ancient grains as Mirazur
—Try the lemon pizza at La Pecoranegra, Colagreco's pizzeria focused on quality ingredients
—For something unexpected, visit Colagreco's Argentinian steakhouse, Casa Fuego, down the street
See and Do
—Wander the old town, where candy-colored buildings tumble toward the sea in a scene reminiscent of the Italian Cinque Terre
—Stroll the brand-new promenade along the waterfront
—Hop on the train to Nice, Cannes, or other Riviera destinations—Menton makes a great, affordable home base
Resources
• Follow Jenn's work on Instagram
• Visit Jenn's website
• Explore all 24 destinations on Afar's Where to Go in 2026 list
• Follow us on Instagram: @afarmedia
Listen to All the Episodes in our Where to Go 2026 Series
E1: This Island in the Bahamas Promises Pink Sand, Historic Hideaways, and Perfect Solitude
E2: Why Peru's Second City Might Be Its Best-Kept Secret
E3: The New 170-Mile Hiking Network Connecting Stockholm's Dreamy Archipelago
E4: Route 66 Turns 100—and Albuquerque Is Ready to Celebrate
E5: Why Morocco's Chill Capital Deserves Your Attention
E6: Three Hours From Nashville, the South's Next Great Food Capital Is Waiting
E7: The French Riviera's Last Stop Before Italy—and Its Best-Kept Secret (this one!)
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For Birmingham, that means discovering what Alabama's second-largest city really offers—especially its quietly stellar food scene that's been racking up James Beard nominations.
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Jenny Adams, a travel writer and Birmingham native now based in New Orleans. Jenny shares why this "big fish in a small pond" city deserves a second look—from its fourth-largest concentration of barbecue restaurants in America to Alabama white sauce, a downtown transformed by Railroad Park, and vintage shopping that rivals anywhere in the South. She also makes a case for an Alabama road trip, from Muscle Shoals to the Gulf Coast beaches.
Plan Your Birmingham Getaway
(First, explore our Alabama travel guide.)
Stay
—Book a room at The Elyton, a historic downtown hotel
—Try The Painted Lady, a new boutique hotel in the city center
Eat and Drink
—Start your morning at Continental Bakery in English Village for old-world European pastries
—Get a sandwich at The Garage Café, a collection of 1920s car garages with a courtyard bar where everything—including the furniture—is for sale
—Try Birmingham barbecue at SAW's BBQ or Jim 'N Nick's, and don't skip the Alabama white sauce—a tangy, mayo-based condiment invented in Decatur
—For Gulf seafood and oysters, head to Bayonet, a new raw bar
—Sip fancy cocktails at Adios, a Mexican bar and James Beard semifinalist
—For a bucket-list dive bar experience, go to The Nick for cheap domestics and live grunge bands
See and Do
—Walk or bike Railroad Park, a linear park built on former blighted railroad tracks
—Tour Sloss Furnaces, the historic ironworks that defined Birmingham's industrial past
—Visit the 16th Street Baptist Church and the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute to engage with the city's essential history
—Catch a show at one of three restored historic theaters: The Alabama, The Carver, or The Lyric
Shop
—Browse Pepper Place, a collection of old brick warehouses with permanent shops and a Saturday farmers market
—Find vintage treasures at Devore, with pieces spanning the Victorian era to the 1970s
—Pick up artisan Alabama goods at Stone Hollow Farms (pickles, ginger syrups, cast iron cookware) and Design Supply (Southern artists and large-scale art)
—Visit Shoppe, a garden store with a charming general store next door where you can eat a BLT while browsing tablecloths and vintage spoons
Resources
• Follow Jenny's work on Instagram
• Visit Jenny's website
• Explore all 24 destinations on Afar's Where to Go in 2026 list
• Follow us on Instagram: @afarmedia
Listen to All the Episodes in our Where to Go 2026 Series
E1: This Island in the Bahamas Promises Pink Sand, Historic Hideaways, and Perfect Solitude
E2: Why Peru's Second City Might Be Its Best-Kept Secret
E3: The New 170-Mile Hiking Network Connecting Stockholm's Dreamy Archipelago
E4: Route 66 Turns 100—and Albuquerque Is Ready to Celebrate
E5: Why Morocco's Chill Capital Deserves Your Attention
E6: Three Hours From Nashville, the South's Next Great Food Capital Is Waiting (this one!)
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For Rabat, that means looking beyond the well-trodden streets of Marrakech and Fes to discover what Morocco's laid-back capital really offers—especially as Africa's largest music festival transforms the city into an open-air stage each summer.
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Yulia Denisyuk, a travel writer and host of the podcast Going Places with Yulia. Yulia shares why this Atlantic coast city deserves a second look—from its free weeklong Mawazine music festival to a non-touristy medina, Andalusian gardens, Roman ruins, and dishes you won't find anywhere else in Morocco. She also reveals what's coming in 2026: new museums, UNESCO World Book Capital status, and a high-speed train connecting Rabat to Casablanca in just 35 minutes.
Plan Your Rabat Getaway
(First, explore our Morocco travel guide.)
