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HOME » In The News In The NewsWant to find out a bit more about Adventure Life? Check out some of these great publications that have written articles about our tours. Browse through these brief summaries or click on the links below to read the full articles! Want further information? Check out the guidebooks that recommend Adventure Life. Click here...
Transitions AbroadThe Semana Santa Easter Festival in Antigua, Guatemala Published: July 25, 2008 By: Sandra Kennedy Pastel-colored homes, cobblestone streets, bougainvillea-covered walls and looming volcanoes offer the first glimpses of Antigua. The UNESCO World Heritage site embraces thousands of travelers wanting to experience this world-famed Catholic celebration commemorating the Passion, Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Antigua, Guatemala comes alive with its annual \"Semana Santa\" Holy Week, held sometime between March 22 and April 23. The entire city participates in the solemn activities during the week with a joyous celebration on Easter. Spanish missionaries from Seville initiated this religious occasion during colonial times. ...Adventure Life Journeys is one of a few tour groups for this Easter Festival. It has a nine-day trip with a local bilingual guide, small groups, and sustainable tourism practices. It includes the Easter Festival, ChiChicastenango and Solola Markets, as well as Lake Atitlan. Multisport Peru Manco Heart-stopper Published: June 10, 2008 By: staff editor Scottsdale Magazine Adventure Life attracts those seeking to push the limit of their thrill-seeking endurance up a north or two. This 12-day adventure offers participants the chance to experience native culture via an overnight stay with local families. The Manco adventure begins with your arrival in Lima where you soak up a bit of civilization before flying off to Cusco the next morning to immerse yourself into the mysteries of the witches' market, or explore the capital city of Inca's many plazas, ancient ruins and museums... ...A well-planned itinerary for those unaccustomed to extreme heights, such as the 14,403-foot La Raya pass, gives adventurers the opportunity to become acclimated before exploring the region's many ancient temples and archeological sites... Ancient Treasures Waiting to Be Found: Cusco & Machu Picchu Published: June 01, 2008 By: Vicki Stout Southern Exposure Magazine Machu Picchu, the mystical Lost City of the Inca, which seems to hang in midair between the clouds above and a rushing river below, is the reason most travelers, myself included, head to Peru... ...Our Adventure Life tour leader, Boris Bonnett, is a Cusco native who earned a college degree more than a decade ago in tourism. He is extremely well versed in the region that is his home and its rich history... ...WHEN YOU GO: Adventure Life, based in Montana. The company specializes in small groups and eco friendly travel in Latin America and Antarctica. National GeographicRiding the Hulahula to the Arctic: A Guide to 50 Extraordinary Adventures for the Seasoned Traveler Published: May 20, 2008 By: Shannon Stowell and Don Mankin Published by National Geographic Books Adventure Life has two featured trips -- our Hiking Galapagos and End of the World adventure -- in the upcoming book published by National Geographic Books as one of the top choices for seasoned travelers! It's time to rediscover the fun and excitement of traveling off the beaten path. In Riding the Hulahula to the Arctic Ocean: A Guide to 50 Extraordinary Adventures for the Seasoned Travelers published by National Geographic Books, expert guides Don Mankin and Shannon Stowell offer both an inspiring collection of personal, often unique, experiences and practical how-to, detailing some of the world's best trips. In-depth narratives convey the rich allure of 26 destinations with lively anecdotes and specialized information, while concise descriptions highlight an additional 26 amazing trips, selected in a survey by the Adventure Travel Trade Association (ATTA) as top choices for people over 40... The TimesGuatemala: Easter Festival, ChiChi and a chicken bus Published: May 01, 2008 By: Sandra Kennedy TheTimesUsually independent travelers, they toured with Montana-based Adventure Life Journeys, joining seven other travelers to experience the nine-day Easter Festival and much more. After a 45-minute ride from Guatemala City, my husband and I passed through an intricate wrought-iron door into Hotel Aurora. Its plain façade belied the lovely courtyard brimming with aromatic roses, chrysanthemums and bougainvillea