Saturday, 06 August 2011

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Canopy Tours

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Canopy Tours
Aug 6th 2011, 10:00

Shhh. Keep quiet or you’ll scare away the animals. You’re on a canopy walkway or taking a zipline tour and the goal is to see birds, monkeys and other animals as they move around the tree tops that surround you.

Canopy Tours on Swaying Bridges

To reach the wiggling wooden bridge that is 90 feet above the jungle floor you’ve climbed up steps nailed into the side of a tree trunk. Now you’re faced with walking from the platform you are standing on across the walkway with a wooden-slat floor to another platform 50 feet away. The trick to walking on these swaying bridges is to hold onto the steel cable sides and walk slowly. That’s okay, because now you can look around see how different the animals look when you’re so much closer to them.

Glide From One Tree to Another On A Zipline Tour

If walkways are too tame for you, try a zip line tour for a faster route between the trees. Considered one of the hottest new adventure sports, on a zip line you traverse via cables from a platform set on one tree to another, reaching speeds of more than 20 miles an hour. The action usually comes with an explanation of what's happening with the animals and flora in the environment around you.

Jungles and rain forests are prime places to take canopy and zipline tours. You can find zip line tours easily if you’re going to countries such as Costa Rica, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Mexico and Peru. One place to start looking is Canopy Tour The walkways are more scarce. You'll find a few in the Peru's Amazon jungle and others in Ghana's Kakum National Park and Gun Palung National Park, Borneo.

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.

How to Take a Zipline Tour?

If you want to know more about zipline tours, if any training is needed (and the answer is minimal) and where to find companies offering these tours visit taking a zipline tour.

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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
Aug 6th 2011, 10:00

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: Volunteer Travel

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Volunteer Travel
Aug 6th 2011, 10:00

A growing number of teens on spring break, baby boomers and well-traveled seniors are taking volunteer vacations to help causes abroad or in the U.S. Feeding African lion cubs, building homes in a Third World country, or helping preserve Caribbean reefs while diving -- all are forms of Voluntourism.

Combining a vacation or trip abroad with volunteering on local projects is one way many travelers choose to immerse themselves in local cultures and make a difference. Here are suggestions for the route to deciding if volunteer travel -- VolunTourism -- is for you. Returning travelers say it's a life-changing experience.

Difficulty: Easy

Time Required: A few hours of research, phone calls and personal assessment

Here's How:

  1. Choose an organization that follows your passions. Do you feel strongly about protecting wild elephants from extinction? Do you feel compelled to build houses for hurricane or tsunami victims? Would you like to help farmers till the land?
  2. Do your research. Visit websites that list volunteer programs and trips. Some sites, such as i-to-i and Volunteer Abroad let you search by typing a country name in a search box or clicking on a map, specify the preferred length of a volunteer trip and the type of volunteer work you would like to do.
  3. Do a reality check about your own personality. If you are doing volunteer work in a culture that is alien to you, will you be open-minded enough to accept and respect the views of the people you are helping?
  4. Think about how much time you want to spend working on a volunteer project and how much time you would like to do touristy activities. If you want a mix, companies such as i-to-i offer "Meaningful Tours" that include some volunteering and lot of sightseeing.
  5. Once you’ve found a few projects of interest, email or call to ask exactly what type of work will you be doing. Teaching in a classroom? Construction? Working with wild animals? Take time to seriously consider if this type of voluntourism is in sync with your physical conditioning or mental skills.
  6. Ask the trip organizer what the country and the specific region the project is located are like. Is the project in a big city? A small town or a rural location where there might not be indoor plumbing and you have to live in a shack or a tent?
  7. How long is the project. A day, a week or months? How many people will be involved in the project? Two or three, a dozen or more?
  8. I want to take my family on a vacation that includes a volunteering component. How do I decide if it’s a good family trip?
  9. Who runs the trip? A non-profit organization in the U.S. or in the country where the project is located? A local organization? What’s the organization’s background?
  10. Travelers typically pay to go on volunteer vacations but ask exactly what the money covers. Does it cover lodging and food for you? The in-country support staff? The staff working behind the scenes to make the trip possible?
  11. If you're a high school or a college student, especially one studying pre-med, ask if there is an internship. If you work for a living, will the volunteer work you do during this trip enhance your resume?
  12. Once you’ve chosen a project, ask about the type and amount of support offered. Once you book will you get pre-departure help arranging your travel? Information about what shots and vaccines might be needed? A packet of information about the country and the project? What about support during the trip and even afterward?
  13. Does the organization have a charitable foundation, in case you decide that a trip isn’t right for you but you'd like to make a donation to the cause.
  14. These trips and experiences are as close as building homes in New Orleans or a far away as helping in orphanages in Romania or elephant camps in Africa. To see a list of organizations that offer volunteer travel trips and vacations (where you spend a few days of a trip volunteering and explore a new country the rest) click on Top Sources for Volunteer Vacations.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: 2010 Adventure Travel Trends