See and Do
—Attend the Mawazine Festival, Africa's largest music festival, a free weeklong celebration featuring artists from around the world
—Explore Chellah, a Roman settlement dating to the first century that doubles as a festival stage
—Wander the Kasbah of the Oudayas, a 12th-century Islamic fort overlooking the Atlantic Ocean
—Stroll through the Andalusian Gardens for mint tea and ocean views
—Take a water taxi across the Bou Regreg River to Salé and back
—Browse the medina, where locals shop, have tea, and produce books—a less touristy experience than Marrakech
—Visit Mohamed Aziz, a famous bookseller in the medina who has read thousands of books and loves to discuss them
Eat and Drink
—Try Rabati pastilla, the "royal" version with thick layers and lots of eggs, influenced by Moorish settlers from Andalusia
—Seek out kefta, meatballs made with spices unique to Rabat that you won't find elsewhere in Morocco
—Eat fresh shrimp and seafood from the Atlantic coast
—Sip mint tea at cafes along the riverfront promenade
Know Before You Go
—In 2026, Rabat becomes UNESCO World Book Capital, with literary events and celebrations starting in April
—A new high-speed train will reduce travel time between Casablanca and Rabat from two hours to 35 minutes
—The Mawazine Festival typically takes place in late June
—Spring and autumn offer milder temperatures; summer is hot but tempered by Atlantic breezes
—The medina, Kasbah, and Chellah are all within walking distance of each other
Resources
• Listen to Yulia's podcast, Going Places with Yulia
• Follow Yulia on Instagram
• Visit Yulia's website
• Explore all 24 destinations on Afar's Where to Go in 2026 list
• Follow us on Instagram: @afarmedia
Listen to All the Episodes in our Where to Go 2026 Series
E1: This Island in the Bahamas Promises Pink Sand, Historic Hideaways, and Perfect Solitude
E2: Why Peru's Second City Might Be Its Best-Kept Secret
E3: The New 170-Mile Hiking Network Connecting Stockholm's Dreamy Archipelago
E4: Route 66 Turns 100—and Albuquerque Is Ready to Celebrate
E5: Why Morocco's Chill Capital Deserves Your Attention (this one!)
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For Albuquerque, that means looking beyond a quick stop on the way to Santa Fe to discover what New Mexico's largest city really offers—especially as Route 66 celebrates its centennial in 2026.
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Matt Kirouac, a writer who fell in love with Albuquerque several years ago during Balloon Fiesta and has returned many times since. He shares why this "flyover city" deserves a second look—from its 18-mile stretch of neon-lit Route 66 to native-owned breweries, centuries-old restaurants in Old Town, and petroglyphs scattered across dormant volcanoes.
Plan Your Albuquerque Getaway
(First, listen to our Unpacked episode about the city and explore our New Mexico travel guide. )
Stay
—Book a room at Arrive Albuquerque, a renovated 1930s motor court with a pool, Pan-Asian restaurant, and onsite gallery featuring Indigenous and local artists
—Stay at the historic Hotel Andaluz, which recently opened a rooftop speakeasy-style bar and wood-fired restaurant, Char
—Watch for the new boutique hotel opening in the Hiway House motel in Nob Hill
Eat and Drink
—Dine at M'Tucci's, an Italian restaurant in a former Route 66 service station (don't miss the speakeasy in the alley)
—Have lunch at Church Street Cafe in one of Albuquerque's oldest buildings, dating to the 1700s
—Eat traditional New Mexican fare at Mary & Tito's Cafe, known for decades-old homespun recipes
—Visit Bow & Arrow Brewing, a native- and women-owned brewery known for southwestern-inspired beers like blue corn pilsner
—Explore Sawmill Market, a food hall with local vendors
See and Do
—Walk or bike the 18-mile Route 66 stretch along Central Avenue, lined with historic neon signs and motor courts
—Visit Petroglyph National Monument to see some of the 25,000 petroglyphs scattered across dormant volcanoes
—Take the Sandia Peak Tramway to the top and dine at the restaurant, or hike the 17-mile round trip trail
—Explore Old Town Albuquerque for galleries, turquoise jewelry, pottery, and the Rattlesnake Museum
—See a movie or concert at the recently renovated KiMo Theatre
—Browse queer cowboy art at Anthony Hurd Gallery
Resources
Follow Matt's work on Instagram
Check out his new book, Secret Oklahoma
Explore all 24 destinations on Afar's Where to Go in 2026 list
Follow us on Instagram: @afarmedia
Listen to All the Episodes in our Where to Go 2026 Series
E1: This Island in the Bahamas Promises Pink Sand, Historic Hideaways, and Perfect Solitude
E2: Why Peru's Second City Might Be Its Best-Kept Secret
E3: The New 170-Mile Hiking Network Connecting Stockholm's Dreamy Archipelago
E4: Route 66 Turns 100—and Albuquerque Is Ready to Celebrate (this one!)
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For Sweden, that means skipping Stockholm and heading instead to the Stockholm Archipelago—a series of 24,000 islands about the size of Connecticut. It's home to a new 170-mile-long hiking path network launched in October 2024.
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Katherine LaGrave, Afar's executive editor and host of our Unpacked: Five Questions series. This past summer, Katherine and her cousin spent a week hiking through pine and oak forests, island-hopping by ferry, eating post-hike Swedish meatballs, and sweating in saunas along the archipelago—covering about 62 miles across seven islands.
Plan Your Stockholm Archipelago Trip
Getting There & Around
• The archipelago is easily accessible from Stockholm via a well-connected ferry system
• Boat taxis are available for more direct island-to-island transport
• On the islands, get around by foot or bike—rentals are available
• Use the Stockholm Archipelago Trail app for offline maps and trail navigation
Where to Stay
• Grinda Wärdshus—stay at the historic home, once the summer residence of the director of the Nobel Prize Committee
• Ingmarsö—a farmhouse B&B with private garden access
• Waxholms Hotell—a newly restored in Vaxholm, the island's capital
• Thanks to Sweden's Right to Roam laws, you can camp almost anywhere for one night (with stricter rules in nature reserves)
Listen to All Our Where to Go in 2026 Episodes
E1: This Island in the Bahamas Promises Pink Sand, Historic Hideaways, and Perfect Solitude
E2: Why Peru's Second City Might Be Its Best-Kept Secret
Resources
• Read Katherine's full story and explore all 24 destinations on our Where to Go in 2026 list
• Learn more about sauna culture in the Midwest (and why there's a right and a wrong way to say it...)
• Follow us on Instagram: @afarmedia
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For Peru, that means looking beyond Machu Picchu and Cusco to discover what lies south—a region of white volcanic cities, canyons twice as deep as the Grand Canyon, and a food scene that rivals Lima's in flavor (if not fame).
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Mark Johanson, a Chile-based travel writer and author of Mars on Earth: Wanderings in the World's Driest Desert. Mark recently explored southern Peru—from the gleaming colonial streets of Arequipa to the condor-filled skies above the Colca Canyon—and found a landscape rich with adventure, history, and some of the heartiest food in the Andes.
