Treehouse Boutique Hotel Cape Town: Honest Review from First-Timers
Table of Contents
- Why Treehouse Boutique Hotel Surprised Us Completely
- First-Timers in Cape Town: Our Story
- The Rooms: Modern Comfort Without Corporate Blandness
- Pool Area: Small but Perfectly Formed
- Breakfast: Genuinely Excellent Every Morning
- The Staff: What Makes This Place Actually Special
- Location: Perfect Base for Exploring Cape Town
- Treehouse Boutique Hotel for LGBTQ+ Travellers: The Real Story
- Load Shedding: Complete Non-Issue
- Who Should Stay Here (And Who Shouldn't)
- Quick Travel Guide
- FAQ
- Final Thoughts: Would We Book Again?
Why Treehouse Boutique Hotel Surprised Us Completely
The receptionist smiled genuinely as she handed us both key cards. "Welcome home, gentlemen. You're in room 204. Let me show you where everything is." Not "welcome to the hotel." Welcome home.
Cape Town wasn't on our radar until this trip. That feels absurd now, given how completely it won us over, but we approached South Africa with cautious curiosity rather than burning enthusiasm. Friends raved about it. Instagram showed impossibly turquoise waters and dramatic mountain backdrops. But Africa felt intimidatingly far from our usual European comfort zone.
This isn't one of the big-name hotel brands plastered across Instagram with infinity pools and safari lodge glamour. But it's genuinely one of the most charming, relaxing, and warmest hotels we've stayed at anywhere in the world. The type of place you sit at your desk months later, daydreaming about being back at.
This Treehouse Boutique Hotel Cape Town review covers what actually matters: staff attitudes that make you feel valued rather than processed, genuine boutique character versus corporate polish, location trade-offs between quiet residential Green Point and buzzing waterfront areas, and whether choosing this Cape Town hotel over famous five-star properties proves the smarter decision.
First-Timers in Cape Town: Our Story
We arrived in Cape Town as nervous first-timers. Two British guys who'd read extensively about South Africa's crime statistics, load shedding power cuts, and complex social realities. We'd never been to Africa. We weren't entirely sure what to expect.
The Uber from Cape Town International Airport took 25 minutes through suburbs that looked simultaneously familiar and entirely foreign. British-style traffic lights. Right-hand drive. Then suddenly Table Mountain looming impossibly close, like someone had Photoshopped it into the landscape.
Green Point felt immediately calmer than we'd anticipated. Tree-lined streets. Joggers everywhere. Cafés with pavement seating full of laptop workers. The Treehouse sits on a residential street that climbs steeply uphill from the harbour, surrounded by apartment buildings and other small hotels rather than tourist chaos.
"You've picked the perfect time of year," the receptionist told us during check-in, pulling up a map on her tablet. "December is gorgeous. And you're so close to De Waterkant here—have you been before? No? Oh, you'll love it. Very welcoming neighbourhood." She circled areas on the map, recommended restaurants, warned us about the hill situation when walking back from the waterfront.
That evening, we walked down to De Waterkant. Twenty minutes along tree-lined pavements, past the harbour, into Cape Town's rainbow district where cafés spilled onto cobblestone streets and same-sex couples held hands without anyone batting an eye. We stopped at a bar called Beefcakes (excellent name, even better burgers) and realised our nervous apprehension had been entirely misplaced.
Cape Town felt safe. Welcoming. Vibrant. And Treehouse had positioned us perfectly to discover why.
The Rooms: Modern Comfort Without Corporate Blandness
We booked the cheapest room category. Standard room, lower floor, road-facing rather than pool view. The configuration that receives occasional criticism in Booking.com reviews for lacking views and potentially suffering noise issues.
We'd read those reviews during booking. We were mildly apprehensive. Turns out we needn't have worried at all.
The door opened to reveal a spotlessly clean space that felt modern without being sterile. Contemporary furniture in warm woods and neutrals. Proper artwork on walls rather than generic hotel prints. A king bed that looked genuinely comfortable rather than just functional.
💡 TIP: Request a king bed when booking if you're a couple. The hotel confirmed this automatically for us without awkward questions, but explicitly requesting removes any potential confusion.
