My travel dream for 2021: top 12 readersâ tips
Winning tip: A perfect âstan
Covid willing, weâll be heading to Kyrgyzstan. Itâs at that perfect point where the infrastructure supports a great travel experience, but itâs not become spoiled by tourists. Bishkek is modern and vibrant, and in the stunning rural areas itâs possible to stay with nomads living the traditional life. Itâs one of the most beautiful countries in the world, with delicious locally sourced food. Kyrgyz community-based tourism proved an affordable way to experience the life of horse-riding nomads living in yurts, and the money goes into the community itself.
Minnie Martin
Where the map takes us, Wester Ross
Evening sunlight over Achnahaird Bay, Wester Ross.Photograph: Lorraine Yates/Alamy Stock Photo
The west coast of Scotland is our wild goal. During the neverending house tidy of 2020, we found the Gairloch & Ullapool area OS map and pored over it â a bit of geography home learning for my son, who liked the wriggly contour lines and the consonant-heavy names of the lochs and mountains. Weâll take the high road to Gairloch to see orca and minke (Hebridean Whale Cruises, £64 adult, £35 child), stay in a wooden wigwam at Sands campsite (from £52pp), and walk to the beach humming the Skye boat song.
Nancy Gladstone
Readers' tips: send a tip for a chance to win a £200 voucher for a Sawdays stay
ShowGuardian Travel readers' tips
Every week we ask our readers for recommendations from their travels. A selection of tips will be featured online and may appear in print. To enter the latest competition visit the readers' tips homepage
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Was this helpful? Thank you for your feedback.Island dream, Lundy
The MS Oldenburg landing on Lundy. Photograph: Backyard Production/Getty ImagesMy son, daughter and I have been making lists of where we want to go since the first lockdown. Weâve booked a few days on Lundy for next August in the hope that it will be safe to travel again by then. It only involves a five-hour drive to Ilfracombe, Devon, and then a couple of hours on HMS Oldenburg (which for my three-year-old boy will be the holiday made before we even get there). Weâll stay in Castle Cottage, in the keep of a castle built by Henry III in 1250. Thereâs nothing to do but explore cliffs, beaches and lighthouses, and look for the crashed bomber plane in the heather. And thereâs no internet.
Kate Attrill
All a-Twitter for York
An 800-year-old figure of Christ returned to York last year and on display at the Yorkshire Museum. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PAIâd love to go to York and visit the Yorkshire Museum as their wonderful tweets â mainly about odd or mysterious items in their collection â have kept me entertained and brought history alive this year. A pint or two in the cityâs ancient pubs and a wander home to characterful lodgings would just cap a cultural visit off nicely!
Liz
Mind-Boggling Whitby, North Yorkshire
Boggle Hole YHA near Robin Hoodâs Bay. Photograph: Ian Bottle/AlamyLow cost and close to home, a stay with the YHA at Boggle Hole is always a welcome relief. A converted watermill with a reception, bar and cosy sitting room complete with a log fire and leather couches, itâs in a pebbled cove overlooking the sea, with wooded cliffs on either side. Go in spring or early autumn and the prices are as low as £29 a night. Walk across the sandy beach to Robin Hoods Bay or over the jagged cliffs to Ravenscar to see the seals.
Safiya El-Gindy
Golden Glasgow
Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow. Photograph: Black Jake/Getty ImagesI long for the wide expansiveness of Glasgow boulevards: west-facing, bathed in the golden glow of light glancing off sandstone. I long for the cobbled alleyways, armpit-piled bookshops, curiosity shops crammed with treasure; and also the glitzy, glassy, high street emporiums filled with unafforded luxuries. I long for views of the university, the Campsie Fells, the high flats, the rivers snaking through. And the tearooms, pubs, gastropubs, curry houses, Asian street food haunts, delis and restaraunts high end and greasy spoon. Itâs only two hours away but has been impossibly out of reach. I long for full immersion, to be sated by all its gritty, impossibly romantic, unabashed grandeur.
Fiona
Simply sublime, Cotswolds Way
The Cotswold Way at Crickley Hill. Photograph: AlamyIn 2021 I want to carry on enjoying the benefits of the simple pleasures of travelling that 2020 led us to â like walking and talking. I want to walk the Cotswolds Way from Broadway to Bath, breathing in fresh air, wondering at big skies, scanning rolling hills in the distance while getting fitter without going to gyms or swimming in chlorinated pools or using mobile apps. Its 120 miles should take about a week, staying in village pubs along the way. Travel, like life, should be about connecting reality to your imagination by inspiration, which can come in the purest, most simple of forms.
Nick
Faroes football
My dream is to fulfil a Covid-delayed bucket-list trip to see the ultimate sporting underdog story, and take my football-crazy nine-year-old on a once-in-a-lifetime trip. We will be travelling to see the Faroe Islands play an international match on home turf. Theyâre due to play Scotland on 12 October in a World Cup qualifier. Fly into the capital, Torshavn, and you can walk to the stadium. Hire a car for the full Faroes experience: itâs the bird-watching capital of Europe. Hotel Streym in Torshavn has Atlantic views and doubles from £90.
John Connolly
Harvest festival with a difference, Ukraine
Harvest time on a farm near Lviv, Ukraine. Photograph: Martin CharlesworthIt will take the best part of a day and a half but hereâs my plan: a few buses, some trains and a flight from my home in the Ribble valley to Ukraine, crossing the Polish border at PrzemyÅl. Iâm expecting Lviv to be âbruised but not brokenâ as the Ray Davies song goes, with coffee, cake and varenyky (dumpling) culture still largely intact. I plan to go in August for the Saviour of the Apple feast, an Eastern Orthodox celebration of harvest. The reason for going is not necessarily the destination or the festival but the sweet joy of a long journey to a foreign land and interaction with strangers at long last.
Martin Charlesworth
Totally ore-some, Mauritania
The iron ore train, MauritaniaFor 2021, I want to travel somewhere that is remote with low population density and gives me an adrenaline rush. After a bit of research, Iâve chosen to go on the iron ore train in Mauritania. The 700km journey on a cargo train from the north of the country to the west coast takes around 34 hours. This train is among the worldâs longest and heaviest and riding it is totally free. From time to time, I look at the photos and videos of the journey on the internet and instantly get goosebumps. See for yourself. Itâs total madness.
Venkata K C Tata
Silk Road: Samarkand to Baku
The Registan place in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Photograph: Andrey Vishin/AlamyAs we enter 2021 with unbridled hope and optimism for a better year filled with limitless freedom and a vaccinated global population, never have I wanted more to return to completing my journey of the Silk Road, started in 2019. Beginning in Xiâan and Kashgar, China, I headed west to Almaty, Kazakhstan, before crossing over into Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. My trip allowed just enough time to reach dazzling Samarkand in Uzbekistan. My trip ended at the Shah-i-Zinda necropolis, a breathtaking marvel from which I hope to restart my adventure in 2021. My aim is to reach Tehran, from where I will return to Baku, one of my favourite cities, for a deserved cup of coffee.
Scott Strachan
Mountain overload, Georgia
Kazbegi, Georgia. Photograph: Franka HummelsI want to be overwhelmed by Georgiaâs Kazbegi region again. I want to get so exhausted by marvellous hikes â where I will not meet a soul â that the next day will be spent on a balcony with a book that gets little attention because the mountains take my breath away. I will only leave that balcony to eat terrific vegetarian Georgian food, with the same view. That balcony I left and want to return to is at Rooms Hotel, where doubles go for $100 â steep by Georgian standards but worth it and not as steep as those mountain slopes.
Franka Hummels