Anyone can be modern-day explorers in these far-flung and exotic places
By Rebecca Ruiz
Forbes
updated 11:14 a.m. ET, Tues., Feb. 26, 2008
World explorers like Marco Polo and Christopher Columbus would likely balk at the modern luxuries of
adventure travel. Treks through Mongolia and sea voyages across the Atlantic are now completed in mere
days or weeks, and little thought is given to historic variables like invaders or starvation.
Yet, these trips still offer modern travelers a sense of accomplishment and discovery.
"It's very rare to walk into a corner of the world and [not] see a Coca-Cola can lying around," says 38-yearold
Jamie Eliades, whose latest adventure vacation took place in December 2006 on Antarctica. It was the last
continent the Washington-D.C. based epidemiologist had yet to visit.
"It's one of those extreme places that's so barely touched by man," he says, "which is getting harder and
harder to find."
Not all adventure travelers are like Eliades, or driven by a desire to explore an unknown landscape. Instead,
most turn such vacations into learning experiences about distant cultures, histories or environments. One
thing these trips have in common: immersion in a local culture and an experiential component from cooking to
cruising.
Adventure travel 101
Many adventure travel operators stress that their trips do not include bungee jumping or another type of
extreme sport, which is often the common perception.
"Adventure is a big word," says George Deeb, CEO and founder of iExplore, an online adventure travel tour
company. "It's different from one person to the next."
Deeb's customers are most interested in vacations that include physical and experiential components like
hiking and biking or culinary tours and expedition cruising.
A feeling of immersion in the local culture or landscape is essential, he says. IExplore trips, for example,
include an on-request lunch with former first lady Jehan el-Sadat while traveling in Egypt, and time spent with
the Masai tribe of Kenya. Destinations like Venezuela, Jordan and Morocco have also become more common in
recent years, whereas European locations have declined in popularity.
But it's often difficult for travelers to make time for such demanding trips. An October online survey of 2,027
people by Deloitte, an international consulting company, found that 49 percent of respondents wanted to take
an adventure travel trip. The majority of those who replied affirmatively were between 18 and 29 and 45 and
60, a trend that points to the difficulty of scheduling time-intensive vacations when work or family obligations
might prevent doing so.
"In my mind," says Adam Weissenberg, Deloitte's vice chairman and U.S. tourism, hospitality and leisure
leader, "the definition [of adventure travel] is doing something that is an experience as opposed to doing
something that's to unwind, relax or visit a relative."
Life-changing trips
For Eliades, long trips in far-off places have been easier to arrange since his job as an epidemiologist for the
Centers for Disease Control required stints of global travel. Prior to visiting Antarctica through iExplore,
Eliades had already crisscrossed the globe to climb Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro, hike through Nepal and explore
Vietnam.
"I get so much out of the trips," Eliades says. His memorable experiences include awakening in a Nepalese
village to a 27,000-foot mountain that was not visible when he arrived the night before. "It was like
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something I'd never seen before."
With numerous online adventure travel tour operators available, coordinating a trip like Eliades' can be quite
simple. Geographic Expeditions offers both private and group tours of destinations like Bhutan, Mongolia and
Alaska. In Mongolia, travelers ride camels while exploring the Gobi Desert.
Linblad Expeditions styles its trips to places like the Atlantic Ocean and Antarctica as learning experiences.
Environmental or cultural experts teach travelers about ecology and history and high-tech equipment like
remote underwater vehicles, hydra-cameras and phones are utilized to fully capture the surroundings.
Sven-Olof Linblad, president of the company, says that the educational focus is designed to inspire travelers
to become advocates of cultural heritage and natural beauty. He also notes that curiosity about certain
destinations often correlates with news about climate change; in recent years, the number of people
interested in the polar regions has doubled or tripled.
"Most people live hectic lives and they become disconnected with the natural world," says Linblad. "It's
incredibly powerful to be out in the middle of nowhere where there are no buildings, nothing but raw nature."