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
2010 Adventure Travel Trends
Aug 6th 2011, 10:00

All travelers, including people who enjoy adventure travel, are booking closer to departure dates, so tour operators are offering big last-minute discounts to fill trips. Many travelers are hesitant to book an adventure travel trip far in advance, in part because so many trips are expensive and in part because of concerns about the economy. Proof of this can be seen on the Web sites of the top adventure travel companies. Click on a company's Web site and look for tabs with names like "Specials," or "Deals" and you may find discounts from 10 percent to much more off trips that are coming up within the next few months.

2010 Adventure Travel Trends - How to Take Advantage of Them in 2011

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Friday, 05 August 2011

Adventure Travel: Colorful Prints & Wall Murals of Adventures Around the World

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Colorful Prints & Wall Murals of Adventures Around the World
Aug 5th 2011, 07:05

Biking in Vietnam poster

If you� want to decorate your walls with colorful and sometimes artistic framed prints or wall murals, take a look at Lonely Planet's collection of travel� posters. There are dozens to choose from, taken in locales around the world. Some of the prints with adventure and sports vacations themes range from surfing and scuba diving to hiking over sand dunes and biking in Vietnam. Lonely Planet is offering them through AllPosters.com.

Photo provided by Allposters.com

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Tuesday, 02 August 2011

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Beach Vacations for Adventures

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Beach Vacations for Adventures
Aug 2nd 2011, 10:00

The Pembrokeshire Coast on Wales southwestern shore is a magnet for adventurous travelers who enjoy coasteering, cliff jumping, surfing on scary reef breaks and swimming in sea caves. And, that's just in the water. On land, there's hiking and biking along the 186-mile long Pembrokeshire Coastal Path, rock climbing and riding horses in the sand. If you enjoy exploring, there are more than 40 Iron Age promontory forts, Norman and Medieval castles, and towns to visit during a hike.

The Pembrokeshire coastline was rated second in National Geographic's Top Rated Coastal Destinations for good reasons. As one of the expert panelists commented: " Magnificent protected coastline from both ecological and geological perspectives."

Freshwater West and Newgate are good starting locations for adventurers. If you're a surfer, Fresh is a huge beach with large peaks along the main beach and good breaks in the smaller bays to the south. (The beach was featured in the latest Harry Potter film.)

Coasteering, scrambling up a cliff wearing a helmet, a wetsuit and life jacket, then jumping into the whitewater surf, is popular here. St. David's is the starting point for many of the coasteering trips.

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Monday, 01 August 2011

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Cliff Diving

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
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Cliff Diving
Aug 1st 2011, 10:00

If your friend or commander told you to dive off a cliff as a sign of your courage and loyalty, would you? This ultra sport - cliff diving - started, it's believed, when Hawaiian King Kahekili commanded his men to leap off the cliff on the southern end of the island of Lanai, as a test of courage and loyalty to him. They did!

King Kamehameha later refined the jumping into cliff diving competitions at the same site. Today, there are cliff diving competitions around the globe. Red Bull runs one of the most dramatic competitions, when skilled cliff divers leap off cliffs or platforms set up to 85-feet above lakes or oceans.

Watching Cliff Diving

Most people would rather watch pro divers than try this risky sport themselves. At La Quebrada Cliffs in Acapulco, Mexico, spectators sit in a restaurant atop the cliff and watch the divers fly over a 148-foot cliff into the water. These divers, who have been part of the evening's entertainment for years, time their entries carefully so they land in the ocean when the waves come in and water is deepest.

The annual Red Bull Cliff Diving competition draws hundreds of spectators to the sites around the world. The dives are acrobatic in design, and watchers hold their collective breath as the competitors take off from picturesque rocks of platforms set high on cliffs. The 2009 eight-country tour includes stops through Europe starting in France and the finals are in Greece, September 20.

