Saturday, 02 July 2011

Adventure Travel: Floating Down a Lazy River Cools You Off in the Summertime

Adventure Travel
Get the latest headlines from the Adventure Travel GuideSite.

Floating Down a Lazy River Cools You Off in the Summertime
3 Jul 2011, 2:07 am

Guide on River Tubing Excursion in Jamaica

It was above 90 degrees in the jungle, but I was cool while floating on an inner tube down the White River in Jamaica. River tubing is popular here in Jamaica, and in my home state of Colorado.� I've watched a man� floating down Colorado's Yampa river beer in hand, with his dog sprawled across a second inner tube.� Didn't see dogs on inner tubes during my excursion, but the kids in the inner tubes near me were having lots of fun and shrieking with glee as we went through the rapids.

Photo: � Lois Friedland

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Friday, 01 July 2011

Adventure Travel: Most Popular Articles: Top Adventure Travel Companies

Adventure Travel: Most Popular Articles
These articles are the most popular over the last month.

Top Adventure Travel Companies
1 Jul 2011, 11:12 am

Here are are some of the top adventure travel companies that offer an interesting and eclectic array of adventure travel trips. Biking in Morocco, hiking the Inca Trail in Peru and rafting through the Grand Canyon are just the briefest sampling of the experiences these companies offer travelers. Each company's website lists specific adventure travel trips, with detailed itineraries, pricing and images that give a taste of the adventures waiting for you.

1. Quick List Access to Specialty Adventure and Sports Travel Companies?

If you want to zero in on specific adventure travel styles, visit the links below this paragraph. Keep in mind that most of the 20plus adventure travel companies in the master list have impressive trips covering all aspects of adventure travel.

Are you looking for Dream Bicycle Trips & Adventures?
Are you looking for adrenalin-charged Multi-sport Trips?
Are you looking for Best Rafting Trips Worldwide?
Are you looking for sources for great Family Adventure Travel Trips?
Are you looking for entertaining Learning Vacations around the world?
Are you looking for Women's Adventure Travel?
Are you looking for Extreme Adventures?
If you want to look at all the top companies, keep scrolling down this page.

2. Gap Adventures Open Up the World

Visiting a monastary in Bhutan with GAP AdventuresGap Adventures

Gap Adventures has again been recognized by National Geographic Traveler in the magazine's 2011 "Tours of a Lifetime" list.  For seven consecutive years, National Geographic magazine has selected a Gap Adventures tour as one of its "25 Best New Adventure Trips of the Year". This company offers a choice of more than 1,200 adventure travel trips to all seven continents. Check out the "Specials" section, where you can find discounts on fascinating trips.

3. Geographic Expeditions Adventurous Trips

Geographic ExpeditionsGeographic Expeditions

Geographic Expeditions offers a portfolio of overland tours, treks, walks, and expeditionary voyages to the world's most astonishing places, ranging from journeys in China, Nepal and Vietnam to Mongolia and Ghana.

4. Austin-Lehman Adventures

Austin Lehman Adventures in GermanyAustin-Lehman Adventures

If you're looking for adventure travel trips that kids of varied ages will enjoy, or trips for you and your teenagers, check out Austin-Lehman Adventures. Multi-Sport trips -- bike, hike, climb, paddle, ride -- go to such scenic places as Alaska, Costa Rica, Mexico, Canada, and Bryce, Zion and Yosemite National Parks.

5. Ecotourism and Nature Trips With International Expeditions

International Expeditions offers small-group eco-tours and nature travel trips to exotic locations including the Amazon, Egypt, Galapagos, India and Kenya during the annual animal migration. the company offers in-depth itineraries designed to explore the soul of a region, through behind-the-scenes access to places and experiences. The group leaders are either naturalists or historians, sometimes both.

6. Off-the-Beaten Path Adventure Travel With Intrepid Travel

Riding an elephant in ThailandIntrepid Photography Competition 2007, Bathtime, Thailand - Wendy Broekx

Intrepid Travel is a niche adventure travel company that focuses on taking travelers off the beaten track to more than 90 destinations around the globe. On these generally small-group trips you’ll travel in ways similar to the local people, respecting their culture and the environment. The groups take mostly public transportation, stay and eat in small-scale locally-owned establishments.

7. Classic Journeys Specializes in Soft Adventure Trips

Riding camels in Morocco during a Classic Journeys walking tripClassic Journeys

Classic Journeys specializes in boutique, small-group, soft-adventure travel. The company operates three types of trips: cultural walking adventures, family journeys and culinary tours. Any Classic Journeys trip can be transformed into a private journey.

