274 episodios

Though travel and adventure have historically been publicly claimed by men, women have always been part of those narratives, too. Each week, host and Condé Nast Traveler editor Lale Arikoglu shines a light on some of those stories, interviewing female-identifying guests about their most unique travel tales—from going off-grid in the Danish wilderness to country-hopping solo—sharing her own experiences traveling around the globe, and tapping listeners to contribute their own memorable stories. This is a podcast for anyone who is curious about the world—and excited to explore places both near and far from home.
For more from Women Who Travel, visit our website or subscribe to our email newsletter.

Women Who Travel | Condé Nast Traveler Condé Nast Traveler

    • Cultura y sociedad
    • 4,0 • 2 valoraciones

Though travel and adventure have historically been publicly claimed by men, women have always been part of those narratives, too. Each week, host and Condé Nast Traveler editor Lale Arikoglu shines a light on some of those stories, interviewing female-identifying guests about their most unique travel tales—from going off-grid in the Danish wilderness to country-hopping solo—sharing her own experiences traveling around the globe, and tapping listeners to contribute their own memorable stories. This is a podcast for anyone who is curious about the world—and excited to explore places both near and far from home.
For more from Women Who Travel, visit our website or subscribe to our email newsletter.

    Criss Crossing America to Visit Every Baseball Stadium

    Criss Crossing America to Visit Every Baseball Stadium

    Tiffany Mathias, a self-confessed baseball stadium chaser (and, incidentally, Lale’s sister-in-law), recounts her quest to visit every ballpark in the US, touring the stadiums, chatting to ushers and fans, and sampling the often eccentric local concessions—often as a solo traveler. To watch a game in a new stadium, says Tiffany, is “to be in her happy place.”

    • 27 min
    How Plants Help Us Understand Our Heritage

    How Plants Help Us Understand Our Heritage

    Life begins again in spring, and as the air (and your nostrils) fill with pollen it might be a good time to learn something new about the plants with which we share the earth. To do so, Lale talks to nature writer Jessica J. Lee about how, as she's lived around the world, learning about non-native plants has given her a sense of belonging. From cherry blossoms to seaweed to tea, plants cross borders by themselves, or because we move them for very different reasons.

    • 27 min
    An Astrologer Guides Our Travel Plans

    An Astrologer Guides Our Travel Plans

    With summer travels on the horizon, Lale taps professional astrologer—and Women Who Travel columnist—Steph Koyfman to read her chart and guide her through the season and the rest of the year. Plus, we hear from three listeners who are thinking about relocating, getting citizenship in a new place, and undertaking a life changing trek, and turn to Steph for clarity.

    • 26 min
    Bear Encounters in Nevada and Chasing Poachers on the Masai Mara

    Bear Encounters in Nevada and Chasing Poachers on the Masai Mara

    Traveling everywhere from the savannahs of Tanzania to the mountains of Montana, Dr. Rae Wynn Grant is on a mission to save the world’s most endangered species. Lale chats with the wildlife ecologist, podcaster, author and co-host of Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom to hear stories from her new memoir, WILD LIFE: Finding My Purpose in an Untamed World (including a dicey near death experience), how she’s advocating for better representation in the environmental science space, and why everyone should have access to the outdoors.

    • 31 min
    Aviation Pioneers: Amelia Earhart and Bessie Coleman's Record-Breaking Flights

    Aviation Pioneers: Amelia Earhart and Bessie Coleman's Record-Breaking Flights

    As Women's History Month comes to a close, we dive into the stories of two pioneering pilots: Amelia Earhart and Bessie Coleman. Yet while the legend of Earhart’s aviation feats and mysterious disappearance has long gripped the public imagination, Coleman’s equally impressive career as the first African-American woman to hold a pilot license is a story that still largely goes untold. Lale chats with Dorothy Cochrane, a curator at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, to find out more about both pilots record-breaking flights, the risks they took, the individual challenges they faced, and the ingenious ways they advocated for themselves.

    • 27 min
    Love, Loss, and Noodles in Cambodia

    Love, Loss, and Noodles in Cambodia

    This week Lale chats with author Chantha Nguon—along with her daughter Clara and co-author Kim Green—about her new memoir Slow Noodles: A Cambodian Memoir of Love, Loss, and Family Recipes. Listen to hear the trio share stories of their travels across Cambodia and collaborations in the kitchen, while Chantha reflects on life as a Cambodian refugee, life in 1960s Battambang, and the dishes that have always kept her connected to home.

    • 26 min

Reseñas de clientes

4,0 de 5
2 valoraciones

2 valoraciones

Alainar529 ,

Needed but not sure if in this way

We need to talk about women and traveling for sure (I am a woman traveler who frequently travels alone) but this podcast is just dripping with privilege. Not sure how to feel about it, I wish they could find a different way to talk about the thing I love the most.

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