Do Not Try Cliff Diving Without Proper Training

Cliff divers are highly trained divers. Todd Walton, who has been a part of the cliff-high diving world for some 20 years, stresses the need for a sound technical education and extensive training before taking the first dive off a cliff. He suggests starting by diving in pools and gradually increase the height of one's dives.

Control of both body and mind is essential when cliff diving. Cliff divers who are highly trained know to check out sites carefully before making a dive. This includes, among other things, checking the wave action, the height of the cliff at where one will dive, the wave action, the depth of the water, and the rocks and other obstacles on the side of the cliff and underwater. Checking with locals is highly advised.

To Find Cliff Diving Information and Pictures

If you want to learn more about cliff diving, visit World High Diving Federation. Click on the "more images" link below the picture at the top of this article to see two more images from Red Bull Cliff Diving Competitions. If you want to learn more about the Red Bull Cliff Diving Competition and see more pictures of the pro divers, visit Red Bull Cliff Diving.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Travel With Maps from Maps.com

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Travel With Maps from Maps.com
Aug 1st 2011, 10:00

Maps.com bills itself as the world's largest map store - and the selection of maps, guidebooks, globes and map accessories is astonishing. The Maps.com website may offer one-stop shopping, if you're looking for maps and travel guidebooks for specific states or countries. If you want to visit Thailand, for example, maps.com has more than 30 different maps and guidebooks. Choices range from Insight's laminated Flexmap, which won't fall apart from constant use while traveling, to city maps for Bangkok and Chang Mai, and the Lonely Planet's guidebooks to Thailand, Southeast Asia and much more.

Travel Maps, Guidebooks, Globes and More

Looking for digital maps, build-your-own custom radius maps or a world, USA or international atlases? You'll find them here. Adventure travelers who love to explore should check out the World Risk Map, which has topics such as health risks, common threats to travelers, and security tips, that are presented both in graphic and text form. The map also has contact information for countries around the world, plus phone numbers and websites to obtain up-to-the-minute information if available. You can even find historical maps from the National Geographic archives.

Maps.com Website

Visit Maps.com for maps and atlases to travel guides and map games. Check out the link to "Free Stuff" on the top of the home page.

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Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now: Aquarium Scuba Dives & Snorkel

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Aquarium Scuba Dives & Snorkel
Aug 1st 2011, 10:00

Nose-to-nose with a 250-pound grouper, the scuba diver waves at the crowd on the far side of the glass in the aquarium. Did you know aquarium scuba diving - and snorkeling -- with fish is offered at several aquariums in the U.S., as well as in other countries? Some "snorkel with the fish" experiences are open age six and older. Scuba certification is required for most dives.

All aquariums below belong to the Association of Zoos andAquariums, America's leading accrediting organization for zoos and aquariums.  Members have achieved rigorous standards for animal care, education, wildlife conservation and science.

1. Snorkel or Dive Into the Downtown Aquarium in Denver, Colorado

(c) Dick Friedland

The Downtown Aquarium has several programs, including "Swim With The Fish, "Dive With The Sharks," "Underwater Photography" and "Adventure Dives." You can take scuba classes with A-I Scuba Colorado to get a scuba diver certification, which includes two aquarium dives.

If you'd like to more about diving with sharks in an aquarium, read Dive Into the Shark Pool. I did and it was a lot of fun.

2. Diving With Sharks at the Mandalay Bay Hotel Las Vegas

About.com's Guide to Las Vegas, Zeke Quezada, dived into the Shark Reef Aquarium at the Mandalay Bay Hotel in Las Vegas. His reaction: "Feeling the gentle glide of a dorsal fin on my thigh I examined the reef shark in such a way that I never thought possible."  If you're a scuba diver visiting Las Vegas, take time away from the tables and nightclubs to go Diving With Sharks.

3. Swim with Sharks at Adventure Aquarium in Camden, New Jersey

Scuba diving with sharks in the Adventure AquariumGoerge Widman for Adventure Aquarium

The "Sharks Up-Close Encounter" lets scuba-certified guests dive into the adrenaline-pumping world of Adventure Aquarium's 550,000-gallon Shark Realm. Join "Swim With The Sharks" and you can snorkel with sand tiger sharks, sandbar sharks, nurse sharks and even barracuda. Then, enter Stingray Lagoon and feed stingrays.

4. Georgia Aquarium's Journey With Gentle Giants

The Georgia Aquarium has both a dive and a swim program for visitors who want to swim with whale sharks. Divers must be certified. During the swim program you'll stay on the surface.

