I learned a lot of things on a recent weeklong backpacking trip with a bunch of guys… …including the fact that boys like to talk about poop. A lot. Their poop-banter was delightfully juvenile and I thoroughly enjoyed it! I also loved having the opportunity to spend so much quality time in nature with friends […]
Category Archives: Hiking
Guiding the Way
There is always that one person on most every group travel trip. You know… “the one.” They often exhibit one or more of the following characteristics: An exhausting personality or offensive sense of humor. The embodiment of the crass and entitled (North) American tourist stereotype. Talking your ear off at dinner, all the while complaining about […]
Michele and Glenn’s Grand Adventure
For longer than I can remember, my work has had a tradition where fellow staff give lunchtime presentations about their international trips. It’s a fun way to learn about the world and dream up new exotic locations to visit before returning to the email-meeting-email hamster wheel we all seem to find ourselves stuck on. When […]
Travel reboot in Thailand
Somewhere along the way Glenn and I lost that sense of awe that comes from traveling. We no longer felt the little tingle in the pit of our stomachs that said “oh wow, look at that” or “huh, this is a new and somewhat uncomfortable situation.” Traveling went from a grand adventure to a little […]
All good things must come to an end. (Overland Track, Tasmania)
Where has the time gone? We only have a few weeks left in our amazing six-month adventure traveling the world. Both Glenn and I are sad that our trip is coming to an end…but also excited to return to the comforts of home. We spent this past week backpacking the Overland Track in Tasmania. (You […]
Flirting with disaster. (Great Ocean Road, Australia)
I’m trying not to develop a complex, but natural disasters seem to follow us everywhere we go. I feel like our arrival in a new country should be taken as a bad omen as the power of nature will soon befall those in our path. When we arrived in Quito (Ecuador) the nearby volcano Cotopaxi began […]
Farewell to Middle Earth (New Zealand, Part 4: North Island)
Kiwis are an endearing lot. The people, not the birds. Although I am sure the birds are nice too. New Zealanders always seem to be happy and positive. I love how they tell you to have a great day and actually mean it. I love that they seem genuinely excited when you give them your […]
Rain, rain…go away! (New Zealand Part 3: West Coast, Kaikoura and Wellington)
Weather in New Zealand is a fickle beast. Baking in the scorching sun one minute and then huddled under a tree trying to escape the freezing wind and torrential rains the next. The weather forecasts are no good – as evidenced by today’s forecast of a “zero percent chance of rain” which we read on […]
Too much of a good thing? (New Zealand, Part 1: Christchurch to Southland)
“You’re spoiled by the world!” was the response of my friend Michelle when I told her I wasn’t yet gaga over New Zealand. I agree with her; I think I have been traveling to too many phenomenal locales lately. Part of what makes something extraordinary is when it is compared to the ordinary…and it has […]
Walking With Giants: Meeting the Churchill Polar Bears
I’ll never forget the feeling of coming face-to-face with a wild polar bear. We had been hiking through the sub-arctic tundra for a couple of hours – trudging over banks of drifted white snow, through rusty brown willows that had gone dormant for the winter and across frozen lakes made of crystal clear ice. My […]
Hiking the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu!
When I was a little girl in Casper, Wyoming, we had a set of encyclopedias that were stacked next to the fireplace. I loved looking at the “M” encyclopedia because the things in that book started with the first letter of my name. I remember being mesmerized by the image of Machu Picchu, the Inca […]
Melting in the Bolivian Amazon
I am not cut out to survive the heat and humidity of the Amazon Jungle, of that I have no doubt. We first visited the Amazon while in Ecuador several weeks ago, and upon our second visit while in Bolivia I found it to be even more steamy. Compared to the cold crispness of being […]
A love affair in the Atacama Desert
I have a confession. I have fallen totally and completely in love with the Atacama Desert in Chile. The varied landscapes created by the wind, the sun, and the presence or absence of water are mind blowing. We spent the first few days here exploring closer to the town of San Pedro de Atacama. These were […]
Welcome to the driest desert in the world!
“Ride like a Chilean. Like you are making love to a woman,” Yasu our guide said about our impending horse ride. This…was our introduction to the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. Glenn’s brother Chris had flown down from Santa Cruz, California, to join us for a little adventuring. On this first morning we found ourselves […]
Chile’s Lake District left quite an impression
Chile’s Lake District is a very dangerous place and not just because of the looming active volcanoes. Known as the Región de Los Lagos in Spanish, much of the Lake District was populated by thousands of German immigrants in the mid-1800s (following the eventual subjugation of the indigenous Mapuche people by the Chilean government) and […]