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Entries Tagged as 'Hiking'

Adirondack Winter Forty-Sixers

April 26th, 2010 · No Comments · Climb, Climbing, Hike, Hiking, Main Entry, Top Stories, Top Stories - Hiking

The Adirondack Forty-Sixers is a group of hikers dedicated to climbing to the summits of the Adirondack Mountains’ 46 major peaks; an even more elite group is the Adirondack Winter Forty-Sixers who climb those same peaks between Dec. 21 and March 21.

“Since 1962, only 449 people have accomplished the feat. Some climbers needed just a few years; others needed decades. Children as young as 10 have become Winter Forty-Sixers.” Liz Leyden of The New York Times reports.

“The hikes are not for the faint of heart: bitter cold, waist-deep snow and a minimum of eight hours along a trail. Of the 46 mountains, one-third have no trails, meaning that the first hiker after a big snow needs an ice ax and a strong spirit to break a trail to the summit. And aside from the mountain itself, hikers need to master the required gear: snowshoes, skis, an ice ax, crampons and ropes for hauling one another up the mountain.”

photo credit: t3rmin4t0r

Summer Backpacking On A Budget

April 23rd, 2010 · No Comments · Hike, Hiking, Travel

Jeb Admire of Backcountry Beacon offers some sage travel trips (packing, gear, clothing, security, finding meals etc.) for the upcoming summer “hostel circuit”: “If you’re staying in one location for several days, find a restaurant you like and stick with it more than once; this may sound unadventurous, but you’ll develop a rapport with the staff, sample a variety of dishes on a reliable menu, and save the time and stress of always finding a new place…”

Summer Camping Equipment Overhaul

April 21st, 2010 · No Comments · Accessories, Camping, Clothing, Gear, Hike, Hiking

Backcountry Beacon offers 4 tips around “summer-ifying” old camping gear for your upcoming treks:

Hiking SoCal Under A Full Moon

April 17th, 2010 · No Comments · Hike, Hiking, Main Entry

David Olert of The Los Angeles Times enjoys hiking Southern California’s foothills two days before the full moon.

“The sky gradually darkened and we soon walked through a world of tall peaks, rolling hills and wide valleys illuminated by the soft ambience of the moon that shone through a cloudless sky. The trail was uphill for the first hour and then undulated over rolling hilltops before finally descending back to the valley.”

Packing For Expeditions

April 14th, 2010 · No Comments · Climb, Climbing, Hike, Hiking, Mountaineering

Stephen Regenold of Gear Junkie runs through the basics of mountain expedition preparation as he gears up for a trek to the Mount Everest Base Camp as part of the Expedition Hanesbrands climbing team.

“There are dozens — even hundreds — of items large and small, common and esoteric, to remember and bring along. But the bulk of the gear, apparel, and accessories for many trips are common outdoors items… Big piles with boots, base layers, packs, waterproof bags, books, and myriad small essentials are already accumulating in my house. I have two big duffel bags and a carry-on pack to cram it all in.”

National Parks Summer Photo Gallery

April 13th, 2010 · No Comments · Hike, Hiking, Photography, Travel

The “must-dos” of summer, national park travel (Glacier, the Grand Canyon, Lake Clark, Yosemite, Olympic National Park, Death Valley, Yellowstone, Redwood, and the Great Smoky Mountains) are previewed by National Geographic Adventure Magazine.

“If the dire projections are correct, Glacier National Park will be bereft of glaciers by 2030. So get going. High above the milky waters of Grinnell Lake, Grinnell Glacier is the most stunning in the park. It’s accessible via a boat trip across Swiftcurrent and Josephine Lakes, then a 3.8-mile hike.”

Trekking Turkey’s Ancient Landscape

April 12th, 2010 · No Comments · Hike, Hiking, Main Entry, Travel

Caroline Finkel of the guardian.co.uk retraces (on horseback) the early stages of the great Ottoman traveller Evliya Çelebi’s epic journey, through northwest Anatolia, “pay[ing] homage to a little-known individual who wrote a compendious 10-volume account of his wanderings.”

“Ours was the first attempt to follow one of Evliya’s trails travelling as he would himself have travelled. We rode first south, then west, following in Evliya’s tracks from the Sea of Marmara to the town of Simav, northeast of Izmir. Here we left his itinerary to loop back east to his ancestral home, the historic city of Kütahya, covering some 1,000km in six weeks.”

Hiking Nepal’s Annapurna Circuit

March 22nd, 2010 · No Comments · Hike, Hiking, Main Entry, Top Stories - Hiking, Travel

Annapurna - Nepal

Ethan Todras-Whitehill of The New York Times writes eloquently about hiking Nepal’s 150-mile Annapurna Circuit–considered by many the world’s greatest trek–before a road is built in 2012. Inclement weather, oxygen deprivation, Buddhist monasteries, and awe inspiring images of the Himalayas’ 24,786-foot Annapurna III abound:

“[A]s we approach the base of Annapurna III after a week of walking, my head is swimming with images seen close up: swaying footbridges over thunderous gorges; rocky footpaths jammed with goats, donkeys and water buffalo; terraced rice paddies thrusting green shoots against the olive hillsides; narrow stone Gurung villages filled with shrieking children, chatty shopkeepers and the low hum of chanting monks seeping out of brightly colored Buddhist monasteries.”

photo credit: Librex

Hiking India’s Curzon Trail

March 16th, 2010 · No Comments · Hike, Hiking, Main Entry, Top Stories - Hiking, Travel

Henry Wismayer of The Daily Telegraph hikes India’s Curzon Trail through the Garhwal Himalayas (bordering Nepal and Tibet), across the Kauri Pass, and below the towering peaks of the Nanda Devi.

Prayer Flags - Himalayas

“From high passes swathed in silver oak, we plunge through tunnels of rhododendrons down to subtropical depths of bamboo thickets where lilac butterflies drink the perspiration from my hands and gullies scud down the hillsides like runnels of mercury. At the base of each valley we tiptoe over concrete bridges that have been weakened by the monsoon deluges. Then on to the next pass – always farther away than it seems – and over, into another yawning gorge.”

photo credit: stevehicks

“Going to California”

March 12th, 2010 · No Comments · Featured Video, Hike, Hiking, Hiking Video, Main Entry, Media, Video

Winter road trip: photographer Luke Humphrey treks from Seattle to California, capturing images of Mono Lake and Redwood, Sequoia, Yosemite, and Death Valley National Parks.

Produced by Luke Humphrey