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13 of Europe’s best under-the-radar summer vacation spots

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Whether you’re sipping a spritz in a buzzing plaza or diving into deep blue waters off a rugged coastline, summer in Europe is incredible. But with more and more people joining the fun, some of Europe’s best places also tend to deal with a bit of overcrowding in the summer high season

But don’t let that scare you off a Euro trip this year ⁠– there are plenty of lesser-explored corners of the continent just waiting to be discovered. Beat the summer heat in the highest stretches of Scandinavia or find an empty beach on the Baltic Coast. Take your vacation where locals go in a lush portion of Portugal or flop down on a more relaxed coastline in Greece

Whatever your travel style, here are our favorite under-the-radar summer vacation destinations in Europe that are perfect for 2025.

Hiking through the Alta Badia valley, Italy. Mostovyi Sergii Igorevich/Shutterstock

1. Alta Badia, Italy

Best for a mountain getaway

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If the Dolomites are the Alps at their most magnificent, the Alta Badia valley in South Tyrol promises the Dolomites at their tastiest. This jagged array of deep valleys, high plateaus and piercing pinnacles in northern Italy echoes with poignant history: between 1915 and 1918, Italian and Austro-Hungarian forces fought amid these unforgiving peaks, and today you can hike routes such as the Kaiserjäger to see their trenches and gun emplacements. Alta Badia is renowned for its skiing, but in summer the cable cars and mountain huts reopen to serve hungry hikers, cyclists, paragliders and trail runners instead – the region is spangled with Michelin stars, but even simple refuges dish up good-value but top-notch cuisine (think mountain cheeses, pasta and strudels). For an extra adrenaline buzz, tackle the challenging via ferrata (“iron road”) climbs, a method of traversing vertiginous rock faces via rungs and cables. 

Planning tip: The nearest airports are at Innsbruck, Verona and Venice. La Villa, San Cassiano (St Kassian) and Corvara make excellent bases from which to explore the peaks and valleys.

Left: The Minho region of Portugal. Sergey Peterman/Getty Images Right: Caldo verde, a traditional soup from the Minho region. Westend61/Getty Images

2. Minho, Portugal 

Best for foodies

Where do the Portuguese take their vacations in Portugal? Those in the know savor staycations in the birthplace of the kingdom: the northerly Minho region, a land of verdant hills, traditional culture and fabulous flavors. The Minho is noted for its vinho verde, literally “green wine”, released just a few months after harvest. As well as those fruity drops (Loureiro and Alvarinho are our picks), the cuisine is delectable, too. There are plenty of local specialties. In Ponte de Lima, Portugal’s oldest town, find a restaurant overlooking the Roman bridge and savor arroz de sarrabulho – rice cooked in pig’s blood and studded with various pork morsels (tastier than it sounds) – and caldo verde, a hearty kale soup. Monkfish, sea bass and bream are fish favorites, along with bacalhau – salt cod, a staple throughout the country. Work up an appetite strolling historic towns such as Braga, Guimarães and Viana do Castelo, where magnificently diverse architecture recalls the wealth of adventurous merchants who made their fortunes during the Age of Discovery and in the subsequent colonial era. 

Trip plan: Porto is a one-hour train ride from Braga, from where buses serve other towns in the Minho.

Ysios winery, Calatrava. JJFarq/Shutterstock

3. La Rioja, Spain

Best for wine lovers

The compact region of La Rioja somehow crams 500-plus wineries into its modest area, between Bilbao, Zaragoza and Madrid in northern Spain. In summer, the vineyards striping the craggy Ebro River Valley are verdant and lush, and among them you’ll find traces of past settlers – remains betray inhabitation from Neolithic times, through Moorish occupation to medieval Christian settlement. This is a slow-paced region, rich in history and viticulture: tastings are a must. Visit the venerable, château-style wineries clustered around Haro in the Rioja Alta; elsewhere, Rioja Alavesa is more contemporary – architects Gehry and Calatrava had a hand in the design of Marqués de Riscal and Ysios wineries. Logroño, La Rioja’s capital, is packed with bars serving cheap, tasty pintxos (tapas), ideal for soaking up the fruity reds. Summers can be very hot, so plan accordingly. 

