Travel Journals
Another Cruise Ship Ban Hits One Of World’s Most Popular Vacation Destinations

The official website of the city of Cannes on the French Riviera recently published an article sharing its new regulations concerning the cruise industry. According to the document, the city is implementing new restrictions on huge cruise ships approaching Cannes’ port.
Fewer tourists will be allowed in the city daily, and only one large boat will be permitted inside the bay each day. Cruise fares will also increase, even though these will remain significantly lower than those in other popular European ports. The main reason behind this controversial choice is the need to protect sea ecosystems and limit pollution in the area.
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Cannes In France Implements Ban On Huge Cruise Ships
View on the cruise ship NORWEGIAN DAWN anchored in the Gulf of La Napoule for a cruise stopover
The Cannes City Council has recently implemented new regulations drastically limiting cruise access to its port and enforcing new passenger limits. By 2026, the city will only welcome ships with a maximum of 1,000 guests. Vessels with a larger capacity will have to use smaller boats to transport the passengers inside the port.
Cannes Information |
|
---|---|
Region |
Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur |
Population |
74,040 (2022) |
Area |
7.58 sq mi (9.62 km2) |
Only one large vessel will be allowed in the bay per day, and the new daily passenger limit will be set to 6,000 individuals. Commenting on the new restrictions, Mayor of Cannes, David Lisnard, declared:
Today, Cannes City Hall is accelerating its concrete environmental policy and achieving a drastic reduction, from 2026, in the number of calls by giant ships with more than 3,000 passengers. It is not a question of being against cruises but of welcoming, in the long term, only smaller, more aesthetic, more modern and environmentally friendly units. Cannes acts with method, consistency and rigor to constantly reconcile economic, attractiveness and biodiversity protection issues.
Apart from the cruise limits, the City Council of Cannes also announced an increase in cruise fares. The new fares will be implemented between 2026 and 2027. Despite this, the article claims they will still be 50% lower than those charged in other major European ports.
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Why Is Cannes Limiting Cruises?
With a population of fewer than 75,000 inhabitants, the vast crowds of tourists associated with cruises have started to negatively impact Cannes, a city mainly renowned for the famous Cannes Film Festival. According to the city’s official website, the goal is now to attract ‘fewer, smaller, less polluting and more attractive cruise ships.’ The choice to limit the number of cruise ships allowed in the port, as well as passengers, is mainly due to environmental concerns:
Faced with the increase in the number of cruise passengers (460,000 in 2024) and the pollution generated by giant cruise ships, Cannes City Hall is strengthening its action to preserve the marine environment, the air and the landscape.
Cannes is now working on an eco-friendly mooring area south of Sainte-Marguerite Island. According to current estimates, by 2027, 20 environmentally friendly moorings between six and twenty meters will be available. These will be able to protect the seabed from ship anchors. Yet, sea floors aren’t the only concern. Unfortunately, cruises are highly polluting. Plenty of cities in the Mediterranean Sea have now implemented similar bans. For instance, cruises are now banned from the popular island of Santorini.
According to a report published by Transport & Environment, one of the biggest cruise ships powered by liquefied natural gas, named MS Iona, emitted approximately the same amount of methane as 10,500 dairy cows per year back in 2022. The article also claims:
We found that in 2022, 214 cruise ships emitted 509 tonnes of SOX , 19,125 tonnes of NOX and 448 tonnes of PM2.5 around European ports (…). Cruise ship activity in Europe clearly keeps increasing with 3 times and so does air pollution, since marine pollutant standards around ports have not improved in many years.
Protecting the environment while ensuring local businesses relying on tourism continue to thrive despite the new bans will be challenging. Hopefully, Cannes will be able to make the most of these new regulations without drastically impacting its economy.
Travel Journals
40 years through the lens: A photographer’s Tasmanian journey | The Examiner

Since this date, the darkroom doors have had over 30 photographers go through – Neil Richardson, Peter Aylett, Maria Connors, Matthew Stanley, Will Swan, Craig Sheriff, Michelle Webb, Jeremy Smith, Eddie Safarik, Tim Hughes, Lorisse Dart, Leila Williams, Sarah Rhodes, Simon Tennant, Sharee Smith, Simon Groves, Ben Vos, Glenn Daniels, Mark Jesser, Geoff Robson, Scott Gelston, Rod Thompson, Phillip Biggs and Craig George.