Plan Your Southern Peru Getaway
In Arequipa
Stay at Cirqa—a luxury hotel in a 16th-century monastery
Explore the Santa Catalina Monastery—a city-within-a-city with salmon-pink walls and centuries of history
Eat at a traditional picanterías like La Nueva Palomino or the more modern Victoria Picantería
Try the rocoto relleno (stuffed spicy pepper), chupe de camarones (river shrimp chowder), and adobo arequipeño (tangy pork stew)
Wash it down with chicha de guiñapo—the original Andean purple corn beer served in huge glasses called "el caporal"
Colca Canyon & Beyond
Stay at Puquio—Peru's first safari-style adventure camp in Colca Canyon
Watch dozens of Andean condors ride the thermals at sunrise
Hike into the canyon and experience the climate shift from cold highlands to near-tropical canyon floor
Mountain bike down a volcano (for the brave) or hike up one (for the rest of us)
Cotahuasi & Toro Muerto
Stay at Tinajani—a new tented camp in the Tinajani Canyon
Explore pre-Inca ruins with very few other visitors
Experience the wind-swept plains and golden seasonal landscapes
Lake Titicaca
Stay at Titilaka—with a new sister property coming in 2027
Visit the world's highest navigable lake at 12,500 feet
Spot flamingos in high-altitude lagoons along the way
Getting Around
Belmond Andean Explorer—a luxury train connecting Arequipa to Lake Titicaca and Cusco
SA Expeditions—for tailor-made trips and off-the-beaten-path Qhapaq Ñan (ancient Incan trail) adventures
Resources
Follow Mark's work on his website and pick up his book Mars on Earth
Explore all 24 destinations on our Where to Go in 2026 list
Follow us on Instagram: @afarmedia
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this special four-part series, join Unpacked host Aislyn Greene as she travels to Charleston, South Carolina, to unpack the city's deeper currents.
For the series finale: Charleston's performing arts scene is nothing short of extraordinary. Aislyn explores the city's world-class venues—from America's first dedicated theater to a stunning apricot-colored concert hall—and meets the people bringing opera, dance, jazz, and theater to life in the Lowcountry.
In This Episode You'll Learn
The remarkable 300-year history of the Dock Street Theater, where ghost stories and contemporary artists meet
How the Spoleto Festival USA became an international arts destination that draws everyone from Yo-Yo Ma to Patti Smith
Why the Gaillard Center is "the Carnegie Hall" of the South —and how it commissions new works that celebrate Lowcountry stories and landscapes
Don't Miss These Moments
[02:00] Inside the Dock Street Theater's drawing room
[06:00] The record for most light bulbs blown during a single performance
[11:00] Spoleto's general director on why 125 concerts in 17 days creates festival magic
[13:00] The two ghosts said to haunt Dock Street Theater
[18:00] Aislyn visits Cistern Yard at the College of Charleston—one of the most beautiful outdoor venues in the city
[21:00] How the Gaillard Center transformed from a brutalist municipal auditorium into a world-class performance hall
[24:00] The moment Audra McDonald turned off her microphone and brought the house to tears
*Time stamps are estimated and may change due to programmatic advertising.
Featured in This Episode
Venues
Dock Street Theater
Gaillard Center
Festivals & Organizations
Spoleto Festival USA
Piccolo Spoleto
Charleston Stage (Dock Street's resident theater company)
Chamber Music Charleston
MOJA Arts Festival
Charleston Literary Festival
Performers
The Gullah Collective
Step Afrika!
Complexions Contemporary Ballet (upcoming)
Resources
Plan your Charleston arts trip using our guides on afar.com
Catch Up on the Series
Missed any episodes? Here's the full Charleston series:
Episode 1: To Understand the Soul of This Southern City, Head for the Water
Episode 2: Charleston Serves Up More Than 300 Years of Flavor—and Every Bite Tells a Story
Episode 3: The Artisans Keeping the Soul of Charleston's King Street Alive
Episode 4: Opera, Punk Rock, and a 300-Year-Old Ghost: One City's Arts Scene
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Unpacked, we're diving into Afar's just-released Where to Go list—but this year's picks are different. In 2026, we want to lessen the burden on overtouristed destinations and expand visitation to other parts of the world. Our editors carefully selected 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that will inspire your next great adventure.
For the Bahamas, that means looking beyond Nassau's cruise port crowds to discover what this nation of 700 islands and cays really offers.
In this episode, host Aislyn Greene talks with Terry Ward, a Florida-based writer who has spent years exploring the Bahamas. She traveled to Eleuthera—one of the Out Islands—where she found pink-sand beaches with barely a footprint, locally-owned guesthouses where Bahamian culture takes center stage, and wild dolphins in crystal-clear waters.
Plan your Eleuthera Getaway
—Stay at the Farm, part of the Little Island Hotels chain
—Stay at the Coral Sands Inn & Cottages, which has eight cottages
—Eat at the Fig Tree at the Potlatch social club
—Eat the national dish, conch salad, at many Harbour Island restaurants
—Explore the Sapphire Blue Hole
—Scuba dive at Valentine's Resort/Beach on Harbour Island
—Visit Seahorse National Park (when it reopens to the public)
—Stay Lighthouse Point while sailing with Disney Cruise Line
Listen to All Our Where to Go in 2026 Episodes
E1: This Island in the Bahamas Promises Pink Sand, Historic Hideaways, and Perfect Solitude
E2: Why Peru's Second City Might Be Its Best-Kept Secret
E3: The New 170-Mile Hiking Network Connecting Stockholm's Dreamy Archipelago
Resources
Follow Terry's work on her website
Explore all 24 destinations on our Where to Go in 2026 list
Follow us on Instagram @afarmedia
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In 2026, it's time to travel differently. This year's Where to Go list from Afar isn't about the usual suspects—it's about lessening the burden on over-touristed destinations while discovering places that are equally extraordinary.
Today, we released our list of 24 emerging regions and overlooked locales that deliver all the magic with none of the crowds. From Bucharest's Belle Époque architecture and lively bar scene to Sado Island's pristine beaches and relaxing onsens, these destinations prove you don't have to sacrifice incredible experiences to travel more responsibly.
