A Venetian masterpiece in Slovenia
Moments after stepping off the bus, I wanted to text my friend: “What have I done to you, why did you tell me to come here?” As I weaved my way through coach-party day trippers, my initial suspicions dissipated. I came to swim, but Piran offered so much more. Venetian squares provided a delicately ornate backdrop, while cobbled passageways housed bustling seafood restaurants, serving the day’s catch. The majestic Adriatic was made manageable by concrete diving platforms, fit for all ages. Naša Pekarna stocked delightfully crisp and filling böreks, and the bar/cafe Pri Starcu – owned by Patrik Ipavec, a former Slovenia international footballer – married warm hospitality with ice-cold beer and delicious early evening refreshments.
Alex
Vintage rock’n’roll, pop and soul in Berlin

A real discovery can be found in Neukölln, Berlin, if you love 1950s rock’n’roll, 1960s pop and classic soul music. A night out in Soul Cat, a 50s and 60s music bar, is a lot of fun and looks fabulous. There is a DJ who spins only vinyl records, and chairs and tables are moved to leave room for everyone to get up and dance. The bar stays open late and sometimes they have live bands. A great night out.
Richard Watkins
Lemkos culture in a Polish spa town

I crossed from Slovakia to the Polish spa town Krynica-Zdrój by bus in mid-May, too late for skiers and too early for tourists. My son arrived and we walked to the top of the ski run and then ascended a giant spiral wooden viewing platform (the Slotwiny lookout tower) that gave magnificent views over fresh green pastures and woodland stretching far into the distance. In these Beskid mountains live Lemkos – a Carpathian upland people persecuted before the last war and dispersed afterwards. We found rustic wooden benches covered in animal skins, enthusiastic folk music and robust cuisine at the excellent Karczma Łemkowska restaurant. A whole museum is devoted to prolific Lemko “naive” artist Nikifor, and the verdant central spa centre has several mineral and medicinal waters on tap – try Zuber or Słotwinka. It was a refreshing change of scene and palate, and a cultural education.
Martin
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Brilliant beaches in Sardinia

My daughter booked our holiday this year in San Teodoro. I’d never heard of it. The town has three wonderful white sand beaches, and its vibrant centre was thronged every night with generations of locals eating and socialising. The world famous (and rammed) Costa Smeralda is an hour’s drive north, but San Teodoro offered a more authentic experience at a quarter of the price. Our hotel, the genteel Hotel L’Esagono, led directly to the beach and had a chic but friendly atmosphere.
Ciaran Kearney
A classic mountain railway in France

The Swallows’ Line (La Ligne des Hirondelles) is a little-known rural railway of the SNCF (French railways) tucked away in the Jura mountains, close to the Swiss border. It makes for a great day trip from Besançon, but may soon become a thing of the past, as the line from Dole (where the old town is worth a wander) to Saint-Claude (famous for hiking routes, diamonds and artisan pipe-making) is threatened with closure. The viaducts around Morez are photographic gems. Go before it’s too late.
Martin
A Baltic battleground in Finland

The Åland islands, in the Baltic, are part of Finland but culturally Swedish. The capital, Mariehamn, has a good maritime museum and some nice restaurants and it’s quite easy to get there thanks to ferries from Sweden, mainland Finland and Estonia. I found the countryside really attractive, with rocky inlets, woods and farms. At Bomarsund the ruling Russians set out rather half-heartedly to build a huge naval base in the first half of the 19th century. It was destroyed by the British and the French at the start of the Crimean war in 1854 during a naval action in which the first Victoria Cross was awarded – to a 20-year-old Irishman called Charles Davis Lucas. It’s free to explore the fort ruins but there’s a charge to enter the visitor centre.
Martin Lunnon
The only way is Essex

In July, we walked for five hours along an English coastline without seeing a soul or passing any habitation. Where were we? Essex. The Dengie peninsula is a secret world with expansive views, seals bobbing off shore, and clouds of butterflies serenaded by piping oystercatchers. The King Charles III England Coast Path meanders along the salt marsh flanking the Crouch estuary, where the skeletons of stricken vessels lie submerged. Start at 7th-century St Peter-on-the-Wall, one of the oldest churches in England, and walk into pretty Burnham-on-Crouch with its quirky houseboats, friendly pubs, museums and vineyards.
Cathy Robinson
Automotive perfection in Romania

An “unbroken grey ribbon of automotive perfection” was former Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson’s description of the Transfăgărășan Highway. Romania’s second-highest paved mountain road (after the Transalpina) is inaccessible in winter and only opened five days before our journey in early June. Constant turns are required to conquer the steep southern section of the Carpathian mountains, but these provide excellent views, and we were able to reach the still snowy Bâlea Lake by car instead of cable car. Our journey may have been less exhilarating than Jeremy’s in his Aston Martin, but at least we took in the sights along the way including, to my great delight, five brown bears at the roadside.
Helen Jackson
Mansions and cats on an island near Istanbul

As the sun lowered in the soft July sky, two friends and I took a cheap ferry from Istanbul to the island of Büyükada. Cutting across the Sea of Marmara, urban combustion was replaced by an oceanic calm. Upon arrival, we walked in awe along mansion-lined, car-free streets, regularly stalling our meanderings to stroke one of the island’s many cats, and to gaze across the sea, back through the haze towards the distant city of 16 million people. On the ferry back at night, in high spirits, we plotted future expeditions to return to this most incredible of islands.
Will Brown
Winning tip: medieval manuscripts in France

Our Interrail trip took us to the French Alsatian town of Colmar – a history-packed, medieval, half-timbered melange of French and German culture, food and wine. Hidden in the town, behind the 14th-century Dominican church is the Dominican library. It’s free to visit and breathtaking. There are thousands of magnificent books, of which the 1,200 illuminated manuscripts are the highlight. Glorious 16th-century maps and translations of letters from Christopher Columbus are set alongside 13th-century books of psalms, Bibles and musical scores. Some documents date to the 8th century. Many are sumptuously decorated by hand in gold and brilliant ultramarine. It’s wonderful.
Wendy Holden


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