Primal Quest Badlands – Team Nike OUT

Wow.

I was shocked to see Kraig’s headline on the official blog:

Robyn Benincasa and Team Nike Out of Primal Quest Badlands

… the withdrawl of defending PQ champs Nike. Last week, team captain Mike Kloser suffered a crash while mountain biking, which left him with a broken collarbone, a collapsed lung, and five broken ribs, and while he is already on the mend, the injuried will obviously keep him out of the race. The rest of Team Nike reluctantly decided to pull out of Primal Quest rather than look for a replacement on short notice. …

Robyn Benincasa and Team Nike Out of Primal Quest Badlands

Benincasa was captain of Team Merrell/Zanfel Adventure …

Primal-Quest

best hike Iceland – Laugavegur?

The most popular hiking route in Iceland is known as Laugavegur and links the areas of Thorsmork and Landmannalaugar. It is 54 km long and passes trough extremely diverse landscapes, tall mountains, coloured rhyolite areas, geothermal fields with erupting geysers, ice caves, sprawling sands, magnificent canyons and ends in verdant bitvh forests. Not forgetting the famed natural hot pools in Landmannalaugar.

The route is divided into four days of hiking. Setting off from Landmannalaugar is most popular, with overnight stays at Hrafntinnusker, Álftavatn, Emstrur and Thorsmork. All those locations have wardens and facilities for hikers are good.

The route is well marked and should be safe for everyone. Its highest point is Hrafntinnusker, at just over 1000 metres above sea level. There may be winter conditions there even in mid-summer and this is were the risk of losing the way when passing through the remainder of the winter snow is greatest.

The Laugavegur is a famous hiking trail in South-West Iceland from the hot springs and solfatara fields of Landmannalaugar to the glacial valley of Thorsmork.

laugavegur

… see a map & more fantastic photos on photoguide.cz

I’m following PatitucciPhoto on twitter. The Dolomite based photographers are in Iceland right now taking gorgeous photos like this one.

Iceland

win a Merrell wardrobe

By email:

Starting July 17th, Merrell sponsored a contest with the aim of disseminating our love for our national playgrounds. …

The grand prize for this contest is a one-year free pass to all the National Parks for a family and a whole wardrobe of Merrell footwear and apparel to assure that these adventures are as enjoyable as possible.

To take part, all readers need to do is visit Merrell’s Facebook Fan Page (www.facebook.com/merrell), and post their favorite National Park story in 150 words or less on our Wall. Participants are encouraged to include pictures or videos of their previous outdoor adventures The stories receiving the most “thumbs up” will win.

he used to hike, he used to blog …

TomIn case you missed it, our preeminent hiking blogger Tom Mangan is moving from California to North Carolina.

He may later relocate from there. It’s lack-of-work related. Or he may start blogging the great N.E.

Good luck, Tom.

His vast archive is still available at Two-Heel Drive.

best use for twitter: SEARCH

Even if you don’t have a twitter account, it can be useful as a real time search engine.

The results are much different … and far more up-to-date … than Google.

How Twitter Search creates new opportunities for business feedback, tracking news in real time and discovering trends.

CommonCraft.com

CLICK play or watch the short explanation on YouTube.

hiking the Stone Sea in Germany

Jeni and just about everyone else told me to travel to the most beautiful lake in the country. It looks like a fjord.

Königssee
Königssee

map-GermanyYou get there from Berchtesgaden, 30km south of Salzburg. Hitler’s mountain residence, the Berghof, was located near here though Der Fuehrer rarely visited due to security worries. Today the Nazi Eagle’s Nest is a restaurant.

Nationalpark Berchtesgaden was established in 1978 and has gradually become one of the region’s largest tourist draws. While technically in Germany, this spot is surrounded on 3 sides by Austria.

The day I was at the lake a boatload of tourists disgorged every 10min to visit a famed pilgrimage church.

St. Bartholomä
St. Bartholomä

From the church I climbed up an interesting gorge to Kärlingerhaus, a popular mountain lodge.

Kärlingerhaus

Nice. But my real goal for the day was to reach the Steinernes Meer. The stone sea. A bleak and rocky plateau.

Stone-Sea

Weird. Geologically ineresting. And beautiful.

At Riemann-Haus I could have escaped back down to the valley.

Riemann-Haus

Instead I had a beer on their deck. And listened to some Army mountain climbers sing group songs before setting out for the cliffs.

beer

Immediately after … I got badly lost. (A gorgeous sidetrip, as it turned out.)

What direction would you go if your guidebook told you to take route 411?

mountain-hiking-sign

A highlight of this hike for me personally was seeing many Chamois up close. For the first time.

Chamois

Chamois2

Even better was crossing a high mountain pass alone to meet Mt. Watzmann.

Rick-and-mountain

What a great evening I had up there!

This is the best hike in the Bavarian Alps. A hiking region surrounded and overshadowed by more famous neighbours: Dolomites, Austrian Alps and the Swiss Alps.

But I’ll be adding the Stone Sea to our list of the best hikes in Europe.

It’s fantastic.

I posted 80 photos from this 3 day hike on flickr.

There’s only one guidebook in English: Walking in the Bavarian Alps. It’s one of the weakest Cicerone guidebooks I’ve used.

Outer Edge Adventure Magazine

From Australia …

… Outer Edge, has broken new ground in outdoor publishing by dedicating the majority of its latest edition (on shelves 29 July) to unearthing active Indigenous adventures across Australia and beyond.

