top of page

What are you a fan of? There's a trip for that.

  • barbara6469
  • 5 days ago
  • 4 min read

If you’ve ever thought, I wish I could travel for the things I actually love, here’s your official green light!


Whether your thing is baseball or Bach, there’s a place in the world where your passion isn’t just understood—it’s celebrated. And planning your trip around what lights you up is how you move from “vacation” to something that sticks with you long after the suitcase is unpacked.

Fan travel is all about turning what you love into a reason to explore. Not just sightseeing, but fulfilling.


Let’s take a look at some of the ways this works—and a few destinations that are waiting with open arms.



For the sports lover


Traveling for a game adds a whole new energy to your trip. Picture yourself watching English football at Wembley Stadium, surrounded by British fans who know the chants better than you do.


 Or imagine the electric atmosphere of a Formula 1 race in Monaco, where the cars scream by just feet from the waterfront.


Or head to Tokyo, where baseball fans cheer in perfectly synchronized rhythm, and even the stadium snacks are an experience.


It’s not just about the sport. It’s about being part of something—if only for a few hours—on the other side of the world.


New Orleans jazz
New Orleans jazz

For the music lover


Some cities don’t just play music—they breathe it. In New Orleans, jazz spills out of French Quarter windows like it’s part of the architecture.


Nashville offers more than country—it’s a whole ecosystem of songwriting and sound.

And in Reykjavik, Iceland, you’ll find indie music performed under midnight sun or northern lights, depending on the season.


Music shapes a place. And when you follow your favorite genre across borders, you hear it differently. It becomes part of your memory of that street, that night, that unexpected encore.


Florence, Italy
Florence, Italy

For the art enthusiast


Museums are amazing, but some destinations let you live inside the artwork. In Florence, you’re walking the streets that inspired the Renaissance—sometimes literally stepping across cobblestones worn smooth by centuries of artists and thinkers.


In Paris, you’ll find street art turning entire neighborhoods into outdoor galleries, constantly evolving and begging to be photographed.


And in Santa Fe, the adobe architecture, Indigenous art, and creative energy don’t just sit on display—they surround you.


Art travel connects you to the pulse of creativity. It’s immersive, and it stays with you.


For the foodie


Food isn’t just a part of the trip—it is the trip. Picture tearing into a still-warm baguette on the banks of the Seine in Paris.


Swirling pasta by hand during a cooking class in a Tuscan farmhouse.


Or sitting in a Kyoto sushi bar, watching a master chef create something delicate, precise, and unforgettable.


These moments slow you down in the best way. They ground you. And they remind you that flavor is a form of culture.


For the genealogy seeker


A few years ago, I helped a multi-generational family plan a trip to northern Italy. They were traveling to honor the memory of a grandfather who had passed, a man who’d grown up in a small village in the Dolomites.


When they arrived, they walked the same cobblestone streets where he had played as a child. They shared a meal with cousins they had never met.


It wasn’t just a vacation—it was a pilgrimage. A bridge between generations. And one of the most meaningful itineraries I’ve been able to create.


If you’ve ever been curious about your roots, your next trip could be the moment where history becomes deeply, vividly personal.


Bruges, Belgium
Bruges, Belgium

For the chocolate connoisseur


If chocolate is your love language, Belgium is calling. In Brussels, master chocolatiers craft truffles and pralines with a level of precision that feels like art.


In Bruges, you can stroll medieval streets while sampling from shops that have been perfecting their recipes for generations. You can even take part in chocolate-making workshops—hands-on, deeply sensory, and absolutely delicious.


And for a completely different—but equally rich—experience, head to Oaxaca, Mexico. Here, chocolate isn’t just a treat—it’s a tradition. You’ll find it in savory mole sauces, in ceremonial drinks, and in bustling markets where local vendors grind cacao with cinnamon and sugar right in front of you.


This is the kind of travel that wraps pleasure in story and heritage. And tasting chocolate in the places where it’s been perfected and honored is unforgettable.


For the wellness-focused traveler


Sometimes the trip you need isn’t about checking off sights—it’s about recalibrating. Think breathwork retreats in Bali, where the landscape itself feels like an exhale.


Sound baths in Sedona, where red rocks and stillness invite introspection.


Or surf towns in Portugal and Costa Rica, where you can spend the morning learning to ride waves and the afternoon getting a massage with a sea breeze in your hair.


Wellness travel meets you where you are—and leaves you better than it found you.


Want to feel more connected to the places you visit?


You don’t have to pick between a relaxing vacation and a meaningful one. In fact, the most memorable trips often do both. When you center your itinerary around what you love, you open the door to connection, inspiration, and a deeper sense of joy.


I specialize in crafting trips that are built around you. Your interests, your passions, your pace.


So… what are you a fan of?


Let’s build your next adventure around that.

 
 
 

Comentarios


bottom of page