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Archives April 2023

10 of the most spectacular beaches in Malta, Gozo and Comino

Tucked beneath Sicily in the Mediterranean Sea, Malta is a hotspot in every way. Its sun-drenched shores and diverse history and culture have made it incredibly popular with travelers looking for an island getaway with lots to offer.

The beaches here tend to be rocky and sea-sculpted, with fewer soft and sandy curves of Mediterranean coastline than you might expect. But the locals have made the most of every little cove available and watersports are huge here – Malta is known as Europe’s best diving destination but even the snorkeling in the incredibly clear waters dotted with historic wrecks is world-class. 

Whether you’re keen on splashing around in the waves, spending an afternoon relaxing on the sand or a picturesque rocky cove, or enjoying a leisurely lunch of local seafood, these are the best beaches to be found in Malta and its smaller sister islands of Gozo and Comino.

1. Golden Bay

Best beach for soft sand

Malta and Gozo don’t offer many big sandy beaches, but there are a few gems. Golden Bay, on Malta’s northwestern coast, arguably the most beautiful, is a wide curve of orange-gold sand that shelves gently into the dark-blue Mediterranean. This is a place to lie down on the island’s softest sand, mull over the watersports and boat trips on offer, or peruse the menus of nearby restaurants overlooking the bay.

Planning tip: Golden Bay has easy access points, making it an ideal option if you’re traveling with small kids and strollers.

2. Mellieħa Bay

Best beach for water sports

You’re never far from a watersports provider in Malta. Mellieħa Bay is one of the best beaches for messing about on the water, with windsurfing, kitesurfing, waterskiing, canoeing, banana boating and parasailing all on offer. This is Malta’s largest sandy beach and it has a reliable northeasterly breeze that makes it ideal for wind-based water sports. Other top choices for water sports include Xlendi, Marsalforn and Golden Bay.

Planning tip: The range of facilities and activities on offer make Mellieħa a popular beach for both visitors and locals. It’s not the place to go if you’re looking for a quiet corner in a tranquil spot.

A young child sits at the side of a lagoon looking out at the swimmers
Visit the Blue Lagoon in the late afternoon to avoid the crowds. Paul Biris / Getty Images

3. Blue Lagoon

Best beach for swimming

Beating many strong contenders, Comino’s Blue Lagoon snags the title of Malta’s top swimming spot. Ringed by rocks and framed by gleaming white sand, the island’s limpid and sheltered inland sea glows periwinkle bright, and it’s a heavenly place to swim.

Planning tip: The Blue Lagoon is definitely not a secret, so in high season, you’ll be sharing the pool with a few hundred others. A better option is to skip the hordes by taking a boat trip here in the afternoon after most people have left for the day.

4. Fomm ir-Riħ

Best beach for peace and quiet

Fomm ir-Riħ – meaning “mouth of the wind” – is Malta’s most remote beach. A steep and sometimes tricky path leads down to it from the small town of Baħrija on the northwestern Maltese coast. Such difficulty brings rewards, however, and if you’re looking for peace and quiet, gin-clear water and magnificent coastal views, this is the beach for you.

Planning tip: The walk down takes around 20 minutes, but if the scramble doesn’t appeal, you can always approach by boat.

5. Wied il-Għasri

Best place for snorkeling

Snorkelers take note: Malta is underwater heaven. On the Gozo coast, Wied il-Għasri is a coastal chasm that creates a narrow river of seawater, finishing in a tiny sand and shingle beach. Access to the beach is via a staircase hacked into the rock. Some of Malta’s finest snorkeling can be had by launching off into the channel, although it is best avoided in rough weather.

Detour: Other prime snorkeling spots include the rocky inlet of Mgarr ix-Xini and the natural sea pool of Għar Lapsi. If scuba is more your thing, there are plenty of diving centers; a popular spot for diving is the Blue Hole near Gozo’s Dwejra Bay.