circling a stone fountain. Usually independent travelers, we decided to tour with Montana-based Adventure Life Journeys. Joining seven other travelers, we experienced the nine-day "Easter Festival," ChiChicastenango and Solola Markets, Lake Atitlan, a macademia plantation, indigenous markets, villages and Maximon (a Mayan deity). We journeyed on tuk tuks (open air taxis), a flatbed truck, lancha (motorboat), van and chicken bus... New York Times53 Places to Go in 2008 Published: December 09, 2007 THE NORHWEST PASSAGE Notwithstanding last month's sinking of an Antarctic cruise ship, climate tourism is heating up. And few places are warming up faster than the Northwest Passage, the Arctic sea route over Canada. Adventure Life Voyages (www.alvoyages.com), for one, is already booking cruises for its Northwest Passage tour next August, with prices from $4,600 a person. National Geographic AdventureBest Adventure Travel Companies on Earth Published: November 07, 2007 By: Costas Christ and Claire Martin We are pleased to announce that Adventure Life was selected by National Geographic Adventure as one of the "Best Adventure Travel Companies on Earth!" You'll rest your head in some of the best locally built and owned lodges on the planet during a trip with this multisport outfitter, which specializes in cultural explorations in Latin America and Antarctica. In Bolivia's Madidi National Park, you'll recharge at the Chalalan Ecolodge; in Costa Rica, you'll stay at the Selva Bananito Cabins, built from cast-off rain forest logs; in Peru and Guatemala, you'll get an authentic experience with homestays... Smart TravelThe Best New Trip of 2008 Published: October 08, 2007 By: Molly Feltner As the audience for adventure travel becomes more sophisticated, the call for trips that truly abandon the beaten path or explore popular destinations in new ways is growing louder. Each year, many adventure providers introduce new trips to help meet this demand. After checking in with hundreds of outfitters from around the world and getting a sneak peek at what's cooking in their trip laboratories, here are my picks for the best new adventure trips of 2008. The forgotten kingdoms of Peru 'The Inca were only the last in a long line of sophisticated pre-Columbian cultures in Peru,' says Adventure Life founder Brian Morgan. 'From the 1st to the 15th-century A.D., [northern Peru] was home to some of South America's most prominent cultures—the Moche, Lambayeque, Chimu, and Chachapaoyas. Like the Inca, they were exquisite craftsmen and excelled in the skills of ceramics, agriculture, architecture, metallurgy, and warfare, but their temples and arts were completely unique from the Inca...' USA TodayThese 6 Global Adventures Span the Extraordinary Published: September 21, 2007 By: Gene Sloan On top of the world: Adventure Life offers a 25-night journey through the Northeast Passage between Alaska and Russia. Clients are taken by icebreaker from Anchorage to Murmansk. Looking for a life-changing adventure? How about a biking trip in Namibia? Or a rare voyage across the Arctic's Northeast Passage? USA TODAY looks at six of the most unusual adventure trips in the works for 2008... ...Outfitter: Adventure Life Endless VacationVoyages of Discovery Published: September 01, 2007 By: Meg Lukens Noonan Not your typical port: Passengers aboard and Adventure Life cruise can spend the night ice-camping on the Antarctic Peninsula's Paradise Bay. It's not secret that taking a cruise has never been the vacation for serious adrenaline addicts. Granted, it can be exhilarating to snag an unclaimed lounge chair on the pool deck after 10 a.m., but for most thrill-seekers, traditional cruises seem unbearably tame. Well, times are changing. In the past few years, ships of all sizes have launched itineraries designed to appeal to even the most adventurous travelers. Far-flung ports, challenging wilderness excursions and heart-revving life-list experiences that have replaced duty-free shopping and drive-by bus tours. The payoff? Incredible memories, a deep sense of accomplishment and -- after a full-day of calorie-burning -- guilt free returns visits to the buffet table... ...A 12-day Adventure Life voyage carries 49-passengers from the mountain-rigged city of Ushuaia in southern Argentina across the Drake Passage to the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula -- where summer highs top out at 50 degrees and the sun can shine for 20 hours a day. Guests board inflatable boats to see Gentoo penguins, ocras and the Wendell seals; paddle sea kayaks through a maze of ice floes; and scale