"Science is for those who learn; poetry, for those who know."Joseph Roux
|
| |
Sports Psychology and Performance Enhancement Mental Game Coaching is that the segment of sports psychology that concentrates specifically on helping athletes break through the mental barriers that are keeping them from performing up to their peak potential. By focusing on the mental skills needed to ...
Ten excuses why people don't do fitness exercise. Here's a list of reasons that people give to get out of doing fitness exercises. Obviously you are not one of these people and you have put in to action a plan to regularly exercise and keep fit. 1) I am too busy right now, I'll start next week. 2) I've ...
The Westin Chicago River North Opens Health Club to Local Membership CHICAGO (July 2005) - The Westin Chicago River North, located on the bank of the Chicago River in the heart of the business and theater district, announced that it is now offering local memberships to its WestinWORKOUT Powered by Reebok® health club. ...
|
|
|
| |
PINKHAM NOTCH, NH - Adventure vacations - with vacationers looking to spend downtime "out there" - are arguably the fastest growing segment of the vacation market. But perhaps the fastest growing segment with that "out there" segment is the "soft adventure" vacation. Soft adventurers are those who, for whatever the reason, don't necessarily have to climb Everest by lunchtime, don't have kayak the Grand Canyon or canoe Idaho's Snake River, don't have to spend a week in the wilderness. They want to do something more than browsing a museum or hitting a cluster of outlet stores, something with a little more get-up-and-go than a cooking class or baking on a beach. They want a vacation that may include a bit more survival than coping with black and white TV or no nearby mall. Something where frost means more than a poet. And soft adventurers in increasing numbers have learned to love New Hampshire's White Mountains. Whether it's schlepping up - and spending a night on - Mount Washington from the Appalachian Mountain Club base here in Pinkham Notch or getting an introduction to rock climbing at Chuck Woodman's Profile Mountaineering in North Woodstock, more and more vacationers each year are enjoying "soft" adventures. Or perhaps a kayaking or canoe trip with Saco Bound in North Conway. "They read about Mount Everest and they hear about other extreme adventures, and they think they'd like to sample like that," Woodman said. "But most people may want to try something, but they don't want to commit to anything that extreme. Believe me, the number of people who want to try climbing far exceeds the number who want to hang from The Old Man." Rob Burbank of the Appalachian Mountain Club agrees. "There are a lot of different trends, and maybe some feed into others; there's a big rise in the interest in kayaking and canoeing. We hear all the time about extreme sport - extreme skiing, extreme this and that - and there definitely are people who like to push the limit and get bloody and be extreme...but I think there's a greater number that wants the experience that feels extreme without the pain." As an example, he says while there are those, who undeniably prefer the isolation of spending time in a wilderness area near Mount Washington, there also are far more who enjoy the chance to hike the highest peak in northeastern North America (elev. 6,288 -more- feet) and spend a night or two (or three) at one of the AMC huts. Overnight lodging includes not only a mattress and pillow and blanket but also dinner and breakfast the next morning, prepared by AMC staffers. And then you're on your way. "The hut experience is a great for people who want to try something different - perhaps a greater level of challenge than roadside camping, but easier than heavy-duty backpacking," Burbank says. "You carry a day pack and some extra clothing, but you don't need to carry a lot of gear - no cook stove, no heavy stuff." While there are thru-hikers who savor the opportunity to hike the entire 2,100-plus miles of the Appalachian Trail between Maine and Georgia, far more prefer the bite-size trails which spider-web the White Mountains, including the one-day hike from the base of Mount Washington to the summit and back. AMC's Teenage Wilderness Programs give youths 13-18 the opportunity to experience the outdoors for up to two weeks. They learn rock climbing, canoeing, trail maintenance, backpacking and other skills. "Over the past 10 years, we're probably up 30 percent or more in our programs and participation. The programs, of course, represent demand - AMC wants to give people what they're looking for. People want to learn how to be proficient in outdoor skills, how to enjoy the outdoors in a safe way. We try to help them hone particular skills - canoeing, wild mushroom hunting, map use, and so on - and be proficient in general outdoor skills," Burbank says. "We want people to be comfortable and to be safe in backcountry. The greater their skill, the greater their enjoyment and the safer they are." One pay-back to - and a quasi barometer of - the enjoyment received is the popularity of AMC's volunteer trail maintenance program where volunteers work on various sections of a trail or even adopt a trail (right down to signing papers of adoption) and are responsible for the upkeep of a trail. "People get an immediate sense they're making a difference. You can stand back at the end of a day and see a rock staircase, for instance, that wasn't there after breakfast," according to Burbank. Profile Mountaineering - an obvious reference to the profile of Old Stone face, the heralded Old Man of the Mountain who hangs above Profile Lake and Franconia Notch - includes a small rock climbing gym and a variety of programs that take place at several spots in the White Mountains. It's designed to be an incubator for vacationers who think they'd like to try various activities. AMC offers beginner to expert workshops and classes. Meanwhile, Profile's Chuck Woodman gets people started and lets them decide how far they'll take their new skills. "The mountains are my bag," says Woodman, who grew up in the region, then moved back for good after graduating from Plymouth State College. He doesn't try to be all things to all people; Profile scratches some of the itch vacationers have for less-than- treacherous activities for soft adventures. "The White Mountains are the playground for the Northeast. The climbing center is North Conway; that's where they've got the really serious stuff - EMS [Eastern Mountain -more- Sports], IME [International Mountain Equipment] - but I think Lincoln has become a center for soft adventures. We see a lot of people, who walk in and want to try something. We do guiding, rent canoes or rent gear, show 'em how to get started climbing... "Y'know, this is a whole different world for people who commute to and from their job in heavy traffic, who probably don't get to see real mountains where they live, or do some things outdoors like this," Woodman says. "This place looks beautiful from their condo window, or from their motel window...and the White Mountains definitely are beautiful. So, we can help them enjoy the mountains just a bit more without having to make any more of a commitment than they want." And how much do the mountain mean to Woodman, who was born near Waterville Valley but moved to southern New Hampshire as a kid when his dad got a job there. "I moved back here after I got out of Plymouth State," he says, "because this is where I wanted to be." A distant relative of Darby Field, who's acknowledged as the first white man to climb Mount Washington in 1642, Woodman felt so strongly about his tie to the mountains that he named one of his daughters Darby. He adds, almost matter-of-factly, " These mountains have been in our family's blood for a long time." About the author: Press Release
|
|
|
|
|
|

|