Staysion

Travel Journal

Stories from real places

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

Showing 241–252 of 260 articles

Chiang Mai for First-Timers: What the City Is Actually Like

19 January 2026

thailand

Chiang Mai for First-Timers: What the City Is Actually Like

Chiang Mai's old city centre holds 130,000 people — Bangkok fits that many into a single district. The difference registers immediately: the moat-enclosed medieval core is walkable in 30 minutes, the major temples operate without the crowding of their Bangkok counterparts, and the surrounding mountains fundamentally alter the landscape. A 1.5-hour flight from Bangkok costs €30 on AirAsia, making Chiang Mai the practical reset point for travellers who want to see Thailand beyond metropolitan sprawl.

Henrik Vinter

Tanzania Safari: Serengeti, Ngorongoro, and What It Actually Costs

18 January 2026

tanzania

Tanzania Safari: Serengeti, Ngorongoro, and What It Actually Costs

A Tanzania safari costs roughly two to three times what first-timers expect. A five-day Serengeti safari with mid-range lodge accommodation runs €3,000–5,000 per person. Budget camping safaris exist from €1,200, but involve shared facilities, fixed group schedules, and significantly less control over timing and movement within the parks. This is not a destination where you can meaningfully reduce costs without reducing the experience itself.

Henrik Vinter

Cape Town for First-Timers: A Practical Week

18 January 2026

south africa

Cape Town for First-Timers: A Practical Week

Cape Town occupies a geographic triangle: the Atlantic Ocean to the west, Table Mountain rising 1,086 metres behind the city, and the Cape Peninsula extending 60 kilometres south as a mountain range that drops directly into the sea. This geography creates a different climate on nearly every shore. The Atlantic side—Sea Point, Camps Bay—stays cool and windy year-round. The False Bay side—Muizenberg, Kalk Bay—runs 5–10 degrees warmer. Both neighbourhoods are Cape Town, but a first-timer needs to understand which side they're on to predict what to pack and how the day will feel.

Henrik Vinter

Kyoto vs Osaka: How to Split Your Japan Time

17 January 2026

japan

Kyoto vs Osaka: How to Split Your Japan Time

Kyoto and Osaka sit 75km apart and are connected by Shinkansen (14 minutes, €12), Hankyu Railway (45 minutes, €3.50), and Kintetsu Railway (35 minutes express, €7). They're close enough to day-trip between but fundamentally different in purpose. Kyoto is the former imperial capital — 17 UNESCO sites, 1,600+ temples, a city designed around cultural pilgrimage. Osaka is the food-forward commercial city that generates revenue instead of nostalgia. Choosing the wrong base for your travel style wastes commute time every morning. This guide clarifies which city to sleep in, how many days each requires, and what actually takes priority when your time is limited.

Henrik Vinter

Three Days in Amsterdam: A First-Timer's Practical Guide

16 January 2026

netherlands

Three Days in Amsterdam: A First-Timer's Practical Guide

Amsterdam's canal ring spans roughly two kilometres across—the entire city centre takes thirty minutes to walk end to end. Most first-time visitors dramatically overestimate how much ground they need to cover, which means they either overschedule transport or miss the fact that the best use of three days is depth over distance. This guide covers where the time actually goes, what requires advance booking, and what the city demands that other guides leave vague.

Henrik Vinter

Istanbul for First-Timers: Where East Meets Your Itinerary

16 January 2026

turkey

Istanbul for First-Timers: Where East Meets Your Itinerary

Istanbul straddles two continents, and this split is not decorative—it dictates how the city functions, where tourists cluster, and where actual life happens. The European side holds the historical sights that draw most first-timers: Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapı Palace, and the Grand Bazaar. The Asian side—primarily Kadıköy and Üsküdar—is where 10 million residents eat, work, and spend weekends without foreign tour groups. The Bosphorus strait running between them is 700 metres wide and crossed by regular ferries for €0.80 each way. That single commute encapsulates why Istanbul works: a journey between continents costs less than a coffee.

Henrik Vinter

Santorini vs Mykonos: Which Greek Island Is Right for You

15 January 2026

greece

Santorini vs Mykonos: Which Greek Island Is Right for You

Santorini and Mykonos sit 2 hours apart by fast ferry, share a reputation, and are on almost every first-time Greece itinerary. They are functionally different islands. Choosing the wrong one is one of the most common planning mistakes visitors make. One is a caldera landscape with excellent restaurants and sunset tourism. The other is a beach club and nightlife destination with prices to match. They suit entirely different types of trips.

Henrik Vinter

Norway's Fjords: How to See Them Without a Package Tour

14 January 2026

norway

Norway's Fjords: How to See Them Without a Package Tour

Norway's fjords cost roughly three times what you'd pay in Western Europe. A sandwich runs €8–12, a restaurant dinner €40–70 per person, and a local beer €12–15. This is the baseline for everything — accommodation, food, transport, activity fees. The fjords are worth the expense, but arriving with realistic numbers prevents shock and poor decisions.

Henrik Vinter

Porto in Three Days: Where to Go and What to Skip

14 January 2026

portugal

Porto 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

Florence vs Rome: Which Italian City to Prioritise

13 January 2026

italy

Florence vs Rome: Which Italian City to Prioritise

Most Italy guidebooks treat Florence and Rome as equivalent first-time destinations. They aren't. Florence is a concentrated Renaissance art museum you can walk across in 25 minutes; Rome is a sprawling three-city layering (ancient, medieval, papal) that requires 4–5 days minimum and significantly more logistics. Choose Florence if you want art intensity and walkability. Choose Rome if you want historical range and can tolerate crowds, heat, and longer distances between sights. Many travellers who try to do both in five days end up burnt out and hotel-hopping. The better question isn't which one to visit—it's how much time you have and what exhausts you less: queuing or walking.

Henrik Vinter

One Week in Lisbon: What to Do, Skip, and Eat

12 January 2026

portugal

One 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

First Time in Barcelona: What to Know Before You Go

12 January 2026

spain

First Time in Barcelona: What to Know Before You Go

Barcelona's most famous street, Las Ramblas, is where you'll see the most postcards and lose the most wallets. Pickpocketing here runs at roughly one incident per 50 tourists during peak season. The architecture tourists photograph is often 20th-century reconstruction, not medieval original. But ignore that street—the actual Barcelona starts a ten-minute walk into the grid of Eixample or the narrow lanes of El Born. First-timers arriving without a strategy waste three days finding this out.

Henrik Vinter