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.

harsh night on an Italian mountain

Trip report by besthike editor Rick McCharles.

I was super excited to hike the Alpe di Siusi region of the Dolomites.

… Seiser Alm, (Italian: Alpe di Siusi) is the largest high altitude Alpine meadow in Europe. Located in Italy’s Bolzano-Bozen province (South Tyrol) in the Dolomites mountain range, it is a major tourist attraction, known for skiing and hiking. …

Seiser-area

I planned 3 days, 2 nights. A big trip. Lots of mileage.

To get started, I cheated by riding the cable car to Compaccio 1844m (5050ft), a busy mountain tourist trap.

cable-car

Arriving late afternoon, I was quite quickly forced into a cave.

under-a-ski-lift

OK, it was actually a storage space under a ski lift. I relaxed, dry, for about 90min.

The typical late afternoon rain ended. Some blue sky appeared. So I set off across gorgeous alpine meadows in the direction of the high peaks. Towards Rifugio Bolzano. I was following the Walk 24 itinerary from Walking in the Dolomites: 28 Multi-Day Routes by Gillian Price.

I was alone in the early evening except for many friendly cows.

cows

Surprisingly, the skies threatened rain once again. To stay completely dry, I quickly set up my (technically illegal) tent on the side of the mountain. There I got pounded with a severe storm. Thunder and lightning non-stop for at least 5hrs. Super dangerous in the mountains. I feared for my life.

It continued raining all night.

I stayed in the tent 10hrs before I finally heard it stop.

Unzipping the fly , I was astonished to see this winter wonderland. It was July. In sunny Italy.

snow-in-the-trees

Snow is always better than rain for a hiker. I packed up as quickly as I could. And headed back down the mountain. The only other hikers I passed were a couple from Norway. They had the same idea. Hiking in the snow is beautiful. Hiking in the rain, a drag.

snow-on-Alpine-Meadow

That night I ended up in a soft bed in a terrific hostel in the quiet mountain town of Brixen.

All’s well that ends well, I guess.

But I REALLY want to go back ….

By the way, my friend Jeni had a similar experience on this same route. She got lost, taking a wrong trail/animal track. On the side of a steep mountain she decided to rope herself to the cliff. Gathering her wits, she finally decided on the safest way out of danger.

Even when there are hundreds of other hikers around, the mountains can still be very dangerous.

This was a cautionary adventure for me. It was almost as scary as the lighting storm I experienced on the John Muir Trail.

Bus and Bike the Italian Dolomites

To rest my feet between hikes, I rented a mountain bike for an “easy” day in the mountains of North Italy.

I did a good chunk of this loop. The bus delivers you to a high pass. And you roll generally downhill.

map
map

The Rails to Trails sections were awesome. But at times I was pushed out into astonishingly dangerous holiday traffic. I can’t believe they don’t have several deaths a day.

The cycling was brilliant. So much fun that I ended up cycling about 120km. Probably the longest day in the saddle I’ve ever done.

(There was some chaffing.)

My 19 Euro / day bike was great. The company – Noleggio – does a very professional job. I could drop the bike anywhere around the loop.

bike-and-bus

Check this out … a custom water bottle holder for a 1.5 litre Coke Lite.

Coke-Lite-on-bike

Brilliant!

hike the 5 Towers, Dolomites, Italy

Trip report by besthike editor Rick McCharles.

Like my hike to the 3 Peaks, again this trailhead starts high, at a bus stop mountain pass

Rick-at-mountain-pass

I followed exactly trip #10 from my hiking guide. I planned, as recommended, to sleep the unique and extreme Rifugio Nuvolau 2575m (8450ft)

hut at the very TOP of the mountain
hut at the very TOP of the mountain

Sadly all the bunks were reserved, the only Refugio I’ve found completely full, so far.

This lofty aerie is totally dangerous. It would never be allowed in Canada. I assume one or two people fall to their deaths off the cliff every year.

Here’s a guy drying his t-shirt on the helicopter landing pad a few feet from the brink.

man-drying-tshirt-on-helicopter-landing-pad

I’m a little more cautious getting that close to the drop-off.

Rick-on-the-brink

There are the famed 5 towers far below.

5-towers

From here they don’t look like 5 towers. But from Cortina they do.

It was a fantastic hike. Just gorgeous. See the rest of my photos.

On the return to my starting point I checked 3 more Refugios. All had space for me. But I did not like any of them. Especially the one that suggested the price 45€.

The one previous charged 26€ for a basic bunk bed.

Happily there was a late bus back to town. I slept in my own tent in Camping Rocchetta back in Cortina. Cost 9€.

