Looking back at the golden, rolling hills of Central California. This shot captures the rugged, sun-drenched landscape surrounding the San Luis Reservoir, taken right at the start of a cross-country journey from California to Ohio back in 2016.

#SanLuisReservoir #CaliforniaLandscape #DiabloRange #GoldenHills #CrossCountryRoadTrip #RoadTripMemories #LandscapePhotography #CentralCalifornia #ExploreCalifornia #Wanderlust #NaturePhotography #ThrowbackTravel #roadtrip #roadtrips #RoadTripUSA

21 points, Charlotte to Cleveland: The Road Trip - Uncover the shocking secrets of the Charlotte to Cleveland road trip! Avoid tourist traps & discover hidden gems. Click NOW before this is taken down!.
https://momvoyage.web.app/journal/charlotte-to-cleveland-road-trip
#FlipboardUserGroup #fediverse #blog #blogpost #follow #followforfollow #writing #surf.social
#RoadJournal #TravelJournal #RoadTrip #CharlotteToCleveland #US11

Set yourself up for a perfect Austin morning - a pancake flight breakfast at Snooze, art at Umlauf Sculpture Garden, and a walk with peacocks in Mayfield Park:

https://perceptivetravel.com/blog/2026/03/25/austin-rocks-a-perfect-austin-morning/

#travel #TravelTips #RoadTrip #Texas #TrueAustin

Austin Rocks: A Perfect Austin Morning

Set yourself up for a perfect Austin morning - a pancake flight breakfast at Snooze, art at Umlauf Sculpture Garden, and a walk with peacocks in Mayfield Park.

Perceptive Travel Blog

The walled Old Town of Cáceres is a UNESCO World Heritage Site containing one of Europe’s best-preserved medieval ensembles, mixing Roman substructure (the 1st C. BCE colony of Norba Caesarina) with largely intact Islamic, Gothic & Renaissance architecture. On a Monday we found it largely deserted—even Plaza Mayor, the main square. A few tour groups did shuffle from ticket booth to ticket booth, but the homologous stone, populous pigeons & closed doors resisted our efforts to connect with this open-air museum, which seemed to lack residents to give it soul. In the late Gothic Santa Iglesia Concatedral de Santa María | Co-Cathedral of Santa María a spiral staircase (📷1) led to a small platform in the bell tower with views over the town (📷2); a number of other towers (including the 12th C. Moorish Torre de Bujaco) were in scaffold. We found the medieval streets & walls struggled to offer themselves as photographic subjects. An exception was at Palacio de Carvajal | Carvajal Palace, a 15th–16th century Renaissance-style palace, featuring a distinctive Gothic-style corner balcony beneath a pointed arch (📷3). We caught the bus back to camp feeling underwhelmed & questioning why this should be so. Camp itself is a highlight: we needed a break from travelling at pace, & what a delight to find an affordable pitch with en suite 🚽🚿facilities (📷4).

🇪🇸 #spain #extremadura 🇪🇺 #europe 🚀 #travel 🚐 #camperVan #nomad #roadTrip #vanLife 🌍 #unesco

road trip east coast 1+2

corresponding to my photoblog posts here my latest journaling hopefully you enjoy reading it:) link to my website is in my bio or click on the picture

https://langnertimon-dqync.wordpress.com/2026/04/20/road-trip-east-coast-12/

My second stop on Route 66. This time it's Needles, California which was the first city you'd see in California if you were traveling west on 66.
https://edwardiseverywhere.blogspot.com/2026/04/needles-california-on-route-66.html
#Route66 #California #RoadTrip #NeedlesCA
Die Mojave-Wüste lockt mit bizarren Landschaften und spektakulären Sehenswürdigkeiten wie dem Flugzeugfriedhof beim Mojave Air & Space Port. Aber Vorsicht: In Death Valley kann dich das Navi in die Irre führen („Death by GPS“) und Drohnen sind verboten. Calico Ghost Town gehört nicht zum Nationalparksystem und der legendäre Wüstenschiff-Mythos ist gar nicht dort. So erlebst du die Wüste sicher und intensiv! 🌵🏜️ #Mojave #USA #Wüstenabenteuer #Roadtrip #Reiseplanung

Sometimes circumstances require an out-and-back road trip, but if you can, take a circle route or loop trip. Here are a couple of ideas, on my personal blog:

https://www.sheilascarborough.com/2026/04/02/loop-trip-travel-post-friday/

#travel #TravelTips #RoadTrip

Travel Post Friday: Take a loop trip | Sheila Scarborough

Sometimes circumstances require an out-and-back road trip, but if you can, take a circle route or loop trip. Here are a couple of ideas.

