14 Jan 2026
In 2026, small group adventure tour operator Undiscovered Destinations continues to focus on destinations that were once hard to reach, misunderstood, or overlooked - now explored responsibly, deeply, and with expert local guidance. These are not 'new' places, but places newly accessible to curious, culturally motivated travellers.
From recently opened countries to long-overlooked cultures and landscapes shaped by isolation, these are trips for travellers who want to go beyond the familiar and understand the world through the places that still resist easy travel. Whether crossing deserts once central to trans-Saharan trade, navigating rainforests by dugout canoe, or reaching islands rarely combined in a single journey, these seven itineraries open door others can't.
Angola - Africa's quiet reopening
Angola has long sat just beyond the edges of most travel maps. Visa-free access now removes the final barrier, and this journey takes advantage while the country still feels refreshingly unpolished. From Luanda's layered Atlantic swagger to the vertiginous bends of Serra da Leba, travel moves through landscapes shaped by isolation and history. In the southern desert, the rock art of Tchitundu-Hulu remains virtually untouched, its engravings older than modern borders. Museums exploring independence, post-war recovery and conservation offer perspectives rarely exported, making this an early, quietly confident reintroduction to Angola.
Angola Unveiled - 13 days from £5,495 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £470). Includes local transport, internal flights, accommodation, some meals, entrance fees, and expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 15 Jul, 5 Aug, 16 Sept 2026, and 4 Aug 2027.
Ghana - where belief still belongs
This is West Africa experienced from the inside, led by living cultures rather than staged encounters. Moving from Benin and Togo into Ghana, the journey follows belief systems that remain woven into everyday life. In Ouidah, the annual Voodoo Festival unfolds not as spectacle but as devotion, with rituals performed for the gods, not visitors. Ancient kingdoms, from Abomey to the Ashanti heartland of Kumasi, reveal power, resistance and continuity. From Tamberma fortified houses to Ghana's Atlantic forts, history is encountered in place, not performance - culminating on the coast, where reflection replaces reenactment and culture remains defiantly alive.
Ghana, Togo and Benin Voodoo Festival - 16 days from £3,799 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £495). Includes local transport, accommodation, most meals, entrance fees, and expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 8 Jan 2027.
Comoros - islands off the chart
Rising from the Mozambique Channel, the Comoros are best understood from the ground up. Volcanoes, trade winds and ocean currents have shaped not just the landscape, but the rhythm of life itself. Flying between Grande Comore, Anjouan and Moheli, visitors explore local villages, the capital, and pristine beaches, while energetic travellers can hike through forests or climb Mt Karthala. Here, geography dictates culture, from settlement patterns to daily life, and the islands' isolation has preserved a rhythm of existence both vibrant and intimate.
Comoros Discovery - 11 days from £1,799 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £440). Includes local transport, internal flights, accommodation, some meals, entrance fees, and expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 18 May and 12 Oct 2026, and 17 May and 11 Oct 2027.
Algeria – magnetism of the M'zab
Algeria is trending, yet it retains an aura of mystery that keeps many travellers at bay. From Roman ruins along the Mediterranean coast to oases tucked amid vast sand seas, the country blends ancient history with a living, evolving culture. Among its most enigmatic treasures is the M'zab Valley: five fortified Berber towns - El Atteuf, Bou Noura, Malika, Ghardaia, and Beni Isguen - where minaret watchtowers once guarded against desert raiders, and today alleyways are filled with livestock, sun-scorched elders, and a pace of life largely untouched by modernity. Algeria is North Africa beyond the headlines; a place where history is not just observed but lived.
Algeria – Desert and History - 15 days from £3,895 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £535). Includes local transport, internal flights, accommodation, some meals, entrance fees, and expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 21 Mar, 11 Apr, 26 Sept and 17 Oct 2026, and 20 Mar, 10 Apr, 25 Sep and 16 Oct 2027.
Bhutan - dance, drums and dzongs
Few countries operate on their own terms, and Bhutan is one of them. Remote valleys cradle villages and dzongs (fortress-monasteries) that defy gravity, while Buddhism, conservation, and tradition guide everyday life. Visitors join carefully controlled tourism that lets culture breathe. Depending on your departure, the trip includes a festival: February/March brings the spectacular Punakha Tsechu, April/May the intimate Ura Festival, September the Tangbi Mani, and November the Black-Necked Crane Festival in Phobjikha Valley. Each celebration offers a rare window into a nation quietly doing things differently and thriving on its own rhythm.
Bhutan Festival Tour – 13 days from £3,595 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £400). Includes local transport, internal flights, accommodation, most meals, entrance fees, and expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 25 Feb, 24 Apr, 20 Sep and 3 Nov 2026, and 24 Feb, 23 Apr, 19 Sep and 2 Nov 2027.
Panama - where worlds collide
Panama is a place of striking contrasts, where world-shaping engineering rubs shoulders with rainforest rhythms. Start in the atmospheric old quarter of Panama City, watching colossal ships thread the Panama Canal before stepping back centuries at UNESCO-listed fortresses. Dugout canoes glide into Emberá territory, offering intimate encounters with a living culture, while highland Boquete's cloud forests and coffee fincas reveal both biodiversity and artisanal craft. Crossing the Continental Divide leads to the turquoise islands of Bocas del Toro, where mangroves and coral reefs await.
Panama – From Canal to Caribbean - 12 days from £3,250 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £815). Includes all accommodation and local transport, most meals, entrance fees, and the expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 25 Feb, 6 May and 24 Nov 2026, and 24 Feb, 5 May and 23 Nov 2027.
Mauritania - libraries, dunes and legends
Mauritania is a landscape that demands attention. Here, the Sahara is less backdrop than text: shifting dunes, windswept plateaus, and the enigmatic Richat Structure invite contemplation as much as exploration. Caravan towns like Chinguetti and Ouadane preserve centuries of knowledge in crumbling libraries, while nomadic communities' lives are largely unchanged by outsiders. Travelling by 4×4 across golden deserts, dipping into hidden pools, and riding camels at sunset, visitors experience a world governed by patience, perspective, and endurance. Remote, logistically exacting, and intellectually rich, Mauritania is a place that reveals itself slowly.
Mauritania – Desert Discovery - 9 days from £2,750 pp (two sharing; single room supplement £200). Includes local transport, accommodation, most meals, entrance fees, and expert local guides. International flights extra. Departs 8 Feb and 22 Nov 2026, and 7 Feb and 21 Nov 2027.
For further information on the full range of tours, call 0191 2962674 or visit www.undiscovered-destinations.com.