glaciers using crampons and ice-axes. They can also ski the white wilderness or do the full Shackleton: and overnight ice-camping excursion. TravelGirlAwe at the End of the World Published: August 15, 2007 By: Carole Jacobs ..."Most people hike the W on their own steam, carrying 30-pound packs up vertical boulder fields, pitching tents in gale-force winds and huddling inside makeshift shelters to heat a pot of water to cook dinner. Our group was going it the easy way with Adventure Life, a Montana based outfit that specializes in global outdoor adventures. Instead of being burdened with heavy packs, we carried only light day packs holding our lunch, water and raingear while our trusty guides, Kenneth and Roberto, and two additional female porters, carried the rest..." "Adventure Life's eight-day Pure Patagonia Base Camp Trekking adventure is an active itinerary of massive glaciers, jagged mountains, glacier hikes and wonderful wildlife. Hiking each day is moderate to strenuous, and participants should be in good shape." "Adventure Life encourages sustainable, low-impact travel in small groups averaging 8-10 guests. Trip leaders are bilingual and hold university degrees in anthropology, biology, botany and other related disciplines. Adventure Life runs several trips in Patagonia and other countries where the wilderness is the star." Mens JournalAn Easy Icebraker Published: July 01, 2007 By: Mens Journal The Northwest Passage links the Atlantic and Pacific and provides a shipping route between Europe and Asia. The deadly, ice-packed Northwest Passage remained unconquered until Roald Amundsen braved the trip in 1906. Today satellite images suggest that the ice is retreating so rapidly that the passage could be a viable shipping land by 2050, making the Panama Canal nearly obsolete. Following Amundesen's route today (from Anchorage, Alaska, to Resolute Bay, Canaada) aboard an icebreaker with outfitter Adventure Life is more aking to a pleasure cruise. Highlights include passage through the roaring Beaufort Sea and the Victoria Straight, where Amundsen was stranded for two winters. In addition to watching whales, seals, and polar bears, travelers get a look at icebergs that, for now at least, are the size of several city blocks. Jax FaxSouth Pacific Cruises: Where Paradise is no Cliche Published: June 01, 2007 By: Jonathan Siskin While the word "paradise" is overused in travel literature, it is absolutely on target when describing a South Pacific cruise... ...One of the newest entrants into the South Pacific cruise market is Adventure Life VOYAGES, a Missoula, Montana-based company that is among the leaders in land based tours to Central and South America. The experts at Adventure Life have selected a few choice expedition cruise vessels and paired them with enticing itineraries to some of the far-flung corners of the globe..." Jax FaxDestination: Best Buys Central and South America Published: May 01, 2007 By: Jax Fax Adventure Life, an eco-based adventure travel company that specializes in trips to Central and South America, is selling the eight-day Reefs and Cayes package starting at $1250 per person double. Participants will glide among the cayes and coral reef while sea kayaking or snorkeling with blue parrot fish, neon blowfish, and study purple plume coral, brain coral and sea fans; eat from the bounty of the sea, and pitch their tents each night under the starry sky. Visit. www.adventure-life.com Transitions AbroadBest in Travel Class 2007 Published: April 07, 2007 By: Christina Heyniger and Sherry Schwarz Adventure Life specializes in family adventures and custom tours throughout Latin America. It adheres to small group travel not only as a benefit to travelers, but also on principle as a way to minimize its "footprint" on the places and cultures they visit. Optional homestays expand cross-cultural awareness, and partnerships with local guides and family-owned ecolodges contribute to local economies. Outside MagazineOutside 2007 Trip of the Year: The Worlds 30 Greatest Trips. Ever. Published: March 01, 2007 By: Meg Lukens Noonan
Two Years Running! This is the second year in a row an Adventure Lifes trip has made Outside Magazine's coveted "Trip of the Year." In 2006 our Argentina Northwest Trek made the list - 2007 honors our Hiking Galapagos trip. Explore some of the Islands' most remarkable regions, including snorkeling at Leon Dormido, Tortuga Bay, El Junco Lagoon and a hike to the rim of Sierra Negra volcano. Spend the nights on the Islands in comfortable hotels. This Galapagos tour is a great alternative to the traditional Galapagos cruise.