And on December 5—and over the next two months—we'll explore 15 of these places here on Unpacked, through conversations with the writers who discovered them firsthand.
Resources
Where to Go in 2026: Places That Are on the Rise and Off the Beaten Path
Find inspiration, or start planning your next trip, on afar.com
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this special four-part series, join Unpacked host Aislyn Greene as she travels to Charleston, South Carolina, to unpack the city's deeper currents.
This week: Step onto King Street, Charleston's iconic retail corridor, where three centuries of commerce come alive. From century-old family businesses to contemporary local makers, discover how Charleston's shopping scene preserves history while embracing innovation—one handcrafted treasure at a time.
(And be sure to listen to episode one, where we set sail on Charleston's many waterways, and episode two, where we dive into the city's iconic food scene.)
In this episode, you'll learn
How M. Dumas and Sons evolved from selling Navy uniforms to becoming Charleston's menswear institution since 1917
The story of the Preservation Society of Charleston—and its fantastic shop, filled with all local products.
How Croghan's Jewel Box has been engraving Charleston's history for 117 years—while also embracing modern technology
How Brackish turns sustainably sourced feathers into wearable art worn by celebrities from Bill Murray to Blake Lively
What makes King Street's three distinct zones unique—and why you might be underdressed for dinner
The significance of sweetgrass baskets and their generational craftsmanship
Featured Guests
Gary Flynn: Co-owner and CEO of M. Dumas and Sons, Charleston's century-old menswear institution
Brian Turner: CEO of the Preservation Society of Charleston, America's first grassroots preservation organization
Jonathan Free: Retail manager at the Preservation Society Shop
Rhett Ramsay Outten: Third-generation owner of Croghan's Jewel Box, Charleston's oldest family-run jewelry store
Don't miss these moments*
[2:30] How M. Dumas and Sons became the number one Levi's dealer in South Carolina after WWII
[4:00] The charming story of how a sport coat pattern with "a little bit of pink" brings out Charleston's colorful style
[8:45] Susan Pringle Frost's pioneering preservation work that saved King Street's architecture
[14:30] How Brackish bow ties made from sustainable feathers became a celebrity favorite
[17:00] The day Rhett's mother sold her personal signet ring with the family crest to "a lovely man from Ohio"
[19:30] Watch master jewelers transform postage-stamp-sized materials into heirloom pieces
*Time stamps are estimated and may change due to programmatic advertising.
Resources
Read the transcript of the episode
Plan your Charleston trip using our guide on afar.com, and learn more about where and how to support local businesses.
Join the Preservation Society for 10 percent off purchases at their shop
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this special four-part series, join Unpacked host Aislyn Greene as she travels to Charleston, South Carolina, to unpack the city's deeper currents.
This week: Dive fork-first into Charleston's legendary food scene, where history and flavor collide. From the resurrection of she-crab soup to the recreation of a groundbreaking 1865 dinner that celebrated equality, discover how Charleston's culinary landscape tells the story of African, Native American, and European influences—one delicious dish at a time.
In this episode, you'll learn
How she-crab soup went from a presidential delicacy to near extinction—and its triumphant return at 82 Queen
The powerful story behind Nat Fuller's Feast, an 1865 dinner celebrating emancipation that was recreated 150 years later
Why you can find 30 different versions of shrimp and grits in Charleston (and why they're all "fat on fat on fat")
The essential Gullah Geechee influences that shape Lowcountry cuisine, from red rice to okra
How formerly enslaved people became Charleston's great caterers and shaped the city's culinary identity
What distinguishes Lowcountry cuisine from broader Southern cooking
Featured Guests
Chef Kevin Mitchell: Chef instructor at the Culinary Institute of Charleston, food historian, author, and host of Savers of Flavor
Jonathan Kish: CEO of Queen Street Hospitality Group, which owns 82 Queen, Charleston's first fine dining Lowcountry restaurant
Lamont Ferrebee: Executive sous chef at 82 Queen
Don't miss these moments*
[2:50] How Kevin's grandmother's tough love at age 6 launched his culinary career
[4:30] The emotional moment when the rain stopped during the Nat Fuller's Feast recreation
[7:15] Why turtle soup still haunts food historian Michael Twitty
[11:45] The West African okra variety grown specifically for its leaves
[17:00] The invention (and resurrection) of she-crab soup
[19:30] What happened when 82 Queen tried to change their shrimp and grits recipe
*Time stamps are estimated and may change due to programmatic advertising.
Dine around Charleston
82 Queen: Experience Charleston's first fine dining Lowcountry restaurant (since 1982) in their magical courtyard setting. Don't miss the award-winning she-crab soup and their unique barbecue shrimp and grits
Chef Scholar Dinner Series: Follow Chef Kevin Mitchell on Instagram for a chance to snag tickets to these intimate 16-seat historical dining experiences (April 15th: honoring Chef Patrick Clark)
Hannibal's Kitchen: Try their renowned crab rice and other Gullah Geechee classics
For dinner, try Fig, Kultura, Lowland, or the Ordinary
For coffee, pastries, or breakfast try Page's Okra Grill, Magnolias, Kudu Coffee, or Bad Bunnies Coffee
For a cocktail, try Babas, the Seahorse, or the Gin Joint
Resources
Read the transcript of the episode
Plan your trip to Charleston using our guide on afar.com
Follow Chef Kevin Mitchell and the Chef Scholar Dinner Series on Instagram @chefkevinmitchell
Watch Savers of Flavor to learn about heirloom Southern ingredients
Explore more Charleston restaurant recommendations on afar.com, including the best new restaurants and where to find the best Gullah Geechee food.
Next Week
Join us as we explore Charleston's vibrant music scene and cultural events, from intimate jazz shows to grand performance halls.
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This is a very special episode of Unpacked by Afar. This week we hosted Unpacked Live, a—you guessed it—live version of the podcast in partnership with Visit California in Boston, Massachusetts. (You can watch the full conversation on YouTube.)