Travel Journals
6 Most Scenic Drives in Alabama

Known as the best state in America for freshwater diversity, Alabama is a nature lover’s paradise. However, unknown to many avid trippers, Alabama also boasts some of the most scenic drives in the country. You will enjoy heart-gripping views at thousands of feet above sea level, then swooping down to take in delicious waterfront views along the state’s white-sand beaches. Some roads cut through dense forests and deep canyons. Meanwhile, others showcase rolling hills, old barns, and other elements of a bygone era. Keep reading to discover the 6 most scenic drives in Alabama.
The Natchez Trace Parkway
Natchez Trace Parkway is a phenomenal drive that spans more than 400 miles and winds through three states, including Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee. To a large extent, it follows the “Old Natchez Trace,” a historic artery used by American Indians, slave traders, soldiers, and even future presidents. You only need a minute on the historic parkway, and you will immediately appreciate why it is ranked as one of America’s 10 best biking roads. The Alabama segment spans slightly more than 30 miles in the state’s northwest corner, but its visual effect is profound in both scope and intensity. It starts on the Mississippi border, a few miles southwest of Cherokee, and winds through to the Tennessee border near Stewartville. Highlights include Colbert Ferry Park, named for Chickasaw George Colbert, and Freedom Hills Overlook, which features a steep, quarter-mile trail that leads to Alabama’s highest point on the parkway.
Alabama State Route 65
There are road trips that leave you yawning at the dull expanse of sameness. Others give a sense of rural calm, especially as they feature curvy, tree-lined segments and offer tasty views that set the heart purring with joy and anticipation. Alabama State Route 65 (not to be confused with Interstate 65) is curvy but incredibly peaceful. Think of old barns, historic homesteads, and weathered farm structures. People skip it for long drives and big names, but this 27-mile eye candy is such a revelation, notably for the fact that it cuts through the entire length of the Paint Rock Valley, described as “the Little Sister to Virginia’s Shenandoah.” The route starts from near the slow-paced town of Gurley and leaps through the mountainous regions of northeastern Alabama to Francisco near the Tennessee border. Roy B. Whitaker Paint Rock River Preserve in Paint Rock has nice, flat trails to explore, while Curly Putman Park in Princeton is photo-worthy in every direction.
Selma To Tuskegee Through Montgomery
A significant portion of the route from Selma to Tuskegee through Montgomery is the historic Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail, which commemorates one of the most consequential moments in the history of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement. A confrontation between peaceful protestors and law enforcement officers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge pricked the conscience of the nation and sent sympathetic shockwaves across the globe. The route’s starting point is the Brown Chapel African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church in Selma, while the Alabama State Capitol marks the endpoint on the other side. An extension to the vibrant college town of Tuskegee winds through peaceful rolling countryside tastefully punctuated with forested stretches. Highlights include the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the Brown Chapel African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, where a statue of Martin Luther King Jr. stands, and the Lowndes Interpretive Center (White Hall), a nostalgic spot dedicated to participants of the historic march.
Talladega Scenic Drive
Talladega Scenic Drive, also known as State Route 281 in Alabama, extends from U.S. Route 78 west of Heflin, a Hallmark-worthy town that serves as the gateway to the Southern Appalachian Mountains, to the intersection of two forest roads in the Talladega National Forest around Adams Gap, about 11 miles northwest of Lineville. It winds through the southernmost extension of the Appalachian Mountains and boasts some of the best vistas in the South, including Cheaha Mountain, the highest point in the state. Rock outcroppings and small rural settlements dot the stretch, sitting as mesmerized witnesses to nature’s incredible grandeur, vastness, and majesty. There are several scenic overlooks to stop and pull over. You can then hide at the Cheaha State Park and explore the jaw-dropping trails around.
Lookout Mountain Parkway
Lookout Mountain Parkway is a two-lane gem that spans approximately 93 miles and effortlessly imprints itself on the minds and memories of those lucky enough to experience its poetic beauty. The parkway starts outside the gates of Gadsden’s Noccalula Falls Park, where a path leads to a photogenic view of Noccalula Falls, a 90-foot waterfall steeped in Native American myth. The park and waterfall are in Gadsden, once Alabama’s second-most important commercial and industrial hub. The Alabama section of the parkway ends at the Georgia-Alabama border near Mentone before crossing into the Peach State. If you find Noccalula impressive, you will find DeSoto Falls, one of the most photographed attractions in Alabama, nothing short of stupendous. A short detour will take you to another unmissable highlight on the Lookout Mountain Parkway: the sandstone cliffs of the Little River Canyon.