"Straddling the equator 600 miles off the west coast of Ecuador, these far-flung volcanic islands have been the focus of scientists and wildlife lovers since Charles Darwin first scratched his head here in 1835. Now that the Galapagos have become one of the most popular destinations on the planet -- 120,000 yearly vistors come to spy on the islands' famous giant tortoises, fur seals, and blue-footed boobies -- the Galapagos National Park Services keeps tight control on where boat passengers disembark and how long they spend at designated land and underwater visitor sites. The best way to avoid crowds?...Join Adventure Life's new nine-day hiking trip, with overnights in small inns." Valley AdvocateFollowing Franklin Published: January 18, 2007 By: Stephen Hartshorne Sailing the historic Northwest Passage in a polar-class icebreaker
Since the Age of Discovery began in the sixteenth century, explorers have been braving the frigid weather and powerful sea ice of Canada’s northern reaches in search of a Northwest Passage to the Pacific Ocean... ...Adventure Life of Missoula, Montana organizes expedition cruises to places almost no one else can get to, and one of them is the Canadian Arctic. Icebreakers and shallow-draft vessels can take you through the very waterways which explorers searched for centuries.... ...Adventure Life’s Canadian Arctic cruise aboard the polar-class icebreaker Kapitan Khlebnikov offers you the opportunity to be one of the very few intrepid souls who have navigated the Northwest Passage. Like AL’s other expedition cruises, the voyage includes presentations on the wildlife, geology, glaciers and human history of the High Arctic from naturalists, historians and scientists.... Motivation StrategiesOn Some Cruises, Less is Definitely More Published: January 01, 2007 By: Marc Boisclair Smaller cruise ships can deliver an unforgettable experince.
When Steve Brown wanted to thank his employees for buying into his company, he decided to forego a standard cruise, instead choosing a ship and ports less traveled. "I wanted something unique, an incentive experience that gave us the chance to relax, celebrate, get outdoors and do some team-building," says Brown, who operates the Trout Lodge fish hatchery in Washington State. So he hit the Internet and landed at Adventure Life VOYAGES, a Montana-based company that specializes in off-the-beaten-path tours for small groups. "He came to us about our Patagonia trip for his group – seven owners and spouses who were going to Chile on business anyway," says Johnathan Brunger, Adventure Life’s adventure coordinator. The big draw, adds Brunger, was the four-day cruise’s mix of adventure and spectacular sightseeing with posh digs and gourmet food, a combination Brown felt would prove a good fit for his group. Did it work? In his post-trip evaluation, Brown was ecstatic: "It spoiled my wife and me to an extent that we would never go on a big-ship cruise again." ... USA TodayFive adventures to get your blood rushing Published: December 08, 2006 By: Gene Sloan
Itching for a once-in-a-lifetime adventure? How about the first commerical trek up Tibet's Tsangpo river? Or rafting in little-visited Montenegro? Or biking in Spain's vineyard-dotted Rioja region? These are just a few of the new offerings from adventure travel companies for 2007. USA TODAY's Gene Sloan offers a guide to five new itineraries:... ...Patagonia: Adventure Life's End of the World trip combines three days on an expedition ship, sailing glacier-fed fjords and corssing the Strait of Magellan, with a land-based exploration of mountainous Chile and Argentina that includes a stay at an eco-tent lodge. USA TodayEvolution of a Good Idea Published: September 29, 2006 By: Gene Sloan
SAN CRISTOBAL ISLAND, the Galapagos, Ecuador — An hour into a grueling hike through the scrubby, arid lowlands that cover much of this island, Alfredo Meneses slows his pace. "Keep your eyes out," says the 40-year-old tour guide, sweat glistening from his brow as he scans the nearby clumps of silvery-gray, lichen-covered palo santo trees. "We've just entered the kingdom of the giant tortoise." ... ...Meneses, an Ecuador-born guide for Missoula, Mont.-based Adventure Life Journeys, launched the first land-based tour in the Galapagos nearly five years ago, a week-long multisport trip that included hiking, kayaking and horseback riding. Soon other adventure companies followed. In the past year, several also have added land-based all-kayaking trips. Now Adventure Life is premiering the first all-hiking trip, the latest twist in the growing trend... Conde Nast TravelerGreen List Published: September 2006 We are thrilled to have made Conde Nast Traveler's 2006 Green List for our role as a Tour Operator practicing responsible and sustainable travel. Read more in the September 2006 issue of Conde Nast...