The room delivered everything that actually matters in hotel accommodation. The air conditioning worked effectively and quietly—essential for Cape Town's December heat. The bed proved genuinely comfortable with quality linens that didn't feel cheap. The bathroom featured a good-sized shower with consistent hot water and proper pressure. Everything functioned as intended.
We had absolutely zero issues with road noise. None whatsoever. If you're an exceptionally light sleeper who wakes at the slightest sound, perhaps request a pool-view room. But for normal humans who sleep with typical urban background noise, the road-facing rooms are completely fine.
The room felt contemporary and well-maintained. No tired fixtures. No mysterious stains. No temperamental electrics. Just clean, comfortable, functional space that felt pleasant to return to after days exploring Cape Town.
What's Included:
- Air conditioning (genuinely essential)
- Quality toiletries that didn't smell like industrial cleaning products
- Daily housekeeping that respected privacy
- Mini bar stocked with reasonable pricing
- Safe for valuables
- Proper desk area for laptop work
- Tea and coffee facilities with decent coffee
WORTH IT? Yes, absolutely. The cheapest room category delivers everything needed without paying premiums for views we barely noticed because we spent so little time actually in the room staring out windows.
Cost: Approximately R2,500-3,500 per night (£110-155) depending on season
When to go: December-March for summer weather; May-August quieter but colder
How to book: Direct through Living Journey Collection website or booking platforms
Getting there: 25 minutes from airport via Uber (R400-500)
Don't miss: Requesting specific bed configuration during booking
Skip if: You need sea views or resort-scale rooms
Pool Area: Small but Perfectly Formed
The pool isn't large. Resort-style lagoons with swim-up bars and multiple sections, this is not. It measures roughly 10 metres by 5 metres, surrounded by loungers and tropical plants that create an intimate courtyard atmosphere.
We spent one particularly lovely afternoon by the pool with South African wine (two bottles, if we're honest—when in Cape Town) and snacks from the pool bar. The sun was warm without being scorching. The setting felt peaceful and private. The entire experience felt indulgent in the best possible way.
⚠️ MISTAKE: We initially assumed the pool bar closed early afternoon. Wrong. Full service continued until early evening, meaning we could have extended our poolside wine situation significantly longer had we known.
The poolside staff anticipated needs before we articulated them. Drinks arrived promptly after brief eye contact. Fresh towels appeared without requesting. Loungers received cushion adjustments without being asked. This level of attentive-but-not-intrusive service elevated a simple pool afternoon into genuinely memorable relaxation.
For context: we don't typically care much about hotel pools. We're usually out exploring destinations rather than lounging poolside. But something about Treehouse's intimate setup and exceptional staff made it feel special rather than obligatory.
It's exactly what a boutique hotel pool should be: intimate, relaxing, and staffed by people who genuinely care about your experience rather than just going through hospitality motions.
WORTH IT? Yes, though manage expectations about size. This is designed for relaxation and cooling off, not athletic swimming or resort-style pool parties.
Cost: Included in room rate
When to go: Afternoons for sun, mornings for quiet
How to book: No booking required, just head down
Getting there: Ground floor, accessible from lobby
Don't miss: Afternoon wine sessions with pool bar service
Skip if: You need Olympic-length pools for serious swimming
Breakfast: Genuinely Excellent Every Morning
Breakfast exceeded expectations significantly. Not just "fine for included hotel breakfast" but genuinely excellent food that we looked forward to each morning.
The setup combines à la carte ordering with buffet-style help-yourself options—the best of both worlds. You get personalised hot dishes prepared to order (eggs any style, pancakes, French toast) plus the ability to graze through continental options, fresh fruit, pastries, cereals, yoghurts, and local specialties.
We're breakfast people. A strong breakfast sets the tone for the entire day, providing energy for hours of walking around Cape Town rather than needing mid-morning snack stops. Treehouse delivered every single morning.
What We Ordered
The eggs Benedict became our standard order. Perfectly poached eggs, quality ham, proper hollandaise sauce that tasted homemade rather than packet-mixed. Served with crispy hash browns and grilled tomatoes.
The buffet section offered impressive variety. Fresh fruit salad with actual flavour rather than refrigerator-cold melon chunks. Multiple bread options including seed loaves and croissants. Proper butter, multiple jams, honey from local producers. Cheese and cold meat selections. Yoghurt with granola and berries.
Coffee arrived strong and hot, refilled attentively throughout breakfast. South African coffee culture deserves more recognition—the quality consistently impressed us.