Planning tip: Make a leisurely loop around La Rioja. Visit Haro’s bodegas, head east to Briones for its ruined castle and the lowdown on rioja at Vivanco, and do a pintxos-crawl along Logroño’s Calle del Laurel. On the return, stop at medieval Laguardia, below the Sierra de Cantabria; Calatrava’s wave-like Ysios winery is nearby. 

Left: Beach on the Pelion Peninsula. Gal_Rotem/Shutterstock Right: The narrow-gage Pelion Train. fritz16/Shutterstock

4. Pelion Peninsula, Greece

Best for a less-crowded Greek holiday

Sure, you could bake on busy beaches on a Greek island. But in sizzling summer, head instead for cool Pelion, the gnarled finger curling into the Aegean to tickle the Sporades. There’s a range of coastal resorts, mostly more isolated and peaceful than elsewhere: try Horto or Milina on the sheltered west coast, southerly Platanias, or busier Horefto, Agios Ioannis and cute Damouhari near beautiful Fakistra beach on the east coast. The mountainous interior oozes natural and cultural appeal – this is where mythical centaurs came to carouse – with ancient cobbled paths linking traditional villages where you can admire church frescoes, sip grape-based, rakı-like tsipouro in the shade of venerable plane trees, and savor local specialties such as spetsofaï (pork-sausage stew), fasoladha (butter bean soup) and lamb in lemon sauce. Up here, the air’s a good few degrees lower than on the coast, and in summer, you can board the narrow-gage Pelion Train that chugs from Ano Lehonia to Milies, running daily in July and August. 

Planning tip: The nearest airport is in Thessaloniki, a three-hour bus or train ride from the gateway to the Pelion, Volos. Athens and Preveza are alternatives. 

Lac Gentau and Pic du Midi d’Ossau on the GR10 trekking route. Alex Treadway/Getty Images

5. Pic du Midi, France 

Best for stargazing

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Scan the heavens on a clear night in the summer and you might witness a spectacular light show: the Perseids meteor shower, sparking dozens of shooting stars in the upper atmosphere. The Perseids are active between mid-July and late August each year, peaking around August 12. Head for a dark-sky reserve where you can also admire the Milky Way in between meteors. The Pic du Midi, in the central French Pyrenees, is one such reserve, with a historic (now high-spec) observatory at 2877m (9439ft); visit during the day to learn about celestial phenomena and admire the mountain panorama, or at night for an immersive astronomical experience. Even if you don’t make it up to the observatory, this region – popular with skiers in winter but peaceful in summer – offers stellar stargazing opportunities, not to mention tremendous hiking: the GR10 long-distance trail meanders nearby. Find a campsite, mountain refuge or apartment in a quiet village, and simply look to the skies. 

Planning tip: Shuttle buses travel from Lourdes to La Mongie, from where cable cars run up to the observatory. The nearest airports are at Lourdes/Tarbes, Toulouse and Pau.

Bad Gastein Spa and Ski Resort in summer. aaddyy/Shutterstock

6. Central Austria

Best for a spa break

To find wellness in Austria, look for the Bad in everything – at least, in place names: if it starts Bad, it’s a spa town. A dense cluster of saunas, treatment centers and thermal waters studs a broad swathe of central Austria east and south of Salzburg, most with a suitably uplifting backdrop of alpine peaks, meadows and valleys. The focus varies subtly from place to place. In Bad Aussee, expect a healthy diet plus outdoor activity, in line with the concepts of Kneipp therapy. The benefits of brine have been promoted in stately Bad Ischl since it received the imperial seal of approval in the mid-19th century. Natural hot springs feed the action at Bad Gastein, with forest bathing and barefoot walking added to the mix in neighboring Bad Hofgastein, which hosts one of Europe’s largest thermal spa complexes. But you won’t want to stay inside during the long, warm days of summer: roam the picturesque paths circling the Salzkammergut’s sparkling lakes, pedal mountain-bike trails above Bad Gastein, or take an invigorating dip in an alpine tarn. 

Planning tip: Fly or travel by train to Salzburg, from where most spa towns are accessible by bus or train.

