Passport Q
Chris Tremblay  3 hours ago
5 MIN READ

Bendigo, in central Victoria, is not the first Australian city that appears on most LGBTQ+ travel lists, but it is increasingly presenting itself as a culturally rich and inclusive stop for queer travelers.

Bendigo is the kind of destination that rewards travelers who prefer a slower, more layered kind of city break: grand gold-rush architecture, a strong gallery and museum culture, tree-lined avenues, cellar doors and a local rhythm that feels distinct from Australia’s better-known queer tourism hubs. It is not typically the first name on LGBTQ+ travel lists, which are more likely to foreground Sydney, Melbourne or coastal resort destinations, but it sits within a national context that is explicitly supportive of LGBTQ+ visitors. Australia legalized same-sex marriage in 2017, and the International LGBTQ+ Travel Association says discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression is prohibited in every state and territory, with federal protections also in place.

That legal backdrop matters for queer travelers, but Bendigo’s emerging appeal is also cultural. The city is known for its historic streetscapes and major arts institutions, including the Bendigo Art Gallery and the Bendigo Joss House Temple, which reflect the city’s layered colonial and migration histories. Bendigo Tourism describes the city as a place where heritage and contemporary culture sit side by side, shaping an experience that is more than a simple weekend stop.

For LGBTQ+ travelers, that kind of setting can be significant. Regional destinations often feel more intimate than major cities, and Bendigo’s compact center makes it easy to move between galleries, cafés, parks and heritage sites without the friction of a larger urban itinerary. The city’s tourism and cultural institutions consistently emphasize accessibility to its central precinct, which can make it an attractive base for travelers who want a relaxed stay rather than a nightlife-heavy trip.

A regional city with visible community signals



What makes Bendigo especially interesting as a queer-friendly destination is not a single marquee event, but a combination of visible signals. Regional Pride activity in central Victoria has become more established in recent years, with local groups and civic organizations using the city’s public spaces to mark inclusion and community visibility. These events are important because they indicate that queer life in Bendigo is not confined to private networks or metropolitan spillover; it has a public footprint.

Bendigo Pride Festival presents itself as a locally rooted celebration of LGBTQ+ communities in the region, and its existence points to a broader shift in how regional Australian cities are positioning themselves. Rather than relying only on “safe” branding, Bendigo is building a civic identity that includes queer people in the story of the city. That is especially relevant for travelers who want more than tolerance: they want evidence of participation, representation and ordinary belonging.

Local institutions also reinforce that message. The City of Greater Bendigo has public inclusion and diversity policies that frame the municipality as a community serving residents and visitors of differing identities and backgrounds. While a policy alone does not define the lived experience of every traveler, it does provide an institutional baseline that many LGBTQ+ visitors look for when deciding where to spend time and money.

Why Bendigo feels different from the usual LGBTQ+ circuits



Bendigo does not compete with Sydney’s Mardi Gras scale or Melbourne’s larger queer nightlife ecosystem, and that is precisely why it can stand out. Its value lies in offering a different model of queer-friendly travel: one centered on culture, daylight experiences and regional hospitality rather than an identity-specific entertainment district. That approach aligns with a broader pattern in LGBTQ+ travel, where many travelers increasingly seek places that are welcoming in everyday life rather than only during festival weekends.

The city’s arts institutions add depth to that experience. The Bendigo Art Gallery has a national profile for major exhibitions, which helps give the city a cosmopolitan edge uncommon in a regional center of its size. The gallery’s programming, combined with Bendigo’s heritage architecture and seasonal food-and-wine culture, makes it possible to build a trip that feels intellectually and aesthetically rich without leaving central Victoria.

Bendigo’s regional setting also matters because it reflects a broader Australian reality: LGBTQ+ travelers are not limited to the country’s largest cities. The national legal framework is comparatively strong, and state and territory protections are broadly established, which helps create the conditions for smaller destinations to market themselves as inclusive. In practice, that means a traveler can choose Bendigo for its architecture, food, art and slower pace without having to treat queer safety as an afterthought.

Local texture: heritage, food and the kind of small-city ease that can feel welcoming



A hidden-gem destination often succeeds because its physical character supports a sense of ease, and Bendigo has that quality in abundance. Its streets are defined by the wealth of the nineteenth-century gold rush, and the city has preserved enough of that era’s civic ambition to make a walk through the center feel like a tour through Australian history. At the same time, Bendigo’s tourism materials emphasize contemporary dining, creative production and wine-country day trips, which means the city does not read as a museum piece.

For queer travelers, that balance can be attractive. A place does not need a sprawling gayborhood to feel inclusive; it needs legible public spaces, cultural institutions that welcome broad audiences and a civic culture that does not insist visitors stay invisible. Bendigo’s appeal is that it offers all three in modest but recognizable form.

The city also benefits from being close enough to Melbourne to be accessible, but far enough away to feel like a change of pace. That makes it a useful add-on for travelers building a broader Victoria itinerary. Visitors can combine Bendigo with regional wine, country hospitality and the city’s museum and gallery circuit, creating a trip that is rooted in place rather than in the usual resort template.

What queer travelers are likely to notice



The most meaningful thing about Bendigo may be that it offers a quieter version of welcome. Queer travelers who have often had to decode whether a destination is safe, visible or merely marketing itself as friendly may find Bendigo’s strongest asset is its normalcy: a regional Australian city where inclusion is increasingly embedded in civic life, where cultural institutions are central to the visitor experience and where Pride has a local home.