8. REI Adventures Offers Great Active Travel Trips

REI Adventures offers great active travel trips, such as canoeing on a lake here in the U.S., cycling in Vietnam, or sea kayaking and hiking in Croatia. And, these are just a few of the 90plus weekend-to-multiweek trips offered by REI Adventures, part of the REI that has more than 80 stores in the U.S. chock-full of equipment and clothing for adventure travelers.

9. Canadian Mountain Holidays Heli-Ski and Heli-Hike Trips

If heli-skiing or heli-hiking are on your adventure-travel radar, check out the variety of trips offered by Canadian Mountain Holidays (CMH). In the winter this company offers heli-ski for advanced intermediates to expert skiers and snowboarders. In the summer, the heli-hiking trips for novices to experienced hikers and for families. CMH also has mountaineering trips.

10. River Rafting & Other Adventure Vacations with ROW Adventures

River Rafting with Row AdventuresRow Adventures

ROW Adventures offers river-rafting trips and adventurous vacations as diverse as snorkeling with sea lions and turtles in the Galapagos Islands and camel trekking in Algeria. Some of ROW's trips have been included in National Geographic Traveler Magazine’s “Tours of a Lifetime” for three years running, and Outside Magazine’s Top Ten New Trips for two consecutive years.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Take a Zipline or Canopy Tour

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week

Take a Zipline or Canopy Tour
1 Jul 2011, 11:00 am

Ready to soar like a bird from tree to tree in a rain forest? Zipline or canopy tours give you a bird's-eye view of the forest, move you across canyons and show you scenery that can't be viewed from the ground. Before you hook onto a line and start zipping, however, reputable zipline tour operators give you basic training, which may include a fast ride on wire close to the ground.

Difficulty: Average

Time Required: 30 minutes to a few hours

Here's How:

  1. What is a zipline tour?

    One zipline lover describes it as "being as close as you can get to flying across the top of the jungle." Participants don a harness with a caribiner that is attached to a wheel on a cable strung between trees. You push off from a platform on one tree and zip along the cable to a platform on another tree. You can be anywhere from 20- to 80-feet off the ground and, literally, flying between the trees at a height in jungles where birds and monkeys hang out on the branches.
  2. Different types of zipline tours

    Zipline tours vary both in length and style. Many tours in Costa Rica and other countries with jungles or rainforests include a jeep tour to the zipline site during which a guide tells you about the wildlife and flora. At some mountain resorts, the zipline experiences are near the base of summer-green ski slopes and the first zipline is reachable via a chairlift. Some experiences only have five or six ziplines; others have many more strung between trees.
  3. What does the basic training include?

    Ideally, the experience will include some "how to" information plus a safety briefing. You'll learn how to put on the harness, latch onto the cable and how to brake if you want to slow down while zipping on a cable. After you learn the basics and watch a demonstration, you may get a chance to practice once or twice on a short zipline that is just a few feet off the ground.
  4. Who enjoys zipline tours?

    Many zipline experiences can be enjoyed by entire families. But before you book, ask about the number of ziplines and the heights at which they are strung to make sure you are comfortable with the heights for both you and your children. Also, make sure of the age, weight and height limits.
  5. What do I need to wear and bring?

    You should wear long pants and gym shoes or hiking boots. Shoes must not have open toes. If you have long hair put it in a pony tail. Use a strap to keep your glasses secured. Don't have any sharp objects, such as keys or pens in your pockets. Keep your camera in a case close to your body, not dangling on a strap. The company should provide the harness, a helmet and gloves. But, confirm that they provide all three.
  6. Do I need to be in great physical condition?

    The answer depends upon the tour. A basic zipline experience requires little physical exertion, although it's not for anyone who has a serious fear of heights). If the tour you want to take includes hiking, mountain biking, kayaking or other activities, you’ll have to be in the proper shape to participate.
  7. What's the minimum age?

    Always verify the minimum age before you book the tour. Some tours require participants be 18 years or older.
  8. Are there minimum and maximum weights?

    Brad Morse of Canopy Tours, Inc., says that anyone on the big side concerned about fitting into a harness properly should check in advance with any waist-size requirements and ask if there is a chest harness or full body harness.
  9. How much do these tours cost?