The event celebrated California's diverse Native communities, and host Aislyn Greene was joined on stage by John Acuna, a Hoopa Valley tribal member and Klamath River kayak guide (listen to his episode), and Christina Lonewolf Martinez, a private chef based in Monterey uniting the worlds of fine-dining and Indigenous ingredients like salmon, seaweed, and acorns (listen to her episode).
Because the talk was in Boston, we wanted to acknowledge that Massachusetts is the original land of the Wampanoag, who have called this region home for more than 10,000 years. Angela C. Marcellino, a member of the present-day Mashpee Wampanoag tribe, joined us on stage to share a brief history, and today we're going deeper.
Angela is a chef, historian, and author of The True Natives of Cape Cod, Massachusetts and Their Food Ways. In this in-depth episode, Angela shares the real story of the original Pilgrim-Wampanoag encounter, how her tribe has retained and expanded its culture, and the best ways that travelers can engage respectfully.
In this episode, you'll learn
The true history of the Wampanoag-Pilgrim encounter and Squanto's role in American history
How Harvard University's 1650 charter was originally dedicated to educating Wampanoag children
Why the Mashpee became realtors to protect their ancestral lands
How ancient foodways and communal cooking traditions keep the Mashpee culture alive today
The 30-year journey to federal recognition and what sovereignty means for the tribe
Meet this week's guest
Angela C. Marcellino, chef, historian, and author of The True Natives of Cape Cod, Massachusetts and Their Food Ways
Resources
Learn about the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe and visit their cultural center
Jesse Little Doe's MacArthur Award-winning work revitalizing the Wampanoag language
The Old Indian Meeting House, one of the oldest congregations in America
Don't miss these moments
[02:00] Angela's unexpected career path: from tribal grant management to real estate—and why land ownership matters
[04:00] The shocking story of Indian districts and forced assimilation in Massachusetts
[07:00] Why the Pilgrims really came to America (hint: it wasn't just religious freedom)
[09:00] Squanto's heartbreaking return to find Pilgrim houses on his village's footprints
[13:00] How the Mashpee church became a center for political resistance
[15:00] The 1970s development boom that changed everything for the Mashpee
[19:00] Coming home to Mashpee: communal living and 10,000-year-old recipes
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This is a very special episode of Unpacked by Afar. Because this week we hosted Unpacked Live, a—you guessed it—live version of the podcast in partnership with Visit California in Boston, Massachusetts. (You can watch the full conversation on YouTube.)
In 2022, Visit California launched Visit Native California, and the goal with the Boston live event was to celebrate California's diverse Native communities. Unpacked host Aislyn Greene was joined onstage by Christina Lonewolf Martinez, a Monterey-based private chef and founder of Chieftess Monterey Bay, who is reintroducing Indigenous ingredients and practices to California’s central coast.
On stage, Christina shared her early life and how working with local Central Coast tribes like the Esselen people, she is reviving and celebrating Indigenous ingredients like acorn flour and seaweed—and using her fine-dining training to bring them to life in brilliant new ways.
In this episode, we go deeper. Christina shares more of her family’s background, the Central Coast’s Indigenous foodways and living traditions, and where she loves to eat on a rare day off.
In this episode, you’ll learn
How Christina’s Mexican and Indigenous family roots shaped her earliest food memories and led her into professional kitchens
What “re‑Americanizing” American food looks like when Indigenous ingredients become the centerpiece
The labor and ritual behind processing acorns and how acorn flour tastes and performs in dishes
How Christina collaborates with local tribal members and community organizations to forage responsibly and honor place
Don’t miss these moments
[02:10] Watching a grandmother’s kitchen—where Christina’s food story begins
[09:40] From Denny’s to the Post Ranch Inn: the pivot into fine dining and foraging
[14:50] The first encounter with acorn blinis at Post Ranch and why acorns matter today
[23:30] Planning and performing the Chieftess table at Big Sur Food & Wine
[26:10] The Salmon People amuse: sea grapes, smoked salmon, and a river rock presentation
[33:00] Favorite local escapes: Point Lobos, Esalen hot springs, and Carmel Valley river picnics
Meet this week’s guest
Christina Lonewolf Martinez, private chef and founder of Chiefess Monterey Bay
Resources
Chieftess Monterey Bay — find pop‑ups, private dinner info, and event listings
Esselen Tribe — local tribal resources and cultural context
Big Sur Food & Wine — festival details and past programming
Explore Afar’s coverage of Big Sur and the Central Coast
Where Christina eats, drinks, and takes visitors
Alta Bakery
Ad Astra Bread Co
Carmel Valley Creamery
Stokes Adobe
Cella Monterey
Hacienda Hay & Feed
Esalen Institute
How to engage
Christina offers pop-ups via her Instagram account.
Check out Three Sisters garden and seed‑saving workshops (community colleges and local organizations) with Rowen White
Watch for college demos at Cabrillo College and UC Santa Cruz
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This is a very special episode of Unpacked by Afar. Because this week we hosted Unpacked Live, a—you guessed it—live version of the podcast in partnership with Visit California in Boston, Massachusetts. (You can watch the full conversation on YouTube.)
In 2022, Visit California launched Visit Native California, and the goal with the Boston live event was to celebrate California's diverse tribal communities. Unpacked host Aislyn Greene was joined onstage by John Acuna, a member of the Hoopa Valley Tribe in Humboldt County, California, and a river guide with Rios to Rivers and Paddle Tribal Waters.
In July, 2025, shortly after the Klamath River was undammed—the largest dam removal project in U.S. history—John helped guide a historic 30-day expedition down the Klamath River, known as the First Descent.
On stage, John shared the Klamath River's history and what it was like to spend 30 days kayaking a river that has been so essential to the West Coast Native communities and was for so long diverted and quite literally drained of life.
In this episode, we go deeper. John shares his early life, how he found his way back to the water, and the lessons he's learned after spending so many years on the river. He also explains how cultural stewardship, land‑back efforts, and Indigenous fire and river knowledge are reshaping landscapes and communities across Northern California.