That does not make Bendigo a queer capital, and it should not be described as one. But it does make the city a credible candidate for travelers looking for a place that is off the obvious route yet still grounded in real infrastructure, public visibility and a national framework of legal protection. In a travel market often dominated by the same handful of LGBTQ+ destinations, that is enough to make Bendigo feel like a hidden gem with room to grow.

by Chris Tremblay

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Steve Duffy  Jun 3
1 MIN READ

Whether he’s getting rare access inside Big Ben’s Great Clock, sampling the generations old art of cheese making at Quatrehomme Paris, drifting off in a surreal dreamscape at Queztacoatl’s News in Mexico City or handing out medals alongside world-class volunteers at the finish line of the New York City Marathon, each stop cracks open a vivid slice of the culture, craft and creativity that brings the very best of the world to vibrant life. 

Inspired by National Geographic’s acclaimed “Best of the World’ franchise, the series follows Emmy winner Antoni Porowski, known for his food and culture storytelling, as he sets out to uncover what truly makes a destination unforgettable. From iconic landmarks to hidden gems, he explores Mexico City, Paris, London, and his hometown of New York City, seeking out the people, flavors, and experiences that extend beyond the guidebook. 

by Steve Duffy

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Mandy Applegate  Jun 2
4 MIN READ

Three Caribbean islands see the sharpest search spikes heading into summer 2026. Sint Maarten, Aruba and San Juan outpace the broader Caribbean trend by a wide margin, and booking now is still the window to get ahead of peak crowds and peak prices.

Three Caribbean islands see the sharpest search spikes heading into summer 2026. Sint Maarten, Aruba and San Juan outpace the broader Caribbean trend by a wide margin, and booking now is still the window to get ahead of peak crowds and peak prices.

by Mandy Applegate

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Philip Marcelo  May 30
3 MIN READ

A puppet-making workshop founded by the legendary creator of the Muppets is drawing back its curtain

Deep in a cavernous New York City warehouse, the artisans behind some of the world’s most beloved children’s characters have been fashioning costumes and puppets for years in relative anonymity.

by Philip Marcelo

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Chris Tremblay  May 29
8 MIN READ

While New York, San Francisco, and Toronto soak up the rainbow spotlight, a new wave of smaller, often-overlooked North American cities is quietly building thriving, LGBTQ‑affirming scenes.

If your idea of LGBTQ+ travel is a greatest-hits playlist—New York, San Francisco, Toronto, rinse, repeat—you’re missing the B‑side tracks where the real queer magic is happening. The big names are still iconic, of course, but across North America, a constellation of smaller cities and “wait, really? ” destinations is quietly becoming more inclusive, more creative, and a lot more affordable for queer‑friendly travel.

by Chris Tremblay

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Chris Tremblay  Jun 1
8 MIN READ

On Croatia’s northern Adriatic coast, the industrial port city of Rijeka is quietly positioning itself as one of Europe’s most welcoming lesser-known destinations for LGBTQ+ travelers, far from the mainstream party circuits of Barcelona or Berlin.

On a stretch of the northern Adriatic where the mountains meet the sea, Rijeka has long been known to Croatians as a working port city and gateway to nearby islands. Now, this city of just over 100,000 residents is increasingly being noticed for something else: a quietly confident, queer‑affirming atmosphere that sets it apart from more commercialized European LGBTQ+ hubs.

by Chris Tremblay

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Chris Tremblay  May 31
8 MIN READ

Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, is quietly becoming one of Africa’s most promising city breaks for LGBTQ+ travelers, even as it rarely appears on standard queer travel lists.

On a balmy weekend night in Maputo, Mozambique’s low‑slung capital, the sounds of marrabenta music mix with Afro‑house and kizomba spilling from small bars near the Baixa and Polana neighborhoods. In the crowd, couples of all kinds dance closely; same‑gender pairs attract little more than a passing glance. It is not a scene many travelers associate with Africa, nor with a country that still appears on few international LGBTQ+ destination lists, yet local advocates say this is precisely what makes Maputo one of the continent’s most quietly queer‑friendly urban escapes.

by Chris Tremblay

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Chris Tremblay  May 30
6 MIN READ

In the traditionally conservative state of Zacatecas, Mexico, an unusually progressive and celebratory Pride event has quickly become a regional symbol of LGBTQ+ joy, visibility, and resilience.

When thousands of people gather in the colonial streets of Zacatecas City for its annual Pride march, they are doing more than celebrating lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex communities—they are reshaping the public image of an entire state long regarded as socially conservative and religiously traditional.

by Chris Tremblay

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Chris Tremblay  May 28
7 MIN READ

While Bangkok and Taipei dominate LGBTQ+ travel lists, the lakeside city of Pokhara in central Nepal is emerging as a quieter, lesser‑known haven for queer travelers.

On the shores of Lake Phewa, ringed by the snow‑streaked Annapurna range, Pokhara has long been a waypoint for trekkers and spiritual seekers moving through the Himalayas. Now, a quieter shift is underway: this laid‑back Nepali city is becoming an emerging, queer‑friendly destination in a region where LGBTQ+ travelers still tread carefully.

by Chris Tremblay

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Jennifer Allen  May 27
3 MIN READ

Picture the classic cruise passenger with a deck chair, ocean view and a formal dinner by 6 p.m. That image clashes with a harder set of numbers: 76% of Gen Z travelers who have already been on a cruise plan to do it again, and the industry knows it. Cruise lines are overhauling itineraries, forging sport partnerships and rethinking who they're building for because the youngest generation of travelers has arrived at sea, and they're not leaving.

Picture the classic cruise passenger with a deck chair, ocean view and a formal dinner by 6 p.m. That image clashes with a harder set of numbers: 76% of Gen Z travelers who have already been on a cruise plan to do it again, and the industry knows it. Cruise lines are overhauling itineraries, forging sport partnerships and rethinking who they're building for because the youngest generation of travelers has arrived at sea, and they're not leaving.

by Jennifer Allen

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.