What Makes a Self-Guided Walking Tour Better Than the Alternative?
There's a version of travel that most people have experienced at least once: standing in a group of strangers, following a person holding a colored umbrella, trying to hear what they're saying over traffic, ambient noise, and the person next to you asking a question that doesn't apply to you. Guided tours have their place, but that format has real limitations. A self-guided walking tour removes most of them. Why Compromise Your Schedule for a Crowd? The core advantage is flexibility. You choose when to start, where to linger, and when to move on. If you want to spend 20 minutes at a single site because it interests you, you can. If you want to skip a stop that doesn't resonate, you can do that too. You're not hostage to the group's pace or the guide's timing. For solo travelers, couples, and small families, this matters a lot. The experience of a city changes when you're not managing other people's schedules on top of your own. What Makes Walking T...