U.S.: Home Covid test ok for travel
Approved home-based kits will now be accepted for travel to the U.S., but some questions remain.
Approved home-based kits will now be accepted for travel to the U.S., but some questions remain.
A plan to build a garage under a modern apartment building has turned instead into a visitable Roman home.
A recent Harris Poll shows more caution among travelers than is reflected in reports of high demand for reservations.
Spain's tourism agency offers a wide selection of the country's most-strollable streets.
As incidents of misbehavior grow with the return of passenger traffic, Delta takes a stand to defend its staff.
Controversy swirls around a giant pink squid intended to help bring visitors back to a western Japan town.
Apparently, the urge to travel doesn't even require knowing where you're going as two cruises with mystery itineraries sell out fast.
Belgium's zoos say their animals are free of Covid infection—and the story of their testing methods is here.
Earlier optimism for earlier cruising is fading over some CDC regulations and Florida's monkey-wrench banning cruise lines requiring vaccination.
Most of London's smaller waterways have been buried; a walker's group is proposing a network of walking paths along their courses.
Lufthansa splits a new order for widebodies between Boeing and Airbus as it clears out older less-efficient big planes.
Cycling UK has created a 150-mile four-day loop that's almost all off-road.
With air traffic reviving, long security lines could be back soon, too. This TSA-backed experiment at Seattle could lead to a new approach.
No, it's not the start of a new round of Napoleonic Wars, and besides, Belgium has given back the occupied territory.
With an 1886 law blocking foreign-flag cruise ships from linking U.S. ports, some are suggesting it's time to reconsider the rule.