What's your ulimate adventure? Bungy jumping at Victoria Falls, Shark cage diving, sky diving, trekking to Everest Base Camp, epedition to Antartica....
There are a few fears I'd love to challege by doing what would be my ulitmate adventures. However shark cage diving would kill me. I think I'd have heart failure the second I was submerged in the water. The others however, I would seriously consider doing.
What are yours? Have you done them or working towards them?
What's your ULTIMATE adventure?
40 posts • Page 1 of 3 • 1, 2, 3
What's your ULTIMATE adventure?
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Travel is its own world. It has its own people and its own language. We're all citizens of the world, but few of us are citizens of Travel.
Travel is its own world. It has its own people and its own language. We're all citizens of the world, but few of us are citizens of Travel.
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Canuck Girl - World Citizen
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1. Climb Mt. Everest
2. Thru-hike the Pacific Crest Trail
3. Complete a few big-wall climbs in Yosimite.
I've already set a date for #2 (April 15, 2009) and I'm learning to ice climb this fall in order to start preparing for #1, which I hope to complete before I turn 30.
We'll see :P
2. Thru-hike the Pacific Crest Trail
3. Complete a few big-wall climbs in Yosimite.
I've already set a date for #2 (April 15, 2009) and I'm learning to ice climb this fall in order to start preparing for #1, which I hope to complete before I turn 30.
We'll see :P
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kardisa - Lost in Place
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1. Climb K2
2. Sail around the world and dive everywhere.
3. Base jump Cerro Torre.
4. Snowboard down Denali.
1.) Working towards climbing in the Himilayans in probably 2-4 years.
2.) Workign on making a lot of $$$ to afford it.
3.) Working on getting my skydiving license.
4.) 2 years.
I could actually go on forever. Too little time, too little money. Now I'm depressed.
BTW Rachael, I don't think you need to know how to ice climb to climb Everest, unless your attempting one of the relatively unused routes.
2. Sail around the world and dive everywhere.
3. Base jump Cerro Torre.
4. Snowboard down Denali.
1.) Working towards climbing in the Himilayans in probably 2-4 years.
2.) Workign on making a lot of $$$ to afford it.
3.) Working on getting my skydiving license.
4.) 2 years.
I could actually go on forever. Too little time, too little money. Now I'm depressed.
BTW Rachael, I don't think you need to know how to ice climb to climb Everest, unless your attempting one of the relatively unused routes.
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Stephen Mattison - Knows What a Schengen Visa Is
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I guess I don't count paying someone $60,000 to guide me up as really "climbing Everest". Anyway, it's better to have the skills and not use them than be SOL in an emergency.
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kardisa - Lost in Place
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Anybody know what the current permit cost is for climbing Everest? This site says it's $10,000 -- just for the government permit (total cost of a trip: $25,000). Not as bad as it used to be (I think it was more like $50,000 or $60,000), but not really my cup of tea.
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jv - Mod Squad
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It sounds like the $2000 fee would be for summiting on the Tibet side. I believe the Nepalese govt raised their rates in the past few years closer to $10,000.
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kardisa - Lost in Place
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Mine would probably be climbing related - my skills are virtually non-existant now, but I do enjoy doing the canyoneering type things, and rappelling. I would need an experienced climber to do all of the ropes/gadget work for me though, so I'd have to do more of an organized climb with a guide.
Rafting trips would be fun too - I did a short daytrip on the CO river in Utah, but to be honest the rapids were pretty small. So something a little more energized would be fun. Or a combo of rafting, climbing, camping, and exploring canyons or other natural environments. If you've seen the Nile Imax movie, that trip looked super cool to me!!
I used to want to sky-dive, but now know my stomach is too weak and while I don't have the fear to do it, I definitely think puking on the way down would ruin the fun of it. ;-)
Also I used to think climbing one of the higher elevation mountains would be awesome, but I get altitude sickness, so will forgo those grand trips! I'll just have to stick to low-elevation adventures!!
