Well away from the clubs and crowds of the south, the north of Ibiza feels like another island entirely. Here a rugged coastline and stunning vistas set the backdrop for chilling out and checking out this wild part of the Balearic islands.
Ben Nevis to Scafell Pike to Snowdon. The highest mountains of Scotland, England and Wales. Twenty-four hours. Six guys. No training. One rickety, old motorhome named Millwall. What could possibly go wrong?
The raw beauty of Greenland's glacial tundras and ice-strewn fjords has to be seen to be believed – the edges of this land of the midnight sun are best explored as the locals have for thousands of years - by kayak.
The summer crowds now dispersed, WildBounds contributor Sian Lewis escapes to Mallorca’s wild heart, where craggy mountain peaks and vertiginous cliff faces are yours for the taking.
A three-day hike through prehistoric Wiltshire takes in Saxon dykes, Bronze Age barrows, Neolithic menhirs, Victorian White Horses and the standing stones of Avebury and Stonehenge.
With its legendary turquoise flat water lagoon and excellent wave spots, Dakhla in Western Sahara, Morocco is the ultimate kitesurf and windsurf oasis. This is the stuff dreams are made of.
From gentle white water rollers to near perfect barrels and thumping reef breaks, the Algarve has it all – and being situated on the corner of the Iberian Peninsula means it has the widest swell window in Portugal.
An unsupported bikepacking journey to Southern Morocco unveils a surprise at every turn, where vast peaks of the High Atlas produce sub-zero temperatures and its people relish every opportunity to show kindness.