National Geographic AdventureGreat Summer Trips of 2006 Published: May 2006
National Geographic Adventure recently highlighted our Peru Manu Biosphere tour in their "Great Summer Trips" issue. Check it out! The 4.4-million-acre Manu Biosphere Reserve, in eastern Peru's Amazon territory, has the highest concentration of bird species on the planet. It is also home to tapirs, a dozen varieties of monkeys, and the playful giant otter -- an animal hunted nearly to extinction elsewhere but still thriving within the reserve. But Manu's most charismatic wildlife attraction is a garish little bird called the Andean cock-of-the-rock; males famously congregate for a bizarre mating ritual -- a sing off that may be the animal kingdom's closest approximation of American Idol. Outfitter Adventure Life has been leading guests to this spectacle for five years and doing it in a way that gives back to the surrounding human and animal communities. "We use local guides and transportation and family-run hotels so that our Peruvian hosts can share the benefits of tourism," says the company's founder, Brian Morgan. Expect high altitude (13,000 feet) in the cloudforest portion of the
reserve. Accommodations at Manu are comfortable and simple -- you'll
have your own bed and bath, but the electricity is on for only eight
hours a day. The Washington PostLending a Hand In Playa Las Tortugas Published: March 05, 2006 By: Cindy Loose
Hundreds of white coolers line floor-to-ceiling shelves inside a hot, dimly lighted shed. The silence is broken only by what sounds like dozens of fingernails scraping against Styrofoam. Veterinarian Miguel Flores Peregrina listens carefully to discern which coolers are emitting the scraping sounds, identifies three and open the lids. Inside, dozens of squirming newborn turtles, each smaller than the palm of my hand, are clawing their way to the top of the sand-filled coolers and trying to bash through the sides of the Styrofoam to freedom. Like all sea turtles, these are born with a natural burst of energy and an ancient instinct telling them to rush headlong into the sea... ...Volunteers at Mexico's Playa Las Tortugas can hold baby turles, help measure females after they've come ashore at night to lay eggs, and see new hatchings scramble in the corrals... ...Adventure Life has trips to Costa Rica's Pacuare Nature Reserve
or Tortuguero National Park in spring and summer. From San Jose, Costa
Rica, eight-day trips begin at $1,345 and include working with turtles,
white-water rafting and visiting a rainforest... Outside MagazineBest Trips of 2006 - The Wanderlist Published: March 2006
Amid the deep red gorges of Argentina's rugged northwest, aboriginal adobe huts stand as reminders that this country's rich history far predates the tango. This nine-day trip covers both past and present, fromt the pre-Spanish Calchaquis relics in Quilmes to the up-and-coming wineries of Cafayate. After a stay at ta comfortable bodega lodge, you'll embark on a three-day trek through the Cachi Mountains, where you and your packhorses will hoof it 29 miles up the Belgrando River Gorge to the multicolored sandstone formations of the Pukamayu Vally. New York TimesHiking the Inca Trail: Procrastinators Need Not Apply Published: February 05, 2006 By: Michelle Higgins
Adventure Life, in Missoula, Mont., offers the Cachiccata Trek, a 10-day backcountry experience that inludes four days of hiking that bypasses the traditional Inca Trail on the way to Machu Picchu ($1,625). "What has become known as the Inca Trail is what people refer to as that four-day hike to Machu Picchu," said DarAnne Dunning, a trip coordinator for Adventure Life. "But that isn't the only Inca trail that there was. There were thousands and thousands of miles of these trails in Peru." New York TimesThe Galapagos Without a Paddle Published: January 08, 2006 By: Hilary Howard
USA TodayEdge of the World Published: December 16, 2005 By: Gene Sloan
Just about every major adventure travel company offers a tour of the Galapagos islands — by boat. Adventure Life's new twist? Participants stay on shore — in small hotels on three islands (a rarity, since 97% of the islands are national park). USA TodayThe trail less trampled on Published: September 22, 2005 By: Gene Sloan
USA TodayAlternate Inca trail routes Published: September 22, 2005 By: Gene Sloan
...While thousands of miles of Incan trails crisscross the mountains of Peru, most major U.S. adventure tour companies only have offered treks on the so-called "classic" Inca Trail that leads directly to the famous ruins of Machu Picchu. Now that's beginning to change. With the Peruvian government enforcing limits on visitors to the classic trail, which has been plagued by overcrowding, firms are adding more treks on "alternative" Incan trails connecting lesser-known ruins. ....The Missoula, Mont.-based company this summer launched "Cachiccata Trek: The Inca Trail Less Traveled," a 10-day trip that includes three days of trekking on the Cachiccata Trail, a route that passes the ruins of Chokekillka. The trip includes a stop at the ruins of Ollantaytambo and a train trip to Machu Picchu.... New York TimesTours from Antarctica to Argentina and Shorter Cruises of Hawaii Published: September 18, 2005 By: Marjorie Connelly ...Based in Missoula, Mont., Adventure Life Journeys, (800) 344-6118 or www.adventure -life.com, organizes trips ranging from 10 days to 23 days; the longer trips include visits to the Falkland Islands and South Georgia Island. A 10-night voyage aboard the 110-passenger Akademik Ioffe visits the South Shetland Islands and the waterways of the Antarctic Peninsula, focusing on areas with the best possibilities of viewing wildlife. Including an optional overnight camping excursion, fares start at $5,390 a person... The Mercury NewsGalapagos Islands Give Travelers a Visual Feast Published: July 24, 2005