In this episode, you’ll learn
How John’s childhood and early work as a firefighter led him to river guiding and youth programs.
Why the Klamath and Trinity rivers matter to Indigenous food security, culture, and health.
What the Klamath dam removals changed — and how quickly salmon and waterways began to recover.
How Paddle Tribal Waters and Rios to Rivers use recreation, mentorship, and cultural practice to rebuild connections for Indigenous youth.
Practical ways travelers and listeners can support tribal‑led stewardship and community‑based guiding.
Don’t miss these moments
[02:00] — John introduces his community kayak fleet (15 boats)
[18:00] — John’s first rafting expedition and the job offer that changed his life
[55:30] — Sendoff ceremony at the Wood River headwaters (prayer roots, blessings)
[59:30] — Open-lake challenge: wind, waves, and seasickness on early days
[01:03:00] — Ikes Falls: a sacred portage and a transformative whitewater run
[01:13:30] — Salmon spotted upstream; surprisingly fast ecological rebound
[01:20:30] — Cultural burning and prescribed fire: returning Indigenous stewardship to the landscape
[01:23:00] — “Tread water” tattoo story — resilience and metaphor
Meet this episode’s guest
John Acuna — Hoopa River guide, former firefighter, Paddle Tribal Waters leader, instructor with Rios to Rivers
Resources mentioned in the episode
Rios to Rivers
Paddle Tribal Waters (project of Rios to Rivers)
Warrior Institute
Redwoods & Rivers guide school
Hoopa Valley Tribe
Yurok Tribe
How to support
Donate to Rios to Rivers or similar Indigenous-led river programs.
Book community-based guides and ethical local tour services when visiting tribal territories, such as the Beaver Creek Guide Service, which offers fishing charters along with education.
Explore our coverage (like this story) on afar.com.
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this special four-part series, join Unpacked host Aislyn Greene as she travels to Charleston, South Carolina, to unpack the city’s deeper currents.
Up first: To really get to know Charleston, you must spend time on its water ways. Aislyn heads out for a pre-dawn paddle, hunts for Ice Age fossils alongside Charleston’s Indiana Jones, and explores one of the most pristine marine parks on the East Coast—making new friends along the way (the human kind and the animal kind).
And be sure to come back next week, when we dive into Charleston’s legendary food scene.
In this episode, you’ll learn
—The history and geology of Shem Creek
—Why Morris Island is such a legendary place for fossils—and what it takes to find the good stuff.
—The moody, remote magic of Bulls Island—home to Boneyard Beach—and what it’s like to cruise through the pristine Cape Romain, one of only three Class I Wilderness Area’s in the United Sates.
—Charleston’s diverse marine life, from oyster-eating birds to dolphins with a unique way to create their very own seafood buffet.
—The best marine wilderness tours to go deeper into Charleston’s aquatic history and landscape.
Don’t miss these moments*
*Time stamps are estimated and may change due to programmatic advertising.
Recreate these experiences
Join Coastal Expeditions, where founder Chris Crolley and his team of fellow naturalists aim to “connect Earthlings with Earth.” Take a ferry to Bulls Island, an uninhabited barrier island; join a kayak tour from their Shem Creek headquarters; or tour Charleston's blackwaters. And be sure to check out the nonprofit Coastal Expeditions Foundation, which supports kids who would otherwise not have access to the marine world opportunity to spend time on and with the water, among other efforts.
Paddle with Nature Adventures, which offers kayak and paddleboard tours, as well as kayak and paddleobard rentals for those who want to explore solo. Co-owner Ben-Jamin Toy also runs On Purpose Adventures, a team-building and bonding company.
Explore with Charleston Outdoor Adventures, which offers its frequent Morris Island fossil tour as well as oyster farm visits, Outer Banks film location tours, and fishing charters. Owner Joe Lott founded the business in 2009 and offers year-round exploration.
Resources
Read the transcript of the episode.
Plan your trip to Charleston using our guides and stories on afar.com
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How do you determine what makes a great city? This week on Unpacked, Afar editor at large Laura Dannen Redman sits down with Chris Fair, president and CEO of Resonance Consultancy, to unpack the firm’s annual World's Best Cities ranking.
Chris explains how the list measures livability, lovability, and prosperity; the UK city that still tops the chart; the methodology changes that reshaped the top 100; and what the ranking means for overtourism, climate risk, and destination marketing.
In this episode you’ll learn
How Resonance measures a city’s livability, lovability, and prosperity
The two cities that remain neck and neck at the top of the list
Which cities climbed or slipped after switching data sources from TripAdvisor to Google Maps
The perception gap between measured performance and global awareness, with Sao Paulo as a case study
How climate risk and resilience are starting to factor into city rankings
Don’t miss these moments
[00:03:00] How the ranking began as a consulting tool and evolved into a public benchmark
[00:08:00] The top 10 cities, revealed
[00:10:00] Why switching from TripAdvisor to Google Maps changed the makeup of the top 100
[00:11:00] Sao Paulo’s rise in lovability and the perception gap in Ipsos survey results
[00:16:00] The emerging role of climate risk and resilience in city rankings
[00:20:00] The challenge of destination concentration and how only a handful of places capture most traveler interest
[00:23:00] Vancouver’s spot at 41 and what it reveals about livability versus prosperity
Meet this episode’s guests
Laura Dannen Redman, Afar editor at large
Chris Fair, president and CEO, Resonance Consultancy
Resources
Read the full World's Best Cities report at WorldsBestCities.comExplore Afar’s coverage of the World's Best Cities List
Read about the WrldCity Forum, hosted by Resonance
If you’re interested in small city rankings or regional lists, check Resonance’s Americas and Europe city reports
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Unpacked: Five Questions. In honor of our latest issue of Afar magazine, which focuses on epic trips—the kind of adventures that change your world—we're hearing from the writers and photographers who chronicled and captured those trips.
In the final episode of the series, host and Afar executive editor Katherine LaGrave speaks with Ryan Knighton, a memoirist, screenwriter, surfer, and Afar contributing writer, about his first trip to Peru with Intrepid Travel.