Sheila Scarborough | Speaker, Trainer, and Writer Specializing in Tourism, Travel, and Social Media

Lisbon and northern Alentejo

We dipped south into the northern part of the Alentejo region, before a detour back into central Portugal conveyed us to the outskirts of Lisbon. Our route would then return us to northern Alentejo as we crossed Portugal into Spain. For this away mission we deliberately omitted Lisbon itself and also the Algarve; that (and southern Spain) will wait for another time.

Coordinates

Into Alentejo

A cactus garden in the evening light, seen from our van door on pitch at an eco-commune in Proença-a-Velha (📷1). The next morning, two new wildlife sightings: B’s first-ever look at Rhipicephalus sanguineus | the brown dog tick—we’ve been vaccinated against TBE (📷2) and a mongoose that crossed the road in front of us. Later, having continued south into the Alentejo region, we made a spontaneous visit to Anta | dolmen 1 of São Gens (📷3); it’s one of four megalithic tombs near Nisa that may have been erected as early as 3500 BCE. Castelo de Vide was a picturesque drive-by, developed around a 13th–14th C. hilltop castle (📷4); it’s also known for whitewashed houses, Jewish history and surrounding greenery.

Marvão is an attractive fortified town, dramatically located at ~860m on a ridge in the Serra de São Mamede, providing stunning views in all directions—including across the Alentejo plains into Spain. The village itself is pretty to wander, with its white walls/ red roofs (📷1) and immaculate gardens (📷2). Castelo de Marvão | Marvão Castle is well-worth the 1,50 € entry fee. It was begun by a 9th C. Islamic knight and taken by Christian forces around 1160–66 CE. The Moorish fortress underwent major redevelopment after the Christian reconquest of Iberia and it was strengthened during the 13th C. under King Dinis of Portugal. The massive 15th–16th C. vaulted cistern, intended to supply the castle during sieges, is quite a feat of late medieval engineering (📷3). The stone walls follow the natural contours of the mountain and the battlements are walkable; the keep is intact and can be climbed (📷4). We witnessed Gyps fulvus | griffin vultures, describing lazy circles on the thermals, and atop the keep were buzzed by fast-moving swifts. We found Marvão wasn’t overly commercialized and it was surprisingly quiet on a (pre-season) Saturday.

An impromptu study of the doorways and windows of Marvão. Who, across the centuries, has knocked and been invited into a dimly-lit interior, or looked out at the world and thought “There really is no place like home”?

Back into central Portugal

Convento de Cristo | Convent of Christ is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Tomar, recognized for its blend of architecture (Romanesque, Gothic, Manueline, Renaissance, etc.) and historical links to the Knights Templar and to the Age of Discovery.

The Knights Templar and the Order of Christ

The Knights Templar, warrior monks/ a Catholic military order, were founded in 1119 CE following the First Crusade to protect pilgrims traveling to Jerusalem; they were disbanded by papal bull (public decree) in 1312 following false accusations of heresy by King Philip IV of France. In 1319 Portugal’s King Dinis I determined to reuse/ repurpose/ recycle their assets (knights, goods, technology and knowledge) as the Order of Christ. The former Templar castle was thus superseded by the Convent of Christ, with Tomar the spiritual and administrative seat of the new Order of Christ.

The Order of Christ helped finance and organize many of Portugal’s early voyages during the Age of Discovery. With the Order led by Prince Henry the Navigator, resources were directed towards maritime expeditions along the coast of Africa. The Order’s red cross emblem was painted on the sails of Portuguese caravels, a visible symbol of exploration in search of commercial opportunities, spreading Christianity and expanding Portugal’s influence.

