Destinations & Things To Do
Numerous Numerical Milestones (ECT Day 200)

More photos, less talk. Continuing my random tradition for celebrating another 50 trail days, here’s a gallery-style photos post… 200 days trekking the Eastern Continental Trail, starting in Key West, FL. Less than 200 miles to Mount Katahdin. 2,000 miles trekking along the AT. Reached 45th parallel north today, “halfway” between the equator and the North Pole. And, a few days ago hit 4,000 ECT miles đ.
The post Numerous Numerical Milestones (ECT Day 200) appeared first on The Trek.
Destinations & Things To Do
Brazil Travel Destinations 2025 : Culture, Nature & Authentic Experiences Lead Tourism Revival

The sun-drenched beaches of Rio, the thunderous roar of Iguaçu Falls, and the cobblestone charm of Gramado arenât just postcard backdrops anymore. In 2025, Brazilâs tourism sector is surging back, driven by travelers craving immersive cultural exchanges and untouched natural wonders. Data from Embratur (Brazilian Tourist Board, May 2025) reveals a 34% year-on-year increase in international arrivals, with destinations prioritizing sustainability and local authenticity leading the resurgence.
Brazilâs Tourism Resurgence in 2025
Brazilâs 2025 tourism boom reflects a global shift: travelers now seek meaningful connections over superficial sightseeing. A recent Latin American Travel Association report (April 2025) notes 78% of tourists prioritize âcultural immersionâ and âeco-conscious itineraries.â Rio de Janeiro exemplifies this, blending iconic landmarks like Cristo Redentor with new accessibility tech. Augmented reality tours in 15 languages now enrich visits, while safety upgrades have boosted family travel by 40%. Similarly, Foz do Iguaçuâs eco-revampâincluding solar-powered boat tours and jaguar conservation trailsâhas made it South Americaâs fastest-growing adventure hub.
Top Brazil Travel Destinations for 2025
Rio de Janeiro remains unmissable. Beyond Copacabana, favela-led culinary tours and samba workshops offer raw cultural insights. Foz do Iguaçu leverages its âThree Bordersâ location for tri-national festivals, while rainforest lodges partner with Indigenous GuaranĂ communities.
Northeastern gems like Maragogi (Alagoas) and Jericoacoara (CearĂĄ) dominate coastal searches. Travel analytics platform Kayak reports a 200% surge in bookings for Praia do Forte, where sea-turtle sanctuaries and capoeira classes redefine beach holidays.
Inland, Bonito (Mato Grosso do Sul) sets ecotourism gold standards. Government-mandated visitor caps protect its crystalline rivers, and certified guides lead cave-diving expeditions. Meanwhile, Gramadoâs European flair peaks during its âNatal Luzâ festival, now enhanced with AI-driven light installations and zero-waste initiatives.
Why Authenticity and Sustainability Drive Demand
Young travelers are reshaping Brazilâs tourism DNA:
- Eco-accountability: Bonitoâs carbon-neutral certification (per Brazilâs Environment Ministry) has increased repeat visits by 60%.
- Tech-enabled access: Apps like âBrazil Offlineâ curate hyperlocal experiences, from Amazonian foraging trails to Salvadorâs Afro-Brazilian cooking classes.
- Community-led tourism: In Paraty, UNESCO-listed historic tours now feature quilombola (descendants of enslaved Africans) storytellers.
Domestic demand is equally vital. Embraturâs âViaje pelo Brasilâ campaign has spurred a 55% rise in local bookings since 2023, with Northeastern states seeing record occupancy.
Brazilâs travel renaissance proves that destinations thriving in 2025 arenât just scenicâtheyâre soulful. From the misty cascades of Iguaçu to Gramadoâs alpine charm, Brazil travel destinations now marry spectacle with substance. As sustainability and storytelling become non-negotiables, the nationâs $50B tourism rebound (World Travel & Tourism Council, 2025) sets a global benchmark. Ready to explore beyond the obvious? Book your Brazilian journey through certified eco-operators todayâadventure with purpose awaits.
Must Know
What are Brazilâs safest travel destinations in 2025?
Rio de Janeiro, FlorianĂłpolis, and Bonito lead safety rankings due to enhanced tourist policing and app-based emergency systems. Embraturâs real-time safety dashboard provides localized alerts.
Which Brazil travel destinations are best for families?
Gramadoâs theme parks and Rioâs interactive museum tours top family lists. Praia do Forte offers kid-friendly wildlife programs, including supervised turtle releases.
How expensive is Brazil for tourists in 2025?
The strong dollar makes mid-range travel affordable. Expect $50â$80/day for meals and transport. Bonito requires bundled activity permits ($120/week), but these include guides and conservation fees.
Whatâs the best time to visit Brazil?
MayâSeptember (dry season) suits most regions. Avoid June crowds in Gramado during winter festivals. The Northeast shines year-round.
Are visas required for Brazil in 2025?
Yes, but e-visas for Americans/Australians process in 72 hours. EU citizens enjoy visa-free entry until 2026.
Which destination offers Brazilâs best ecotourism?
Bonito leads with government-enforced sustainability protocols. All operators must adhere to waste-reduction and wildlife protection standards verified by ICMBio (Brazilâs environmental agency).
Destinations & Things To Do
Ridgelines, Wet Electronics, and Thundering Downpours: PCT Days 90 to 93

In which our hero strives for lunch, dunks his electronics, and meets a friend.
The post Ridgelines, Wet Electronics, and Thundering Downpours: PCT Days 90 to 93 appeared first on The Trek.
Destinations & Things To Do
Here I Am In The Future With My Friends…

