Posts Tagged: ‘adventure travel’

Do you wish to dangle from great heights while you snooze?

Yes, you do. And you might as well do it in Bavaria, Germany, at an adventure resort called Waldseilgarten. Here at the mountain retreat, you will have three sleep-up-high options. They are as follows:

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Right now, six guys in a row boat are headed for the North Pole.

If all goes as planned, they’ll reach the Magnetic North Pole by water. Why by water? Because of all that ice-melt in the Arctic. The expedition is meant to highlight the effects of global warming.

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When I was a kid, we discovered we could sled down the fescue grass in the front yard on pieces of plywood. But that’s not really the same as sledding down a volcano.

Except for the plywood. Darryn Webb, founder of volcano boarding (as the sport’s called), first attempted to board down the slope of the Cerro Negro volcano in Nicaragua on mattresses and refrigerator doors.

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I always thought “travel” was just, like, when you go somewhere.

But not everybody thinks every kind of “going somewhere” is worthy of the word. For example, travel writer Paul Theroux thinks you can’t even call travel “travel” unless, during the trip, you “endure a kind of alienation and panic.”

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This zip line scares the crud out of me.

It’s run by New York Zipline Adventures at Hunger Mountain, about two hours outside of New York City. For $119 (and after some zip line pilot training), you’ll fly down a 3,200-foot-long zip line at 50 miles per hour. And you’re 600 feet above the valley below! It’s the highest, longest, fastest zip line on North America.

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A few weeks ago, history blogger Katie Lambert forwarded me a World Hum article on how to eat fried tarantula in Cambodia. I don’t really want to eat fried tarantula, but according to travel writer Darrin DuFord, if you take a taxi to the town of Skuon and roll down the window, street vendors (who are not on roller skates) will approach your vehicle with trays piled high in fried arachnids.

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Last week, B-side co-host Mark Larson forwarded me a blog post written by a guy named Nicolas Rapp, who recently ditched his art director job at the Associated Press to drive his 1996 Toyota Land Cruiser around the world. He hopes to be on the road by Nov. 15, 2009.

Around-the-world trips are fairly common. During a Google search, I found a Forbes Traveler article that lists cruise lines, tour companies and hotel corporations that sell round-the-world travel packages. For example, if you have $100,000 to spend, you can fly from one Four Seasons to another in 34 countries. Or, you can take a 107-day round-the-world cruise on Cunard’s Queen Victoria ship.

But the travel industry uses the term “round-the-world” loosely. You don’t literally circumnavigate the globe. You fly in airplanes to various spots; you eat your meals at cruise buffets while the ship’s at port. Rapp’s round-the-world trip is literal. It’s a road trip — he’s not going anywhere without his Land Cruiser.

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