5. California's Monteray Bay Aquarium Underwater Explorers Program

Kids ages 8-13 dive with staffers in the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Great Tide Pool. The kids wear a mask, drysuit, regulator and specialized SCUBA gear.

6. Atlantis Paradise Island, Bahamas

Go deep-water swimming with dolphins in Dolphin Cay at Atlantis Paradise Island in the Bahamas. You'll snorkel and glide alongside these marvelous creatures.

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Sunday, 31 July 2011

Adventure Travel: Sightseeing Around Shanghai, China, in a 1930s Sidecar Motorbike

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Sightseeing Around Shanghai, China, in a 1930s Sidecar Motorbike
Jul 31st 2011, 21:18

Touring Shanghai in a vintage sidecar motorbike

Despite the high temperature and the humidity, it was breezy as I tooled around Shanghai in a vintage sidecar motorbike. A professional was doing the driving, so I was free to enjoy the kaleidoscope of colorful scenes in this Chinese city. The guide, who spoke excellent English, passed along entertaining anecdotes and tidbit of history as we explored.

Shanghai Sideways Tours, a company started by expats, has a fleet of 30 vintage sidecar motorbikes. You can book customized sightseeing trips lasting from an hour to all-day, or into the evening.� It is a novel way to see the city, and can be booked in advance by anyone visiting Shanghai.

Photo: � 2011 Lois Friedland

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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
Jul 31st 2011, 10:00

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: 5 Swiss Alps Day Hikes

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
5 Swiss Alps Day Hikes
Jul 31st 2011, 10:00

Quite simply, the Swiss Alps is the best supported hiking destination in the world. Admittedly, I’m biased in making such a bold claim. I’ve guided walkers, hikers, and trekkers in the Alps for over 20 years. Where else can you enjoy that kind of mountain scenery and never have to carry anything more than a light daypack. Even on long-distance trails like the Haute Route, which I traverse at least twice a year, you can walk for days on end without a tent, sleeping bag, food or stove, knowing that a well-linked system of mountain huts provides great meals, a hot shower, and a comfortable bed at the end of a long day.

But in today’s economy, where both vacation time and money are tight, you may prefer to spend your limited time in the Alps on day hikes. You’ll be able to enjoy the mountain scenery, waterfalls, glaciers, wildlife, and wildflowers during the day, and still be back in town or on to your next destination before sunset.

Here are my recommendations for the most magnificent day hikes in the Swiss Alps. All are well-marked, easy to follow, and can be hiked in either direction. You’ll find them charted on free maps available from local tourist information offices. In most cases there is a cogwheel railway, funicular or gondola to speed you to a high and scenic elevation to get started. Most importantly you’ll find plenty of huts, inns, and mountain restaurants along the way where weary hikers can get recharged with cheese, chocolate, and apple strudel.

Höhenweg Höhbalmen

Where: Zermatt Length: 11miles/18km Duration: 5-7 hours Zermatt is touristy, to be sure, but within five minutes of the center of town you’re already leaving wildflower-spangled meadows to ascend through larch forests. The route takes you up the steep valley walls with dramatic views back down to Zermatt. Soon you emerge above treeline to a high alpine meadow known as the Höhbalmen, where a sweeping panorama of Switzerland’s highest peaks. Your descent offers spellbinding Matterhorn views to the right and the Zmutt glacier below.

Riffelsee to Sunnegga

Where: Zermatt Length: 8 miles/13km Duration: 3-5 hours Once again, the Matterhorn is the showstopper here, but you access the postcard views quickly by taking the cog-wheeled Gornergrat train to Riffelsee, where you’ll have mirror-reflections of the Matterhorn in the small glacial lakes. Descending to Rifflealp, you’ll be tempted to stay the night at the elegant Rifflealp Hotelâ€"not a bad choiceâ€"but continuing down to cross the Findelbach canyon leads you past more reflecting lakes and alpine meadows. The Sunnegga funicular makes for a quick descent back to Zermatt, although the forest path through the hamlet of Findeln is absolutely charming.

Lac de Louvie

Where: Verbier Length: 9 miles/15km Duration: 6-8 hours Make a quick escape from the ski-resort bustle of Verbier by taking the gondola to Les Ruinettes and continuing on a short stroll to the Cabane du Mont Fort for views of the Mont Blanc massif. Then it’s on to the Sentier de Chamois (the Chamois Trail) where you’re likely to see both ibex and chamois on the rocky slopes above, and commanding views of the Val de Bagnes below. Crossing the Termin Pass, you’ll arrive at Lac de Louvie, a stunningly beautiful gem of a lake with fascinating 200-year old stone barns at its head. Ring the lake, take in the views of the Grand Combin massif and descend through the dense forest to the village of Fionnay where you can catch a bus back down the valley or return to Verbier.