Barbour County Governors’ Trail
Barbour County Governors’ Trail has a giveaway name that easily reveals its overarching focus: the Alabama governors who called Barbour County home. The trail features 8 governors, including those with historical significance such as Governor Shorter, a strong secessionist and a co-author of the Confederate constitution. Still, despite its name, the Barbour County Governors’ Trail is not exclusively about governors. You can pass by the Octagon House in Clayton, which served as Union cavalry headquarters during the Civil War years. Alternatively, you can explore the gorgeous Blue Springs State Park, which features several attractions, including a spring-fed swimming pool. The trail begins in Clio and continues northeast through Louisville to downtown Clayton.
The Takeaway
Besides being some of the best stress-relievers out there, road trips are fun, enjoyable, and often come with a euphoric sense of freedom and adventure. Alabama, one of the most diverse states in America, is home to some surprisingly beautiful drives. The best part is that the drives travel the whole gamut: From the flat terrains with shimmering water views to cloud-grazing pathways with panoramic vistas. Depending on your pick, you can also enjoy a big dose of history. Keep in mind that several defining events associated with the Civil Rights Movement played out in Alabama, including the Selma to Montgomery March, making this state perfect for road-trip-loving history buffs.
Travel Journals
5 Key Takeaways for Improving Infrastructure and Range Anxiety
I’ve owned an EV for more than a year. I scored a deal on a 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5 SEL AWD. I’ve enjoyed the car. I’ve put more than 5,000 all-electric miles on it. I’ve evangelized about how hassle-free EV ownership can be. What I had not done was the most anxiety-inducing part of EV ownership: taking a road trip. Not a really long drive. But a 600-plus-mile round-trip trek with my wife and kids in tow, requiring planning and multiple charging stops. I finally got the chance a few weekends ago, when friends invited us to their cottage in a picturesque part of Northern Michigan best left unmentioned to New Yorkers.
The experiences in this piece are those of the author and in no way mean to suggest that everyone’s experiences will be similar or that infrastructure difficulties will always be this way.
My trip was neither perfect nor painless. But it wasn’t a complete disaster. My family made it home with relationships intact. But my experience proved eye-opening. I’m not quite ready to bail on EVs and buy a hybrid. But I have compiled a few, hopefully helpful thoughts on the infrastructure and what I’ll be looking for when I buy my next EV.
Range Is Important For EVs
This point is obvious. But it’s worth reiterating: the more range your EV has, the less stressful your road trip will be. My threshold for what constitutes “enough” range has increased since I took the road trip. The EPA estimates that my 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5 SEL will achieve 260 miles of range on a single charge. It’s probably a hair less after a year of ownership. But we can use that for the sake of the argument. Typically, I charge to 80 percent. That gives me a little over 200 miles of range to play with in optimal conditions. I don’t commute. My kids attend school within walking distance of our home. I have a Level 2 home charger. I can get to the airport and almost anywhere in Metro Detroit using less than 50 miles of range, round trip. Range is never an issue.
Road trips are atypical. I charged to 100% before leaving. However, after that first leg, I was left with about 200 miles of range to use between stops when charging to 80% – in theory. The car’s functional range, presuming one doesn’t wish to drain the battery completely, is less than that. For me, double-digits remaining was when the anxiety began creeping in. I started cutting my speed, rationing the air conditioning, and monitoring the delta between the range and distance remaining like a hawk. Hitting my first charging stop with the car showing 30 miles of range left was cutting it closer than I would have liked.
Not everyone can afford a Lucid Air or a Rivian Max Pack. However, even increasing the range from 250 miles to above 300 miles with a vehicle like the front-wheel-drive Chevrolet Equinox EV can reduce anxiety and, potentially, make the difference between needing a second stop or shortening your trip by half an hour to 45 minutes by avoiding it.
2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5 AWD Range Versus Rivals
Max EPA Range (AWD) |
Starting MSRP (AWD) |
|
2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5 AWD |
260 mi |
$49,350 |
2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 AWD |
290 mi |
$50,150 |
2025 Ford Mustang Mach E eAWD |
300 mi |
$40,995 |
2025 Tesla Model Y Long Range AWD |
327 mi |
$48,990 |
2025 Honda Prologue AWD |
294 mi |
$50,400 |
Range Calculators Are An Underrated Feature
My Ioniq 5 predates the 2025 refresh. The car’s performance is top-notch. However, the software to manage that performance is lacking. The Ioniq 5’s range calculator determines the range with a heavy weight on previous driving. That’s fine during everyday usage. That’s not ideal for a road trip when you go from 100% city driving to less efficient highway cruising.
