We have some die-hard travelers on our staff, and it can be hard for many of them to chose their most memorable vacations. But, when pressed, they came up with these answers, which range from epic (biking 3,600 miles across the country) to indulgent (bingeing on braised oysters and sazeracs in the Big Easy). Take your pick, then pack your bags.
Bike from Seattle to Virginia
Biking across the country is the best way to see every inch of it. One summer, I rode with a group raising money for charity from Seattle, across the northernmost states, right up to my parents鈥 front door in Virginia鈥3,600 miles. Montana was incredible鈥攁ll wide-open land and sky. We camped in a rodeo grounds one night. I also loved North Dakota, which has the nicest people in the world. And Minnesota and Wisconsin鈥攁ll the lakes, rolling hills, cheese, and beer. You鈥檇 be surprised at the kindnesses people bestow on you when it鈥檚 just you and your bike. We were taken in and fed more times than I can count. It restores your faith in this big ol鈥 country of ours.
鈥擬ary Turner, deputy editor
Hike Mount Mansfield via the Hell Brook Trail
Before my family lived in Stowe, Vermont, we visited the town every year to hike the Green Mountains. When I was around eight years old, we climbed Mount Mansfield on Hell Brook, arguably the toughest route up the mountain. I was not very fit (I blame my childhood diet of pasta and Kool-Aid), but I finished. It was the greatest feeling to accomplish something I knew was difficult, and it was the moment I fell in love with the outdoors. I鈥檝e hiked this mountain many times, but this trail is definitely the best鈥攁nd most challenging鈥攚ay to do it.
鈥擜bbey Gingras, social media editorial assistant
Sail Bear Lake
My favorite place is one I go back to as often as I can and that I鈥檝e been visiting since I was a kid: Bear Lake, Utah. The lake is about 18 miles long and seven miles wide and straddles the Utah-Idaho border. It has everything you want in a weekend getaway. I grew up sailing a catamaran across the lake to get raspberry shakes at LaBeau鈥檚, skiing at Beaver Mountain, and hiking to Old Ephraim鈥檚 Grave, a monument dedicated to a massive grizzly bear in the area鈥攐r as the poem on the plaque reads: 鈥淭o the king of the forest so mighty and tall, we salute you, old Ephraim, the king of them all.鈥
鈥擩. Weston Phippen, senior editor
Kayak Mosquito Bay on Vieques Island
My father worked in Puerto Rico when I was growing up, and on one of our many trips, my family found our way to Vieques, a small island off the commonwealth鈥檚 eastern coast. After a moonless ride through the jungle in an old school bus, vines snapping through the open windows, we arrived at the most magical natural wonder I鈥檝e ever seen: Mosquito Bay, the brightest bioluminescent bay in the world. I鈥檒l never forget the water dripping through my fingers, outshining the stars in the night sky.
鈥擭ick Hunt, associate editor
Explore Chapel Hill, North Carolina
One of my favorite summer trips was to visit my best friend outside Chapel Hill, North Carolina. We spent plenty of early mornings and late evenings kayaking the local fishing hole, Lake Jordan. The pinks and oranges in the sunsets over the tree-circled lake are beyond 鈥檊ram-worthy, and the fish always seem to be biting. On weekends, when we weren鈥檛 climbing quartzite in Linville Gorge, we were scouting for the wild ponies that live on the Atlantic coast along the Outer Banks. When we were craving mountains, we鈥檇 drive west for hiking in the Appalachians and end our trip in Asheville, which has one of the most expansive microbrewery scenes in the country. The best part? Sampling a wide range of sweet and smokey barbecue to refuel after a big day of running, climbing, or paddling.
鈥擜bby Wise, online managing editor
Drive Highway 1
Clich茅 alert: Mine has gotta be driving California鈥檚 Highway 1 from San Diego to Big Sur. Highlights: the best breakfast burritos in the world at in Encinitas, surfing at Swamis, eating at the Inn of the Seventh Ray in Topanga Canyon, sea kayaking in San Simeon with the Hearst Castle looming on a hill on the other side of the highway, pulling over to watch elephant seals laze around on the beach, and staying at the Treebones Resort in Big Sur. If you have time to keep going north, do. Some of the best food, views, and wildlife are found between Monterey and Bodega Bay.
鈥擲vati Narula, assistant social media editor
Tackle the Teton Traverse
If you like moving quickly through big mountains, there鈥檚 no better trip in the contiguous United States than the Teton Traverse with Nat Patridge and Zahan Billimoria from . Three days, ten summits, and more than 24,000 feet of elevation change.
鈥擬att Skenazy, senior editor
Road-Trip Through the Southwest
The summer after third grade, my parents took us on a ten-day RV trip through the Southwest. My brother and I collected from parks throughout the region, including Grand Canyon, Zion, Arches, and Bryce Canyon. While the details are hazy, to this day it is the best vacation I have ever been on because it whetted my appetite for adventure.
鈥擩enny Earnest, social media manager
Canoe the Boundary Waters
For my most recent Boundary Waters trip, I planned a solo route across lakes I鈥檇 been to before, confident that I鈥檇 reach total serenity by about day three and emerge a better human on day five. A very close bear encounter, a few hours of being totally lost, and an untimely storm sent me paddling back on day two. Pledging never to call myself 鈥渙utdoorsy鈥 again, I drank and fished the week away at a nearby cabin instead. Why pick the BWCA, then? When I think of that trip now, I mostly just recall the perfect reflections of the trees and the steady flow of my paddle. Turns out serenity hits you pretty quickly up there.
鈥擩onathan Ver Steegh, editorial producer
Fish and Eat Your Way Through New Orleans
I base my travel on one of two things: food or fish. When I only have a weekend to spare, that usually means focusing on one (fish in northern Michigan) or the other (food in Cincinnati). In New Orleans, that鈥檚 not the case. In one day, you can have some of the country鈥檚 best cuisine and biggest redfish. Start by meeting , just a 30-minute Uber ride from downtown. After you鈥檝e spent the morning looking for backing reds, he鈥檒l drop you off at , where you can refill on braised oysters and sazeracs. But save room for dinner at . It gets a lot of media love and deserves every bit of it.
鈥擩onah Ogles, articles editor
Tube Down the Little Colorado River
In high school, I lucked out on the trip of a lifetime: rafting down Grand Canyon with a private group. I have many highlights from those two weeks, but the one that stands out most in my mind is the afternoon we spent hiking up, then tubing down the . This waterway, one of the main tributaries that flows into Grand Canyon, is remarkable for its bright-blue color and white limestone rocks. After being surrounded by shades of ocher for a week, the Little Colorado looked like something out of a Dali painting and inspired childlike play from everyone in the group as we slashed and bumped our way down its course.
鈥擜xie Navas, executive editor