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  <lastEdited clientType="local-build-20111130" date="2011-11-30 14:00:17 -0800"/>
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    <richText>&lt;b&gt;My Road Trip&lt;/b&gt;</richText>
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    <richText>&lt;b&gt;&#xD;&lt;/b&gt;Anyone can be modern-day explorers in these far-flung and exotic places&#xD;By Rebecca Ruiz&#xD;&lt;b&gt;Forbes&#xD;&lt;/b&gt;updated 11:14 a.m. ET, Tues., Feb. 26, 2008&#xD;World explorers like Marco Polo and Christopher Columbus would likely balk at the modern luxuries of&#xD;adventure travel. Treks through Mongolia and sea voyages across the Atlantic are now completed in mere&#xD;days or weeks, and little thought is given to historic variables like invaders or starvation.&#xD;Yet, these trips still offer modern travelers a sense of accomplishment and discovery.&#xD;"It's very rare to walk into a corner of the world and [not] see a Coca-Cola can lying around," says 38-yearold&#xD;Jamie Eliades, whose latest adventure vacation took place in December 2006 on Antarctica. It was the last&#xD;continent the Washington-D.C. based epidemiologist had yet to visit.&#xD;"It's one of those extreme places that's so barely touched by man," he says, "which is getting harder and&#xD;harder to find."&#xD;Not all adventure travelers are like Eliades, or driven by a desire to explore an unknown landscape. Instead,&#xD;most turn such vacations into learning experiences about distant cultures, histories or environments. One&#xD;thing these trips have in common: immersion in a local culture and an experiential component from cooking to&#xD;cruising.&#xD;&lt;b&gt;Adventure travel 101&#xD;&lt;/b&gt;Many adventure travel operators stress that their trips do not include bungee jumping or another type of&#xD;extreme sport, which is often the common perception.&#xD;"Adventure is a big word," says George Deeb, CEO and founder of iExplore, an online adventure travel tour&#xD;company. "It's different from one person to the next."&#xD;Deeb's customers are most interested in vacations that include physical and experiential components like&#xD;hiking and biking or culinary tours and expedition cruising.&#xD;A feeling of immersion in the local culture or landscape is essential, he says. IExplore trips, for example,&#xD;include an on-request lunch with former first lady Jehan el-Sadat while traveling in Egypt, and time spent with&#xD;the Masai tribe of Kenya. Destinations like Venezuela, Jordan and Morocco have also become more common in&#xD;recent years, whereas European locations have declined in popularity.&#xD;But it's often difficult for travelers to make time for such demanding trips. An October online survey of 2,027&#xD;people by Deloitte, an international consulting company, found that 49 percent of respondents wanted to take&#xD;an adventure travel trip. The majority of those who replied affirmatively were between 18 and 29 and 45 and&#xD;60, a trend that points to the difficulty of scheduling time-intensive vacations when work or family obligations&#xD;might prevent doing so.&#xD;"In my mind," says Adam Weissenberg, Deloitte's vice chairman and U.S. tourism, hospitality and leisure&#xD;leader, "the definition [of adventure travel] is doing something that is an experience as opposed to doing&#xD;something that's to unwind, relax or visit a relative."&#xD;&lt;b&gt;Life-changing trips&#xD;&lt;/b&gt;For Eliades, long trips in far-off places have been easier to arrange since his job as an epidemiologist for the&#xD;Centers for Disease Control required stints of global travel. Prior to visiting Antarctica through iExplore,&#xD;Eliades had already crisscrossed the globe to climb Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro, hike through Nepal and explore&#xD;Vietnam.&#xD;"I get so much out of the trips," Eliades says. His memorable experiences include awakening in a Nepalese&#xD;village to a 27,000-foot mountain that was not visible when he arrived the night before. "It was like&#xD;Adventure trips that will change your life - Active - MSNBC.com Page 1 of 2&#xD;&lt;a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23280984/print/1/displaymode/1098/"&gt;http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23280984/print/1/displaymode/1098/&lt;/a&gt; 2/29/2008&#xD;something I'd never seen before."&#xD;With numerous online adventure travel tour operators available, coordinating a trip like Eliades' can be quite&#xD;simple. Geographic Expeditions offers both private and group tours of destinations like Bhutan, Mongolia and&#xD;Alaska. In Mongolia, travelers ride camels while exploring the Gobi Desert.&#xD;Linblad Expeditions styles its trips to places like the Atlantic Ocean and Antarctica as learning experiences.&#xD;Environmental or cultural experts teach travelers about ecology and history and high-tech equipment like&#xD;remote underwater vehicles, hydra-cameras and phones are utilized to fully capture the surroundings.&#xD;Sven-Olof Linblad, president of the company, says that the educational focus is designed to inspire travelers&#xD;to become advocates of cultural heritage and natural beauty. He also notes that curiosity about certain&#xD;destinations often correlates with news about climate change; in recent years, the number of people&#xD;interested in the polar regions has doubled or tripled.&#xD;"Most people live hectic lives and they become disconnected with the natural world," says Linblad. "It's&#xD;incredibly powerful to be out in the middle of nowhere where there are no buildings, nothing but raw nature."&#xD;&#xD;</richText>
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    <richText>&lt;b&gt;Adventure trips that will change your life&lt;/b&gt;</richText>
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    <richText>&lt;b&gt;Sunday, November 27, 2011&lt;/b&gt;</richText>
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