Summer Bucket-List Things to Do in Georgia
The summer months offer a perfect time to take a trip locally and discover some hidden gems that you’ve never experienced before. It’s the phenomenon of being a tourist in…

The summer months offer a perfect time to take a trip locally and discover some hidden gems that you've never experienced before. It's the phenomenon of being a tourist in your own town, with the chance to hit the road and discover some glorious spots that others have traveled far and wide to experience but are really just in your backyard. So, get ready to have a fun summer, because the official travel season is here. Now, one travel outlet has picked out five "bucket-list" things to do in the state, so these items should make for a pretty comprehensive summer to-do list.
Summer Bucket-List Things to Do
The crew at Moon Travel Guides has a feature out with three exciting bucket-list things to do in each state, including this one. "Experiencing the best of the United States can inspire, change perspectives, transform—and hopefully encourage us all to keep contributing to making this country's great experiment a success," they state in the feature.
The three bucket-list things to do for Georgia according to Moon Travel Guides are "wandering hauntingly beautiful Bonaventure Cemetery," "celebrating a Civil Rights luminary at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site" and "glimpsing wild horses on Cumberland Island National Seashore." Those things are truly unique to Georgia.
So, is it summer yet? Almost. Summer officially starts, according to Britannica, during "the summer solstice, which occurs on June 20 or 21 in the Northern Hemisphere and on December 21 or 22 in the Southern Hemisphere." For 2025, that falls on June 20, and it lasts for three months.
"The summer solstice marks the official start of astronomical summer and the longest day of the year," Space adds in a feature about summer solstice and what it means. "It occurs when one of Earth's poles is tilted toward the sun at its most extreme angle, and due to Earth's tilt, this happens twice a year." Plus, in the Northern Hemisphere, the summer solstice falls in June, but that's actually winder solstice in the Southern Hemisphere.