Blind since his late teens, Ryan reflects on orchestral nights in the Amazon, the terrifying thrill of canopy rope bridges, and why tactile histories — from Incan pebble counting to khipu knot records — stayed with him long after he left Machu Picchu.
On this episode you'll learn
How a blind traveler experiences the Amazon’s soundscape and why a night in the Amazon became the trip’s standout moment
What the canopy walk felt like and why tactile, sensory experiences mattered more than famous vistas
The Incan tactile systems Ryan encountered and why those discoveries resonated with him personally
How group travel reshaped Ryan’s experience and turned strangers into a supportive traveling “tribe”
Don't miss these moments
[3:23] Ryan describing the Amazon at night and its “Dolby” soundscape
[6:25] The first step onto a high canopy rope bridge and the trust it required
[8:49] Reflections on Machu Picchu, expectations, and why some bucket-list sites land differently for different travelers
[13:46] The guide’s tactile pebble-and-grid demonstration of Incan counting systems
[20:29] How group dynamics transformed the trip into a shared, memorable experience
Resources
Read Ryan Knighton’s Afar story about Peru
Learn more about Intrepid Travel
Take This Trip
Contributing writer Ryan Knighton joined Intrepid Travel on its nine-day “Premium Peru” trip, which visits Lima, the Amazon, Cuzco, and Machu Picchu. On the ground, meals, transport, accommodation, and luggage and airport transfers are included. Travel dates for 2025, 2026, and 2027 are available at intrepidtravel.com. From $4,600 per person.
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Unpacked: Five Questions. In honor of our latest issue of Afar magazine, which focuses on epic trips—the kind of adventures that change your world—we're hearing from the writers and photographers who chronicled and captured those trips.
In the third episode of the series, host and Afar executive editor Katherine La Grave speaks with Afar contributor Chris Colin about his first safari — a family trip through Botswana that mixed biking, Land Cruisers, salt pans, and intimate wildlife encounters.
Chris describes the sensory moments that changed how he pays attention, the guides who opened the landscape to his family, and the small-scale wonders (including an antlion and a near-miss with a cobra) that stayed with him long after the trip.
In this episode you’ll learn
Why Botswana’s slower pace and fewer vehicles make it a different kind of safari
How biking through the bush reveals small-scale wildlife moments you won’t see from a Land Cruiser
Practical travel advice for families and first-time safari-goers (how to slow down, pack flexibly, and read local history)
How local guides turn instincts and small signs into unforgettable wildlife sightings
Don’t miss these moments
Opening conversation on why Botswana felt like the right first safari
Riding on elephant trails with a bike-supported vehicle nearby
The antlion pit: a small, gruesome, unforgettable predator encounter
Lying on the salt pans under a vast African sky and hearing lions roar at dusk
A near miss with a massive cobra while answering nature’s call
Meet this episode’s guest
Chris Colin — Afar contributing writer and the traveler at the center of this episode
Take this trip
Contributing writer Chris Colin’s eight-day Botswana itinerary was put together by Teresa Sullivan, cofounder of Mango African Safaris, who specializes in family travel. The trip featured a Natural Selection cycling safari into the Makgadikgadi Pans and exploring the Okavango Delta. From $2,444 per person, per day.
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Unpacked: Five Questions. In honor of our latest issue of Afar magazine, which focuses on epic trips—the kind of adventures that change your world—we're hearing from the writers and photographers who chronicled and captured those trips.
In the second episode of the series, host and Afar executive editor Katherine La Grave sits down with journalist Chloe Berge. Chloe spent 13 days paddling 80 miles down Canada's Firth River—one of the country's oldest and most northern rivers—before reaching the Arctic Ocean. This epic journey through Ivvavik National Park combines adventure, science, and deep cultural history in one of the most remote regions on Earth.
Chloe shares her experience navigating Class IV rapids, disconnecting completely from the digital world, and standing in ancient Inuit hunting grounds that have been used for thousands of years. She reveals why this unique expedition—which hosts only about 100 visitors annually—serves as the sole opportunity for Parks Canada scientists to collect critical environmental data in this pristine wilderness.
On this episode you'll learn:
Why Canadian River Expeditions' partnership with Parks Canada makes this the only annual scientific data collection opportunity in the region
How two weeks completely off-grid changes your relationship with time and the natural world
What makes the Engigstciak mountain one of the most important archaeological sites in Arctic Canada
Why the region's unglaciated history during the last ice age created such unique geological formations
How paddling expectations versus reality shaped the physical demands of the journey
Don't miss these moments:
[04:00] Chloe's previous Arctic experiences and what drew her to this inland expedition
[06:00] Standing at Engigstciak—an ancient hunting lookout used for thousands of years
[08:00] Finding the rhythm of the river and how time becomes less linear in the wilderness
[10:00] The immediate sense of remoteness when dropped by bush plane 200 miles from civilization
[13:00] The geological wonders that didn't make the story—from glittering quartz pillars to sandstone archways
[15:00] Surprising truths about the paddling requirements and physical demands
[19:00] The profound mental clarity that comes from two weeks without digital connection
Resources
Read Chloe's complete Afar feature about paddling the Firth River to the Arctic Ocean
Learn more about Canadian River Expeditions and their science-focused Arctic trips
Explore Ivvavik National Park and its rich Inuit cultural heritage
Follow Chloe Berge for more stories at the intersection of travel, environment, and culture
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Unpacked: Five Questions. In honor of our latest issue of Afar magazine, which focuses on epic trips—the kind of adventures that change your world—we're hearing from the writers and photographers who chronicled and captured those trips.
In the first episode of the series, host and Afar executive editor Katherine La Grave speaks with photographer Kari Medig. Kari has spent 15 years traveling the world documenting ski culture—from Austria's iconic Hahnenkamm downhill to landlocked Lesotho. But one region has captivated him above all others: the Balkans.
Kari shares his journey through Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kosovo, revealing why these mountains—many higher than the Swiss Alps—offer something beyond world-class skiing. He discusses the unbelievable hospitality that keeps bringing him back, his unique analog photography approach using a Hasselblad film camera, and why he seeks out parking lot encounters as much as pristine powder.
