Travel Digest #2842

By @worldmappin2/23/2026hive-163772

Introduction


Hey, hey! This is @gabrielatravels, and I am pleased to bring you a brand new edition of #TravelDigest! ❤️ Today's post is going to take you on a city walk in Venezuela, to both natural and artificial lagoons in Maracay, and to an art museum in South Africa. Don't forget to check the honourable mentions too, for even more awesomeness across the globe. Thanks for bringing your daily contributions to our beautiful community, and I hope you enjoy today's Travel Digest! ❤️


All featured posts are visible on the Editors Choice Map and upvoted by @worldmappin, our curation trail, and potentially @blocktrades. For more travel digests check out #traveldigest.


Our winners today


🥇 Pagar un tour en tu ciudad ¿Vale la pena? (ESP/ENG) by @arteyviajes

Now, if we start with the tour, the trip was about visiting several tourist attractions in the municipality of Jiménez, a municipality neighboring the city where I live. As I said before, these are places I have already visited, but my plan was to be a tourist and enjoy the whole tour. So, as reason number one, I tell you: Every travel experience is unique, no matter how well we know the destination.

This post on Worldmappin - This user on Worldmappin




🥈 Lagoons, water reservoirs, life reserves - Lagunas, depósitos de agua, reserva de vida (AN) by @soyunasantacruz

Some said the lagoon was natural and others said the opposite, but there was no data to prove it. My family always believed it was natural. In fact, for many years, it was said that sewage flows into the lagoon. If that is the case, it would be difficult to use it for crop irrigation and industrial purposes, which is why I always thought it was natural.

This post on Worldmappin - This user on Worldmappin




🥉 Visiting the Oliewenhuis Art Museum, in Bloemfontein, Free State, South Africa by @fermentedphil

The house itself is part of the artwork. It is very old and in the style of some of the original houses built from colonial expansions. (The date on the building reads 1941, but I guess this spot was of importance so there must have been other buildings here before this one.) Or so I guess. Before it was turned into the art museum, it was the house of the local governor. But this has since moved to just across the hill. Now, the building itself has become a piece of art.

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Honorable Mentions



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