At the moment — on Wednesday, May 24 — he’s also in the midst of one of his longest stretches without visiting a Trump property. This 10-day stretch in which he has not visited one of his hotels, resorts or golf courses is the longest since the Jan. 22-Feb.2 period. In other words, since two days after he took office.

But there’s another interesting facet to Trump’s current travels. On Wednesday morning, he was farther from a Trump-branded property than he has been at any other point in his presidency.

Trump’s ongoing trip is his first overseas as commander as chief, as you’ve probably heard. Before this, he had never ventured west of the Mississippi River as president.

That meant that the farthest he got from a Trump property was during his visit to Nashville, which left him about 330 miles from Trump National Golf Club outside Charlotte. But by venturing to the Middle East and Europe, he has broken that record — excluding, of course, the midflight portions of his trip over the Atlantic Ocean.

Interestingly, it wasn’t when he was in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, that he was farthest from a Trump property. There, he was fairly close to the Trump International Golf Club in Dubai.

(The farthest property is his hotel in Hawaii.)

Riyadh has been the second-closest stop to a Trump property during the ongoing trip. His stops in Jerusalem (and nearby Bethlehem) and Sicily are in the middle, all closest to Trump’s property in Istanbul. They are about 730 and 764 miles away, respectively.

That property in Istanbul is also the closest to where he was Wednesday morning in Rome — but, at about 860 miles, it puts Trump farther from one of his business empire’s holdings than he has been since his inauguration.

Trump went from Rome to Brussels, and, in doing so, from a place farthest from a Trump property to the place that’s closest. Brussels is only about 490 miles from his club in Turnberry, Scotland.

Trump isn’t due back in the United States until May 27. At that point, he will have been away from a Trump-brand property for 13 days, the longest stretch of his presidency.