From a chance morning photo of a ski rental owner in her bathrobe to reconnecting with a Bulgarian café owner a decade later, Kari's stories illuminate how skiing becomes a lens for experiencing culture in its most authentic form.
On this episode you'll learn:
Why the Balkans' mountains are higher than many expect—and vastly underdeveloped for skiing
How "Midwest Kind" isn't the only form of extraordinary hospitality—the Balkans surprised Kari with their warmth
Why Kari shot his Balkan trips on film with a single Hasselblad camera instead of modern digital equipment
How parking lots and ski rental shops become unexpected locations for the most meaningful photographs
What makes skiing a unique way to participate in—not just observe—a culture
Don't miss these moments:
[02:00] Kari's first trip to Bulgaria in 2004 and his amazement at the scope of the mountains
[03:00] The café owner who Kari reconnected with a decade later
[05:00] Why Kari uses a Hasselblad film camera for his nostalgic, muted aesthetic
[08:00] The ski hill in Bulgaria and why parking lots are Kari's favorite shooting locations
[10:00] The last-morning photo of a ski rental owner in her bathrobe that captured the entire trip
[12:00] Why people always ask Kari—who grew up skiing in Canada—"Why are you here? You have the best skiing in the world"
Resources
Explore Kari's complete Afar photo essay about skiing in the Balkans
Follow Kari Medig for more ski culture photography
Stay Connected
Sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode.
Explore our other podcasts, View From Afar, about the people and companies shaping the future of travel, and Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
Unpacked by Afar is part of Airwave Media's podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices























I recently came across a website called DocuDown, and it’s actually pretty useful for students who need quick access to study materials. Sharing in case it helps someone too: https://docudown.com
Love how Unpacked by AFAR simplifies complex travel topics! It’s like when you visit wendysmenu to find out the salads options—clear https://wendysmenue.com/wendys-salads-menu/, helpful, and just what you need to make smart choices.
Understand the importance of regular self-renewal in physical, mental, and emotional aspects as practiced by effective individuals to maintain balance and sustained success. Read More - https://apkjadu.com/why-should-you-adopt-the-habits-of-highly-effective-people/
Gain a thorough understanding of each habit and its role in fostering a balanced and successful life. Read More - https://wordpresswikis.com/heres-everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-habits-of-highly-effective-people.html
Uncover creative virtual team-building ideas that foster engagement, trust, and productivity among remote workers. Read More - https://jungle-networks.com/2025/03/08/team-building-activities-and-virtual-team-games-strengthening-workplace-connections/
Learn about creative virtual team-building exercises that enhance teamwork and productivity. Read More - https://newsvinehub.com/the-power-of-experiential-learning-in-team-building-engaging-games-for-enhanced-collaboration/
Great insights! Finding reliable packers and movers in Hyderabad can be overwhelming, but this guide really breaks it down well. I especially liked the tips on checking reviews and verifying licenses—super important but often overlooked. Thanks for sharing such helpful info for anyone planning a move! Read more - https://signature-me-uae.com/2024/12/19/choosing-the-best-packers-and-movers-in-hyderabad-for-a-stress-free-relocation/
Great article! Choosing the right second-hand car parts can definitely be tricky, especially with so many unreliable options out there. I really liked the tip about verifying part numbers and checking for visible wear before buying — super practical advice. It would be awesome to see a follow-up post on the best online marketplaces or local sources for used parts. Thanks for sharing this valuable info! Read More - https://myautocart.com/how-to-choose-the-best-second-hand-parts-for-cars/
This was such an inspiring read! I love how the habits mentioned are not just about work but also focus on health, mindset, and lifelong learning. It’s a great reminder that success isn’t just about big leaps, but the small, consistent actions we take every day. Definitely bookmarking this to revisit. Thanks for the motivation! Read More - https://smartkitchenhacks.com/common-habits-of-successful-people/
This was such an informative read! I really appreciated the breakdown of the different types of virtual learning platforms—especially the distinction between LMS and LXPs, which I hadn’t fully understood before. It’s true that flexibility and accessibility are huge advantages, but the point about needing self-discipline really hit home. Thanks for laying everything out so clearly! Read more - https://www.eatmywings.com/heres-all-you-need-to-know-about-virtual-learning-platform.html
This was such an insightful read! I really appreciate how clearly the benefits of experiential learning were outlined. It's so true that hands-on experience helps solidify concepts in a way traditional learning often can't. I especially liked the point about building soft skills and real-world problem-solving abilities. Definitely sharing this with a few colleagues who are exploring new training approaches! Read More - https://ovuracosmetic.com/top-notch-benefits-of-choosing-experiential-learning-programs/
Auto locksmith course equips you with essential skills to unlock a successful career in automotive security. Learn how to handle car lockouts, key replacements, and advanced vehicle security systems. With hands-on training and expert guidance, you’ll be prepared to provide fast, reliable services to clients. Enroll in our auto locksmith course today and open the door to a rewarding career in the automotive locksmith industry! https://www.mpl-locksmith-training.co.uk/3-day-auto-locksmith-training-course
Accredited locksmith training equips you with the practical skills and knowledge needed to succeed in the security industry. From key cutting to advanced lock systems, learn from seasoned professionals in hands-on sessions designed for real-world application. Whether you're starting fresh or upskilling, this certified training opens doors to a secure, rewarding career. Start your journey with accredited locksmith training and unlock a future full of opportunities! https://www.mpl-locksmith-training.co.uk/
You can use https://tracklist.pro for easily, Quick and hassle-free Music.
3luckyblue game Pakistan game (https://www.3luckybluee.com/)
3luckyblue game Pakistan game (https://www.3luckybluee.com/)
3luckyblue game Pakistan game (https://www.3luckybluee.com/)
3luckyblue game Pakistan game (https://www.3luckybluee.com/)
3luckyblue game Pakistan game (https://www.3luckybluee.com/)
3luckyblue game Pakistan game (https://www.3luckybluee.com/)