Cadaques Spain

When my kids were little, the 100th day of school was a very big deal. In the days leading up to the 100th day, the excitement was exponential. There were 100th-day projects, 100th-day activities, and 100th-day surprises—all culminating in a 100th-day celebration with a guest appearance by Zero the Hero (a masked superhero played by their teacher’s fiancé). 

I never questioned why the 100th day of school was such a big deal. I was knee-deep in 100 Honey Nut Cheerios, 100 LifeSavers, and 100 cotton balls—all glued to neon construction paper courtesy of Elmer. Elementary school was a blur of sticky little fingers wreaking havoc on our black labs and white sofas.

The 100th day of school. For teachers—a way to nurture a love of math. For parents—a categorical mess.

This is my 100th post. I’m as excited by this number as any 1st-grader about to meet their first superhero. To mark the occasion, I won’t abuse processed oats or hard candy. I won’t use glue. Instead, I’ll list 100 places I want to go.

As a point of clarification, these are not 100 places to visit before you die, not the top 100 places to visit in 2025, and definitely not 100 places to see after you die (wow, sometimes Google suggestions are entirely off the mark).

Just 100 (amazing) places.

Google list

Lists of lists

My travel wish list has lived in my phone’s Notes App for years, quietly snowballing with conversations overheard in coffee shops, inspiring Instagram posts, friend recommendations, and sidebars in Travel + Leisure magazines. I’ve grouped them into a few broad categories to add structure. But that’s about it. A random, cobbled assortment of (amazing) places to go. 100 places to inspire your next trip. 100 places to add to your travel wish list.

Do you have a travel wish list? 

It’s time to create one.

Basil's Bar
Mustique

Counting to 100

Listing these 100 places was an interesting exercise—sort of like time travel. I thought back to how, years ago, my list was filled with fancy beach hotels in Mexico—places with kids’ clubs so I could have lunch with my husband without cutting quesadillas into poquito pieces. Back then, Caribbean resorts mesmerized me with miles of pristine coastline where my kids would argue over one square foot of sand.

Later, my list included glamorous city hotels so Daniel and I could dine at Michelin-starred restaurants and sit for hours at sidewalk cafés. The kids were the ideal ages to stay with grandparents. Grandparents who thought sno-cones for lunch was perfectly acceptable. 

Kids overlooking hotel/village
Montenegro (even from behind, Ella looks completely unimpressed)

As the kids got older, we found places with activities we could do as a family—adventurous spots that didn’t solely revolve around the beach or pool. Our kids will deny it, but they hated hiking from the ages of 8-18. Daniel and I selfishly marched them up mountains, forcing them to admire views in places like Montenegro, Mallorca, and Montana. The only times our kids got along was when they were lagging fifty feet behind, complaining about these (their words) god-awful, miserable hikes. They cried child abuse. We hiked faster.

Now, they act like they are hiking gods. Jimmy Chin is Ella’s idol. Chase races us to the summit. Parenting is a thankless job.

100 (Amazing) Places To Go 

It’s worth mentioning this list is aspirational. If you hope to find budget-friendly and easy-to-get-to destinations, you’re reading the wrong blog. But—if you’re hoping to get inspired and find a few splurge-worthy vacation spots, read on—100 very expensive ideas await!

And lastly, those marked ( * ) are currently at the tippy top of my list.