The breakfast area overlooks the pool with natural light flooding in through large windows. Service remained friendly and efficient without hovering. Staff remembered our preferences by the second morning (strong coffee, extra hot water for tea).
💰 COST: Breakfast is included in the room rate, making it exceptional value. Comparable breakfast quality at standalone cafés in Green Point would cost R150-200 per person (£7-9).
WORTH IT? Absolutely. One of the best included hotel breakfasts we've experienced anywhere. The combination of quality, variety, and service makes it genuinely difficult to fault.
Cost: Included in room rate
When to go: 07:00-10:00 daily (earlier for quietest service)
How to book: No booking required, just arrive
Getting there: Ground floor dining area near pool
Don't miss: Eggs Benedict and fresh fruit selection
Skip if: You prefer exploring local breakfast spots (though you'd be missing out)
The Staff: What Makes This Place Actually Special
Here's what elevates Treehouse from "good boutique hotel" to "somewhere we'll actively recommend and return to": the staff make you feel genuinely valued rather than processed.
From arrival to departure, we were treated with warmth that felt personal rather than scripted corporate hospitality. Every single team member—reception, housekeeping, poolside, breakfast service—went beyond professional courtesy into actual friendliness.
The receptionist who checked us in remembered our names throughout the stay. "Morning Joe, morning Alex. Off to Table Mountain today?" She'd ask about previous days' adventures and offer unprompted recommendations based on what we'd enjoyed.
Housekeeping respected our privacy completely. We'd leave the "please service room" sign out and return to spotless space. They even folded our clothes that we'd left draped over chairs (slightly embarrassing but appreciated). One afternoon we returned to find a handwritten note: "We noticed you were running low on coffee pods—we've restocked. Enjoy your stay!"
This wasn't performative hospitality. These were people who seemed genuinely invested in ensuring we had an excellent stay in Cape Town rather than just ticking boxes on service checklists.
They offered thoughtful recommendations that matched our interests rather than generic tourist suggestions. When we mentioned enjoying wine, the poolside staff suggested specific wine farms in Stellenbosch. When we asked about LGBTQ+ nightlife, reception immediately pulled up saved recommendations on their phones.
💡 TIP: Staff genuinely want to help you have a great Cape Town experience. Ask questions, request recommendations, engage with them. Their local knowledge proved more valuable than any guidebook.
We've stayed at properties triple the price where staff delivered technically correct service devoid of any warmth. Treehouse does the opposite: they make you feel like valued guests in someone's thoughtfully run home rather than anonymous hotel room numbers.
Location: Perfect Base for Exploring Cape Town
Treehouse sits in Green Point, a residential neighbourhood that strikes the perfect balance between accessibility and tranquillity. Not in the tourist chaos of V&A Waterfront. Not isolated in distant suburbs. Positioned exactly right for exploring Cape Town without drowning in tourist infrastructure.
Walking Distances and Routes
De Waterkant: 20 minutes along scenic harbour front
V&A Waterfront: 25 minutes waterfront walk
Sea Point Promenade: 15 minutes west
City centre: 15 minutes via Uber (R50-70)
Table Mountain Cableway: 20 minutes via Uber (R80-100)
We walked to De Waterkant several times during our stay. The harbour front route proved genuinely lovely—ocean on one side, Signal Hill rising dramatically on the other, joggers and dog walkers everywhere creating that lived-in city vibe we love. The walk felt completely safe during daylight hours.
The V&A Waterfront walk took 25 minutes and felt equally pleasant. Slightly longer than expected but the scenery made it worthwhile.
⚠️ MISTAKE: The hill situation is real and legitimately challenging. Treehouse sits significantly uphill from the harbour and waterfront. Walking back after a full day of sightseeing means climbing a proper gradient that left us breathless despite being reasonably fit.
Getting Around Cape Town
Uber in Cape Town proved absurdly easy, cheap, and reliable. We used it constantly. Never waited more than five minutes for pickup. Drivers were uniformly friendly and professional. Cars were clean and well-maintained.
Typical Uber costs:
- Treehouse to V&A Waterfront: R50-70 (£2-3)
- Treehouse to city centre: R50-70 (£2-3)
- Treehouse to Table Mountain: R80-100 (£4-4.50)
- Treehouse to Camps Bay: R120-150 (£5-7)
The location works brilliantly if you're prepared to Uber strategically. Walk down to destinations, Uber back uphill. The residential setting means you return each evening to genuine quiet rather than tourist-district chaos with bars and restaurants creating noise until late.
