A closet full of high-tech outdoor apparel that looks great and is loaded with high-tech features.? Gloves you don't have to take off when using touch-screen devices, jackets for exploring the backcountry that also look cool in the city, and a lot more outdoor apparel.
Tuesday, 29 November 2011
Tis the Season for Great Deals if You Like Adventure Travel
Adventure travelers, it's the season for great deals. Black Friday is here, but this year the hot deals online season started before Thanksgiving, and in some cases will extend past Cyber Monday.? Here's where you can find links to Black Friday, Cyber Monday and beyond great deals for adventure travel.
Take a look at this winter's hot new high-tech clothing.? Looking for adventure travel gifts under $50.
The World's Highest Sea Cliffs Form a Natural Barrier for Kalaupapa Peninsula
Monday, 28 November 2011
Take Imaginative Trips With Myths and Mountains
If you'd like to trek with the nomadic people of rural Bhutan, camp with shamans in rain forest villages and experience other unusual aspects of an adventure vacation, check out Myths and Mountains.? This adventure travel company runs trips to Bhutan, Cambodia, other Asian countries, Easter Island and South America. Expect to take home more memories than souvenirs with Myths and Mountains.
Yellowstone in the Winter
Yellowstone in the winter is an adventure traveler's paradise. You can snowmobile or cross country ski past steamy clouds drifting from blue-tinted hot springs, or go snowshoeing on paths in the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. You photograph bison from the safety of your snow coach and watch wolf pups play as the adult wolves lope past bison rooting in the snow for winter grass. During a night snow coach tour of Yellowstone you'll see a canopy of stars overhead. The nation's first national park, Yellowstone is a two million-plus acre playground.
1. Winter in Yellowstone is More than Old Faithful
Winter in Yellowstone National Park is incredibly beautiful. Steam rises from the hot springs, geysers and fumaroles; bison wander across vast snow-covered fields and drink in streams sparking with ice crystals, and Old Faithful performs for guests at the Old Faithful Snow Lodge. You can see it all from a snow coach, driving a snowmobile, cross country skiing or winter hiking. You can also enjoy snowmobiling on the vast trail system just outside the park. Click on these pictures to see what Yellowstone and West Yellowstone look like in the winter.
Yellowstone National Park Lodges (two are open in the park in the winter) has packages for adventurous travels. You'll find links to the 2010/2011 adventures below.
2. Gliding Silently on Trails Through Woods on Cross Country Skis
Yellowstone has many miles of cross-country trails threading the park. The trails are listed in a series of pamphlets available at the park's visitors centers and hotels open during the winter. Shuttles offers drop-offs and pick-ups at trail heads. Equipment can be rented in the park. Here's a list of cross country ski packages for 2010/2011
West Yellowstone, Montana, just outside the west entrance to the park also has miles of groomed cross country and ski skate trails in the Rendezvous Ski Trails system.
3. Snowmobiling to Old Faithful and the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone
Snowmobiling is allowed on specific roads in the park but only on guided tours. Snowmobiling excursions to Old Faithful are offered by several snowmobiling companies in West Yellowstone, Montana, just outside the park. Inside the park, Xanterra, the company that manages the park's hotels, offers a snowmobiling package that allows riders to spend a night at the Old Faithful Snow Lodge then ride 90 miles to Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel the next day. Snowmobilers leaving from West Yellowstone also have the freedom to explore hundreds of miles of groomed snowmobiling trails and slopes in the U.S. national forests.
4. Watching Wolves, Bison, Foxes and -- Maybe -- A Bear or Mountain Lion
The Yellowstone Association, which partners with the National Park Service, offers a variety of animal-watching day trips and multi-day programs. The Lodging and Learning programs include overnight stays so you can see Yellowstone at dawn then view wolves, bull elks with massive racks of horns, and other animals with spotting scopes. Naturalists lead the tours to help you understand how these animals survive and interact in the park. The "Trail of the Wolf" package combines wildlife watching and snowmobiling. For more information about various packages for 2010/2011, visit Lodging and Learning Packages
.
5. Spending the Night in Yellowstone During the Winter
Just walk outside your hotel at night to see a canopy of stars overhead. During the winter only two hotels are open in the park: Old Faithful Snow Lodge and the Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel. In the morning, look down from your guestroom window at the Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel and the odds are excellent that you'll see an elk foraging for grass. Staying at the Snow Park Lodge, it's a quick walk to see Old Faithful erupt.
Yellowstone National Park Lodges offers a variety of cross country skiing, adventure, snowmobiling and other packages for the 2010/2010 winter season. For more information call (1) 307-344-7311 or toll-free 866-GEYSERLAND (866-439-7375), or visiting the web site Yellowstone Park Lodges.
6. A Night Tour of Yellowstone by Snow Coach
Mist rises around you while carefully following the dark outline of your guide along boardwalks, to the tune of hissing geysers erupting in the dark. It's not the prelude to a horror movie, it's the start of an incredible snow coach journey to see how alive Yellowstone is at night. At one point during your evening's trip, the snow coach stops and everyone gets out to stand quietly and look at a star-filled sky that one can only imagine while living in a light-infused city. You'll enjoy the Steam, Stars & Winter Soundscapes tour the most on nights when the sky is clear.