I donât think I had a fantastic first pitch on a tent platform. Mostly because when I woke up, there was a layer of condensation over everything. Ahh! While it didnât get cold last night, I still donât like waking up wet. Itâs the AT, so I know that itâs an inevitability that even when itâs not raining, Iâll always be wet in some form. But stillâŚÂ
I guess I couldâve cowboy camped last night, but then thereâd be bugs. Thereâs no winning out here.
I spent a bit of time exploring the extremely haunted-feeling Cooper Lodge, and the privy today. I posted on FarOut that itâs swarming with bugs, but that doesnât do it justice. While doing my business, the bugs mostly left me alone, but it sounded like a jet engine taking off from all the buzzing.
Todayâs hiking was all downhill, literally! I had to make it from Killington to Route 4 to meet up with some friends. I put in some podcasts early, and just started plugging away. Thatâs not to say I felt amazing while doing it though⌠Even with all of the eating I did last night, it clearly wasnât enough. My glycogen levels are down, Iâm always tired, thereâs always something going on. Even with some short breaks, I wasnât going to make my 10 AM goal. Thatâs ok though, since my friends were (classically) running late. I actually told them to meet me earlier than I expected to get to the trailhead, since I knew theyâd be late. Looks like I was right :P.
One of the saddest/happiest things going on is Iâm kind of chasing the shadow of Fission, someone I met in Hot Springs and hiked with for a bit. Heâs been slowing down to enjoy the trail, and was actually at the Churchill Scott Shelter last night, which is the next shelter after Killingtonâs Cooper Lodge. Heâll be ahead of me for a bit again, since Iâm taking some time off. Ah⌠drats.
Something Iâm sad about is that the trail no longer follows the ridgeline over Pico Peak into the Inn at Long Trail. Thatâs because Pico is all private land, and the AT wants to be on protected land. Itâd be too expensive to buy up and protect the ski resort, so instead the trail was rerouted⌠a shame since Pico is also an iconic ski resort for New England as Killingtonâs sister peak. Iâd be tempted to retro-blaze if I didnât already plan where Iâd meet with friends for our short day hike. So down I went!
I hit US Route 4 just as my friends got there, and they gave me some coffee and a breakfast sandwich, both of which I devoured instantly. And I was still hungry⌠that hiker hungerâs really set in. Once I stop moving, I can finally start stomaching food again. And once that starts⌠nothing ever feels good enough other than town food. A few of them joined me on a little two mile section, which showed them what the AT is really like. They saw nothing but rocks and roots, and rocks, and roots, and trees. Even the promised âviewâ on FarOut turned out to be overgrown.
We ran into some SOBOâs, and I started chatting with them, telling my friends to go on ahead and that Iâd catch up with them. As a prank, my friends Ethan and Geoff started BOOKING it down trail, to prove that I couldnât catch up. After about 2 minutes, I caught up to Figgs and Brittany, who told me about the other two. In a minute of jogging, I caught up to both of them, much to their surprise. To quote Ethan âhe caught us just like that!â Itâs undeniable that my level of leg strength is⌠dramatically higher than theirs. And theyâre all fit.Â
After taking them up to the Maine Junction, we turned off to go to the Inn At Long Trail for food inside. We ate some food from the Pub, and started the drive to my friend Kelseyâs ski house in Chester, about an hour away. The funny thing about Chester is that the trail kind of centers it, so itâs concentric to Manchester City, Rutland, and Woodstock. Technically I couldâve chosen any of the three cities as the point to which they met me, so it worked out that Iâm near Rutland. We first drove over to Echo Lake, by Okemo, but a thunderstorm was rolling in⌠and I was getting hungry and cold again.
Food at this point is becoming utilitarian. After a few hours from any meal, Iâm always hungry. I need the calories, and my bodyâs accepting them on any day off. My legs are destroying themselves, my upper body has been reduced to nothing. Thereâs no fat, and barely any muscle for my body to consume to fuel itself, and it knows it. I felt bad, but at the lake, I made it clear that all I wanted to really do was to get back into the house, wash up, and try to fuel up. My head hurt, and I was shivering even though it wasnât even that cold, but I felt like death. On the way to the ski house, I tried to just catch some shut eye in the back, but my head was throbbing. I even ate some trail food to try to get my body feeling better, but to be honest⌠any trail food at this point makes me want to vomit. Having a car with only trail mix and chips in it made me feel awful. That complicated eating historyâs coming back to bite me.
At the house, there was another shock. Recently, Kelseyâs parents had the hot water system replaced, and so it actually wasnât hooked up yet⌠it wasnât planned to be hooked up til next year. So there wasnât any hot water! I showered to the best of my ability, but I had to eat up in order to do it and not die from shivering. Took some time in the âhotâ (itâs also not heated to very high right now) tub with my friend Figgs, catching up a bit on how the summer went, before retreating inside. There, I watched as my friends were playing with their new obsession, Go, and I worked on getting a big buffer out for the blog. (I got actually a three and a half week buffer here⌠and somehow that wasnât enough of a dent. Thatâs on me for not staying up to date!)
We took a quick grocery run where I ate some Maple Creameeâs at Sugar Bobs, a local maple syrup shop, before retreating back to the house and doing more blogging. For once, I didnât feel bad about not contributing to meals and stuff. Itâs nice to accept hospitality for a bit. We watched some âsportsâ events, and while the others started a fire outside, I just didnât want to be anywhere near bugs anymore (and they were everywhere!) Plus, we started the fire around 8:30⌠and I was already exhausted. So I just excused myself and went to bed. Ah⌠itâs nice to be in a home bed again. I think I mentioned this way back in Pennsylvania, but thereâs something different even between a hostel bed, and a home bed. Itâs just⌠comfier.
(title lyrics from: Finale, Steven Universe the Movie)
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