China: The Path of Tea and Horses
Before it became a universal beverage, tea was a journey. From the rainforests of Yunnan, where thousand-year-old Camellia sinensis trees still grow, caravans loaded with pressed tea bricks set out across treacherous mountain passes on their way to Tibet.
Guatemala, the land of volcanoes
Volcanoes that breathe, jungles that hide temples, cities that rebuild over their own ruins. Guatemala is a country where the earth never rests and history remains alive in every stone, every language, every ritual.
Expeditions: the lost essence of a journey
There was a time when the word expedition meant going into the unknown. It was not synonymous with safari or organized travel, but with uncertainty, risk and discovery. It was an act of faith in a world still incomplete, where maps held huge blank spots and the horizon line only promised challenge.
The gauchos: myth, craft, and freedom in the pampas
At once mythic and flesh-and-blood, the gaucho still sets the rhythm of the Argentine countryside: the asado, the estancia, the festival of tradition. The pampa is vast, and so is the story.
Ignacio Pereira: The loneliness of crowds
Ignacio Pereira shares with us his vision of urban loneliness that he captures through his renowned series of photographs of emblematic spots in large empty cities.
"The Godfather's" Sicily, a movie stage trip
Travel to Sicily in the footsteps of "The Godfather", visiting the island through some of its locations in an exclusive film-reminiscent route.
Congo: Odzala, West Africa's best-kept secret
Pristine forests, western lowland gorillas, and travel that protects what remains to be discovered.
Fuchsia Dunlop, Chinesse cuisine master
Since settling in Chengdu in the 1990s to study Chinese, Fuchsia Dunlop has dedicated her life to exploring the culinary culture of the world's most populous country, China. Her books have redefined the perception of Chinese cuisine in the West.
Matthew DeSantis, a Westerner in the Kingdom of Bhutan
He has spent 15 years leading projects such as the digitalization of Bhutanese religious art and the introduction of baseball as an official sport in this small kingdom.

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Passepartout as the name of our magazine draws upon its rich literary heritage, derived from Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days. In the novel, Passepartout is the loyal, resourceful valet who accompanies Phileas Fogg on a whirlwind journey around the globe. The character embodies adaptability, adventure, and a sense of worldly exploration, all of which align with the spirit of our magazine..
 

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