Welcome Rob reports2025 Travel Issue. If there is a shared thread this year, it is not a passport stamp, platinum status, or yacht -tola transfer. As a journalist, I can appreciate this continuity. Today’s most sensible travelers are not interested in anyone else’s travels. They want the bin line. Whether it’s flying at the speed of sound, the commercial beaches for a new half, or your own Antarctic epic, the journey in those pages is just as real as they are behind.
Our Marine and Aviation Editor, Michael Wordon, discovered it himself. His characteristic “High Flyers”, he joined a group of private pilots who moved to North America to Nepal on 42 -day Odisi on their jets. The passengers of these passengers are thrilling to chart their course. In the sea, the tempo may be slow, but the desire is the same: Wordon also searches a growing class of residential ships where owners are not just traveling-they are moving and turning the imaginary concept of life into a luxury, full-time reality.
Somewhere, the journey leads to the next chapter. Author Allison Bolin examines why the growing number of rich Americans so far see New Zealand as a simple transit, but as a long -term investment in lifestyle and stability and withdrawing from the growing global uncertainty. The draw is not just ancient scenes, but also a rare opportunity to rewrite one’s future – away from the turmoil and polarization of state politics. Even a couple found themselves researching freely, just to realize, mid scroll, they were both planning the same move.
And ready to step into their own documentary, by vault Rob reports Our readers offer an extraordinary opportunity. In “Lights, Camera, Antarctica”, you will find details of a private Support Campaign in Southern’s largest continent. This section is adventure, Part Attork, and is only available for a handful of passengers every year.
Of course, travel (like life) is not always clean in any theme. Nor is it ever complicated. In Barboda, the editor of the big Mark El Wood once detected a change of desktric Caribbean hydowe-in which Princess Diana was supported-a flashpoint of development and disagreement. Robert de Nero is the headline of a group of investors with bold ambitions, but not everyone is raising glasses. This post – Irma Building Boom has given rise to a strong debate about ground rights, local sovereignty, and what kind of paradise Barboda.
As always, there is more to discover a lot in this issue-from the fastest SUV of Road Testing Bentley to Rotterdam’s courageous cultural rehabilitation on the cattle farm of Montana. In addition, a Horological Legend lives a 252 -year -old citizen, Georgenon, Torbot emerges as the fastest seafood madness in the United States, and Marina Bay Sands transforms wine into a global troting experience. Wherever you are the next head, the story you write is yourself.
Enjoy the problem.