Find empty beaches along the Baltic Coast, like near Ventspils. marketa1982/Shutterstock

7. Baltic Coast, Latvia 

Best for empty beaches and national parks

With some 300km (187 miles) of largely empty shoreline – much of it white sand, backed by wooded hills and ridges – you might wonder why Latvia’s western coast isn’t more developed. The answer lies in the communist era, when this was the western Soviet frontier, a strategic area from which locals were squeezed. Today it’s a mesmerizing region to roam on sunny summer days: sometimes somber, sometimes seductive, always spectacular. Coastal settlements range from rapidly gentrifying Ventspils to gritty, grungy Liepāja (great for alternative music) and a host of small fishing villages studding isolated stretches where you’re sure to find a beach all to yourself. To really get away from it all, head north to Slītere National Park and Kolka, the headland where the Baltic meets the Gulf of Rīga. Here, hike or bike among towering dunes, woods and sea, and munch smoked fish bought in traditional fishing villages, such as Vaide, Košrags and Mazirbe, where you can also learn about near-extinct Livonian culture. 

Planning tip: Most visitors arrive on the west coast from Rīga; buses trace the coastline to Kolka and run inland to Ventspils and Liepāja, but hiring a car makes travel quicker and easier.

Left: Arctic fox, Svalbard. JoannaPerchaluk / Shutterstock Right: Coal mining houses on the hills of Longyearbyen. LouieLea/Shutterstock

8. Svalbard, Norway 

Best for wildlife watching

In the high Arctic, the window of opportunity for cruising is open only briefly: the northernmost shores and most remote fjords of the chilly Svalbard archipelago are accessible by sea for only a month or two each summer. But it’s a window worth seeking out. In July, the seas are mostly clear of ice, the temperature “soars” to a (relatively) balmy 5°C (41°F) and the sun shines for weeks on end – morning, noon and (mid)night – enabling 24-hour sightseeing. Expedition cruise vessels plow past the islands’ jagged mountains and creaking glaciers, while expert guides keep watch for wildlife: walrus colonies, herds of reindeer, Arctic foxes, seals, whales of all sorts and, of course, polar bears. Perhaps 3000 of the huge white predators stalk Svalbard and the surrounding Arctic region; in summer, when the ice breaks up, the bears stay close to the coast. Board a small Zodiac boat and explore the shoreline for the chance of a close encounter. 

Planning tip: Fly via Oslo to Longyearbyen on Spitsbergen, Svalbard’s main island, from where one- or two-week cruises depart; itineraries and activities are dictated by weather and sea conditions.

A beach club in Ksamil on the Albanian Riviera. Hyserb/Shutterstock

9. Albanian Riviera, Albania 

Best for an under-the-radar beach break

While not quite the hidden gem that it was at the turn of the millennium, when empty beaches and truly bargain prices abounded, Albania’s glorious southern shoreline remains a treat for those in search of sun, sand and seafood. Saranda is now a fully fledged party town, its esplanade lined with bars. For quieter resorts, head up the coast to Himara, flanked by a scattering of good beaches (try Potami, just to the south). In summer, you’re guaranteed sun, balmy water and hot tweather; unsurprisingly, loungers and beach umbrellas are at a premium but you can still seek out peaceful patches of sand at spots such as Palasa, Borsh, pebbly Bunec and the islands off Ksamil. Or head over to the epic Llogara Pass to Vlora Bay, where you’ll find more resorts and boat trips to isolated beaches at the end of the Karaburuni Peninsula. For a break from sand-lolling, head to the archaeological site of Butrint, where Greek, Roman and Byzantine ruins, some dating back 2500 years, are crammed onto a knobbly headland. 

Planning tip: From Corfu, which receives international fights and ferries from the Italian port of Brindisi, daily fast ferries reach the main city of Saranda in 30 minutes.

Left: A ferry in the Stockholm archipelago. Igor Grochev/Shutterstock Right: Gamla Stan in Stockholm. Zuzana Habekova/Shutterstock

10. Stockholm Archipelago, Sweden 

Best for an island break

Less a city, more a wooded archipelago that happens to host some important buildings, Sweden’s capital is unreasonably attractive – and never more so than in sunny summer, when the sun glints on the water and the many parks beckon. Stockholm has enough cultural attractions to pack several days, from the cobbled alleys of Gamla Stan (Old Town) to exceptional contemporary galleries and museums (including open-air Skansen), while the sleek modern shopping district of Nordmalm offers ample welcoming cafes and restaurants for the all-important fika (coffee and cake break). It’s easy to roam the 14 main islands on foot, by bike or metro, but there are tens of thousands more islets and rocks in the archipelago that are best explored by ferry, on a boat cruise or – better yet – by kayak. Watch for ospreys, beavers and grey seals in various choice spots around the archipelago. 

