Kansikuva näyttelystä Where to Go Next

Where to Go Next

Podcast by Normand Schafer

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Kulttuuri & vapaa-aika

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Can’t decide where to travel next? Let Where to Go Next be your guide. In every episode, we explore exciting destinations, seasonal travel tips, and trending getaways to help you plan the perfect trip. From tropical escapes and cultural city breaks to once-in-a-lifetime bucket list adventures, we bring together expert insights, practical hacks, and inspirational stories to help you travel with confidence. Whether you're planning a quick weekend away or a long-haul adventure, we’ll help you choose the right place. Tune in, get inspired, and always know where to go next.

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jakson Where to Go Next in Fiji After You Land: Start with a Smooth Te Waka Welcome kansikuva

Where to Go Next in Fiji After You Land: Start with a Smooth Te Waka Welcome

In this episode we talk about Te Waka, a luxury transport and logistics company in Fiji, and why the “where to go next” question often begins the moment you arrive at the airport. If you’re planning Fiji, start at Far and Away Adventures.com and connect with our team at https://farandawayadventures.com [https://farandawayadventures.com] so the first steps of your trip—arrival, transfers, and touring days—are as smooth as the destination itself. Normand Schafer interviews James, co-founder and managing director of Te Waka, about what travelers should know when they want stress-free movement through Fiji, whether they’re heading straight to a resort, splitting time across regions, or adding custom touring experiences along the way. James explains that Te Waka is known for reliable, luxury-focused transport services and seamless logistics, and he begins by describing what happens right after you land at Nadi International Airport. Te Waka has a presence at the airport, including an arrivals lounge environment, and trained team members and drivers who welcome guests professionally. James describes the meet-and-greet process, including name placards for arriving passengers, and emphasizes efficiency—getting clients into quality vehicles and onto their journey quickly so the trip begins with calm rather than confusion. For many travelers, that first hour sets the tone of the entire vacation, and the conversation highlights why premium transport can make Fiji feel easier right away. Normand asks what elevates Te Waka beyond basic transfers, and James gives an answer that becomes a theme: Te Waka is not providing a transfer service; it is providing an experience. He describes how their professionally trained drivers share their perspective on Fiji and help guests understand what to expect at the resort or hotel ahead. Whether the ride is a shorter transfer toward Denarau or a longer drive toward Fiji’s Coral Coast, including resort areas like Shangri-La, James says the intention is to make the journey part of the holiday. That’s especially valuable if you’re trying to decide where to go next, because how you move between places affects how rested and present you feel when you arrive.

21. touko 2026 - 9 min
jakson Where to Go Next in the Pacific: Tech That Helps You Build the Perfect Island Mix kansikuva

Where to Go Next in the Pacific: Tech That Helps You Build the Perfect Island Mix