“We believe it’s a first for any outdoor magazine – to theme nearly an entire edition along Indigenous lines and specifically to focus on Indigenous adventures that go well beyond the stereotypical cultural tour options trotted out time and again as a core Indigenous tourism product,” says editor, Patrick Kinsella. …

Good idea.

Outer-Edge-magazine

Outer Edge home page

hike Bocca di Brenta to Molveno, Italy

The Brenta Mountains in the Dolomites are popular with via ferrata (iron road), cable assisted, climbers.

They stretch 40km (25mi) on a north-south axis. I nearly chose to hike a lengthwise itinerary called The Mighty Brenta Dolomite Traverse. … Unfortunately transport to the trailheads was problematic.

Instead I crossed west to east from famed tourist trap Madonna di Campiglio to the most lovely mountain town I’ve found in Europe so far, Molveno.

Again I took a cable car to start as high as possible.

CABLECAR

I was delivered to Rif. Tuckett and Sela.

mountain-hut

The wildflowers are still going strong in late July. (They are nearly gone now in Canada.)

wildflowers

It’s great being instantly on top of the world. Just like heli-hiking. The start is mostly a traverse under the highest peaks. Amazing. Such easy access to this environment.

Rick-and-mountains

The sunset was a classic Dolomite experience. Wow.

sunset-on-mountain

Next morning the weather was fantastic. So I stashed my pack in the boulders and dashed up as high as I could go to Rif. Alimonta.

Wonderful. But daylight was burning. I turned back and pushed hard to get over the mountains.

Here was the crux of the hike when I was there. (It was not quite as bad as it looks in the photo. But it was challenging.)

climbers-descending-steep-snow

I entrusted a Summit Stone to the virgin guarding the highest pass.

summit-stone

This is astonishing Rif. Pedrotti 2491m. Many famed climbers have stayed here.

Refugio

Starving, but in a mad rush now to get DOWN off this mountain, I ordered a meal. It tasted FANTASTIC at this altitude.

Lasagna

No photos from my decent. I practically ran from 3000m to the lake at 868m in order to be sure I would catch a bus out of the valley.

That was one long, long exit.

Whew.

This was my personal favourite of the 4 Dolomite hikes I did on this trip. See the rest of my photos on flickr.

Timex survey: Return the Outdoors

I would have thought the economic downturn would be getting more people outside. Survey says … NOT.

Lauren Flemming from Catalyst │Thinkable Results sends us the results of an interesting survey of 1,122 Americans ages 18.

Americans’ attitudes towards spending time outdoors

The vast majority of Americans 18 and older (87%) feel that they need to take the time every week to get outdoors, and feel that doing so would make them feel less stressed (72%), but more than one-third of Americans expect to get outside even less because of the economic downturn (35%).

Americans of all ages, both male and female, strongly identify with the benefits of getting outdoors

93% feel refreshed when outdoors
93% agree being outdoors relieves stress
90% agree that getting outdoors makes them happier
88% agree that being outdoors makes them feel free
86% agree that spending time outdoors with family and friends brings them closer together

How Americans spend their time – outdoors and otherwise

In a typical weekday, Americans spend many more hours watching TV and on the computer, than they do outdoors.

Reasons for not getting outdoors in a typical week day vary, according to age and gender.

Millennials (18 – 24) don’t incorporate the outdoors into the social interactions that are dominating their time. They spend almost 5 hours per day on the computer and almost 3 hours per day socializing with friends, but less than 2 hours per day outdoors

Young parents aren’t incorporating the outdoors into time spent caring for their children. Women 25-34 spend 5 hours per day caring for children and more than 3 hours per day watching TV, but less than 2 hours per day outdoors

The weekend is an opportunity to do more of the same.

Millennials continue to spend an incredible about of time socializing with friends (4 hours) and on the computer (5 hours), but they spend no additional time outside (less than 2 hours)

Women 25-34 spend three times as many hours caring for children on weekends (9 hours) and find almost two hours daily to socialize with friends. Additionally, their TV usage increases to 4 hours per day, but the time spent outdoors remains flat at less than 2 hours.

Americans’ reasons for not spending leisure time outdoors range from being too tired (almost 40%) to being busy running errands (27%).

Millennials cited the widest variety of reasons to remain indoors, including:

44% are too tired
38% are too busy running errands
25% need to spend more time at work
19% are not sure where to go that is close by

Young parents are most commonly too tired (38%) or busy taking care of children (38%).

Playing outside starts at home. In the past year, Americans have been walking (83%), gardening (52%) and playing in their backyards.

18 to 24 year olds gravitate towards fitness and exploration activities:

Walking (90%)
Swimming (76%)
Running (66%)
Biking (51%)
Exploring (48%)
Hiking, Camping (37%)

Young parents stick to family and neighborhood-centric activities:
Picnicking (57%)
Playing in their backyards (66%)
Visiting and neighborhood parks (56%)

screen shot
screen shot

Timex® Expedition® watches were derived from the virtually indestructible 1960s infantry watches and adapted to meet the explosive growth in popularity of outdoor activities. … The brand recently launched “Return the Outdoors,” a joint endeavour with the Conservation Alliance and American alpinist Conrad Anker to inspire Americans to get outdoors and reconnect with nature. The brand’s Web site, TimexExpedition.com, hosts content, forums and tools designed to make the outdoors more accessible to our everyday lives.

Conrad is an American rock climber, mountaineer, author and environmental activist.