Planning tip: Even in summer, bring warm layers for evenings, when temperatures can drop to 10°C (50°F). Things get quieter after the Swedish school summer holidays end in the second half of August.

Left: Cardigan Bay, Wales. Shutterstock / Richard Whitcombe Right: A bottlenose dolphin in Cardigan Bay. Karl Weller/Shutterstock

11. Cardigan Bay, Wales 

Best for sea life 

The coast of west Wales is a popular destination – for marine mammals as well as holidaying humans. In summer, the broad sweep of Cardigan Bay hosts Europe’s largest population of bottlenose dolphins, some resident, others seasonal visitors, and numbering around 300 individuals. They’re not shy, and as summer warms up, a boat trip offers a healthy chance of enjoying a close encounter, especially likely offshore of Cemaes Head or New Quay; hop on board from one of the attractive harbors at the southern end of the bay. The fun doesn’t end with dolphins: grey seals haul out on rocks, and you might also spot harbor porpoises and seabirds such as guillemots and razorbills. On land, explore the Dylan Thomas connections at New Quay, roam ancient castles and churches, and fuel up on local treats – seafood, of course, but also excellent artisan cheeses. 

Planning tip: Base yourself in one of Ceredigion’s postcard-pretty coastal towns – New Quay, Aberaeron or Llangrannog – and spend a few days exploring. The Cardigan to Aberystwyth section (97km/60 miles) of the coastal path makes an achievable four- or five-day adventure.

Square of the Cathedral, Antwerp, in summertime. StefanoZaccaria/Getty Images

12. Antwerp, Belgium 

Best for a cultural city break

Many things in Antwerp, the thrumming historical hub of the Low Countries, are high: the culture, the fashion and, in many respects, the prices. Fortunately, summer offers a respite for your wallet via Zomer van Antwerpen (Antwerp Summer), a diverse and densely packed calendar of music, dance, theater and circus performances that takes over the city from late June through August – many events are free, while others charge “democratic” (ie bargain) prices. Of course, there’s plenty more to pack into a short break: Rubens’ masterworks in his house-museum and within the spectacular Onze-Lieve Vrouwekathedraal; city-wide medieval and art nouveau architectural gems; hedonistic clubs and summer pop-up bars in parks and along the river. Long renowned as a trading center for diamonds and, more recently, cutting-edge fashion, Antwerp offers dangerously addictive shopping, too. 

Planning tip: Antwerp’s spectacular fin-de-siècle Central Station is a destination in itself – arrive by train if possible (easy, with ample services from across Europe, many via Brussels). The airport is just 5km (3 miles) southeast of the city center.

Left: Kayaking on the Soča River in Triglav National Park. Michael Thaler/Shutterstock Right: Cycling along Lake Jezero Jasna in Triglav National Park. Umomos/Shutterstock

13. Julian Alps, Slovenia

Best for outdoor adventures 

In Slovenia, a land of spectacular mountains, lakes and rivers, and one of Europe’s most forested countries, it’s no coincidence that Slovenes are so keen on outdoor activities. And the Julian Alps, where the 2684m (8806ft) Mt Triglav is surrounded by 840 sq km (324 sq miles) of national park, are the focus of this action. Summer is a great time to get outside, whether swimming in picture-perfect lakes Bled or Bohinj, rafting the Soča River or canyoning the Grmečica gorge. Hiking is also huge here: it’s said that every Slovenian should climb Triglav at least once, but you could also dip into the low-level, circular Julian Alps Trail, totalling 260km (162 miles) and affording tremendous views of the peaks, plus access to village accommodation, cultural insights and places to fuel up on excellent Slovenian cuisine and wines – universally high in quality but low in price. 

Planning tip: Fly to Ljubljana or Venice (an easy drive west), then either tackle some of the Julian Alps Trail or explore from a handy base – Kobarid or Bovec for the Soča Valley, Kranjska Gora or Mojstrana for the Sava Valley, or any of the settlements in the Bohinj Valley.



