4 cool destinations to put on your solo travel hit list

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On the lookout for cool destinations for solo travel? We’ve got your back

Forget gin: solo travel is the tonic of the modern age, fuelling you in a way that no amount of booze could do justice to.

Travelling alone builds resilience and self-belief, letting you be who you want to be. It’s a great way of meeting new people, too.

Flash Pack delivers the best of both worlds, as you get to spread your wings solo, and flex your adventure spirit within –with the added moral support of a group of like-minded strangers.

So, where to go? For the wandering nomad in search of horizons new, the world is positively brimming with cool destinations. And handily, the folks at Nat Geo Traveller have whittled down the playing field in their new Cool List 2019.

These are the shakers of the travel world; places and regions that are cooking up a storm of inspiration to get people talking. Here’s four of our favourites from the shortlist, all with a Flash Pack twist:

Cambodia

cambodia

The ancient Khmer kingdom of Angkor Wat has always lured visitors to Cambodia, and The Killing Fields Museum in Phnom Penh unveils a dark history that should never be forgotten.

But according to Nat Geo Traveller, it’s the country’s “high-end hotel boom” which gives it added wow factor for 2019, putting the cherry on the cake in this fascinating land of jungle and temple ruins.

Two highlights for Flash Pack include the newly refurbished Shinta Mani Shack in Siem Reap (above) and the sleek Patio Urban Hotel in Phnom Penh.

Both offer charisma in spades, combining flawless design with a string of pleasing features.

Don’t miss mango mojitos in Patio Urban’s rooftop infinity pool, with front-row views of the city (plus, a garden filled with frangipani trees for when you need downtime). Then over at the Shinta Mani Shack, you have swinging seats suspended over a lily pond, and a complimentary poolside ice-cream.

Get involved

Hong Kong

 

hong kong

Who could resist Hong Kong, with her mist-clad cityscape of peaks, towers and harbour?

Nat Geo Traveller hails this evocative hub as “a cultural hotspot in 2019” with “big artistic ambition”.

Must-sees here include Victoria Dockside on Kowloon, with sculptures, tai chi gardens and dreamy waterfront views. Then on Hong Kong Island, there’s Tai Kwun, a one-time police station that’s home to a new generation of galleries, bars and restaurants.

Read more: What it’s really like communal bathing in Japan

Hong Kong’s cultural identity is also writ large in its amazing food. We at Flash Pack get right to the heart of the action, with an immersive street food safari through local neighbourhood hot spots.

From puffy egg waffles to bo zai fan (clay pot rice), feast your way around Hong Kong’s cafés, markets and pop-up hawker stalls, with a Cantonese-speaking guide helping you to order local dishes. Then, walk it all off with a trek along the Dragon’s Back Trail by the South China Sea.

Zimbabwe

zimbabwe

Amid the violent turmoil of recent years, Zimbabwe was considered off-limits by many visitors. But now, it’s making a comeback.

“With Mugabe gone, Zimbabwe’s new president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, seems keen to invest in tourism,” says Nat Geo Traveller. “And while there’s been economic and political turbulence, the safety of tourists hasn’t come into question.”

For a bucket-list hit, jump straight on over to Victoria Falls: Zimbabwe’s mighty ““smoke that thunders”, and the largest waterfall in the world.

Read more: Solo travel fuels this major happiness habit

With Flash Pack, you’ll admire the churn and torrent of this incredible sight via helicopter ride, along with a wander around the wooden walkways that snake between the thundering falls.

Then it’s over to Hwange National Park, regarded as one of the country’s finest wildlife spots, for game drives and a once-in-a-lifetime dawn bush walk. Just for good measure, we pop across the border to Botswana too, where more beautiful animals await.

Take me there

Indonesia 

beach

We don’t really need an excuse to visit this luscious pocket of the world, but Nat Geo Traveller has one all the same.

2019 marks the 150th anniversary of when Alfred Russel Wallace’s seminal book The Malay Archipelago was published.

According to the magazine, “Wallace spent 1854 to 1862 travelling the Malay Archipelago where he discovered the striking division in the distribution of animals that’s since become known as the Wallace Line: an invisible marker between Bali and Lombok running northward between Borneo and Sulawesi, either side of which the distinct fauna of Asia and Australasia are found.”

Read more: 18 moments of adventure travel you don’t want to miss

You can pay homage to Wallace’s journey by rediscovering Indonesia’s awesome wildlife for yourself.

Start in Bali, where you can snorkel between the big-eyed trevally and lizardfish that cluster around a WWII shipwreck off the coastal town of Amed.  Plus, in Ubud, a lush jungle town where we hang out, the monkeys are always keen to say hi.

Then pop on over to the wildlife nirvana of Borneo, and camp out in the rainforest with orangutans, pygmy elephants and crocs all around. There’s also endangered sun bears to visit at a local sanctuary, just to complete the wonderment.

Bali, bring it on

Images: Flash Pack and Shutterstock, lead image James Hall

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