When you travel the world for a living, the reality is that sometimes destinations start to blur into one another. Big cities start to feel the same; this beautiful beach looks just like the last beautiful beach; and grand churches and cathedrals start to lose their awe factor.
But then, every once in a while, you travel to a new place that’s so unique and so breathtaking that you know there will be no chance of it feeling like “just another” destination.
The Faroe Islands were like that for me.
Located roughly halfway between Norway and Iceland, the Faroe Islands are made up of 18 rocky, volcanic islands in the wild North Atlantic. They technically are an autonomous part of Denmark –…