Avatar

NatGeoTravel

@natgeotravel / natgeotravel.tumblr.com

Dream. Plan. Go. Share. The official National Geographic Travel photography Tumblr
Avatar

Daily Travel Photo: Tam Coc, Ninh Binh, Vietnam

Photograph by Dennis Walton, Getty Images

Boaters paddle their way down a river in Tam Coc, Ninh Binh, Vietnam, at the heart of the Trang An Landscape Complex. The area, designated as Vietnam’s newest UNESCO World Heritage site in 2014, is a mere 64 miles from the capital of Hanoi. There is evidence of human activity in the site’s caves dating back thousands of years, and temples, pagodas, and small villages dot the landscape of steep cliffs and paddy fields.

Avatar

Daily Travel Photo: Lake Titicaca, Peru

Photograph by Christian Heeb, laif/Redux

Llamas gather on a hillside overlooking Peru's Lake Titicaca, the world's highest-altitude navigable body of water. Because of the llamas' ability to move heavy packs over the rough Andean terrain, native people in this region have used them as pack animals for centuries. At one time thousands of llamas grazed the lake's high basin.

Avatar

Daily Travel Photo : Gásadalur, Faroe Islands

Photograph by Adam Burton, JAI/Corbis

It wasn’t until a tunnel was built in 2004 that the residents of Gásadalur had an easy path to and from their home. At the time, the village—perched above this iconic waterfall on Denmark’s Faroe Islands—had all of 16 residents. Now that the village is accessible by car, and not just via an arduous hike or horseback ride, that number has risen to 18 residents.

Avatar

Lake Louise, Banff National Park

Kayakers paddle the turquoise surface of Lake Louise in Alberta, Canada, in this view captured from the Big Beehive hiking trail. Located within Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies, the lake's striking color comes from sunlight reflecting off the rock flour suspended in its waters, seen here deposited with the flow of glacial meltwater.

Photograph by Yohan Dumortier, National Geographic Your Shot

Avatar

"A large, inquisitive, and almost dangerously playful female humpback whale calf measures me with her pectoral fin," explains Matthew Draper, who took this photo in Tonga. "This image was captured on a very wide fish-eye lens, which doesn’t quite show how close she really is. By measuring how close I am she can determine if her tail is going to come in contact with me as she swims past."

Sponsored

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.