6. Għajn Tuffieħa

Best beach for sunbathing

Neighbor to popular Golden Bay, and sharing the same lovely outlook and soft, silky, butterscotch-colored sand, Għajn Tuffieħa is a quieter choice for sun-worshipping. Unlike Golden Bay, it’s not backed by hotels, and the slightly longer walk to get there also helps to thin out the crowds. When all you want to do is lie in the sun and occasionally cool off in the sea, this is an ideal choice.

View of Ramla Bay, Gozo, Malta.
Ramla Bay is a great choice for families with young kids. Petroos / Getty Images

7. Ramla Bay

Best beach for families

Easily accessible by bus and car, the terracotta-colored sands of Gozo’s Ramla Bay are backed by a restaurant that hires out umbrellas and sunbeds. The beach slopes gently into the water, the views up across the hills are delightful, and there’s a scramble up to Calypso’s Cave to consider if anyone’s getting bored. Ramla Bay is one of Malta’s best family beaches, although Golden Bay, Mellieħa Bay and Paradise Bay are also worthy contenders for the title.

8. Mġarr ix-Xini

Best beach for lunch

Reached via a narrow, winding road, Gozo’s Mġarr ix-Xini (Port of the Galleys) was once the island’s main harbor for the Knights of St John, and the rocky bay’s pebbled beach is now the location of possibly Malta’s most laid-back beachside restaurant. Service at the 10-table Rew Rew can sometimes be a little too relaxed, but lunch plates overflowing with seafood – including excellent calamari – salad and homemade potato chips make the experience all worthwhile.

Planning tip: Try to visit on a weekday for a shot at securing a spot in the adjacent car park, or charter a boat around the coast from Xlendi or Mġarr harbor.

People are enjoying sunny day at Saint Peter's pool near Marsaxlokk, Malta
Escape the heat with a refreshing dip in the waters of St Peter’s Pool. trabantos / Shutterstock

9. St Peter’s Pool and Il-Kalanka Bay

Best natural swimming pools

Natural swimming pools, sea-sculpted from the coastal rock, are a scenic summer highlight in Malta. Located on the southeastern coast, St Peter’s Pool is one of the loveliest – a ladle-shaped scoop out of the rock that forms a sheltered lagoon for a swim, after which you can bask seal-like on the surrounding rocks.

Detour: Nearby, and usually much quieter, is the swimming hole at Il-Kalanka Bay. Note the platform for jumping into the water at Il-Kalanka is higher than at St Peter’s, so extra care should be taken.

10. Għar Lapsi

Best place to leap into the sea

Worthy of special mention is Għar Lapsi, a rocky inlet that lies at the base of Malta’s Dingli Cliffs. It’s popular with snorkelers, divers, and especially children who like leaping into the sea from the rocks. Offering brilliant views of Għar Lapsi’s rocky cove, Carmen’s Bar & Restaurant is another top spot for a relaxed meal.

Plan your summer vacation to Northern Michigan

Where some families have recipes that they hand down through generations, my family has canoes and sand dunes.

Every summer since my grandmother was a girl, my family has made the trek from wherever we are living to a little lake cottage in Northern Michigan. We spend our days riding bikes and playing in the lake. We take long rock-collecting walks and sand dune hikes and get ice cream in town. In the evenings, we light beach fires and watch while the sun electrifies the sky.

It’s idyllic and timeless. The tradition of it has trained me to anticipate my week of relaxation. I plan dinner outfits all year. I used to tell Michigan stories the way some people told band camp stories in a certain movie. It becomes more than a week at the beach. It becomes a touchstone to reset, recalibrate and reconnect to the parts of me I cherish and the people who love me no matter what.

This doesn’t have to be a family tradition. Taking a week (or more) to disconnect from full schedules and busy days to fill your days with the things that bring you joy is an experience anyone can create. Here are my top tips to help you make this happen.

Planning some time on the beach? Here are 9 of the very best in Michigan

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Search for the signature stone in Petoskey, float the Crystal River in Glen Arbor or chill by one of the many lakes near Frankfort © Sarah Stocking, Lonely Planet

Step 1: Choose where to base yourself

Northern Michigan is tailor-made for road tripping. There are small hamlets to stop in, parks to camp in and boundless adventures to be had. But in order to really create a slow-paced, connective and fun vacation, I recommend finding a cottage, bed and breakfast or small motel in which to base yourself for the week. Day trips are abundant if you get bored (we rarely do). Here are some of the best places to stay.

