
Stories
The Art of Arriving With Nowhere to Be
Almost every traveler arrives with a version of the same instinct: fill the days, see everything, come home with proof it was worth it. We watch that instinct loosen, reliably, around day two.
It usually starts small — skipping a planned stop because lunch ran long and no one minded, staying at the pool an extra hour, letting a conversation with a stranger reroute an afternoon. Nothing on the original plan was wrong. It's that somewhere along the way, being somewhere started to matter more than seeing everything.
We design journeys with that shift in mind from the start — enough structure that nothing important is missed, enough room that nothing has to be rushed. It's a small design choice with an outsized effect on how a trip is actually remembered.