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Tours

Traffic is terrible in Riyadh.

I did a women-only trip in one of the world’s most notorious countries

It’s one of the world’s most patriarchal societies, but I had a behind-the-scenes look at the secret lives of women here.

  • Katrina Lobley
Zagreb’s main square and cathedral.

Europe’s most underrated capital has everything, except crowds

Here you can feel absorbed into the fabric of a growing, rapidly changing city that goes about its own business, rather than a place that feels like Disneyland.

  • Brian Johnston
A Qantas Lockheed Constellation.

Seven stops, two weeks to London: Original ‘Kangaroo route’ revived

Tour company Captain’s Choice will use a Qantas A330 to recreate the original Australia-London connection, stopping in exotic locales along the way.

  • Julietta Jameson
Explore the walled city of Intra-Muros in Saint-Mal, Brittany, with Bunnik Tours.

Planning your next holiday? 25 of the best trips to book right now

There’s a lot to be said for getting other people to do the hard work for you when you want to go somewhere relaxing and interesting.

  • Brian Johnston
Victoria Street is a popular tourist area in Edinburgh.

A unique walking tour offers a unique glimpse of Edinburgh

A chance for Edinburgh’s homeless to work in tourism is changing lives.

  • Julia D'Orazio
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The Cliffs of Moher on the Wild Atlantic Way, County Clare.

A craic, castle and Guinness-filled road trip through Ireland

Ireland is an island full of saints, so it’s hardly surprising to encounter a small miracle.

  • Keith Austin
Slieve League

For a small country, this place’s cultural influence is gigantic

The way to truly enjoy Ireland is not to see the sights but to listen.

  • Brian Johnston
The springs are geo-thermally heated.

Now you can see the NT’s most spectacular parks, crowd-free

Tour operator Rob Woods doesn’t like crowds. And when people pile into the Territory’s famed attractions in the dry season, he says there’s a better way.

  • Craig Tansley
San Gimignano’s slender towers draw walkers to a welcome rest stop on the Via Francigena.

Forget Spain: Italy’s Camino trail is older, longer and less crowded

The Via Francigena was Europe’s overland spine, and it’s now growing in popularity as a slow-travel option through the continent’s most touristic countries.

  • Luke Slattery
The walls once separated Protestant loyalist and Catholic nationalist enclaves during The Troubles.

The European city that’s still divided by a wall

The strangest thing about this wall is that it runs right through a seemingly ordinary residential neighbourhood.

  • Brian Johnston

Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/traveller/topic/tours-l61