Frankfort

Vibes: Surf town meets Americana charm. Frankfort has a thriving main street that deadends into a gorgeous white sand beach. Ice cream shops mixed with cute boutiques and a plethora of t-shirt shops make for a fun stroll.

Do: Rent paddle boards and bikes from Crystal Lake Adventures Sports and have a blast in the water and on the incredible bike trails around town.

Eat: Storm Cloud Brewery is the local microbrewery with a tasting room at one end of town (with food trucks) and a restaurant at the other. I also particularly like Goody’s Seafood Shack, which is great for a calamari snack while the kids play at the playground on the harbor across the street. Finally, Port City Smokehouse has fish sandwiches for takeaway, trout dips for cocktail hour fare and fresh cuts to make at home.

Stay: Harbor Lights Resort sits right on Frankfort Beach. Its simple, straightforward rooms and condos are just what you need when returning wet and sandy from a day at the beach. Alternatively, look for home rentals on Crystal Lake. The smaller lake is ideal for boating and swimming.

On a road trip? Here’s our guide to the best driving routes in Michigan

Glen Arbor

Vibes: Art Galleries and waterfront dining amidst outdoor adventure haven. Located on the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lake Shore, Glen Arbor is great for those stretches of empty beaches, but it’s also surrounded by smaller lakes, making this a good place to rent a little cottage.

Do: Rent a canoe or kayak and float the Crystal River. It meanders through overhanging forests and reedy eddies, making it a magical nature moment. Bring a picnic and plenty of water as it’s a long day.

Eat: Cherry’s Public House takes full advantage of local cherries and makes jams and pies – even its seasoned fries have a hint of cherry. But the best part is the outdoor patio seating in the front and back.

Stay: This is where to pick a lake and find a cottage. The Glen Lakes have numerous vacation rentals with listings in all the usual places.

Petoskey

Vibes: Posh sophistication in a quaint beach town package, perfect for a romantic getaway or a weekend with friends. Petoskey is the hub for resorters who stay in the surrounding area, like Bay Harbor, Bay View and Harbor Springs, among others. The town has excellent shopping, a summer concert series and movies in the park for evening fun.

Do: Head to Lavender Hill Farm. Inland Northern Michigan is filled with gorgeous farms, and Lavender Hill is exactly as beautiful as it sounds. Plus it smells heavenly.

Eat: For an evening when you want to dress up and eat lavishly, head to Walloon Lake Inn, about 10 miles out of town, where local wines are paired with locally sourced fish.

Stay: Again there are small lakes surrounding Petoskey that are prime for summer vacation rentals. It’s also home to Stafford’s Bay View Inn, a dreamy Victorian inn and resort that harkens back to days when travelers arrived via ferry with their steamer trunks for the entire summer. The wrap-around front porch begs for long, lazy mornings and the lawn chairs await sunset views with a glass of wine.

Step 2: Book your accommodations

Look for cottages around the above towns and book early. If you can start looking in January, that’s best, but there are ALWAYS last-minute options, and TBH, you can’t go wrong when you’re heading Up North. Remember: the important thing is a place to rest your head at the end of the day. You’ll be outside 99.9% of the time, so the decor really doesn’t matter. But be aware. A lot of these cottages have been in the same family for generations and are not in their prime. There are bugs and critters and drafts. There are plenty of posh, remodeled options too, but sometimes the sound of the slamming screen door or the rocking chair creaking on the porch is worth more than all the stars in the rating.

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Learn to paddleboard, bike through the serene countryside and run down the dunes, among other things to do in Northern Michigan © Sarah Stocking, Lonely Planet

Step 3: Plan the best things to do with your days in Northern Michigan

There are some great day trips

  • Mackinac Island is a fantastic day trip. It’s pricey to stay and kitsch to the max, so just cross the bridge for a day and enjoy the old-timey charm of this car-free island.

