美国人会在他们的虚拟V到哪儿去了acations? Here’s a State-by-State Breakdown

Country-wide (and world-wide) shutdowns and stay-at-home orders have left most of us to satisfy our wanderlust with virtual travel instead of hopping on a plane or train. Luckily, there are a number ofmuseums,national parks,gardens, famous homes (like Buckingham Palace) and eventhe Stonehenge Summer Solstice eventfor us to explore online, all for free. And while we certainly know which virtual adventures we’ve personally been taken advantage of, we can’t help but wonder: Where have the rest of you been going?

Fortunately for us, the folks at FrontierBundles were also curious and socompiled a mass of interesting statson just which online tourist attractions have been the most popular these past few weeks, broken down by state. Here’s what they found.

each state s most popular virtual tour
courtesy of Frontier Bundles

Thirty one states preferred international destinations over domestic, although it seems both New Yorkers and Californians prefer to keep things local with in-state museums proving the most popular in each (theMetropolitan Museum of Artand theMonterey Bay Aquariumrespectively).

Floridians, Georgians and Texans also preferred home-state tourist attractions with theWalt Disney World Resort,Georgia AquariumandHouston Zoocoming out on top. Fun fact: The Houston Zoo is the second-most visited zoo in the United States, after the Bronx Zoo, despite the fact that it’s only one-fifth the size.

Residents of New Jersey and Colorado seemed to be inspired by the fact that their quarantines began during Women’s History Month (March), leading to a surge of visits to theNational Women’s History Museum.

France was unsurprisingly a hot virtual destination with tours ofthe catacombs of Paris,VersaillesandThe Louvreproving most popular in eight states, while Italian museums proved popular out west, specificallythe Uffizi Galleryin Florence.

Those living in Rhode Island have had some pretty strong urges to hop across the pond to Europe with a multi-national three-way tie for the top spot featuring The Louvre in France, the Uffizi Gallery in Italy andthe Van Gogh Museumin Amsterdam.

One surprising stand-out is theRijksmuseumin Amsterdam, which was the most-visited virtual destination in not one, not two, butthreestates—Arizona, Oregon and Oklahoma. It currently houses over one million works of art including a huge selection of pieces by the Dutch Masters Rembrandt, Vermeer and Van Gogh. Who knew?