    Prices vary dramatically depending upon whether it’s just a zipline experience, or if the zipline tour is part of a longer tour that might include a jeep tour to the site where the ziplines are set up and lunch. They can cost as little as $45 for just the zipline experience up to $120 or more for a zipline experience and other activities.
  10. Companies offering zipline tours

    Zipline tours are offered in many places around the globe from Whistler and Alaska in North America to Hawaii, Costa Rica and New Zealand. Canopy Tours, Inc. has a directory of Zip Line tours around the world. With Kauai Backcountry Adventures you can zoom down a mountainside on a series of 7 ziplines.
  11. How do you find zipline tours?

    Start at Top Zipline and Canopy Tours. If you already know where you are vacationing, many vacation packages offer a zipline tour option and other countries you can usually book them through the hotel concierge or front desk. You can also book before you go directly with a company via its Internet site.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Zipline Tours at Whistler

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week

Zipline Tours at Whistler
1 Jul 2011, 11:00 am

Summer or winter you can take a zipline tours at Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. After a safety orientation, you'll take a ride that zips you on a traininng Skyline over 16 Mile Creek and through the massive old-growth forest separating Whistler and Blackcomb mountains. Then, the real fun starts. It takes five Skylines to get back to the base, and along the way the guides will tell you about the surrounding ecosystems. The five ziplines are linked by boardwalks and trails. Tours are offered daily.

Where to Learn More

Visit Whistler Zipline Tours to learn more or call the Whistler Blackcomb Activity Hotline at 877-935-4528.

Find Zip Line Adventures Around the World

Zip lines adventures keep growing in popularity. Once you had to travel to Costa Rica, Thailand, South Arica or other exotic countries to go on a zipline, but today there are zip lines around the globe. Click on Top Zipline Adventures to see if there is one near you, or one in the locale you're planning to explore on your next trip.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Hiking in the Swiss Alps

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week

Hiking in the Swiss Alps
1 Jul 2011, 11:00 am

The Swiss have a word for it: Alpenbegeisterung, literally “Alps enthusiasm.” It’s a highly infectious urge to set out on a mountain trail in search of stunning sceneryâ€"jagged peaks girded with glaciers, deep-cut valleys laced with surging waterfalls, and moist fir forests topped with wildflower-spangled meadows. Casual visitors to Switzerland’s Jungfrau region are unlikely to leave without having caught at least a mild case of Alpenbegeisterung, and the only cure seems to be a return visit that allows more time to explore this treasure of splendid alpine scenery and culture.

Hiking in the Jungfrau Swiss Alps Region

The Jungfrau region is one of the most beautiful places on earth. It's a glistening mountain landscape and home to the Alps’ highest concentration of glaciers. Here you’ll find exquisite hiking trails, hundreds of dazzling waterfalls, and legendary peaks like the Eiger with its fearsome North Face. Located in Switzerland's Bernese Oberland, and most easily accessed from the city of Interlaken, the Jungfrau region is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, recognized worldwide for its stunning natural beauty and cultural heritage.

But with all its beauty, finding solitude and an escape from the tourist trail can be difficult in the Junfrau. With millions of visitors pouring into the region annually, resorts like Gridelwald, and even smaller villages like Mürren and Wengen teem with tourists in both summer and winter. For those itching to ditch the crowdsâ€"and willing to take off on footâ€"Obersteinberg may be the last untrammeled corner of the Jungfrau.

Off the Tourist Trail Hiking Route in the Swiss Alps

The route to Obersteinberg begins in the village Stechelberg at the head of the Lauterbrunnen Valley. It’s the world’s largest glacial valleyâ€"larger than Yosemiteâ€"so you can’t help but be awestruck. It’s an impressive sight, especially in the summer, as 72 waterfalls pour off its upper rim into the valley floor below, while shimmering icy peaks loom overhead.

From the final PostBus stop at Stechelberg take the paved footpath upvalley on the left bank of the already-raging Weisse Lütschine. Crossing the river, you’ll continue uphill following signs to Trachsellauenen, a small guesthouse and restaurant near a 300-year-old mining site. Continuing on, the path narrows and steepens considerably, becoming a series of over fifty shaded switchbacks.

Arriving at the Hotel Tschingelhorn, views to the valley open up and signal that you’re nearing Obersteinberg. Within about 2½ hours after leaving Stechelberg, the Swiss flag, flapping from a pole in front of the hotel, appears in view, along with some small farm building, a pig sty, happily grazing cows, and the traditional-style hotel dating to the 1880s. Obersteinberg sits at an elevation of 5833 feet, a full 2850 feet of vertical ascent from your Stechelberg starting point.