The 5 Towers is a well known destination for mountain climbers:

… Cinque Torri, meaning “Five Towers”, is a group of actually more than 5 towers that lies on the south slopes of Falzarego Pass above Cortina d’Ampezzo. …

Summit Post – Cinque Torri Group

Highly recommended!

hike the 3 Peaks in the Dolomites, Italy

Trip report by besthike editor Rick McCharles.

These are the famed and disclaimed 3 Peaks. The most photographed mountains in the Dolomites, I reckon.

3-peaks

… The Drei Zinnen (German for “Three Peaks”), also called the Tre Cime di Lavaredo (Italian), are three distinctive battlement-like peaks, in the Sexten Dolomites of northeastern Italy. They are probably one of the best-known mountain groups in the Alps. …

People come to the Locatelli Refuge (IT Rif. Locatelli) to enjoy a fine meal at high altititude.

food-and-3-peaks

I’ve never seen so many hikers in one place at one time before, except on the Tongariro Crossing in New Zealand.

many-hikers

Why are they here?

It’s easy to take a bus right to 2300m (7545ft), the very base of the mountains.

But, for some reason, the crowds did not bother me. It was wonderful to see so many people exposed to hiking in such an easy and painless way.

If you hate crowds of enthralled visitors, go hike Alaska.

I adored everything about this hike.

I loved the wild flowers. Alpine meadows. The WW 1 history. The tunnels. Especially the Via ferrata (Iron Way) side trips. I think I’ve found a new life passion.

via-ferrata

Hiking in Italy is far easier than I expected.

map-of-Dolomites

hiking-guidebook1) Travel to Cortina, Italy
2) Buy a bus ticket to TRAILHEAD at Rif. Auronzo
3) Wander where you like for as long as you like
4) Take a LOT of photos

I used Walking in the Dolomites: 28 Multi-Day Routes by Gillian Price. This Cicerone title is the best available in English for this region. This area is covered by hikes 1,2 and 3. Buy your guidebooks in advance of travelling to Italy. English books are not widely available here as there are so many other titles in German and Italian.

Cicerone has several other guides including Treks in the Dolomites: Alta Vie 1 and 2 and Shorter Walks in the Dolomites. But the one I used is the best for most hikers.

No need to carry a hiking pack. There are great mountain huts every hour or two. Hosts will feed you and give you a bed for 40-50 Euro a day.

hiking in the clouds
hiking in the clouds

I left a Summit Stone on behalf of artist DSD. Look for it in the cairn atop the carved stone steps starting the Via ferrata closest to Refugio Pian de Cengia. (That’s a FUN Via ferrata by the way. Exhilarating, but safe.)

hikers-in-the-Dolomites

If looking for more inspiration to plan a trip to Italy, see all 134 of my photos. (I went crazy with the camera.)

sleep cheap – The Tent – Munich

This place is ideal for European hikers in transit who have the gear and experience to sleep on the ground, outside.

The hostels and low cost hotels in Munich are often full. As an overflow, you can always stay at “The Tent”, a non-profit organization.

It’s a campground. A big tent full of bunkbeds.

bunk-beds

Or a big tent where you can sleep on the Floor.

sleep-on-the-Floor

Cost in 2009 depending on which you choose varies from 7.50 – 11 Euro / person. Even less if you put 2 or more people in your own tent.

See more photos. The many services offered.

official website

read some reviews

They have a tent in Berlin, Germany, as well. A real party “scene” at both places.

I’ve always felt there’s a market for low cost accommodation. You could make money offering cheap sleeps in many parts of the world where hostels are over-priced.

hiking Port Joli Head, Nova Scotia

Trip report by besthike editor Rick McCharles.

Finally, a success story from my hiking days in Maritime Canada.

I loved this pretty little 8.7km day hike loop, the seaside adjunct of Kejimkujik National Park. That’s the only National Park in all of Nova Scotia.

map

It was all good. A lovely coastal walk to visit the seals.

seals

anchor

flower

see the rest of my photos

KJ024_fix

bushwhacking Cape Split, Nova Scotia

An information kiosk lady told me I would not like the Cape Split Trail. That peaked my interest.

Was she wrong as so many information kiosk ladies are wrong about hikes?

It looked appealing on the map.

Cape-Split-map

At the trailhead a woman coming off the trail looked muddy and disappointed. She inspired me to take to the coastline (left side) instead of the regular inland trail.

Perhaps I could make it all the way to the end. Then backtrack on the regular trail.

I love the beach boulder boogie at low tide. There were no impassable headlands as far as I got. It was great FUN … but required the agility of a mountain goat.

Eventually, time pressing, I decided to bushwhack across the Spit to the main trail. And return back to my rent-a-car that way.

How far could it be?

Turned out this was the worst bushwhack since George decided to lead us through the Devil’s Club in Alaska, bear hunting.

I do wish I had made it to the end of the spit.

cape-split

Nova Trails – information

Ronnie Sculion – trip report