Not glossy itineraries, not copied lists. Just real routes from a solo traveler who books her own flights, misses buses sometimes and still figures it out. If I’d do this trip again, it goes here.

I travel solo, overthink routes, and write it all down.
I’m based in the US and I plan my trips myself, usually late at night with too many tabs open. I don’t travel perfectly, I travel honestly. Some days are magic, some are messy, but every route here is real. If a place didn’t feel worth it, I’ll say so.

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.

I started traveling solo because I got tired of waiting for the “right moment”. My first trips were chaotic, honestly, but they taught me how to move smarter each time. I care a lot about pacing, not rushing, not burning out on day three. I plan routes the way I actually move through places, not how guides think I should. I write everything down while it’s fresh, sometimes with typos, sometimes half asleep. These guides are for people who want real trips, not perfect ones. And yeah, I still Google things mid-trip like everyone else.

Every guide here is built after the trip, not before it. I only keep days and places that felt right in real life. You’ll see what I’d skip next time, what surprised me, and where I’d stay longer. This isn’t about checking boxes, it’s about moving through a place in a way that feels doable and human.
Some days are slower on purpose, because that’s how travel actually feels. I include transport time, tired mornings, and moments where plans changed last minute. If something was overrated or just not my thing, I say it directly. These routes are flexible, not strict rules you have to follow. Think of them as a base you can adjust to your own mood, energy, and budget.