
4 June 2026
portugalAzores Travel Guide: Which Islands, What to Expect, and How to Plan the Trip
The Azores is nine volcanic islands in the mid-Atlantic, 1,500km west of Lisbon — roughly the same distance as Lisbon to Moscow. The archipelago is Portuguese since the 15th century, geologically among the youngest land masses in the Atlantic. Each island has a distinct…
Henrik Vinter

4 June 2026
portugalMadeira Travel Guide: Levada Walks, Funchal, and Why the Season Doesn't Matter
Madeira sits 600km southwest of Lisbon and 700km west of the Moroccan coast in the Atlantic. The island is volcanic, mountainous, and receives between 16°C and 26°C year-round — the south coast around Funchal gets around 2,700 hours of sunshine annually. The "island of eternal…
Henrik Vinter

28 May 2026
portugalCascais Travel Guide: The Atlantic Town 30km from Lisbon
Cascais is a fishing town on the Atlantic coast of the Estoril Coast (Linha de Cascais), 30km west of Lisbon and 40 minutes by train from Cais do Sodré station. The Portuguese royal family used it as a summer residence f
Henrik Vinter

28 May 2026
portugalÉvora Travel Guide: Roman Ruins, Bones, and the Alentejo
Évora is the capital of the Alentejo, the vast inland plain that covers a third of Portugal's territory between the Tagus river and the Algarve. The city sits on a low hill in the centre of a cork oak and olive landscape
Henrik Vinter

28 May 2026
portugalSintra Travel Guide: Palaces, Crowds, and How to Handle Both
Sintra sits in the Serra de Sintra hills 30km northwest of Lisbon, where an Atlantic microclimate keeps the hillsides forested and the temperature 5–8°C cooler than the capital year-round. The Portuguese royal family use
Henrik Vinter

28 May 2026
portugalÓbidos Travel Guide: Portugal's Walled Medieval Town
Óbidos is a medieval walled town of around 3,000 permanent residents in central Portugal, 80km north of Lisbon. The walls — 1.5km of complete Roman and medieval fortification — enclose an area small enough to walk end to
Henrik Vinter

28 April 2026
portugalDouro Valley Travel Guide: Wine Quintas, the Train Journey, and When to Go for the Harvest
The Douro Valley is 250km of terraced vineyards carved into steep schist slopes above a river that drains most of northern Portugal. The wine is good, the train journey from Porto is one of the finest in Europe, and harvest season in late September is the reason most serious visitors choose their dates.
Henrik Vinter
26 April 2026
portugalLisbon Travel Guide: Neighbourhoods, Miradouros, and the Cost of a City That Changed Fast
Lisbon spent a decade as Europe's affordable alternative city break. Prices have risen substantially since 2018, but the city still delivers — historic neighbourhoods on steep hills, exceptional food markets, and a scale that remains walkable.
Henrik Vinter

25 April 2026
portugalPorto Travel Guide: Wine Cellars, the Ribeira, and the City That Resisted Tourism Longer Than Lisbon
Porto took a decade longer than Lisbon to attract mass tourism, which left its working-class character more intact. The wine lodges of Vila Nova de Gaia, the tiled facades of the Ribeira, and the fish restaurants of Matosinhos are the reasons to visit.
Henrik Vinter
11 April 2026
portugalAlgarve Travel Guide: Beaches, Costs, and When to Go
The Algarve's 150km of coastline splits into two distinct halves. The west is wilder and windier; the east is calmer and more developed. Which one you want depends on why you're going.
Henrik Vinter
14 January 2026
portugalPorto in Three Days: Where to Go and What to Skip
Porto operates on different principles than Lisbon. Where Lisbon spreads across rolling hills and feels systematically organized, Porto crowds itself into steep terraces that tumble toward the Douro River—the stone is older and rougher, the staircases narrower, the whole city feels like it's sliding downhill. Lisbon rewards broad itineraries and efficient ticking off; Porto rewards walking in circles, sitting on a curb with coffee, noticing that a street you walked this morning connects to one you're on now from a completely different angle. Most first-time visitors arrive expecting a smaller version of Lisbon with port wine. The port wine is real and worth one afternoon. The rest of Porto—the worn-down residential neighbourhoods, the small standing-room cafés, the fact that you'll get genuinely lost and find something better than the guidebook suggests—is what actually anchors a three-day visit.
Henrik Vinter
12 January 2026
portugalOne Week in Lisbon: What to Do, Skip, and Eat
Lisbon's seven hills are not decorative. Two neighbourhoods that appear adjacent on a map—Príncipe Real and Alfama, say—can mean 25 minutes of climbing on foot, straight up. This single fact reshapes how you navigate the city and determines whether a week feels rushed or measured. Get this wrong and you waste hours hiking between districts. Get it right and the week becomes fluid.
Henrik Vinter