The Faulhornweg

Where: Grindelwald (Jungfrau) Length: 9 miles/15km Duration: 6-8 hours For high-level panoramic views of the Jungfrau, the Faulhornweg is a hiker’s dream. From Grindelwald, take the gondola to First, where a well-worn path leads to the Bachalpsee which creates an infinity-pool with the backdrop of the Eiger, Monch, Jungfrau and other snow-clad peaks flanked by massive glaciers. Soon views to the north open up as you overlook Interlaken and the glistening lakes on both sides. You’ll conclude at Schynige Platte, where the gardens display over 600 alpine species and the 360-degree views are among the best in Europe. A mountain railway that dates to 1893 takes you on the descent to the village of Wilderswil for easy connections to Interlaken or back to Grindelwald.

Mürren

Where: Lauterbrunnen (Jungfrau) Length: 6 miles/10km Duration: 3-4 hours The Lauterbrunnental is the world’s largest glacial valley (it’s hard to imagine someplace that outshines Yosemite) and it’s ringed by 72 waterfalls, including some of the highest in Europe. There’s no better introductory hike to this spectacular valley than the loop that leads from the town of Lauterbrunnen up to Grütshchalp (take the tram or the steep trail), then along a gentle forest path, crossing a dozen streams, to the village of Mürren, perched on a hillside. You’ll find plenty of viewpoints along the way before descending to the lovely village of Gimmelwald. From here you can take the steep trail or the tram back down to Stechelberg at the top of the Lauterbrunnen valley. Return to Lauterbrunnen by bus or follow the riverside trail past meadows, small farms, and waterfalls on every side.

More Hikes from Greg Witt

If you'd like a hike that is off the normal Jungfrau tourist trails visit hiking a quieter route

I believe 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: Adventures in Mexico at Xplor

Adventure Travel: What's Hot Now
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Adventures in Mexico at Xplor
Jul 31st 2011, 10:00

Do you know what lies beneath your feet? At Xplor in Mexico's Riviera Maya, there's an entire world of underground adventures including swimming and rafting in underground rivers. Above the earth's crust, there's a network of zip lines that looks like freeways in the sky, and a three-mile track where you can drive an amphibious buggy through the jungle, into caves and on suspension bridges over water. Not sure which to try first? You can do everything, more than once. The daily fee covers everything, from the adventures to the food.

Last March a group of scientists wrote in Science journal that they did a study that confirms the dinosaurs died when an asteroid hit Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula 65 million years ago, changing atmospheric conditions. This same asteroid created a unique topography - essentially a mega-sized slab of limestone through which ground water drips creating caverns, or cenotes as they are called here. In this adventure park, you can swim and raft in the cenotes and underground rivers.

Our day-long adventure began when we were given a helmet at check-in, because much of the day is spent underground in a vast complex of natural caves with underground rivers. Sixty-five million years ago, when dinosaurs roamed on earth, an asteroid smashed into the Yucatan Peninsula. Rainwater filled the crater's basin and seeped through the limestone slab that covered the peninsula, creating the caverns and underground rivers.)

The Xplor adventure park's four main adventures are anchored by a big red "heart" that emits a throbbing sound, so you know you're getting close to the center of the action. From the heart, marked paths through the caves lead you to the four adventures. Staying below the earth's crust, we went swimming in the Stalactite River, then paddled a raft through a different part of the underground river. We had a lot of fun steering an amphibious buggy with big, fat tires, along a three-mile track that led through the jungle, on suspension bridges over water and through caves. Visitors can fly high on two sets of zip lines - one has five lines and the other has six. We loved the zip line that landed in the water at an opening to a cave.


Swimming in an Underground River at Xplor, Rivera Maya, Mexico
Rafting Adventure in an Underground River at Xplor in Mexico's Riviera Maya
Riding an Amphibious Buggy Through Jungle and Caves at Xplor, Riviera Maya, Mexico
Going Airborne on Zip Lines at Xplore in Riviera Maya, Mexico
All-Inclusive Xplor Adventure Park in Riviera Maya, Mexico
More Adventure Travel Experiences in the Riviera Maya and Cancun, Mexico

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