  • If you’re interested in a more cosmopolitan experience, head to Traverse. This sweet city is rapidly rising but with a steady eye toward charm and comfort. The shopping is fabulous, and many wonderful restaurants line the waterfront. I particularly enjoyed an afternoon at the Little Fleet Food Truck park.

  • Head up the Leelanau Peninsula. Fishtown near Leeland is an interesting stop. The fishing shanties that line the mouth of the Leeland River have been in use since the 1800s. Most have been converted into shops, and it’s very atmospheric to roam along the boardwalk. Keep driving up the peninsula admiring the gorgeous coastline and dense old-growth forests until you get to Northport. Stop, eat and meander through this tiny, quaint village.

Climb the dunes

Hiking through Sleeping Bear Dunes is a rush. The run down the dune is a particularly joyful experience – the kind of thing that makes you forget how old you are. It’s a long way back up, though, so take it slow and remember it’s supposed to be fun.

Look for Petoskey stones

Take long walks along the white sand beaches and sift through the sand for a special rock only found here in Northern Michigan and in Florida. The sunburst pattern on the rocks glistens under the water. We like to bring our treasures back to the cottage and keep them in a bowl to admire. Then we return them to the lake at the end of the week.

Experience the best of the outdoors

What do you like? Golf? Tennis? Kayaking? Hiking? Swimming? All of the above? Great. It’s all available. Bring your bikes or rent them when you come to cycle the winding country roads. Spend your days swimming in the clear, cool lakes, feeling the rush of the world fade off. These hikes are almost all in the area (the Empire Bluff one is my favorite). Or, bring a good book (or buy one at a local bookstore), find an Adirondack chair, sit back and enjoy. I would caution less is more – don’t plan too much and trust yourself to find bliss.

Traveling as a family? Here are the best things to do in Michigan with kids

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The produce in Northern Michigan is incredible. There are farm stands along all the highways and farmer’s markets in the small towns, and many of the restaurants are farm-to-table © Yolanda Gonzalez Photography, Patt_c, Garry Ennis, Getty Images

Step 4: Shop and eat the best local produce

Scout out grocery stores and markets. There are farmers markets in Frankfort and Glen Arbor throughout the summer. These are the best places to pick up fresh local produce. So much is grown in the farms surrounding these beach towns — strawberries in the early summer, blueberries in June and oh, the cherries. There are plenty of u-pick places too! Farm stands dot the highways with fresh eggs, fruits and vegetables. Stop and get your fare for the week. Pick a few nights you want to go out for meals, but eating in makes the days longer and the evenings more relaxed. In all the small towns, there are specialty food shops with cheeses, bread, dips and other delicious items to build your cheese board with. The local grocery stores sell wine, beer and other liquor. Stock up on s’more fixings and you’ll be good to go!

Step 5: Decide how you will get there

We always road trip in. We used to travel from Colorado, taking two days to get to Chicago, where we’d stay with grandparents before making the trek up the mitten to M-22. The plusses of driving in are that you can load up your car with everything you need — bikes, paddle boards and sand toys galore. But if you don’t have the time or inclination, fly into Traverse City and rent a car.

Step 6: Pack your bags

I’m going to be honest with you and admit that I never pack light for Michigan. I change my clothes at least three times a day. I like a morning outfit for breakfast, usually something cozy but cute. I need hiking clothes and biking clothes. I need ALL my swimsuits. I also need cute sundresses with a light wrap or cardigan for dinner outfits, and finally, I need jeans and sweatshirts for the evening. You can make your own decisions of course, but you will want to dress in layers. Mornings and evenings can be chilly, rain is always possible and its never particularly hot. Men should have collared golf shirts or button downs for nicer dinners. Sundresses are perfect for women. Bring water-worthy shoes for river trips and dune hiking– something like Tevas or Chacos – that are more than a flip-flop.

5 summer solstice celebrations in the northern hemisphere

For some countries, the summer solstice marks the official start of summer, when the longest day – and shortest night – of the year is a time for revelry, steeped in local culture and history.

In 2024, the official solstice falls on June 20, but these celebrations in the northern hemisphere run from June 20 to June 23. Here are some of the unique ways this event is marked.

