Staysion

Travel Journal

Stories from real places

Destination guides, honest hotel picks, and travel writing that actually helps you plan.

Showing 157–168 of 260 articles

One Week in Japan: A Practical First-Timer's Itinerary

16 March 2026

japan

One Week in Japan: A Practical First-Timer's Itinerary

A one-week Japan itinerary typically follows the Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka circuit, and it works well for first-timers because these three cities are connected by reliable trains and collectively show Japan's contradictions: megacity noise, temple forests, neon districts, and centuries-old shrine districts within 30 minutes of each other. What first-timers get wrong is thinking seven days is enough to add Hiroshima without rushing—it isn't. This route instead prioritises depth over distance. Decide upfront whether you're optimising for urban exploration, temple culture, food, or sensory contrast. Everything else follows from that choice.

Henrik Vinter

Swedish Lapland Guide: Kiruna, the ICEHOTEL, and the Northern Lights

15 March 2026

sweden

Swedish Lapland Guide: Kiruna, the ICEHOTEL, and the Northern Lights

Swedish Lapland sits 145 km above the Arctic Circle. The ICEHOTEL is the most photographed thing here, but Abisko National Park, the Aurora Sky Station, and the Sámi cultural landscape are what make the trip worth the distance.

Henrik Vinter

Two Weeks in Thailand: A Practical Itinerary

14 March 2026

thailand

Two Weeks in Thailand: A Practical Itinerary

Most first-time visitors to Thailand waste days deciding between north and south, then spend half their time in transit. Two weeks is enough to do both well if you make one strategic choice upfront: fly between Bangkok and Chiang Mai rather than taking the overnight train, and skip the second return to Bangkok. This saves a full day and removes the logistical knot that derails most two-week itineraries.

Henrik Vinter

Hua Hin Travel Guide: Thailand's Royal Resort Town

14 March 2026

thailand

Hua Hin Travel Guide: Thailand's Royal Resort Town

Hua Hin has hosted the Thai royal family since 1923, when King Rama VII built Klai Kangwon Palace on the Gulf coast—a fact that still shapes the town's character today. While most travellers flying south from Bangkok head for islands or Phuket, Hua Hin sits just 2.5 hours away by train, offers a cleaner beach than Pattaya, and serves better seafood than either. It's Thailand's oldest beach resort, favoured by Thai families and retirees rather than backpackers, which means fewer neon bars, fewer jet-ski touts, and a distinctly more local atmosphere. For anyone with four to five days and a base in Bangkok, Hua Hin avoids the flight-connection trap while delivering a genuine beach break—just not the one you've seen on Instagram.

Henrik Vinter

Entering Thailand: Visas, Entry Requirements, and First Days

13 March 2026

thailand

Entering Thailand: Visas, Entry Requirements, and First Days

Thailand's 60-day visa-free entry for Western nationalities—extended from 30 days in November 2024—is the single most important update for anyone planning a longer initial stay. Most US, UK, EU, Australian, and Canadian passport holders can now arrive, clear immigration, and remain legally for two months without advance paperwork. The process is straightforward once you understand which documents matter, which ones don't, and where the actual delays happen.

Henrik Vinter

Chiang Rai Travel Guide: White Temple, Golden Triangle, and the North

12 March 2026

thailand

Chiang Rai Travel Guide: White Temple, Golden Triangle, and the North

Chiang Rai is worth two nights if Chiang Mai has delivered what you wanted from northern Thailand — quieter, smaller, and with three genuinely unusual temples that don't exist elsewhere. The White Temple is the anchor; the Golden Triangle is primarily context and a museum, not spectacle. Most guides oversell the "escape" narrative; the reality is a manageable provincial city where the temples are the content, and the in-between time moves slowly.

Henrik Vinter

Koh Tao Diving Guide: What First-Timers Need to Know

12 March 2026

thailand

Koh Tao Diving Guide: What First-Timers Need to Know

More than 100,000 people complete their PADI Open Water certification on Koh Tao every year — roughly equivalent to the entire resident population of the 21km² island turning over as tourists every twelve months. At any time during peak season, one in three visitors is in a dive school's four-day course. The infrastructure for training is exceptional: over 70 operators, equipment for thousands, instructors in a dozen languages, and certification costs roughly 50% of what you'd pay in Europe or Australia. This scale defines the island entirely — it's not a diving destination that happens to have schools, it's a diving school that happens to be on an island.

Henrik Vinter

Pai and Northern Thailand: Beyond Chiang Mai

11 March 2026

thailand

Pai and Northern Thailand: Beyond Chiang Mai

Pai has a reputation as a hippie retreat three hours north of Chiang Mai—and that reputation is half-right. The town is small (population under 5,000), heavily visited relative to its size, and extremely oriented toward cafés, massage shops, and slow travel. That's either exactly what you want or entirely not. The real draw isn't the town itself. It's the surrounding countryside: the canyon ridges, the hot springs, the waterfall circuits. Know what you're signing up for before the minivan leaves Chiang Mai.

Henrik Vinter

Krabi Travel Guide: Railay, Rock Climbing, and Island Hopping

10 March 2026

thailand

Krabi Travel Guide: Railay, Rock Climbing, and Island Hopping

Krabi province is not a single destination — it's a collection of beaches, islands, and limestone formations spread across a 4,500 km² region, and where you choose to base yourself determines almost everything about your trip. Most first-timers settle in Ao Nang, a roadside beach town on the mainland, but many should actually skip it entirely and go straight to Railay Beach, which has no road access and feels like a different universe 15 minutes away by boat. Understanding the geography first — and being honest about what's actually worth your time — separates a good Krabi trip from a wasted week in a mediocre beach town.

Henrik Vinter

Zhangjiajie Travel Guide: The Avatar Mountains and Tianmen

10 March 2026

china

Zhangjiajie Travel Guide: The Avatar Mountains and Tianmen

Zhangjiajie's sandstone pillars inspired the floating mountains in Avatar. The real thing — towering quartzite columns rising from a sea of forest in Hunan Province — is stranger than the film version. Here's what to see.

Henrik Vinter

Koh Samui Travel Guide: The Honest First-Timer's Briefing

9 March 2026

thailand

Koh Samui Travel Guide: The Honest First-Timer's Briefing

Koh Samui is Thailand's second-largest island and the first major coastal resort destination that actually has functioning infrastructure: an airport, a hospital, internet that doesn't cut out mid-email, and seven-elevens on every corner. It's not the backpacker hideout it was 20 years ago. It's a developed beach island that works for families, couples, and anyone who wants reliable services alongside sand — but that reliability comes with crowds, higher prices, and a taxi cartel that prices journeys with the efficiency of a Stockholm auction house.

Henrik Vinter

Maui Travel Guide: A First-Timer's Practical Briefing

8 March 2026

united states

Maui Travel Guide: A First-Timer's Practical Briefing

Maui is the second-largest Hawaiian island and the one deliberately engineered for tourists. The resort infrastructure is concentrated, the beaches are genuinely excellent, and the costs are high: a week for two people runs roughly $4,500–7,000 including flights from the US mainland, accommodation, car rental, and meals — comparable to a Maldives trip but for a fundamentally different experience. The question is whether Maui's particular appeal — excellent snorkelling, reliable weather, proximity to the volcano, whale watching in season — justifies it over the Big Island or a return to somewhere you've already been.

Henrik Vinter