
A week moving through the south with zero rush and lots of pasta. Trains are easy but not always on time, so flexibility helps. This route is about towns, meals, and not trying to see everything at once.

Built for a first Japan trip when everything feels overwhelming. Clear pacing, simple transport days, and space to get lost a little. You won’t do everything, but you’ll enjoy what you do.

This is a slow, physical trip with a lot of planning behind it. Long travel days, early mornings, and moments where the views honestly don’t make sense. Not easy, but unforgettable.

Short distances that somehow take all day. Waterfalls, black sand, random weather changes. This route is realistic about time, energy, and how tired you’ll be by day five.

Designed for people who want to feel the city, not conquer it. Neighborhoods over landmarks, long walks, good food stops. You’ll still be tired, but in a good way.

A coastal route that’s better when you don’t rush it. Small towns, ocean views, and plenty of stops that weren’t planned. Ideal if you like driving with no strict schedule.

Paris without pressure to see everything famous. Cafes, wandering, repeat places you like. This guide is more about rhythm than sightseeing.

A mix of busy and calm that doesn’t burn you out. Cities first, islands later, with realistic travel days between. Good for people who want variety but still need rest.

Built around easy train travel and flexible days. Some nights go late, some mornings start slow. This route leaves space for food, wandering, and doing nothing sometimes.

Two cities that feel very different but work well together. Food is a big focus here, plus pacing that helps with altitude and heat. Expect full days but not exhaustion.

A road trip that’s about scenery more than cities. Weather changes fast and plans change with it. This route works best if you’re okay with quiet days and long drives.

A compact route with early starts and big sights. Petra takes more energy than you expect, and the desert slows everything down. Worth it, but you’ll feel it in your legs.