This spring, as many Canadians made plans to spend their summer vacation without crossing the U.S. border, we asked Globe readers to tell us about their travel destinations.

Your responses were captivating – so we asked for something more. We asked you to send us a postcard from your journey.

Postcards are picturesque, of course, and whimsical, even nostalgic. As Walter Schneider of Toronto put it, sending postcards is a “retro way of saying hello.” A postcard is a tactile, physical thing in an increasingly digital, AI-generated world: hand-picked and hand-written, placed by hand in a mailbox. The sender’s trust that it will reach its intended recipient more ethereal than physical, and deeply human.

Your postcards started trickling into our office in June (weeks before the Air Canada labour dispute complicated many travel plans). A totem pole here, a rainbow there. Pictures of lakes and oceans, rocks and mountains. Lighthouses and icebergs.

There were postcards of trees, fields and rolling hills. A bear. A bighorn sheep. A historic B.C. streetcar. The CN Tower. Parliament Hill. Nova Scotia’s provincial flag.

On the back, you wrote of friendly places and kind people. Of joy and gratitude, wildlife and beauty. Ice cream, barbecue, lobster rolls, sunsets. Interconnectedness.

Here, in your own words, you describe the wonders you visited in the summer of 2025, in this country we call home.

-Idella Sturino, advice and service editor

Click on the images below to explore postcards readers mailed us from their travels across Canada this
summer

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