For Planet Earth, No Tourism Is a Curse and a Blessing
From the rise in poaching to the waning of noise pollution, travel’s shutdown is having profound effects. Which will remain, and which will vanish?
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Recent and archived work by Lisa W. Foderaro for The New York Times
From the rise in poaching to the waning of noise pollution, travel’s shutdown is having profound effects. Which will remain, and which will vanish?
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Rain has replaced what used to be a white winter in my corner of the world.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Thousands of dams across New York, many abandoned, are blocking fish migrations. A movement to remove them is growing.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Frederick Law Olmsted’s tours of English parks shaped his vision of landscape design. You can see his inspiration in three dimensions by touring five of them.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Wine-tasting, bird-watching, biking and gallery-hopping: In the Outer Cape towns of Eastham, Wellfleet and Truro, there’s plenty to do both in and out of the water.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
A budget hotel is long on camaraderie and short on creature comforts.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Charity Danso, 47, became blind after a bout of malaria led to more serious problems. Her teenage son, back with her after years apart, needed a bed.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Three incumbents, Mr. Faso, Dan Donovan and Claudia Tenney, were defeated by Mr. Delgado, Max Rose and Anthony Brindisi.
By Lisa W. Foderaro
Oprah campaigns for Stacey Abrams; new polling produced some ominous results for Republican House candidates; Trump goes after Ryan.
By Jonathan Martin, Matt Flegenheimer and Alan Blinder
A Republican candidate for Connecticut’s Senate mailed a postcard that featured an image of his Democratic opponent clutching a fistful of $100 bills.
By Lisa W. Foderaro