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Thailand Welcomes Agoda’s Debut Merchandise Store Featuring Exclusive Travel-Inspired Lifestyle Products That Celebrate The Spirit Of Exploration And Everyday Adventure

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Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Agoda has officially launched its first-ever merchandise store in Thailand. Available exclusively on leading e-commerce platforms Shopee and Lazada, this store offers a carefully curated collection of travel-inspired lifestyle products. From functional accessories to stylish apparel, each item is designed to capture the essence of exploration and adventure, making travel a part of everyday life. This new retail venture not only enhances Agoda’s connection with its community but also allows Thai consumers to embrace the spirit of travel—whether they are preparing for their next trip or simply adding a touch of wanderlust to their daily routine.

Agoda Enters Retail with Travel-Inspired Lifestyle Store in Thailand

Agoda, the globally recognized digital travel platform, has taken a significant leap into the world of retail by unveiling its first-ever merchandise store. Available exclusively on leading e-commerce platforms Shopee and Lazada in Thailand, this new retail venture allows Agoda fans and travel enthusiasts to shop for branded lifestyle products that embody the essence of travel.

This innovative move marks a notable evolution in Agoda’s brand strategy. While the company has long been synonymous with hotel and flight bookings, it now aims to build a deeper emotional connection with its customers through a lifestyle product line. The Agoda Swag Store introduces a new dimension to the brand—one that merges travel passion with everyday living.

Curated Travel-Inspired Merchandise Collection

The launch features a thoughtfully selected range of lifestyle products designed for both frequent travelers and fans of the Agoda brand. Shoppers can choose from functional yet trendy items such as:

  • Branded T-shirts
  • Stylish mugs
  • Soft eye masks
  • Cosmetic pouches

For those always on the move, Agoda offers practical travel accessories including:

  • Luggage straps and tags
  • Durable travel covers
  • A vacuum compression travel backpack
  • A hands-free carry-on sling
  • The innovative Hydrate & Scroll 2-in-1 water bottle that doubles as a phone stand

Each item has been carefully designed to enhance travel experiences while promoting a sense of personal style and brand connection.

Launch Offers to Boost Accessibility

In celebration of the Agoda Swag Store’s debut, shoppers can enjoy special introductory deals with discounts reaching as high as 60%. This introductory offer aims to make the merchandise accessible to a wider range of shoppers, encouraging more people to engage with the Agoda lifestyle.

The company’s broader vision is not just to sell products, but to integrate the spirit of travel into everyday life. Through this retail expansion, Agoda hopes to connect with individuals who view travel not just as an occasional activity, but as part of who they are.

Fast, Reliable Delivery with DPX

Agoda has partnered with DPX, a trusted logistics provider, to ensure that all orders are fulfilled quickly and efficiently across Thailand. Most deliveries are completed within 1–2 business days, and many orders are eligible for free shipping depending on platform-specific promotions.

This efficient delivery model enhances the customer experience, ensuring that travelers and shoppers alike receive their products with minimal delay—just in time for their next journey or lifestyle upgrade.

Expanding Brand Engagement Beyond Bookings

The launch of Agoda’s merchandise store reflects a wider strategy to build lasting relationships with customers. By offering tangible branded products, Agoda reinforces its visibility in the daily lives of its users, going beyond the digital touchpoints of its booking platform.

Whether someone is packing for a vacation, sipping coffee at home, or organizing travel essentials, these lifestyle products serve as constant reminders of Agoda’s commitment to making travel more seamless, stylish, and inspiring.

How to Shop the Agoda Swag Store

Thai consumers can explore the full range of Agoda’s lifestyle merchandise by simply searching for “Agoda” on Shopee or Lazada. Both platforms feature the complete collection, updated deals, and shipping options to suit a variety of customer needs.

This new shopping experience not only reflects Agoda’s innovative brand vision but also showcases its commitment to adapting to evolving customer expectations. As travel continues to blend with lifestyle, Agoda’s retail debut sets the tone for a new kind of brand engagement—one that brings the adventure home.

In conclusion, Thailand is the launchpad for Agoda’s debut merchandise store, offering travel-inspired lifestyle products that celebrate exploration and adventure. Available exclusively on Shopee and Lazada, the collection blends style with practicality for everyday travelers.