🤔 Curiosity

The convent’s centrepiece is the church. Seen from the within the main body, the rotunda impresses (📷1); it began as a 12th C. early Templar Romanesque fortified oratory, inspired by the Temple in Jerusalem. Early in the 16th C. it became a chancel with an ambulatory (sequential iconographic panels telling a religious story). This view is from beside the central drum, looking towards the ceiling (📷2). The rotunda’s window frames are highly detailed (📷3). The exterior window on the church’s west façade (1519–13 CE) exemplifies the late Gothic “Manueline” style, with maritime/ exotic motifs reflecting wealth brought back from overseas (📷4).

Claustro do Cemitério | Cemetery Cloister, with a view of the church, is one of a number of cloisters within the complex (📷1); initially built in the 15th C. it was remodelled in the early 17th C. and is named for its role as a burial ground for friar knights. The end of one of three corridors making up the 40-cell Dormitório Grande | Main Dormitory (📷2); completed in 1543–45, the azulejo dado tiles were added in the 17th C. We also toured the Refeitório | Refectory c. 1535 and Cozinha | Kitchen, which wasn’t completed until after 1550. On the eastern flank of the convent, Castelo De Tomar | Tomar Castle—closed for restoration—was built c. 1160 as a stronghold and headquarters of the Portuguese Knights Templar (📷3); it was transferred to the Order of Christ and later integrated into Convento de Cristo. On the western flank of the convent is Aqueduto dos Pegões | Pegões Aqueduct—access here was also barred. However, there is an access tower ~3km away on Rua do Saibreiro from where two tiers of stone arches can be seen (📷4). Although it looks Roman-like, the 6km-long structure was built 1593–1614 CE to supply water to the convent.

Nazaré is globally recognised among the surfing community for it’s big waves, which can reach 20–30m in height. Just offshore here is one end of the largest submarine trench in Europe, at ~230km long and ~5km deep. The Nazaré Canyon funnels Atlantic swells towards the shore, where the abrupt change in depth compresses wave energy, refracting and amplifying it. Our visit to Nazaré coincided with a coastal wind warning (gusts up to 55 km/h) so we saw no surfing, but we did see surf! Praia da Nazaré is the city’s main golden-sand beach, viewed here from the rocky headland at the north end of the beach (📷1). On the tip of the headland is Farol de Nazaré, a lighthouse atop a fort, providing a vantage point from which to watch the breakers roll in to adjacent Praia do Norte (📷2). We watched long waves crest and collapse, all the while the wind whipping off the tops in sheets of spray (📷3). Other waves broke apart thunderously on the rocks directly below the lighthouse (📷4).

After departing Nazaré we entered the walled medieval city of Óbidos via Porta da Vila, the main gate built c. 1376 CE, which integrates a small baroque chapel lined with azulejo | tiles depicting biblical scenes, installed c. 1740–45 (📷1). Rua da Direita is the main cobbled street leading from the gate to the castle, lined with shops, cafés and traditional (guest) houses (📷2). Muralhas de Óbidos | the town walls are well-preserved and make for an alternative route from Porta da Vila to the castle (📷3), although some fellow visitors seemed unnerved by the absence of railings. Castelo de Óbidos | Óbidos Castle was originally Moorish; it was expanded following the Christian reconquest. The Governor’s Palace was rebuilt in the 16th C. and has been a hotel/ restaurant since 1948. Adjacent is Igreja-Livraria de Santiago, a former church converted into a bookshop—in keeping with the town’s status as a UNESCO Creative City of Literature (📷4).

The ramparts of Óbidos provide views out into the surrounding landscape, but also draw the eye inward across town house courtyards, where varied use is made of small outdoor spaces (📷1–3). Touristy it may be, but “the thing” in Óbidos is ginjinha | cherry liqueur, served in small cups made of chocolate. The correct means of consumption, we are reliably informed, is to drink first then eat the cup. We can neither confirm nor deny whether we presently have cherry liqueur aboard this vanship…

Lisbon region

Parque Natural de Sintra-Cascais lies to the west of Lisbon and covers a stretch of Atlantic shoreline as well as extending into the Sintra hills. Our first stop was Azenhas do Mar, where whitewashed houses are stacked on steep cliffs of limestone and shale above a beach and seawater pool (📷1). On to Cabo da Roca | Cape Roca, the westernmost point in Continental Europe. The landmark was crowded and while the view to the open Atlantic was thought provoking, the sea cliffs to the north were more dramatic (📷2). There are marked trails on the headland beginning near the parking area; this view looks south back to the cape’s lighthouse (📷3), while this view is towards the golden sand beach of Praia da Ursa lying at the bottom the cliff (📷4).