For first-time Cape Town visitors, Green Point positions you perfectly. Close enough to everything major. Far enough to feel like you're experiencing real Cape Town rather than sanitised tourist bubbles.
Treehouse Boutique Hotel for LGBTQ+ Travellers: The Real Story
Is Treehouse Boutique Hotel Cape Town LGBTQ-Friendly?
Yes, genuinely and completely. Not performatively rainbow-flag-waving-during-Pride-month friendly, but actually-treats-queer-couples-like-normal-humans friendly throughout the entire experience.
We felt entirely comfortable as a gay couple from check-in to checkout. Not "tolerated." Not "professionally accommodated." Genuinely welcomed. The staff never blinked at our relationship. Check-in was seamless with our pre-requested king bed. No awkward questions. No assumptions about separate rooms. No performative allyship. Just normal, professional service that treated us like any other couple.
Cape Town turned out to be one of the most diverse, accepting, and vibrant destinations we've visited anywhere. The city's LGBTQ+ scene is well-established, visible, and integrated into mainstream culture rather than existing as a separate subculture requiring insider knowledge to access.
South Africa legalised same-sex marriage in 2006—the fifth country globally and first in Africa to do so. The constitution explicitly protects sexual orientation and gender identity. Cape Town specifically has cultivated a reputation as Africa's most LGBTQ-friendly city with visible gay neighbourhoods, annual Pride celebrations, and general cultural acceptance.
Treehouse's location puts you 20 minutes' walk from De Waterkant—Cape Town's rainbow district with gay bars, restaurants, cafés, and a palpable queer presence. We felt comfortable holding hands walking back along the harbour at night without experiencing any negative reactions.
For context: we've travelled extensively through Europe, North America, and parts of Asia. We've developed finely tuned radar for subtle discomfort—the barely perceptible pause when checking in as a same-sex couple, the slightly too-careful professional politeness that signals underlying discomfort, the way some staff avoid eye contact or rush through interactions.
We felt absolutely none of that at Treehouse. Zero. The atmosphere felt genuinely inclusive in ways that go beyond rainbow flags and Pride marketing.
Safety Tips for LGBTQ+ Travellers in Cape Town
Cape Town feels overwhelmingly safe for queer travellers in the areas tourists typically visit. We saw multiple same-sex couples holding hands around V&A Waterfront, in De Waterkant, along Sea Point Promenade, and throughout Green Point without any negative reactions.
General safety considerations:
- Cape Town has significant crime issues in certain areas, but tourist neighbourhoods like Green Point, De Waterkant, V&A Waterfront, and Camps Bay feel very safe with visible security presence
- We never felt unsafe walking during daylight hours in any area we visited
- Evening walks along the harbour front between Treehouse and De Waterkant felt safe with good lighting and other pedestrians
- Staff at Treehouse offered specific safety advice about areas to avoid and recommended Uber for evening returns
Transport safety:
- Uber drivers showed zero concern about same-sex couples. Many were chatty and friendly, asking about our trip and offering recommendations
- We never experienced any homophobia or discrimination using Uber, taxis, or public facilities
- The MyCiTi bus system operates efficiently but Uber proved more convenient for most journeys
Areas and situations to consider:
- Stick to well-touristed areas after dark. Township areas and certain city centre sections require caution regardless of sexual orientation
- De Waterkant and Green Point specifically feel very safe for LGBTQ+ travellers at all hours
- South African law protects LGBTQ+ people from discrimination, meaning hotels, restaurants, and businesses cannot legally discriminate based on sexual orientation
Emergency contacts:
- South Africa emergency number: 10111
- Triangle Project (LGBTQ+ support): +27 21 422 0255
- OUT LGBT Well-being provides resources and support
The reality? We felt completely comfortable being visibly queer throughout our Cape Town stay. More comfortable, in fact, than in some supposedly progressive European cities where tolerance exists but true integration feels lacking.
Load Shedding: Complete Non-Issue
As British travellers, load shedding (South Africa's scheduled power outages) was an entirely foreign concept. We'd read extensively about it before arriving. Friends who'd visited South Africa warned us about candles during dinner, lifts stopping mid-floor, wifi dropping constantly.
