Travel Guides
Por dani · · Editorial analysis without affiliates, honest comparisons and practical guides.
Editorial analysis without affiliates, honest comparisons and practical guides.
Latest posts
Is the Vatican guided tour worth it?
Is the Alhambra ticket worth it?
Is the Santiago Bernabéu tour worth it?
Is the El Escorial day trip worth it?
Budapest in 3 days: what to see & Széchenyi baths
Lisbon in 3 days: what to see and how to get around
Granada in 2 days: Alhambra, Albaicín & tapas
Best day trips from Madrid
Visiting Auschwitz from Krakow: practical guide
Disneyland Paris: 1 or 2 days? Tickets guide
Rome in 3 days: skip-the-line itinerary
Free tour vs guided tour: which to choose
Alhambra tickets sold out? How to get them
Madrid in 3 days: an honest itinerary without clichés
The best time to visit each European destination
How this blog works
The pieces published here are pure editorial content: comparative analyses, detailed itineraries and practical guides, with honest opinions on destinations. No affiliate links, no sponsored content, no empty-keyword SEO. Each article exists because someone (reader, friend, lost traveller) asked us the same question repeatedly and deserved a detailed answer.
We publish slowly: 1-2 articles a month. The idea isn't to compete with mega travel sites pumping 30 posts a week without setting foot in the destination. The idea is to publish what we actually know, with the depth it deserves.
Upcoming planned articles
- What to actually do in Krakow (beyond Auschwitz)
- Comparison: Sagrada Familia vs Seville Cathedral vs Burgos
- Visiting Florence without tourist-fatigue
- Rome for non-history-fans: how to enjoy it anyway
- European museums nobody mentions but should
Interested in any of these? Tell us and we'll prioritise.
Why there are no comments on articles
We decided not to include a comments system. Reasons: spam multiplies faster than moderation, long threads tend to degenerate, and readers with something important to say write us directly via Instagram or email. We prefer one-on-one conversations: richer and more honest.
What you'll find in this blog
The blog is designed as an honest complement to the activity pages. Activity pages answer "what to book and how"; the blog answers "what to think about before booking" and "how to fit the complete trip together".
Three recurring content types:
- Honest itineraries ("Madrid in 3 days", "Rome in 4 days"): detailed plans with realistic schedules, specific restaurants and warnings about tourist traps. Not generic Wikipedia-copy lists.
- Comparisons ("Madrid Royal Palace vs Aranjuez", "Széchenyi vs Gellért"): when two similar options exist and the choice isn't obvious. We help you choose based on your specific profile.
- Transversal analyses ("Best time to visit Europe"): questions affecting multiple destinations that deserve country-by-country analysis.
The style is direct: no empty-keyword SEO, no filler paragraphs, no "5 things you didn't know about Madrid" clickbait. If an article deserves 1,500 words, it has them; if it deserves 500, it has those.
Who writes the articles
All articles are signed by dani, project founder. No ghostwriters, no external editorial team, no "SEO writers" padding with empty keywords. When an article is based on dani's own visit, we say so explicitly; practical guides are produced with verified, up-to-date information.
When someone collaborates occasionally (a local adding context about their city), they appear as explicit co-author. No false attributions.