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6 Best Safari-and-Beach Holidays, From Madagascar to Mozambique

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“Love and marriage, go together like a horse and carriage,” Sinatra crooned. Not exactly a current choice, but the song does drift to mind when asked about the merits of a bush-n-beach vacation—because that is one slam-dunk combination. Spending time in Africa’s primordial wilderness areas is always an eye-opener, from the ethereal sight of a valley filigreed in spider webs made visible by dawn’s dew to watching a leopard cuff a hyena as her cub scrambles up a tree, or pied kingfishers diving into reed-fringed pools deep with hippos. You never forget your first safari, and if you’ve booked in the right place, it’s unlikely to be the last. That said, the daily regime—from predawn wake-up calls to postprandial fireside chats—can be tiring. So following it up with a powder-soft beach—the lapping of a warm Indian ocean acting as your evening lullaby—is a pretty perfect ending. But where on this vast continent would you land? Here are some of our favorite safari-and-beach trip ideas that combine the best of both.

Singita Sasakwa is built in the style of a stately manor house, and is perched on a hillock with expansive views of the Serengeti.

Courtesy Singita Sasakawa

Grumeti Serengeti, Tanzania | Mnemba Island Zanzibar, Tanzania

Bush

Grumeti, in Tanzania’s western Serengeti, is archetypal Africa: savannah plains with flat-topped acacias under big blue skies—always gorgeous, always secluded, regardless of when you visit in the migration cycle. It’s also where you’ll find Singita Sabora Tented Camp, arguably the most opulent and romantic tented camp in Africa, and easily combined with Singita Sasakwa Lodge. A game-drive distance away, Sasakwa is perched on a hillock with expansive views; a lovely contrast with Sabora, and Singita’s mycelium-style service means the team here already know whether you prefer sparkling or still, cheese or dessert, sauvignon or chardonnay.

Beach

Just three clicks off the northeastern coast of fast-developing Zanzibar, Mnemba is long feted the most romantic beach lodge in East Africa, and a huge overhaul in 2024 has only cemented this. Its 12 “bandas”—all-natural cocoons privately located in the casuarina forest’s cool depths; tiny duiker antelopes foraging as you make your way along private pathways to a startlingly white beach—are hard to leave. And with modern conveniences, fabulous snacks, and a butler at your service, you really don’t have to.

Connectivity: Coastal Air offer an easy ride from Grumeti airstrip to Stone Town airport; you’ll likely stop to pick up passengers but there’s no disembarking, and should get there in three hours. From here andBeyond will be waiting to whisk you across to the north-east coast—a 1.5-hour drive at the most followed by a quick 10-minute boat ride.

More worth considering: Completely overhauled in 2022, andBeyond Grumeti Serengeti offers the kind of accommodation and service one expects from this class-act outfit, and combining it with more of their Tanzania or Kenya camps (all great) can offer significant savings. And keep an eye on Laba Grumeti Art Lodge. A contemporary-chic take on the tented camp, filled with contemporary artworks by 10 African artists, vintage Land Rovers adapted to run on diesel, ethanol and electric, elevated views, and no shortage of modern conveniences, it opens September 2025. Pair this with Zanzibar Sunrise, a perennial Zanzibar favorite, with its prime position overlooking a lush garden-beach cove, the best on Zanzibar’s east coast. Or head north to Matemwe, where the rustic-romantic Zanzibar Sunrise comprises 14 barefoot-chic-Crusoe-castaway bungalows, built right on the beach.

Time + Tide’s Tsara Komba on Nosy Komba, a forested mountain-island just a short boat ride from Nosy Be, is a bucket-list experience.

Time and Tide

South Luangwa National Park, Zambia | Nose Be Archipelago, Madagascar

Bush

Named after the broad expanse of water that flows along its southern boundary, under pillowed clouds and crepuscular skies, South Luangwa National Park offers great game viewing (Zambia’s largest populations of lions; one of the highest leopard densities in Africa) alongside gorgeous landscapes, negligible visitor numbers, and one of the continent’s best walking experiences. It’s a true immersion in untrammeled wilderness, walking between any of Time + Tide’s camps—each only two to four hours apart, while luggage is transferred by road. Do opt to spend at least one night sleeping under the stars.

