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Your 2015 Female-Approved Travel Bucket List

Your 2015 Female-Approved Travel Bucket List

Your 2015 Female-Approved Travel Bucket List

Grab your suitcase and go somewhere life-changing this year.

Maybe you didn't get to travel enough in 2014, or you're looking for something new. Here are eight trips that will make your Instagram followers really jealous. 

 

1. See the Northern Lights
You truly don't know how beautiful the Northern Lights are until you catch them dancing in front of you. Here in North America, you can see the lights fairly well in the northern United States and Canada. But if you're more interested in using your passport, Iceland is just a cool, strange place where to watch them. Scandinavian countries like Denmark, Norway, and Sweden are also fantastic, safe, interesting places for women to travel, but catching the Northern Lights there is unparalleled to anything else.

 

 

2. Take a lady pilgrimage

Sometimes it's just nice to go somewhere different and be surrounded by women. Maybe it's the Dinah in Palm Springs or Vegas, or Wildwood, New Jersey's Wild Women Weekend, or a women's film festival, or a ladytastic cruise with Olivia, or an epic all-women's rave in Zurich, Switzerland that you only hear about through a a Vine star's friend of a cousin. In either case, it's a fun thing to swim in an estrogen-laced pool every now and then, if that's not the norm for you.

 

 

3. Take an epic train trip

Vancouver to Montreal? Chicago to New Orleans? Sure you could fly those routes in a couple of hours, but why don't you slow things down and take the train? Like, long-range train trip, with options to hop on and off the train, traveling from city to city, or stay cozy in a top-notch private rail car. 

For example, the Southern Spirit introduces riders to the Australian outback, while the Hiram Bingham brings you to Peruvian ruins. And in case you thought the Orient Express was a thing of the past, it ain't

 

 

4. Get crazy-pampered

Two words: Spa Weekend. There's nothing like a relaxing weekend of rubdowns and scrub-downs. These things are all over the place. You can go to Iceland and sit in a mineral-rich pools out in nature, or chill with your girlfriend or girlfriends at a blissful B&B a few hours away from home.

 

 

5. Get crazy-adventurous

Cities like Boulder, Colo., have tons of activities like whitewater rafting, mountain biking, 200 miles of public hiking trails, snowboarding, backpacking, ice climbing, kayaking, skiing, and snowboarding, thanks to the nearby Rocky Mountains.

For a heart-pumping international expedition, try Queenstown, New Zealand, which accurately bills itself as the adventure capital of the world. Bungee jumping? Helicoptering onto the top of a glacier? Paragliding? Off-roading? Riversurfing? Yeah, they got all of that plus way, way more. 

Is an Wild-like trek in order? There's the Pacific Crest Trail (2,650 miles from California through Oregon and Washington), the Appalachian Trail (2,180 miles from Maine to Georgia), and a few others sprinkled throughout the United States. Then there's the quirky and naturally gorgeous Patagonia region in Chile, which attracts backpackers far and wide.

In any case, just bring your GoPro. And a helmet. 

 

 

6. Try a foodie pilgrimage

If you want to stay domestic, there's Portland, Oregon's eclectic range of high-end and low-end  restaurants and food carts, as well as Charleston, S.C.'s vast array of southern comfort food.

On the international front, Thailand has plenty of inexpensive and exotic food options, especially in Bangkok, where you can dine like a queen or hang out in a street market with the locals. Barcelona is probably the best food city I've been to in all of Europe. Every restaurant offers its own spin on tapas, jamón, y paella so you better be ready to chow down. Make sure to wash it down con tinto.

If you're more into wine pairings, the Napa Valley region in California is right at the source — the downtown area is going through a revitalization, and there are more than 30 venues that offer wine tastings right there; there's even a wine train and a cycling wine tour! If suds are your thing, San Diego, Bend, Ore., Bellingham, Wash., Brooklyn, and Tampa, Fla., are hotbeds of new beers with breweries sprouting up all over the place. Or, you know, go to Oktoberfest.

 

7. Go somewhere completely new (to most Americans)

Uh, Cuba. To many of us, Cuba has always been a sort of mysterious Caribbean island off limits to us. The infrastructure to accommodate mass tourism isn't quite there yet (small groups have been permitted for years, and licensed tours have been in business for Americans since 2011). But now that President Obama has announced the easing of restrictions between Cuba and the U.S., this all might change. The island, which was once a haven for American travelers in the early 20th Century, is expected to see a boom in the coming years.

Not so big on Cuba? You could also try one of the newest countries in the world like Kosovo, Palau, or the newish Czech Republic (the region's history goes back for centuries, of course, but the country itself is only 21 years old). 

 

 

8. Take a heritage trip

A couple of years ago, I took a very fun trip to Puerto Rico with my family to dig around in old records about our family. We learned a bit and got to see the neighborhood my grandfather worked and grew up in before migrating to Brooklyn, where he met my grandmother. I highly recommend a trip like this if you're into nerdy things like Ancestry.com, family trees, Census data, and DNA cheek swabs.

Advocate Channel - The Pride StoreOut / Advocate Magazine - Fellow Travelers & Jamie Lee Curtis

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Michelle Garcia