In this episode, we talk about Tour Plan Pacific with Paul and how travel technology supports the kind of trip many travelers want next: a Pacific Islands itinerary that’s customized, experience-rich, and easy to travel with. Far and Away Adventures.com and https://farandawayadventures.com [https://farandawayadventures.com] are included early because choosing where to go next is only half the challenge—building a seamless plan across islands, hotels, transfers, and experiences is what turns an idea into a great trip. Normand Schafer welcomes Paul and frames Tour Plan Pacific as a travel technology leader supporting tour operators and destination management companies. Paul explains that Tour Plan operates across the Pacific and focuses on inbound operators and DMCs, providing software that automates back-office workflows, speeds up bookings, supports product distribution, and generates the documentation travelers depend on. We translate that into what it means for someone deciding where to go next: the more organized and responsive the system behind a trip is, the easier it becomes to mix destinations, add experiences, and make changes without stress. Paul describes how Tour Plan clients can generate vouchers and itineraries from the system and deliver them digitally, so travelers can access key information on devices while traveling. That digital approach supports modern travel preferences and reduces the confusion that can come from paper vouchers and scattered confirmations. The conversation also highlights the real advantage of technology when plans shift. Normand points out that changes happen—hotels can become unavailable, transfers can change, and travelers often adjust preferences mid-planning—and Paul explains that Tour Plan clients can apply changes quickly across multiple bookings and notify travelers almost instantly. This is particularly valuable in the South Pacific, where time zones and distance can slow communication if systems aren’t modern. We also talk about what travelers are seeking in the Pacific right now. Paul sees a trend toward cultural experiences rather than only classic beach resort travel, and he notes a strong push toward everything digital, including easy access and multi-language capability where needed. That digital ecosystem doesn’t just make travel smoother—it can expand what you discover. Paul shares a Fiji example: he found the Sleeping Giant Zipline in Nadi through a client’s online offerings, tried it, and loved it. That story illustrates how online distribution can surface experiences travelers might not have known existed, helping people build more personalized “where to go next” itineraries. Normand adds an important planning lesson: when a trip is coordinated as a package, suppliers know who is handling each service, transfers and hotels have aligned information, and travelers have one clear plan instead of disconnected bookings that don’t communicate. The episode ends with practical advice for travelers choosing companies: look for a well-built website, strong information, and reliable backup support—signs that the company can keep you informed and help quickly if anything changes. If you’re deciding where to go next in the Pacific and want a trip plan that’s smooth, flexible, and customized around your priorities, connect with Far and Away Adventures and let a specialist design the itinerary and handle the details end to end.

17. touko 2026 - 7 min
jakson Where to Go Next on Viti Levu: Pacific Harbour for Waterfalls, Villages, and Suva Add-Ons kansikuva

Where to Go Next on Viti Levu: Pacific Harbour for Waterfalls, Villages, and Suva Add-Ons

In this episode, we talk about a “where to go next” move that can change how you experience Fiji: leaving the western resort corridor for a day (or a night) to explore the Pacific Harbour side of Viti Levu—waterfalls, inland scenery, village culture, and optional Suva touring. For help planning and booking this routing into your Fiji itinerary, visit Far and Away Adventures.com and https://farandawayadventures.com [https://farandawayadventures.com] to connect with a specialist. Normand Schafer is joined by Arisha and Edward from TerraTrek and Koromakawa Transfers, and the conversation begins with their goal: helping guests experience Fiji’s culture whether they’re staying at resorts or traveling into the interior for something more immersive. A key theme is that many visitors spend their entire trip in the western region—areas like Denarau—and never see what the mainland interior can offer. Arisha and Edward describe how traveling inland reveals eco lodges, villages, and a dramatic landscape of mountains, winding roads, rolling hills, and panoramic overlooks. Norm adds his own perspective, emphasizing how breathtaking the inland roads and scenery can be, and how those views can become the “unexpected highlight” of a Fiji trip. The episode then highlights a signature Pacific Harbour-region experience you can plan as your next step: a 4x4 waterfall tour. The guests describe a route that begins with a short on-road segment and then shifts into a longer off-road drive into the interior before guests hike to the waterfall site. They mention the fun detail that there are two waterfalls at the location—one deeper and one shallower—adding variety and making it feel like more than a single stop. They also note that conditions after rain can make the off-road portion more adventurous, which appeals to travelers who want a little rugged excitement. For travelers who want cultural connection, the guests describe village visits offered through Koromakawa. Villages can showcase locally made products such as baskets, handicrafts, and artifacts, and travelers can purchase items and support communities directly. Norm frames this as an easy way to make a trip feel more meaningful and connected. The conversation includes practical village etiquette tips: bring a sulu or sarong, dress respectfully, and cover shoulders. On the water-adventure side, Arisha and Edward explain that their transfers can connect guests to partnered activity providers in the Pacific Harbour area, letting travelers choose activities once on location—examples mentioned include river tubing and shark-diving style adventures. That leads into a helpful planning point: Pacific Harbour can work as a quick day trip or as a base for more time, because travelers can choose shorter scenic trips, longer half-day options, or combine the day with a Suva tour afterward. The guests emphasize that travelers can come for part of a day, a full day, or a few days depending on how much they want to do. Seasonality is touched on with the mention of November to April as cyclone season and the note that Pacific Harbour gets more rain than other areas, plus a regional highlight: an uprising music festival around October to November for travelers who want to combine exploration with a major event. The episode closes with what tends to leave the strongest impression: the waterfall site itself and a mangrove-planting experience where guests plant and can return later to see their contribution. If you’re wondering where to go next in Fiji to add depth beyond resort life, Pacific Harbour and the inland routes around it can deliver scenery, culture, and adventure in one move. When you’re ready, Far and Away Adventures can help you plan and book the right day-trip or overnight routing so it fits smoothly into your itinerary.