Gazing across the valley from the hotel you’ll have spectacular views of hanging glaciers perched above waterfalls that cascade down the valley walls. Of all the waterfalls, Schmadribachfall is the showstopper with a height of nearly one thousand feet. This waterfall has been captured on canvas by noted landscape artists going back to the 1820s, but due to its remote location, more people have seen the paintings than have actually seen the falls. Hiking in a Protected Area in the Swiss Alps Obersteinberg is set within a protected area, where many alpine species that were once hunted to near extinction are now making a welcome comeback. Sightings of ibex, chamois, and red deer are frequent and always thrilling. Sheep and cows graze the rich alpine grasses in summer, as they have for hundreds of years. The adjacent farm is a working dairy, and though alpine summers are short and workdays are long, the farmhands are justifiably proud to show visitors the time-honored cheese-making process.

Overnight at Swiss Hotel Tschingelhorn

Dinner at the hotel focuses on traditional Swiss dishesâ€"simple, hearty, and well-preparedâ€"while breakfast is adorned with fresh butter and Alp Cheese from the neighboring farm. A night at the hotel can be enjoyed in either a dormitory or a private room. Since there is no electricity at the hotel, you’ll be provided with a candle to illuminate your room and a smothering eiderdown comforter to keep you warm on potentially chilly nights. Bathrooms are down the hall and each room has a pitcher and basin for washing up in the morning.

Return Via More Adventurous Route in the Swiss Alps

When it comes time to depart, you can always return the way you came. But for the adventurous, ascend the slope behind the hotel and follow the contour of the mountain to the north as is ascends to Busenalp before dropping into the charming village of Gimmelwald, a walk of about 3 hours. From Gimmelwald you can return directly to Stechelberg by tram or continue on to Mürren and back to Lauterbrunnen.

From Obersteinberg you can also walk to the upper glacial basin in about an hour, where Oberhornsee, a deep-blue tarn rests in the shadows of snowcapped Grosshorn, Breithorn, and Tschingelhorn. Sitting in this upper basin, remote and removed from the valley bustle, you sense that you’ve discovered the source of the Jungfrau’s water and natural beautyâ€"the mother lode of the Jungfrau.

More Hikes from Greg Witt

Visit my 5 Best Day Hikes in the Swiss Alps for more of my favorite walking routes in Switzerland.

I believe that Salt Lake City is the greatest hiking destination in America. Name another city in the country where within 300 yards of the state’s Capitol building and the downtown center you can be walking in a protected nature reserve, spotting elk and raptors. For a description of five great hikes in this city click on Salt Lake City hikes.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Adventure Camps for Teens

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week

Adventure Camps for Teens
1 Jul 2011, 11:00 am

These teen adventure camps are sure to give adrenalin rushes and painless doses of learning new sports and activities. The adventure camps offer everything from backpacking, canyoneering and hiking to sailing, scba diving, learning motorsports, bungee jumping and ziplining. The trips go all over the world, from as close at the Grand Canyon to as far away as China and Fiji.

1. Hollywood Stunt Camps to Extreme Action Adventures

Hollywood Stunt Camp run by Pali Overnight AdventuresPali Overnight Adventures

Pali Overnight Adventures has 16 novel summer camps and several will entice active, adventurous teens.  Among the choices are the Extreme Action Adventure, Motorsports Extravaganza, Hollywood Stunt Camp, Secret Agent Camp and Girl Power Extreme.

For example, they can ride zip lines, race dune buggies and climb rock walls at Extreme Action Adventures. Or, they can learn hand-to-hand combat and fight scene choreography at the  Hollywood Stunt Camp.

There are one- and two-week sessions, and four-week sessions that can combine two different types of camps.

2. Introduce Teens to the World With Discovery Student Adventures

Discovery Student Adventures is powered by Discovery Education, which was created by the Discovery Channel, so the trips are sure to be imaginative and mind-expanding.

The all-inclusive international trips range from Australia and China to Costa Rica and the Grand Canyon. The trips are designed to entertain while expanding teens' horizons. In South Africa, teens will visit Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela lived as a political prisoner, or they can canoe to indigenous villages in Costa Rica, or

3. Teen Adventure Camps with Wilderness Ventures

Activities range from hiking and kayaking to sailing and backpacking in some of the world's most pristine places. Trips range from the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Northwest to  Europe, South America and Fiji.

4. Outward Bound Challenges Teens" Limits

Outward Bound courses are designed to challenge teens' mental, physical and social skills. Outward Bound's philosophy: "Facing the challenges the course will offer you, you will emerge physically and mentally stronger, with an increased mastery of expedition skills as well as a better understanding of your own capabilities and how to make a difference in the world." Choices include canyoneering, desert backpacking, dog sledding, rock climbing, sailing and more.

 

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