by azbackpackr » May 02 2011 5:42 am
As for the adventure of a lifetime, I am doing two Grand Canyon private river rafting trips over the next year and a half. I hope these are great trips, but I don't expect them to be the "ultimate." But since one of them is for 20 days and the other one for 25 days, they do qualify as expedition-length trips. And as they are non-commercial, they qualify as something I can have a hand in planning, especially since one of the permits is mine.
Sailing around the world in a Tahiti ketch comes to mind as an ultimate, life-changing adventure. Thru-hiking the CDT or PCT. Canoeing the entire Yukon River or other long Arctic river. I am sure there are foreign trips (I don't count Canada as "foreign") which I might like which would count. I have no desire to bag peaks in the Himalayas (too cold and bleak for me), but one of those long "treks" such as Writelots described would be great!
I personally would not really count something the "trip of a lifetime" if I did not have a hand in creating it. If all I did was reserve a spot on one of those ecotour vacations, well, then, that would be really fun, but it would not count as "trip of a lifetime" if I were basically just a glorified tourist. A friend of mine in Tucson has climbed Kilimanjaro in Africa, and hiked the Milford Track in New Zealand. Both were ecotour trips. She had a blast, and I can see where, especially with Kili, it is a good thing to go with a tour group--in fact I am not sure you can get a permit to climb Kili without using the porters, etc. Milford Track, however, is quite touristy, and it may actually be cheaper to hire a guide than to pay all the little fees and hut reservations, etc. which start to add up.
Oh, I forgot, I also would like to ride my bicycle on a very long trip, such as across the U.S.
Incidentally, some of these ecotour trips are pretty affordable. My friend said she paid about $6000 for the entire Africa trip to climb Kili which included a safari with elephants and lions, airfare, etc. This was about 4 years ago.
Rich people can afford to fly off and do this or that, and some of my friends have been to some pretty exotic places--one pal of mine went to Antarctica this year. I can't afford to do that. However, I notice that some of these people don't know how to put together a trip on their own. And that is something I CAN do--I have been a trip leader for backpacking many times. I am taking an intensive one-week class this month in river guiding. I'll be learning everything from menu planning and shopping to packing the boats and setting up the kitchen and cooking the meals. In the fall semester I'm going to take some more of that type of class. Hopefully I'll gain more skills in trip planning. So, if I can't afford to be a rich ecotourer, maybe I can guide rich ecotourers instead!
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
Steal your face right off your head!