Remote Lands’ Dozen Dream Destinations: Where to Travel in Asia for 2020
Jungles? Food? Beaches? Summer Games? Remote Lands knows exactly where you should travel in 2020 with the Dozen Dream Destinations.
An Online Magazine from the Asia Travel Experts at Remote Lands
Jungles? Food? Beaches? Summer Games? Remote Lands knows exactly where you should travel in 2020 with the Dozen Dream Destinations.
To the lover of all things North India, Glenburn Estate is a sanctuary of tea, peace, and an abiding history that defines the region.
Luang Prabang is becoming a Southeast Asia travel staple, but the Rosewood Luang Prabang is the best reason to put this Laos gem on your winter travel list.
The indigenous people of Hokkaido, the Ainu, are perhaps northern Japan’s greatest cultural legacy, and this will be in full display in the run up to the Summer Games 2020.
Travel writer Ronan O’Connell crafts a ceremonial dagger, or keris, with a 9th generation blacksmith on Indonesia’s most fascinating island.
It is terribly cold and some areas of Ladakh are impassable in the winter months, but there is one very good reason to go: the snow leopard.
Nestled amid dense forest, Beomeosa famed for its fighting monks and the unique martial arts skills that helped repel Japanese invasions.
Luxury resort brand Aman has partnered with Nai Lert Group to establish a hotel and branded residences in the heart of downtown Bangkok. The Bangkok Aman is expected to welcome guests in 2022.
In every season the Takedao Abandoned Railway is a lesser-traveled wonder, a rare disused railway track north of Osaka. It’s easy, unique, and great for Instagram.
October to March in Madhya Pradesh is an ideal place to couple the history of humanity with the endless diversity of life on the subcontinent.
The great ancient Khmer capital is a wonder of the world and beloved by 2.5 million tourists a year. But how did it come to be abandoned?
“The two most important principles were prohibition of cutting of trees and protection of wildlife around us,” Khemkaran says. “And to this day the Bishnois adhere to them until death.”