In Parque Natural de Sintra-Cascais we chose the PR4 CSC – Guincho Coastal Route as our morning hike, parking in Malveira da Serra. Once we cleared the village the trail took us into open scrub-covered hills, with a view down to the coast at Praia do Guincho (📷1). After intersecting the coast the trail runs along the cliffs tops and looks down into several rocky coves (📷2). At Praia do Abano we reached the ruin of Forte do Guincho c. 1642 CE (📷3); the view here is northeast in the direction of Cabo da Roca. Praia do Guincho is a wild Atlantic beach backed by dunes (📷4). The uphill leg back to the village involved a fair bit of road walking and was comparatively dull: a 10km/ 3h return loop.

Coastal flowers noted in Parque Natural de Sintra-Cascais include Armeria welwitschii | the divine thrift, endemic to coastal central Portugal (📷1); Thapsia villosa | the villous deadly carrot, a poisonous native (📷2); Cistus ladanifer | the gum rock-rose, native to the western Mediterranean and predominant on this trail—here providing a home for Synema globosum | the Napoleon spider (📷3); and the native Centaurium erythraea | common centaury (📷4).

Also noted: Convolvulus althaeoides | mallow bindweed; Erophaca baetica | Iberian milkvetch; Centaurea pullata | Iberian knapweed; Anacamptis pyramidalis | pyramidal orchid; Orobanche crenata | bean broomrape; Anthyllis vulneraria | common kidney-vetch; and Papaver somniferum | opium poppy.

The Sintra hills within the Parque Natural de Sintra-Cascais are the setting for a number of sites included in the UNESCO Cultural Landscape of Sintra. A retreat for Portuguese royalty and aristocracy since the medieval period, Sintra became a Romantic playground blending natural scenery and monumental architecture, starting in the 19th C. under King Ferdinand II. Palácio da Pena | Pena Palace was commissioned by the said king, completed in 1854 with vivid colours and eclectic styles (📷1). Castelo dos Mouros | the Castle of the Moors was begun in the 9th C. to protect Sintra a thousand years before Pena Palace was even conceived (📷2); the 19th C. partial restoration is seen here from the palace. We passed beside Palácio Nacional de Sintra | the National Palace of Sintra (📷3), recognizable by its two massive white conical chimneys, when descending to the historic town centre (📷4). There are multiple other sites and interiors we missed in a ~10km/ 3.5h loop walk costing 24 € (Pena Park only x2).

Sintra: brace, brace, brace!

Visiting Sintra was a financial*, logistical (parking, limited suitable pitches in the vicinity, choice/ spread of sites) and physiological (crowds, car crime and pickpocket risk) challenge.

*For example, four top-tier points-of-interest = [Park & Palace of Pena 20 € + Moorish Castle 12 € + National Palace 13 € + Quinta da Regaleira 25 €]x2 + [No. 434/ 435 bus pass 10,96 €]x2 + 1,80 € paid motorhome parking would have cost us 164 € for the day.

✳️ Tips and tricks

After inching our way through Lisbon’s rush-hour traffic we made camp south of the city. This experience, combined with the stress of navigating Sintra, only served to reaffirm our decision to skip revisiting Lisbon’s attractions. We thus arrived at Praia De Santo Antóniois, one of the beaches along Costa da Caparica, with a promenade, fisherpeople and surf school. Later we attempted to visit Praia da Figueirinha near Setúbal on a recommendation, but found the access road closed. We thus bid farewell to the Atlantic and turned inland to begin our return journey.

