The Travel Issue: Letter From The Editor
These are stories of risk and growth, building connections and realizing when they’re ending — all the places we think are worth moving toward and the things worth returning to.
These are stories of risk and growth, building connections and realizing when they’re ending — all the places we think are worth moving toward and the things worth returning to.
The last thing I want when facing 200 other lesbians in the sun-filled woods is to look like I was cooked to rare and then set free at the Jersey Shore.
Manhattan is a very good place to be a girl who likes girls.
From “Boston Marriages” to Second Saturdays at Machine, the Boston area has always been kind to the Sapphicly inclined.
Cities wanna be her.
Albuquerque: hard to pronounce, impossible to spell, easy to love.
Meet four trusty, lusty ladies to guide you through Oxford!
Santa Fe through the eyes of a recent transplant.
Ohio’s capital city (and the third largest city in the Midwest) has everything you’d ever need, including the world’s best ice cream, one of the country’s largest universities, and a hoppin’ LGBTQ scene.
Here’s a DIY guide to enjoying a queerified Bronx.
Let’s take a trip back in time to Bali, Michigan, Nigeria, New Orleans, New York and many other fine fine locales.
If you can handle the rain, you’ll be handsomely rewarded by my beloved hometown of Vancouver, one of the gay-friendliest cities in Canada!
It’s a little village, but it’s got a whole lot of gay per square kilometer.
Cleveland ROCKS!
A beautiful city with the best name for an LGBT organization you’ve heard all year.
Highlights from Sydney Mardi Gras and Crystal takes you to Australia’s largest girl party, GiRLTHING!
Washington DC through the eyes of a hyper-social resident and her pet unicorn.
It rains a lot here, which means the girls are extra wet.
When the water is turquoise and the sun is out and the coastline is spectacular, politics don’t seem necessary.
“It’s the Peter Pan of cities.”