Arizona RepublicSecondary Inca Trail Leads to Rewards Published: July 10, 2005 By: Kendra Gonnerman Have you ever thought about taking the Inca Trail less traveled in Peru? My friend, Mary and I were excited to take the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu, but then we found an alternative trail that would take us around to modern Incan communities and magnificent views of the snow-capped Andes. Adventure Life put together a wonderful tour that took us to Cusco and the Sacred Valley and then on a four-day trek along the Cachiccata Trail. Our vacation concluded with our visit to Machu Picchu for two days... The Honolulu AdvertiserGalavanting in the Galapagos Published: May 23, 2005 By: Lou and Joan Rose
*The Roses have traveled all over the world and have an excellent website with excellent travel tales, advice and adventures to share. Visit: The Rambling Roses to learn more. Western Montana InBusinessEscape Artists Adventure Life offers clients a bolder brand of travel Published: May 2005 By: Jared Ritz
San Francisco ChronicleAdventure Life Offers Exclusive Trip: Study Leatherback Turtles in Costa Rica Published: April 21, 2005
Sacramento BeeHead south - way south - for extended ski season Published: April 19, 2005
USA TodayGuatemala in a New Light Published: March 11, 2005 By: Gene Sloan
USA TodayAdventure Lite Published: March 11, 2004 By: Gene Sloan
New York TimesTours of Every Stripe Published: January 18, 2004 By: Martha Stevenson Olson
"Central America is still a new destination for many Americans, however, and even in Costa Rica independent vacations can be difficult, particularly if you're driving, because of the poor roads. So tours make sense. ....various smaller tour companies have sprung up to meet the demand for more specialized trips..." ..."Itineraries in Costa Rica, Belize and Guatemala are offered by Adventure Life Journeys, based in Missoula, Mont., which specializes in trips to Latin America. A 12-day tour departing April 2 visits Guatemala during Semana Santa, the holy week before Easter, when processions and huge puppets parade along streets decorated with dyed sawdust and flowers. Visits to Chichicastenango's colorful market, Lake Atitlán and Tikal are included, along with several days in the colonial city of Antigua, where much of the pageantry is centered. The trip includes stays in comfortable hotels and lodges (with breakfasts), along with in-country transportation except the flight between Guatemala City and Flores, near Tikal. A nine-day trip in Belize (with a side trip to Tikal), includes two nights at Glover's Reef, a coral atoll, or Ambergris Caye, with snorkeling, sea kayaking or windsurfing available, then three nights at a jungle lodge inland, with excursions along the river and to a Maya ruin. Information: (800) 344-6118 or www.adventure-life.com." NewsweekGetaways | Race For Survival Published: February 10, 2003
Stay up late with biologists and half-ton leatherbacks. For a few nights at a private reserve, go to www.adventure-life.com. Costa Rica Turtles and Rainforest:
The Vancouver SunCavern Holds Mayan Secrets Published: January 18, 2003 By: Mark Angelo
"We set out from our lodge in the early morning and, after a two-hour trek through the jungle, we arrived at the entrance to a beautiful, hourglass-shaped cave with a small stream flowing from its mouth. Locals referred to this cavern as Actun Tunichil Muknal, which means the Cave of the Stone Sepulchre, and we had come to probe some of the mysteries and secrets of the Mayan civilization. …" Belize Rainforest and Ruins:
The Wall Street Journal EuropeLuxury Class: Viewing the Natural World Published: October 18, 2002 By: Brian A. Grow "...What's special? Six hundreds miles from the shores of Ecuador
lie the storybook islands of the Galapagos, where Darwin first chronicled
the evolutionary origins of the species. These volcanic In the middle of the Pacific Ocean, the Galapagos are a stage on which the Earth's evolutionary forces play out unencumbered by the hectic pace of life in the world's more inhabited climes. But travelers on the "Adventure Life" Galapagos 10-day luxury yacht tour can enjoy the mystical islands in relaxed style aboard the double-sailed schooner Diamante..." Galapagos Islands tours: StarTribuneFlights to Galapagos not always fancy Published: August 18, 2002 By: Catherine Watson
Outside Magazine10 New Outfitted Trips for Families Published: 2002 By: Kimberly Lisagor "With
a stay at a private leatherback-turtle research facility south of Tortugero
National Park, this eight-day Costa Rica Caribbean itinerary has a scientific
bent. ... Kids will love accompanying biologists on their rounds to
measure the giant turtles."
