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Considering a solo trip? Here are the 20 things you need to know before you go

Considering a solo trip? Here are the 20 things you need to know before you go
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Best in Travel 2021: the winners of the Readers Choice Awards

Best in Travel 2021: the winners of the Readers’ Choice Awards Daniel Fahey 22 January 2021 Toronto, Wakayama and Istria destinations selected by Lonely Planet readers in the annual Best in Travel campaign © Getty Images Last year we asked you, the Lonely Planet community, to nominate the destinations that you believed were using travel as a force for good in the areas of sustainability, community and diversity. You did not disappoint.  Here are the winners of the Readers’ Choice Awards for Best in Travel 2021 — as selected by you. Diversity winner: Toronto, Canada There it is, carved into Toronto s coat of arms like a sailor’s tattoo: “Diversity Our Strength”. By the oft-unattainable standards of a city’s tagline, Toronto’s stands true: the Ontario capital is home to 250 ethnicities, who speak more than 170 languages, creating an invigorating verve in its enthic enclaves — there are two Little Italys here, three Chinatowns, c

Four offbeat hotels in Scandinavia

© Asaf Kliger High up in the frozen wilds of northern Sweden, the doors to the 31st Icehotel have just creaked open. Every year since 1989, the Icehotel has been created afresh in the little village of Jukkasjärvi. Outside the mercury falls to as low as –20˚C. But inside the thermometer remains a steady, and relatively balmy, 5˚C thanks to the 563 tons of ice from the river Torne used to build the hotel.  The Icehotel is also an art gallery. In normal years, chainsaw-wielding artists arrive from around the world every October to work the blocks of ice into fantastic shapes. Last year, there was a ferris wheel and miniature rollercoaster to celebrate three decades of the hotel in ice. This year, because of travel restrictions (see below), the artists are all from Sweden. But the range of designs are as quixotic – not to mention exotic – as ever. A giant lizard skulks in its icy den in one suite, along with other fantastical creatures.

Lonely Planet writers look ahead to 2021 and the first trips they can take

Lonely Planet writers look ahead to 2021 and the first trips they can take Lonely Planet Editors 18 December 2020 As with almost everyone else, Lonely Planet travel writers had to stay put through 2020. But that hasn t stopped their desire to travel in 2021. We asked some contributors to share their travel plans for the year ahead. Sarah Reid, sustainable travel writer Sarah plans to be more conscious of her carbon footprint when traveling in 2021 © Sarah Reid Sipping cocktails on the terrace of a Siem Reap hotel in early March, my fellow travelers joked that we might get stuck there if the newly-named coronavirus got much worse. If we hadn’t flown home to Australia within the next two weeks, we would have been. 

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