7. West Yellowstone is a Gateway to the Park and a Winter Playground Itself
On a Saturday morning in West Yellowstone, Montana, there are more snowmobiles driving along the streets than cars. This town is primarily lodging, bars, restaurants and shops for visitors who want souvenirs or cold-weather clothing, but it's a perfect gateway to exploring the park and the Gallatin National Forest. The town edges against the park, so you can take day-trips into Yellowstone via snowmobile or snowcoach. Be sure to visit the Grizzly & Wolf Discovery Center, a non-profit wildlife park, to watch bears tussle and wolves prowl. There's also an exstensive cross country trail system.
8. A Chance to Wear Warm Winter Clothing
Yellowstone in the winter can be very cold. Pack lots of cold-weather gear, preferably high-tech undergarments that will wick away moisture, especially when you're cross country skiing or snowshoeing. Bring fleece tops or warm sweaters that you can layer under a wind-resistant/water resistant jacket. Best to have wind-resistant and water-resistant pants, too. Take a warm hat, a fleece neck gaiter and warm mittens or gloves. Bring along a bag of the chemical hand-warmer packets that you shake to activate then stick inside your gloves or boots to keep your hands and feet warm. Don't forget your camera!
9. Makes You Want to Visit Yellowstone in the Summer, Too
Not many people visit Yellowstone in the winter so there's space to enjoy the beauty. The quiet is disrupted in the summer, when tourists from around the globe come to the summer-green landscape, vibrant with colorful wildlflowers and green grasses.? See what Yellowstone looks like in the summertime.
10. Information Contact for Yellowstone National Park
For more information about visiting Yellowstone, go the the National Park Service Yellowstone Web site. Lonely Planet Guidebook to Yellowstone and Grant Teton National ParksIf you'd like a Lonely Planet Guidebook to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks click on Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks Guide.
Smith Turbo Fan Goggles
The Bottom Line
If you've been forced to stop mid-mogul on a ski slope because your goggles have fogged and you can't see the bottom of the bump, or if you're in a snowstorm and have a personal white-out from fogged glasses you'll want to own a pair of Smith's Turbo Fan goggles. Quite simply: They clear the foggy air so you can see where you are going. If you're a downhill skier, snowboarder or snowmobiler who wears glasses that fog when you're active, check out the Ocular Docking System. It's an insert in which you can put your own prescription lenses.
Pros
- A tiny, quiet fan is built into the frame.
- The switch to move the fan between two speeds is easy to use when wearing gloves
- The goggles are comfortable
Cons
- May need a strap extender to fit over a helmet
- The goggles sell out rapidly, so may be hard to find at stores
Description
- Quiet micro-electronic fan runs continuously to eliminate fog
- Carbonic-X lens provides exceptional clarity and scratch resistance
- Self-adjusting split "V" nose for a comfortable fit
- Prodigy and Knowledge OTG are Ocular Docking System compatible
- Basic models come in black with platinum or sensor mirror lense.
- Rose-copper lense available.
- Knowledge OTG is large fit; Prodigy and Phenom are medium fit
- Fan unit requires two AAA batteries
Guide Review - Smith Turbo Fan Goggles Clear the Fog
The Turbo Fan goggles do exactly what’s promised: The fan keeps the lenses clear so you can see where you are going. While they’re a terrific choice for any skier, snowboarder or sportsperson who wanders around outdoors in the winter, they are an incredible gift to people who wear eyeglasses.
I was literally in a fog the first time I wore eyeglasses under my goggles on the ski slopes, after years of wearing contact lenses. Between the powder falling from above and the body heat generated while skiing though the bumps, every time I paused my goggles fogged so quickly and completely that I had to take them off and try to dry the lenses. The tiny quiet fan, which runs at two speeds and is built into the frame of the Smith Turbo Fan Prodigy goggles, keeps my glasses clear even when skiing during snowstorms. If the goggles start to fog when you stop after skiing hard, just slide the switch to a higher speed for a few minutes and they clear.
There are three models – the Prodigy, the Phenom and the Knowledge OTG. The first two are medium fit, while the Knowledge is designed to fit over glasses. People with smaller faces may be able to fit their glasses inside the Prodigy model, as I do. If not, Smith has an Ocular Docking System that fits inside most Turbo Fan models.
Cattle Drive Vacations
I was at Vista Verde Guest Ranch, northwest of Steamboat Springs, Colorado, the last week in September for the final week of a month-long cattle drive. I live in Colorado and chose this particular week for three reasons. First, the weather is usually good, with colder nights that quickly turn into warm days. Second, the aspen tree leaves have turned golden and it’s just beautiful. Third, the majority of the 1,000-head herd has been brought in, so we were heading up into the high country to help roundup strays, that didn’t want to be found. We needed to bring cows down from the open range before the deep snow falls and they eventually starve.
While all levels of riders can participate in the drive, my group's experience made City Slickers seem like a walk in the park.
Keep clicking "next," or put your computer mouse on the numbers for descriptions of the other pictures and descriptions of how we were trained and brought cows home to the pasture during the cattle drive.
Free Walking Tours in Paris, London, New York & Other Interesting Cities
I took a free walking tour in Paris last week and discovered it was just as good as some of the tours with paid private guides. You aren't the only one on the tour, of course, but it was fun to chat along the way with travelers from other countries who also wanted to learn more about Montmartre, where Renoir, Van Gogh and other painters lived and worked.
You'll find free walking tours in Paris, London, New York City, San Francisco and many other cities around the world. If you're happy with the tour, just tip the guide. The guides are locals who know a great deal about the area you want to explore, so they take a chance that you'll tip them well. I've found and listed several links to companies offering free walking tours.
Photo ? Lois Friedland