Turtles and Rainforest tour: Caribbean Travel & LifeIn the Jungles of Costa Rica Published: October 2001 By: Natalia de Cuba Romero "White-water rapids and eight- hour jungle hikes may not seem very romantic. But in Costa Rica, a magical netherworld where the air is cleaner, the greens are greener and life a little slower and sweet, Francisco and I see it differently!Jungle is sexy; cold showers and sleeping on the ground are not. Fortunately, Adventure
Life Journeys offers us the Lost World by day and real beds by night!
Vigorous hikes are highlighted by bright-red frogs, armies of leaf-cutter ants and flame-colored heliconias dripping from the trees. We drink sweet water from streams and splash through rivers amid mahogany tree so tall we can't see the tops and so wide we hide behind the roots. Our guides toss ropes over a roaring waterfall; I'm too afraid to rappel down on my own, but I make it with the help of new friends! Over the next few days we gallop horses across banana plantations, and Francisco climbs trees while I admire from below. We laze on hammocks, drink wine, watch wildlife, wake to birdsong and live by candlelight. We get all the adventure and romancy we dreamed of! " Beaches and Rainforest tour:
New York TimesAncient Symbols in the Sand Published: January 07, 2001 By: Chris Iovenko "... We booked a 17-day tour with Adventure Life Journeys,
a Montana-based company that specializes in Peru. When we arrived in
Lima we were met by our guide, Fredy Manrique, and the next day departed
for Pisco!As soon as we were airborne, we could see that the desert
below us was traversed with faint lines as though it had been tilled
by giant plows. Then, through the hazy heat, we saw a break in the lines
and an indistinct shape. The pilot circled around to get a closer look.
Still the design remained faint and unclear and only slightly darker
in outline than its sandy background. The pilot shouted back that the
mystery shape was a condor.
The nextfigures proved much more impressive. A monkey with a vast
spiral tail was followed in short order by a hummingbird, a whale, a
fox, and a waving man with an oddly shaped head, referred to as the
owl man!" Marco Polo MagazineExpedition Cruising in the Galapagos Islands Published: 2001 By: Mary Jo Plouf
Galapagos Islands tours:
MissoulanSouthern Exposure Published: January 16, 2000 By: John Stucke
The Semana Santa Easter Festival in Antigua, Guatemala Published: 0000 By: Sandra Kennedy Pastel-colored homes, cobblestone streets, bougainvillea-covered walls and looming volcanoes offer the first glimpses of Antigua. The UNESCO World Heritage site embraces thousands of travelers wanting to experience this world-famed Catholic celebration commemorating the Passion, Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Antigua, Guatemala comes alive with its annual \"Semana Santa\" Holy Week, held sometime between March 22 and April 23. The entire city participates in the solemn activities during the week with a joyous celebration on Easter. Spanish missionaries from Seville initiated this religious occasion during colonial times. ...Adventure Life Journeys is one of a few tour groups for this Easter Festival. It has a nine-day trip with a local bilingual guide, small groups, and sustainable tourism practices. It includes the Easter Festival, ChiChicastenango and Solola Markets, as well as Lake Atitlan.
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