When I began my drive with a 100% battery charge, my car told me I had 344 miles of range. That estimate presumed I would continue city driving in warm weather and traveling more than four miles per kWh. I knew the car would not achieve that figure. But I figured 216 miles to the first charging stop would be a safe bet. We made it with 30 miles remaining after 220 miles.
My anxiety stemmed not so much from the range but from not being able to trust what the car was telling me. The delta between my remaining range and the charging stop held steady for about the first hour or so of the drive. Then it began plummeting, particularly when the remaining range fell below 200 miles. I departed our food stop with 121 miles of range and 67 miles to the charger. That delta dipped to just 30 miles by the time I parked at the charger.
The ability to plan ahead is only as good as your data. I would have loved a feature like the integrated Google Maps in GM EVs that can map you to your destination, factor in the charging stop, and provide a relatively accurate estimate of how much battery life would be left when you arrive.
Tesla Supercharger Access Wasn’t A Game Changer
One of the reasons I felt confident embarking on my first EV road trip was Tesla Supercharger access. Hyundai sent me a free NACS adapter for my Ioniq 5. Stations are well-dispersed and maintained. Stations have numerous chargers. It felt like that network would be a reliable security blanket, making road tripping easier. It wasn’t.
Adding Tesla Supercharger access didn’t add places for me to stop. Other fast-charging providers in Michigan are, for the most part, not filling the gaps. Companies like Electrify America are simply placing their chargers adjacent to Tesla Superchargers. In that scenario, there’s no reason to use Tesla’s charging. My Ioniq 5 can charge more than twice as fast on a 350 kW charger. And paying by tapping my credit card was easier.
The one time I needed Tesla Superchargers to come through it became a near nightmare. I pulled into Bay City, MI, with about 80 miles left to travel and about 95 miles to go. It was 96 degrees. I had not noticed on the PlugShare app before leaving that all Electrify America chargers there were out of service. Tesla’s eight supercharging bays were open for use. The trouble is that traffic was heavy. Most EVs on the road are Teslas. And all the bays were full.
Ford’s Blue Oval Network Was My Salvation
I waited in line for a few minutes before a bay opened up. I pulled in. The problem was that Tesla’s cord was too short. It only reaches Tesla ports on the left rear of the vehicle. The Ioniq 5 has its charger on the right side. My options were to wait by the one bay I could angle my car into or wait for two consecutive spaces to open up and claim them both. I did find salvation, but it came at a Blue Oval Network charger at a Ford dealer a mile away.
Better Infrastructure Around The EV Charger Could Make A Huge Difference
Charging time is important. But it’s only part of the time you spend off the highway. The distance to the charger and poor infrastructure around it can increase the stop time. Most EV fast chargers in Michigan reside at large big-box retailers like Meijer (or “Meijer’s” if you’re a Michigander). That’s good in a sense: Meijer stores are already strategically located at hubs. But they are typically off the main drag, around a mile or two from the highway. Driving to and fro can add three to five minutes to the stop length on both ends.
Having the charger at Meijer is great for bathroom access and potential grocery shopping. But they are typically located away from the restaurants and fast food outlets just off the highway. So, you can’t just get lunch in the dead time while charging. A typical stop could look like this: drive a half-mile east, wait in a drive-thru line for 10-15 minutes, then drive 2.5 miles back across the highway in the opposite direction (five or so minutes) to reach the charger. Spend 15-20 minutes charging. Spend another 3-5 minutes driving back to the highway.
Real time spent can be upwards of 40 minutes. Food near the chargers or chargers at food outlets could significantly reduce that time. And the time savings may even be worth having to scarf down $13 Elon dogs.
When EV Infrastructure Worked, It Was Great
But for the aforementioned snafu in Bay City, my charging experiences were pleasant. My Ioniq 5 charged like a beast on Electrify America chargers, reaching a peak of 220 kW. Going from 13% to 80% took a little over 20 minutes.
I also found a bank of 160 kW fast chargers at City Hall in Cheboygan, MI. None of them were in use on a Saturday night. I left the car on the charger while we got the kids ice cream and stopped for an outdoor beer. It was 100 percent full when I returned an hour or so later. It also allows me to tap my card to pay, rather than using an app. The extra charging allowed us to take a detour to a lighthouse on the way home.
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