1. Stonehenge – Wiltshire, England

The purpose of the impressive boulder formations of Stonehenge may still be cloaked in mystery, but they serve as the perfect backdrop of a phenomenal – and arguably the most famous – observation of sunrise and sunset. Believed to be the site of ancient Druid solstice celebrations, visitors have flocked to the site for years.

One-day access to the inner prehistoric stone circle allows travelers to face what’s known as the Heel Stone to catch the sunrise over the giant boulder.

As the popularity of the free event grew, thousands of people have been known to camp out nearby (no camping is permitted at the site) days in advance while donning traditional Celtic attire. English Heritage live streams the event on its YouTube channel, so you can tune in from wherever you are in the world. It will start with sunset on the evening of Thursday, June 20, and sunrise on Friday, June 21.

A teenage boy dressed in traditional clothing with colorful beads and feathers dances during the Summer Solstice Indigenous Arts Festival in Ottawa.
Celebrating Indigenous culture is a major part of summer solstice celebrations in Ottawa © Paul McKinnon / Getty Images

2. Summer Solstice Indigenous Festival – Ottawa, Canada

A diversity of cultures is represented in Ottawa’s three-day Summer Solstice Indigenous Festival, which runs June 21 to 23 this year, fusing the longest day of the year with National Indigenous Peoples Day on June 21. The area was the traditional territory of the Algonquin people before Queen Victoria declared Ottawa Canada’s capital.

During the festival, there’s food by celebrated Indigenous chefs, traditional costumes and cultural events. A visually captivating Pow Wow that brings out the best talent in the surrounding areas, all vying for $75,000 in prizes. Admission is free, but there is a fee for events and workshops.

3. Fairbanks and Anchorage – Alaska, US

About one-third of the state of Alaska lies north of the Arctic Circle, therefore a solstice celebration can be found pretty much wherever you land. Up north, Fairbanks goes for good old Americana with the Alaska Goldpanners hosting the Midnight Sun Baseball Game, a tradition since the town’s beginnings in 1906. The game kicks off at 10pm and pauses close to midnight for the singing of the Alaska Flag Song.

A little further south, Anchorage gets 22 hours of daylight, and they use all of them with the Anchorage Mayor’s Marathon and Half Marathon on June 22, with the event in 2024 marking the marathon’s 50th year.

A pair of girls wearing white dresses and floral crowns hold hands as they dance around a maypole behind another group of people holding hands. Summer Solstice is known as Midsummer in Sweden.
Sweden’s Midsummer is a traditional festival that includes eating pickled herring, wearing floral crowns and, of course, dancing around maypoles © Kent Klich / Getty Images

4. Midsummer – Stockholm, Sweden

Midsummer in Sweden is sweet with romance, with traditional maypole dancing and gathering wildflowers for floral crowns. Tradition states that if you place seven types of flowers under your pillow at Midsummer, you will dream of your spouse. But who has time to sleep?

For the weekend surrounding the solstice, people have traditionally filled the streets for a never-ending party, washing down pickled herring and dill-laced new potatoes with spiced schnapps and plenty of drinking songs; the dirtier, the better. Celebrations are family-oriented and usually happen out in the countryside. For those unable to snag an invite to someone’s home, the open-air Skansen Museum in Stockholm serves as a good alternative with three days of activities from June 21 to 23.

Mountains are glowing red and orange in the darkness, lit by many fires
See Austrian mountains ablaze in the Tyrol on midsummer © Andreas Mohaupt / Getty Images

5. Mountaintop bonfires – Tyrol, Austria

When the summer solstice comes around, Austrians play with fire. Their tradition of lighting bonfires on mountaintops not only looks spectacular but is also rooted in the Middle Ages, when flames were used to ward off evil spirits.

In the 1700s, the fires were re-cast to fight against the imminent threat of invasion by Napoleon, and after the victory, Austrians pledged themselves to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Since then, the mountains of the Tyrol have been set ablaze annually in dramatic form, save for a brief time when they were outlawed by the Nazis. Today, Austrians still honor the shortest night of the year but have incorporated religious symbols like crosses into the festivities.