A travelogue by Sarah Casewit: travel designer, writer, and founder of Otherworldly Travel. Field notes, hotel opinions, destination guides, and the kind of advice that doesn't appear in guidebooks.
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Dispatches by Sarah Casewit for the traveler who hasn't decided where yet but knows it has to be worth it.
The World's Most Beautiful Places: A Curated Edit
Every January, the internet produces its list of the world's “most beautiful” places. I read them the way I read horoscopes, with one eyebrow raised. Beauty is not a competition and it certainly isn't consensus. And yet. Here is my edit, built from years of designing journeys to places that have genuinely stopped me in my tracks. Take it as one well-traveled opinion, nothing more. If they move you, it’s because they are authentically and objectively beautiful.
50 Trip Ideas For This Summer
I’ve put together a list for your summer plans. This may either help or momentarily send you into a spiral, in which case you’re welcome to close this window, clear your caches, and email me instead so we can talk it through properly. But if you, like me, appreciate seeing your options laid out, consider this the holy grail of summer planning: what follows is a list of 50—yes, five zero—ideas for summer, designed to spark inspiration rather than demand an immediate answer.
Transformational Luxury: Sarah Casewit’s Bespoke Journeys
In a world where “luxury travel” is often synonymous with glossy brochures and cookie-cutter five-star itineraries, Sarah Casewit offers something refreshingly different: journeys designed not around amenities, but around meaning: a new path for discerning travelers who want more than just a change of scenery, they want transformation, connection, and stories to last a lifetime.
Sailing Into the Arctic Glow
There are certain moments in the Arctic Circle, Norway, that feel almost mythical. They are so fleeting, so otherworldly, that you wonder if they truly happened. The last sunset before the polar night is one of them, on the night of November 27th. And this year, as we sailed across the Norwegian Sea, it unfolded in a way that felt absolutely unreal.