— hi, we're Greg & Seanna.
I'm Greg. I run Greg & Seanna's Adventures with my partner-in-everything, Seanna. This site is part travel journal, part planning studio — a place to keep the stories from our trips, and a way to help other people take trips like them.
The short version of how we got here: a Panama Canal crossing on the NCL Joy in December 2022 turned us into people who plan trips for a living. Since then we've taken our travelers (and ourselves) through Alaska on the Bliss, across Europe on the Star, and back to the Caribbean a few too many times to count. Somewhere between a lock filling with water under a tropical sky and a glacier calving into a still bay in Alaska, we figured out we wanted to spend the rest of our lives chasing exactly this feeling — and helping the people we love do the same.
The best trips don't just take you somewhere. They take something out of you and put something better back in. — Greg, on a balcony, somewhere off the coast of British Columbia
The good stuff is in the details. The right cabin, the right table on the right night, the small restaurant the guidebook missed. Big trips are made of dozens of small choices, and we obsess over them so you don't have to.
Lived-in beats well-researched. We only recommend places we've actually been, ships we've actually sailed, and excursions we'd send our parents on. (We've sent our parents on a lot of them.)
Travel should leave you better than it found you. Slower mornings. Bigger horizons. A little more wonder. We plan trips that come home with you.
Cruises (especially Alaska, the Caribbean, and the Mediterranean). All-inclusive beach escapes for couples and families. Honeymoons. Milestone birthdays. First-time international trips for people who've always wanted to go and never quite found the moment. We're particular specialists in helping people who feel a little overwhelmed by the planning — that's our favorite kind of client.
Long table dinners. Train windows. The first hour in a new city. Strong coffee in styrofoam cups on a ferry. Sitting in airports an hour earlier than necessary. The smell of a hotel lobby in a humid country. Coming home, dropping bags in the hall, and saying the same thing every time: okay, where next?