Pikaia Lodge exterior
Pikaia Lodge, Ecuador

Resorts

*Pikaia Lodge, Ecuador

Six Senses Duoro Valley, Portugal

Our Habitas Atacama, Chile

*Isla Secas, Panama

Amangalla, Sri Lanka

Passalacqua, Lake Como, Italy

*Rosewood Kona Village, Hawaii

Susafa, Italy

Six Senses Zighy Bay, Oman

Kachi Lodge, Bolivia

*Chablé Yucatan, Mexico

NIHI Sumba, Indonesia

Hotel Esencia, Mexico

Paradero Todos Santos, Mexico

Sublime Comporta, Portugal

Eteréo, Mexico

Rosewood Vienna, Austria

Room view Forestis
Forestis Dolomites

Adventure Hotels and Lodges

*Forestis Dolomites, Italy

Tordrillo Mountain Lodge, Alaska

The Three Chimneys, Isle of Skye

*Eriro, Austria

Highland Base, Iceland

Nekupe, Nicaragua

Puquio, Peru

Wilderness Mombo Camp, Botswana

Rosewood Cape Kidnappers, New Zealand

Kisawa Sanctuary, Mozambique

Ilmanaq Lodge, Iceland

Maroma, A Belmond Hotel, Riviera Maya, Mexico

*Shinta Mani Mustang, Nepal

Cheetah Plains Private Game Reserve, South Africa

*Awasi Patagonia, Chile

Taylor River Lodge, Colorado, USA

Shangri La Muscat Canyon Wadi Rum, Jordan

Tierra Patagonia, Chile

Jack’s Camp, Botswana

Hotel Foroyar, Faroe Islands

Fogo Island Inn, Newfoundland

The Omnia, Zermatt, Switzerland

One&Only Gorilla’s Nest, Rwanda

Al Maha, Dubai

Moudira suite
Al Moudira, Egypt

Boutique Hotels

*Al Moudira, Egypt

Farmhouse Inn, CA

The Ned Hotel, London

Borgo Santo Pietro, Tuscany, Italy

Son Blanc Farmhouse, Menorca, Spain

Ellerman House, CapeTown

Venice Venice Hotel, Italy

Single Thread Farm, CA

*Ett Hem, Sweden

Aman Rosa Alpina, Dolomites, Italy

Piaule Catskill, NY

The Ned NoMad, NY

The Tokyo EDITION, Tokyo

Hasbrouck House, NY

La Samanna, A Belmond Hotel, St. Martin

Dawn Ranch, CA

Silversands Beach House, Grenada

Casa Polanco, Mexico City

Bishop’s Lodge, Auberge Resorts Collection, Santa Fe, NM

Hotel Sanders, Copenhagen

Post Ranch Inn, CA

The Rooster Antiparos, Greece

*Eleven Rio Palena Lodge, Chile

TRUNK, Tokyo

Palazzo Margherita, Italy

Lime Wood, UK

Splendido, A Belmond Hotel, Portofino, Italy

White Barn Inn, Auberge Resorts Collection, Kennebunk, Maine

Goaty's
Petit St Vincent, Caribbean

Private Islands

*Petit St Vincent, Caribbean

Miavana, Madagascar

Bawah Reserve, Indonesia

*Naoshima, Japan

Kokomo Private Island Resort, Fiji

Kudadoo Maldives Private Island

Bears at Katmai
Alaska

Destinations

*Alaska

Sardinia, Italy

*Svalbard, Sweden

Namibia

Galapagos Islands

Gstaad, Switzerland

Nepal

Jordan

Malta

*Faroe Islands

Aselund, Norway

Kerala, India

South Georgia Island

Saxony, Germany

*Oaxaca, Mexico

Bemond Orient Express
Orient Express

Alternative Travel

*The Venice-Simplon Orient Express, A Belmond Train

Nour El Nil, The Nile River Boat, Egypt

Koks exterior

Koks, Faroe Islands

Restaurants

*Koks, Faroe Islands

Den, Tokyo

Quince, San Francisco

Cosme, New York City

Alinea, Chicago

*Single Thread, CA

Florilége, Tokyo

Funke, Los Angeles

*The top of my wish list (subject to change)

Website

100, and counting

I started this blog, (I mean, website), in 2018 with a handful of subscribers and even fewer Instagram followers. Today, I’ve reached my 100th post, have several thousand subscribers, and over 10K Instagram followers. No one is more surprised by these stats than me—and probably my daughter. 

I love this blog website blog. It’s given me a creative outlet beyond helping my kids find 100-round things to glue to construction paper. It’s taken my travels to new levels, as I’m constantly thinking about how to best describe what I’m seeing and experiencing, which, in turn, helps me see and experience things differently. 100 posts (often with suspect grammar and incorrect punctuation) about travel.

What’s the point?

I think about this list. What’s the point? I won’t get through 10% of it in my lifetime. But that’s precisely the point. The list will change as I change. Some places will fall off my radar as others replace them. Some will make no sense—did I really want to go to Easter Island??? Others will attempt to recapture those years when my kids waddled along the beach in saggy, swimmy diapers. 

I’ll never finish my list. I’ll never win. The hard-core list makers of the world might have trouble with this concept. I know I do. Or, I did. Until I realized that’s the best part: adding, subtracting, and multiplying (the math metaphors are neverending!) destinations. It’s ok to lose.

My kids are adults now. They stopped believing in Zero the Hero around the same time they found out about the tooth fairy. But I thank the teachers, especially Mrs. Haese and her long-suffering husband Derek (aka Zero the Hero), for doing their job. My kids can count. And because they can count, they have lists of their own. Lists that will expand and change as their lives expand and change. 

Those elementary school years are a sticky, messy blur. My clearest memories are from our family vacations. So, I’ll keep adding.

Will my list look completely different in ten years? Or even five?

I’m counting on it.

by: Jamie Edwards

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