We were mildly concerned about the impact on our stay.
We didn't notice load shedding once at Treehouse. Not a single time.
The hotel clearly has backup systems—generators, batteries, or some combination—that eliminate any guest-facing disruption. Lights stayed on continuously. Air conditioning worked without interruption. Wifi never dropped. Breakfast service continued seamlessly. Pool area remained fully functional.
💡 TIP: Load shedding schedules are publicly available online, but at Treehouse you genuinely won't notice them. The infrastructure investment means zero impact on guest experience.
Ironically, the only place we experienced load shedding in Cape Town was during dinner at the One&Only hotel—a five-star property at V&A Waterfront where candles suddenly appeared on tables and staff offered apologetic explanations. At Treehouse? Seamless power throughout our entire stay.
This speaks to thoughtful infrastructure investment rather than just slapping a boutique label on a property and hoping charm compensates for practical shortcomings.
Who Should Stay Here (And Who Shouldn't)
Book Treehouse Boutique Hotel if you:
- Want genuine boutique character over corporate brand hotels
- Value exceptional service and staff warmth over flashy facilities
- Are first-time Cape Town visitors seeking a reliable, comfortable base
- Appreciate being in residential neighbourhoods rather than tourist districts
- Are LGBTQ+ travellers wanting genuinely welcoming atmosphere
- Plan to explore De Waterkant and V&A Waterfront areas regularly
- Prefer smaller, intimate properties over large resort complexes
- Care about value for money and getting more than you pay for
Skip this hotel if you:
- Need to be directly on the beach (Sea Point beaches are 15 minutes walk)
- Want full resort facilities like spas, multiple restaurants, massive pools
- Strongly prefer walking everywhere and have mobility limitations that make hills challenging
- Expect ultra-luxury five-star polish like marble lobbies and doormen
- Need budget accommodation (this is mid-range pricing for what you get)
- Want party atmosphere or social hostel-style environments
- Prefer staying in historically significant buildings (this is modern construction)
Quick Travel Guide
Money & Costs
Currency: South African Rand (ZAR)
Exchange rate: Approximately R18-20 = £1 (fluctuates)
Cards: Widely accepted everywhere; contactless works
ATMs: Available within 5 minutes walk; use those inside shopping centres
Budget breakdown for two people:
- Hotel: R2,500-3,500 per night (£110-155)
- Breakfast: Included
- Lunch: R200-350 per person (£9-16)
- Dinner: R400-600 per person (£18-27)
- Uber around Cape Town: R50-150 per journey (£2-7)
- Wine tasting tours: R800-1,200 per person (£36-55)
- Total daily: £100-180 depending on activities and dining choices
Getting Around
From Cape Town International Airport:
- Uber: 25 minutes, R400-500 (£18-23)
- MyCiTi bus: Cheaper but slower with multiple stops
- Hotel transfer: Can be arranged, typically R600-800 (£27-36)
Best method: Uber for everything. Cheap, reliable, safe, convenient. Download the app before arriving.
Apps: Uber for transport, Google Maps for navigation, MyCiTi for bus schedules
When to Visit
Best months: November-March for summer weather, outdoor activities, beach days. December-January warmest but busiest.
Worst months: June-August can be cold, wet, windy. Table Mountain frequently cloud-covered.
Pride dates: Cape Town Pride typically runs late February or early March with 50,000+ attendees.
What to Pack
- Layers for unpredictable weather (Cape Town weather changes rapidly)
- Reef-safe sunscreen (UV index extremely high year-round)
- Comfortable walking shoes for exploring
- Smart-casual for better restaurants
- Swimwear for hotel pool and beaches
- Light rain jacket (even in summer)
- Adapter for South African plugs (Type M, three large round pins)
Sun & Weather Safety
UV Index: Extreme (11-13+) during summer months
Weather patterns: Unpredictable; can change dramatically within hours
Health precautions: Sunscreen essential even on cloudy days. "Slip, slop, slap" taken seriously by locals.
Cape Town sits below the ozone hole, making sun exposure significantly more dangerous than equivalent latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere. We burned within 30 minutes despite usually tanning easily.