Beach

Combining the best of the Indian ocean—floating above a kaleidoscope of fish; swimming with turtles—with fascinating wildlife in the verdant forests (lemurs; chameleons; boa constrictors!), the Nose Be archipelago offers ‘bush and beach’ in one, and is relatively undeveloped and totally unmarred by tourism. Lucky then, to find one of the most special lodges on the continent: Time + Tide’s Tsara Komba on Nosy Komba, a forested mountain-island just a short boat ride from Nosy Be. Comprising eight timber cocoons, thatched roofs peeking out the lushly landscaped hillside overlooking a crescent of sand, the glittering ocean backdropped by the green hills of the mainland, the water warm, and calm—it is simply idyllic.



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Northumberland’s golden gem beach rated one of top school holiday attractions for summer 2025

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Beautiful horseshoe-shape beach near two Northumberland castles could make for the perfect school holiday outing

Beadnell Bay, Northumberland

A gem of a beach with ‘protected waters and golden sandy beaches’ is a hit with visitors to Northumberland who describe it as a beautiful area to take both children and dogs, with one describing it as their favourite stretch of coastline in the entire UK. Beadnell Bay in Northumberland is a popular spot for building sandcastle, flying kites and kayaking while off the village harbour, which is awash with colourful fishing boats in summer, its waters are fished for wild salmon and trout.

Just an hour’s drive from Newcastle, Beadnell combines a bustling community life with ample opportunity for chill-out relaxation on its wide sands and a trip to the beach features on Trip Advisor’s 2025 list of the 10 best things to do in Northumberland with kids. It makes the high ranking thanks to comments from visitors seduced by its charms.

Several noted its cleanliness and stone-free sands ideal for sandcastles and one recent TripAdvisor reviewer, who thought it lovely for a walk and dog-friendly, said: “This is a hidden gem. It’s a long beach, soft sand and backed by dunes.”

Another also called it “a hidden gem with great access” and one fan wrote: “Having visited Beadnell Bay numerous times in the last 20 or so years, I can hand on heart say it is by far my favourite beach in the UK”. The review added: “With the carpark, toilets and ice cream van conveniently close to the beach, you only have a short walk from the car to the beach” and called the beach “stunning, with golden sand”, saying the sand dunes are “brilliant for the kids to enjoy tiring themselves out”.

Beadnell Bay, Northumberland

As previously reported, Beadnell was named by travel experts earlier this year as one of the UK’s top destinations to enjoy a break as well as one of the best holiday spots to take pets and several TripAdvisor reviewers clearly appreciated the chance to take their dogs on the beach. Others noted handy ice cream and snack spots and one family review included: “The boys were happy digging and paddling all day.

“Toilets are available in the car park and there’s a cafe to get drinks and snacks. All in all a lovely day and would definitely return.”

Visit Northumberland describes Beadnell as ‘the sporty one’, calling it fun for sandcastle building, beach cricket and the likes of kite-surfing, kayaking and windsurfing. It adds: “With its protected waters and golden sandy beaches, Beadnell is a water sports paradise.”

Beadnell is less than a 15-minute drive from Bamburgh Castle to the north – which also makes the Trip Advisor list of things to in Northumberland with kids, taking top spot – and there’s another castle nearby too. Dunstanburgh Castle is about 20 minutes south; a short walk from Craster which itself has been described as a fishing village where time stands still.

Seahouses is also on its doorstep and just up the coast is Holy Island, making Beadnell a popular base for tourists too. Other Beadnell highlights include coastal pub The Craster Arms – which dates back to the 15th Century and incorporates a pele tower – and the adjacent Beadnell Towers Hotel where non-residents can dine too and where dogs are also welcome in its bar and reading room.

Other attractions to make the Trip Advisor list include Cragside, Vindolanda, Alnwick Castle, The Alnwick Garden, Andy Howeys Birds of Prey Centre, Northumberland Zoo and Kielder Observatory. With many families watching the purse strings, beach days can be an ideal option and packing a picnic will save money too.

For more ideas for where to enjoy free trips out with the kids over the summer holidays see here and find a round-up here of the Northumberland beaches rated best for a relaxing mindful walk.

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