Rafting trips would be fun too - I did a short daytrip on the CO river in Utah, but to be honest the rapids were pretty small. So something a little more energized would be fun. Or a combo of rafting, climbing, camping, and exploring canyons or other natural environments. If you've seen the Nile Imax movie, that trip looked super cool to me!!
I used to want to sky-dive, but now know my stomach is too weak and while I don't have the fear to do it, I definitely think puking on the way down would ruin the fun of it. ;-)
Also I used to think climbing one of the higher elevation mountains would be awesome, but I get altitude sickness, so will forgo those grand trips! I'll just have to stick to low-elevation adventures!!
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Eowyn218 - World Citizen
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I'd say:
Spending 3 months or more in asia
going to antartica
safari and traveling through Africa, namely Vic Falls, seeing some Silverback guerillas as well as Capetown
Last on my list is South America, I am really interested in seeing Manchu Picchu
I am hoping to do asia this year, 3 months will most likely be 3 weeks but hey its a start.
Spending 3 months or more in asia
going to antartica
safari and traveling through Africa, namely Vic Falls, seeing some Silverback guerillas as well as Capetown
Last on my list is South America, I am really interested in seeing Manchu Picchu
I am hoping to do asia this year, 3 months will most likely be 3 weeks but hey its a start.
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Eppyboy - Sells Travel by the Gram
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Kamchatka and Kuriles. Geysers, volcanoes, surf, shore, Ainu, Japanese, Russian, and absolutely zero tourist infrastructure. Watch out for the bears.
A life well lived must accept some risk.
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SputnikLee - Squat Toilet Professional
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This is a really good question, I am not really sure what my ultimate adventure might be, but a couple of ideas:
*Hiking the entire Milford trail in New Zealand. Can't forget the obligatory Bungee jump too!
*Hiking/climbing in Ladakh (India)
*Some sort of outlandish Safari in Kenya.
...lol and seriously:
*Iran: I've always wanted to go there, why is it an aventure? Well it seems with all that Americans go through just to get a visa it ought to be. Iran originally had been a close second to Australia, I ditched the plan because of all the associated BS, let's hope that America in the meantime doesn't try to get its war on.
*Hiking the entire Milford trail in New Zealand. Can't forget the obligatory Bungee jump too!
*Hiking/climbing in Ladakh (India)
*Some sort of outlandish Safari in Kenya.
...lol and seriously:
*Iran: I've always wanted to go there, why is it an aventure? Well it seems with all that Americans go through just to get a visa it ought to be. Iran originally had been a close second to Australia, I ditched the plan because of all the associated BS, let's hope that America in the meantime doesn't try to get its war on.
http://www.myspace.com/samanthasosohniye
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Sohniye - Holds PhD in Packing
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I believe that My Ultimate Journey would be to sail, yes sail, around the world a few times. The details are not so important as I believe that no matter what particulars one found, the experience would be mind changing.
It also has the perk of getting you within reach of a whole lot of places.....
It also has the perk of getting you within reach of a whole lot of places.....
We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arive where we started and know the place for the first time.
~ T.S. Eliot
~ T.S. Eliot
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Sideways Elephant-Orchids - Lost in Place
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Though, if price were no issue, I would have to say that I would in an instant agree to become the worlds first liberal space tourist!!!!
We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arive where we started and know the place for the first time.
~ T.S. Eliot
~ T.S. Eliot
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Sideways Elephant-Orchids - Lost in Place
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- Joined: March 18th, 2005
I asked a friend this question and they said... MARRIAGE. LOL
____________________________________
Travel is its own world. It has its own people and its own language. We're all citizens of the world, but few of us are citizens of Travel.
Travel is its own world. It has its own people and its own language. We're all citizens of the world, but few of us are citizens of Travel.
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Canuck Girl - World Citizen
- Posts: 1110
- Joined: January 10th, 2005
- Location: Calgary, AB
My ultimate adventure is selling everything I have, taking the money and travelling the world til I get lost, dizzy or just plain broke. Guess what I'm doing 
elv
elv
Yes there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run
There's still time to change the road you're on....
There's still time to change the road you're on....
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Elvie - Knows What a Schengen Visa Is
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