Language & Culture
Key phrases:
- Howzit (HOW-zit) - Hello/How are you
- Lekker (LECK-er) - Nice/good/cool
- Ja (yah) - Yes
- Eish (aysh) - Expression of surprise or frustration
- Sharp sharp - Goodbye/cool/sorted
Cultural norms:
- Tipping: 10-15% in restaurants expected
- PDA: Cape Town feels very open. We saw same-sex couples kissing publicly without issue
- Friendliness: South Africans are remarkably warm and chatty
- Time: "Now now" means soon. "Just now" means later. Neither means immediately.
LGBTQ+ notes: Cape Town Pride runs annually. De Waterkant is the rainbow district. The Mother City Queer Project provides community resources.
Must-Try Experiences (Top 5)
- Table Mountain Cable Car - Rotating cable cars with 360-degree views, go early morning before clouds roll in (R395 return)
- Boulders Beach Penguins - African penguins waddling on beaches, genuinely adorable and unexpectedly close (R190 entry)
- Stellenbosch Wine Tasting - Full-day tours through spectacular wine estates, world-class wines at fraction of European prices (from R800)
- De Waterkant Gay Scene - Start at Beefcakes for dinner, move to Crew Bar for cocktails, end at The Waiting Room for dancing
- Signal Hill Sunset - Free viewpoint overlooking city, ocean, and Table Mountain, bring wine and snacks
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Treehouse Boutique Hotel Cape Town LGBTQ-friendly?
Absolutely. We felt completely comfortable as a gay couple throughout our stay. The staff were welcoming and professional without any awkwardness, and the location is a 20-minute walk from De Waterkant, Cape Town's vibrant gay district. Cape Town itself ranks among the most LGBTQ-friendly destinations we've visited anywhere globally, with strong legal protections and visible, integrated queer communities.
How far is Treehouse Boutique Hotel from V&A Waterfront?
About 25 minutes walking along the scenic harbour front, though we usually took Uber which cost R50-70 (£2-3) and arrived within five minutes. The walk is lovely during the day with ocean views and joggers creating pleasant atmosphere, but the return journey is significantly uphill which proves challenging after full days of sightseeing.
Are the road-facing rooms at Treehouse Hotel noisy?
We stayed in a road-facing room on a lower floor and experienced no noise issues whatsoever. The rooms are well-insulated, modern, and comfortable with effective double glazing. If you're an exceptionally light sleeper who wakes at the slightest sound, perhaps request a pool-view room, but for normal sleep requirements the road-facing rooms are completely fine and cost less.
Does Treehouse Boutique Hotel have load shedding issues?
We didn't notice load shedding at all during our stay despite South Africa experiencing regular scheduled power outages. The hotel clearly has backup systems (generators or batteries) that eliminate any guest-facing disruption. Lights, air conditioning, wifi, and all facilities worked continuously. Ironically, the only place we experienced load shedding in Cape Town was at a five-star property during dinner.
What's breakfast like at Treehouse Boutique Hotel?
Outstanding quality and variety. The breakfast combines à la carte hot dishes (eggs Benedict, pancakes, French toast) with buffet-style continental options (fresh fruit, pastries, cereals, yoghurts, local specialties). The quality consistently exceeded expectations and breakfast is included in the room rate, making it exceptional value. Staff remembered our preferences by the second morning.
Is Treehouse Hotel good value for money?
Exceptional value. You get genuine boutique character, spotless modern rooms, fantastic included breakfast, exceptional staff who genuinely care about your experience, and a perfect location for significantly less than big-name five-star properties. We'd choose it over more expensive options based purely on the overall experience and genuine warmth that made us feel valued rather than processed.
How safe is Cape Town for LGBTQ+ travellers?
Very safe in tourist areas like Green Point, De Waterkant, V&A Waterfront, and Camps Bay where Treehouse is located. South Africa legalised same-sex marriage in 2006 and constitutional protections exist for LGBTQ+ people. We felt completely comfortable holding hands publicly and experienced zero negative reactions. General safety considerations apply as with any major city, but Cape Town ranks among the most LGBTQ-friendly destinations we've visited.
For more LGBTQ+ travel guides and honest hotel reviews, explore our South Africa Destinations, browse our hotel and accommodation recommendations, and discover our LGBTQ+ travel tips. Watch our latest adventures on our YouTube channel.
Travel with us, always with love and a little luxe 🌈✈️

