Eight years, more than a dozen countries, and one rule: go slow. We don’t chase a checklist. We pick places for the food, the culture, and the corners most travelers drive straight past, then we stay long enough to actually know them.
Some of these we found on purpose. Most we stumbled into and never wanted to leave. They all share one thing: they reward you for staying a while.
We’re drawn to good food, deep history, and places off the obvious track. We’d rather know one neighborhood well than tick off ten cities in a blur. If we like where we are, we stay. If we don’t, we move. Simple as that.
Here are the regions we keep coming back to, grouped the way we think of them. Pick one and wander in.
Our home base for years now. Whitewashed villages, late dinners, and the slow rhythm of the south.
Flower-lined alleys, Moorish history, and patios you could lose an afternoon in. The south of Spain is where we finally stopped moving.
Explore →A short drive from Málaga and worth every switchback. Steep whitewashed lanes, no crowds, and a glass of something cold at the top.
Explore →Our kitchen and our classroom. We get to know Málaga the way we know everywhere now: one market, one bar, and one long lunch at a time.
Explore →The Mediterranean at its most dramatic. We came for the views and stayed for the food, which is usually how it goes with us.
Explore →Inland from the coast, the Ebro carves green gorges through the Catalan hills. We pulled over at a stone overlook and ended up staying for the whole afternoon.
Explore →Where our nomadic life started. Rice terraces, street food, and the lesson that taught us to slow down.
Limestone peaks erupting straight out of the rice paddies, best seen from a slow boat. Eight months in Asia is what hooked us for good.
Explore →Empty beaches, a rented motorbike, and no plan. Vietnam is also where we later taught English and learned how much we still had to learn.
Explore →We stood on the bridge at sunset as the sampans lit up the water. Hoi An is touristy and we did not care one bit.
Explore →Hundreds of paper lanterns strung through the trees of an old city temple. Northern Thailand is where we keep going back to slow all the way down.
Explore →Wat Rong Khun mirrored in its own pond, every inch of it carved white. It is the kind of place you plan a whole day around.
Explore →Stone guardians, gold doors, and green on every side. Bali rewards the travelers who wander past the obvious and stay a while.
Explore →Some of our best days in Asia were the ones spent small, standing under trees older than any city we have ever lived in.
Explore →From alpine peaks to medieval towns most travelers skip. We put 14,000 km on a campervan finding these.
We watched these peaks turn pink from a quiet pine forest, no ski crowds in sight. Northern Italy rewards anyone willing to drive the long way.
Explore →Cobbled lanes, painted houses, and far fewer tourists than you would expect. Romania is the detour vanlife was made for.
Explore →Old harbor towers, a giant spiced cookie in hand, and a slower side of the Netherlands most people drive past on the way to Amsterdam.
Explore →Half-faded saints on the walls of an old stone monastery, and barely another soul around. The Balkans hold the kind of history you get to have almost to yourself.
Explore →The far edges. We drove the Wild Atlantic Way by campervan and kept chasing the places at the end of the road.
Green cliffs, quiet bays, and ancient ring forts. Out here you feel like you are standing at the end of the earth, and that is exactly the point.
Explore →Up before dawn to watch the balloons rise over the rock valleys. Turkey sits right where Europe and Asia meet, and it feels like both at once.
Explore →Clear turquoise water and white-pebble beaches below the headlands. We lived in Albania for a year, and this coast is a big part of why.
Explore →A lone sailboat, a flat sea, and the sun going down. Some of our favorite coastlines we never photographed well, but this one we got.
Explore →
Our short, practical guide to planning a slower trip — how to pick a base, how long to stay, and how to travel deeper without the overwhelm.
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