FisherpeopleSurf school

A little more northern Alentejo

One doesn’t visit Évora’s historic centre to see extensive well-preserved Roman ruins; rather, the city’s UNESCO listing reflects continuous occupation since the Roman era, when it was known as Liberalitas Julia. Distinct Roman remains are few, although there is more legacy embedded in the fabric of the medieval town. Templo Romano de Évora | the Roman Temple is the primary monument of Roman Évora, built in the early 1st C. CE with granite columns featuring Corinthian capitals (📷1); it’s one of the best-preserved Roman temples in Iberia and was likely dedicated to the cult of the Emperor. Porta de Dona Isabel is a remnant access point to the Roman city (📷2); surviving sections of wall have been incorporated into later fortifications, but it still defines the original Roman urban perimeter. Termas Romanas | the Roman baths c. early 1st C. CE are excavated beneath Câmara Municipal De Évora | the city hall (📷3); this rounded structure is the laconicum, a central space used for sweating in hot, dry air. Not Roman, but nevertheless a curiosity, Igreja de S. Francisco | St Francis’ Church contains the early 17th C. Capela dos Ossos | Chapel of Bones, with three naves formed from arrangements of human bones sourced from local burial grounds (📷4) in a move predating modern concepts of informed consent and planning permission!

One of Europe’s densest megalithic landscapes lies on the outskirts of Évora. We selected a few of the primary sites, beginning with Menhir dos Almendres, a 4m tall isolated standing stone near the village of Nossa Senhora de Guadalupe (📷1). Further along the same dirt road—we had to abandon the van and walk—is Cromeleque dos Almendres, a stone circle constructed ~7,500 years ago, comprising 100+ menhirs, making it the largest monument of its kind in Iberia (📷2). From the adjacent village to the south we walked to Anta Grande do Zambujeiro, one of the largest dolmen (burial monuments) in the world, exemplifying Neolithic funerary architecture (📷3); it’s ~5,500 years old—built at the same time as the pyramids in Egypt and Stonehenge in England. During our time travels in the local landscape we had several meetings with the endemic Berberomeloe castuo | Portuguese red-striped oil beetle (📷4); the body resembling a black menhir, its defense mechanism is to excrete an oily haemolymph containing the toxin cantharidin, which causes severe blistering to human skin.

Interpretation aids and access advice

Call in first at Centro Interpretativo dos Almendres for information (there is a series of interpretation panels) and access advice regarding directions, road condition and walking requirements.

✳️ Tips and tricks

The compact village of Monsaraz features whitewashed buildings and cobbled lanes in a layout little changed since medieval times (📷1). Castelo de Monsaraz, a 13th C. hilltop fortress, now contains a bullring built by villagers in 1830 using stones harvested from the semi-ruined parade ground and walls (📷2). Albufeira do Alqueva | Alqueva Reservoir, one of Europe’s largest artificial lakes, is seen from various vantage points, with views over the Alentejo plains and into Spain (📷3). From the walls we also looked over large-scale olive groves, “montado” (a traditional agroforestry system combining cork or holm oaks with grazing land) and vineyards (📷4).

Forte de Santa Luzia at Elvas is part of the UNESCO listing for “Garrison Border Town of Elvas and its Fortifications”. The site is one of the best-preserved examples of early modern military architecture in Europe, demonstrating the 17th C. bastioned fortifications developed as a response to artillery. For its part, this fort—one of two near the fortified city—played a border defense role, layed out on a hill in a polygonal star plan with bastions, dry moat and thick ramparts. Such geometry eliminated blind spots and enabled crossfire; a guarita | sentry box would be located at intervals, often on prominent wall angles to shelter sentinel soldiers (📷1). During the Portuguese Restoration War (1640–68) in which Portugal fought to restore independence from Spain, soldiers stationed here (📷2) saw repeated action, especially in the 1659 campaign—a Spanish offensive culminating in the Battle of the Lines of Elvas. The thick ramparts, engineered to absorb and deflect artillery fire, include cannon positions to return fire (📷3); this is a 7.5cm calibre English campaign piece with wooden gun carriage. Within Casa do Governador | the governor’s house is an unusual vertical “staircase” affording access to an observation terrace (📷4).

After our fort visit we crossed the border back into Spain. Até à próxima, Portugal!

#2026 #camperVan #europe #hiking #nature #nomad #portugal #roadTrip #romans #travel #unesco #vanLife
Photographer Plans 90-Day Road Trip Across US to Document 'Muslim America'

This photographer wants to show what Muslim America really looks like.

PetaPixel