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8 Tips for flying with a camera bag

Photography and travel go hand in hand.  We travel to explore and we take photos to capture those explorations and memories that we create in the course of travelling. Travelling unlocks new destinations, new subjects...

Why You Should Kayak British Columbia’s Inside Passage

Rowing southeast along Vancouver Island’s coast, my kayak emerges from the first rock notch: I see a black bear idling underneath the warm sun. Stroking his fur and itching wherever his paws can reach, he...

Is Your Travel Camera Flight ready?

With what seems like the light at the end of the tunnel from a devastating pandemic, the world is making plans to reopen for travel towards the end of this year. In some regions, travel...

La Aventura Nicaragüense: Maderas Village

Maderas Village is a hidden gem located in the lush coastal hills of Nicaragua. Langly’s founder and creative director Evan Lane spent a week exploring this paradise. Maderas boutique resort is tucked away in a...

Alaska, Wild

Alaska offers endless experiences of everyday encounters with nature and road trips you will never forget. One of Alaska’s highlights, is the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park that covers a vast area of mountain ranges, pristine...

MEANDERING AROUND MORROCCO

8 days of trekking through Morocco through the lens of Evan Lane. Morocco is a gateway to Africa and a country of dizzying diversity. Here you'll find epic mountain ranges, ancient cities, sweeping deserts – and warm...

What the Galápagos Can Teach Us About Travel

Walking through the middle of North Seymour Island, I quickly notice my steps occupy just a tiny sliver of the island’s expanse. I’m traversing a land that is centuries old, and it seems like I’ve...

Exploring Huacahuasi Valley, Peru's Best Kept Secret

Unlike the revered Inca and Salkantay trails, the Lares route to Machu Picchu flies largely under the radar for most travelers. Developed by Mountain Lodges of Peru in late 2015, the trail blends the intimacy...

'DamNation': “Desert Goddess” Remembers Arizona’s Glen Canyon

When the Glen Canyon Dam was approved in April 1956, a group of archeologists and river runners set out to document more than 250 culturally significant sites and 125 side canyons that would be flooded...