You Can Virtually Visit These Vacation Destinations From Your Couch - 2 minutes read
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If spending more time at home lately has you itching to travel, you’re not alone.
While an international flight might not be the best idea right now, a number of parks, museums, and festivals have brought some of the things you might have been able to see on that trip to your living room.
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You can virtually wanter through the catacombs in Paris, Washington DC’s Cherry Blossom Festival, and tour Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park all from your laptop at home. If you’re not sure where you want to go, we also found a site that will take you on a surprise virtual journey to a spot on the globe where you can explore and try to guess where you’ve landed.
This Xbox One S 1TB All-Digital Bundle Comes With a Spare... Read on The Inventory
Click through the slideshow, below, to see some of the virtual tours we’ve found that are worth a look:
Tour the Catacombs in Paris: You can’t go to Paris right now, but you can visit the catacombs. The catacombs have an virtual tour available on its website. Unlike some virtual tours, this one is done through a series of still photographs Take a surprise virtual trip: Roll the dice and virtually travel to a random location around the world with Geoguessr Tour a National Park: You might not be able to go to your favorite National Park right now but that doesn’t mean you can’t visit. Google Arts & Culture has virtual tours available of six National Parks See Washington’s cherry blossoms: If you aren’t going to make it to see the cherry blossoms in Washington, DC this year you can visit them virtually through the National Cherry Blossom Festival’s website. Through April 12th the website is offering free virtual tours Image : Shutterstock Advertisement You can skip ad after 1 second You can go to the next slide after 1 second Continue Walk the Great Wall of China: Ok, so you’re not exactly going to “walk” across the Great Wall, but you can take a virtual tour of the 3,000-mile wall. The China Guide has a virtual tour of the wall up on its site Image : The China Guide 1 / 5
Source: Lifehacker.com
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If spending more time at home lately has you itching to travel, you’re not alone.
While an international flight might not be the best idea right now, a number of parks, museums, and festivals have brought some of the things you might have been able to see on that trip to your living room.
Advertisement
You can virtually wanter through the catacombs in Paris, Washington DC’s Cherry Blossom Festival, and tour Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park all from your laptop at home. If you’re not sure where you want to go, we also found a site that will take you on a surprise virtual journey to a spot on the globe where you can explore and try to guess where you’ve landed.
This Xbox One S 1TB All-Digital Bundle Comes With a Spare... Read on The Inventory
Click through the slideshow, below, to see some of the virtual tours we’ve found that are worth a look:
Tour the Catacombs in Paris: You can’t go to Paris right now, but you can visit the catacombs. The catacombs have an virtual tour available on its website. Unlike some virtual tours, this one is done through a series of still photographs Take a surprise virtual trip: Roll the dice and virtually travel to a random location around the world with Geoguessr Tour a National Park: You might not be able to go to your favorite National Park right now but that doesn’t mean you can’t visit. Google Arts & Culture has virtual tours available of six National Parks See Washington’s cherry blossoms: If you aren’t going to make it to see the cherry blossoms in Washington, DC this year you can visit them virtually through the National Cherry Blossom Festival’s website. Through April 12th the website is offering free virtual tours Image : Shutterstock Advertisement You can skip ad after 1 second You can go to the next slide after 1 second Continue Walk the Great Wall of China: Ok, so you’re not exactly going to “walk” across the Great Wall, but you can take a virtual tour of the 3,000-mile wall. The China Guide has a virtual tour of the wall up on its site Image : The China Guide 1 / 5
Source: Lifehacker.com
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