15. touko 2026 - 10 min
jakson Where to Go Next: Tonga’s Island Groups Explained by Tonga Tourism’s CEO kansikuva

Where to Go Next: Tonga’s Island Groups Explained by Tonga Tourism’s CEO

In this episode, we talk about the Kingdom of Tonga with Viliami Takao, CEO of Tonga Tourism, and why Tonga may be the perfect “where to go next” destination if you want the South Pacific with more daily cultural immersion and less staged tourism. Far and Away Adventures.com and https://farandawayadventures.com [https://farandawayadventures.com] are included early because the biggest decision in Tonga isn’t whether it’s beautiful—it is—it’s which island group (or combination) matches your travel personality, your pace, and the kind of memories you want to create. Normand Schafer welcomes Viliami and frames Tonga as a nation of natural beauty and deep traditions, then asks how Tonga Tourism works and what its mission is. Viliami explains there are two main tourism bodies: the Tonga Tourism Authority is mandated to market the nation globally, while the Ministry of Tourism handles other responsibilities. He also shares that Tonga is rebranding with a new brand planned for November (as stated), and that an important part of the effort is improving websites, social media, and online access for tourism businesses so travelers can find information more easily as Tonga expands marketing abroad. The conversation then moves into the most practical part of the episode: what to see, where to go, and how to think about Tonga beyond whale watching. Whale watching is noted as a major draw, but Viliami emphasizes Tonga’s goal to highlight the full uniqueness of its islands, landscapes, culture, and heritage. A key identity point anchors the episode: Tonga is described as the only remaining kingdom in the Pacific, and its cultural heritage sites are connected to the history of monarchy. Tongatapu is presented as the gateway island with the capital, Nuku’alofa, and key royal and cultural highlights referenced in the episode, such as the palace area and royal tombs, plus additional heritage sites beyond the capital. We then move to Vava’u, described as a beautiful cluster of islands that’s easy to navigate and good for kayaking. Viliami explains how it earned the nickname “port of refuge” because of its sheltered bays and harbors that protect boats from rough weather—an insight that also hints at why the visitor experience can feel calm and water-focused. Ha’apai is discussed as another distinct island group, flatter in landscape with sandy beaches and a different feel, plus active options like kite surfing (as mentioned) and historical stories tied to Tonga’s unification era and modern royal lineage. Normand adds a powerful “Tonga feels real” moment: the marketplace, where vendors bring what they grow and where the local way of life is visible without performance. Viliami explains the town and bush allotment tradition that supports subsistence farming, and he notes seasonal highlights like pineapples and watermelons appearing at certain times of year alongside root crops and staples. The episode also references a major national celebration tied to Tonga’s constitution and flag, with November 4 highlighted and the possibility of extended festivities—useful context if you’re choosing travel dates. If you’re deciding where to go next in the South Pacific, this episode helps you see how Tonga’s island groups differ and what experiences define them. When you’re ready to plan, Far and Away Adventures can help you choose the best island mix and build a seamless itinerary that matches your priorities and pace.

10. touko 2026 - 10 min
Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
Kiva sovellus podcastien kuunteluun, ja sisältö on monipuolista ja kiinnostavaa
Todella kiva äppi, helppo käyttää ja paljon podcasteja, joita en tiennyt ennestään.

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