Published August 6, 2025 02:26PM
Destinations & Things To Do
Introducing EF Adventures: Travel that Moves You

- New adventure tour operator launches with more than 20 biking, hiking, walking and multi-adventure tours across Europe, Asia, Central and South America and the Pacific Islands
- New sentiment survey of more than 1,000 international travelers from North America demonstrates high demand for high quality adventure tourism that is also culturally immersive
- Tours supporting a range of skill and fitness levels across include biking and e-biking trips in Spain and Italy; hiking and walking trips in the Alps and Bhutan; and multi-adventure tours that include kayaking in Costa Rica and Bali
- Inclusive pricing also covers boutique lodging, amazing excursions, high quality equipment and support, delicious local cuisine and professional tour directors who will ensure travelers learn about the people, places and cultures they visit (optional roundtrip flight package pricing also offered)
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 25, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — EF World Journeys, operator of the leading immersive and guided tour brands EF Go Ahead Tours and EF Ultimate Break, is proud to launch a new tour operator that will change the way world explorers are moved when traveling.
Introducing EF Adventures.
The launch of EF Adventures was inspired by the culture of staying active and prioritizing wellness at the company overall. EF World Journeys is part of EF Education First, which is the leading educational learning company that also owns a men’s and women’s pro cycling team. Combining a company culture that values wellness with market trends in the travel sector, EF Adventures launches with a passion for active travel and will meet a still unfilled market need for adventure travel that also focuses on cultural immersion. At launch, EF Adventures will offer more than 20 tours with departures starting in October 2024 to more than 16 countries across the world, with numerous additional hiking, biking and multi-adventure tours in development.
“Travelers are getting more active than ever before, telling us directly they want more adventure in their vacation where they can also learn about the people, history, culture and cuisine of the destinations they’re visiting. One of the many reasons we’re launching EF Adventures is to better serve this growing marketplace demand,” said Heidi Durflinger, President of EF World Journeys Inc., which oversees EF Adventures. “We can better serve these adventure seekers who want a combination of movement and cultural immersion. We will deliver a more active travel experience and offer a deeper understanding of global cultures we visit on tour. Our decades in business as an experiential, guided tour operator will benefit diverse age groups of adult travelers with varied fitness levels booking with EF Adventures, and we look forward to creating new ways to help them experience and learn about the world we live in.”
EF Adventures is for travelers 14 years old and older. Tours will be scored 1-5 based on easy to challenging in terms of fitness levels. Tour experiences are offered for a wide range of age groups and fitness levels, inclusive of options like e-bikes, walking tours and flexible schedules that enable travelers to seek out adventure at their own pace. Need a day off to relax or immerse yourself more in the local culture of a destination? EF Adventures will accommodate a traveler’s need to take a break from the day’s more physical activities.
In addition to witnessing mind-expanding, Instagram-worthy scenery from mountainsides to rainforests to ocean vistas, EF’s highly experienced Tour Directors – included in the price of every trip – will introduce travelers to local food and drink and provide insights into the culture and history of destinations on the itinerary of every tour. As Tour Directors work to build a cohesive sense of community on tour to make all feel welcome, they also streamline travel logistics like luggage transfers, equipment care, and tour participant safety.
Finally, EF Adventures provides elevated lodging experiences for these tours, introducing travelers to hotel properties where hospitality, relaxation and recovery is top priority. Hotel selection criteria includes preferencing properties with a clean and fresh style, characterized by a touch of elegance, featuring outdoor spaces, and boasting a distinct, boutique-style ambiance. Lodging will range from property styles that include modern hotels to agriturismos (an independently owned farm with lodging) to family-run boutique properties and mountain chalets. Many of these special hotels will offer recovery services, inclusive of spa treatments and amenities like pools, hot tubs and saunas (where available). EF’s staff have tested and handpicked every lodging property supporting traveler stays during these unique tours.
Tour selection and design also prioritizes sustainability, factoring in overtourism concerns, as more intimate groups of travelers are brought to off-the-beaten-path locales with a focus on engaging local businesses.
“More than half of the international travelers we surveyed have recently booked an adventure-oriented trip, yet nearly a third of travelers felt these tours lacked cultural immersion within the destinations visited. Similarly, travelers are expressing disappointment about lodging and food quality. We aim to change that. No matter if it is by a bike ride in Spain, on a hike in the Alps, or by way of a kayak in Costa Rica, we believe EF Adventures can and will deliver a better adventure tour experience for these travelers craving a better understand this world,” added Durflinger.
EF Adventures Introduces First Set of Tour Destinations
Click on the following tour links to view detailed itineraries:
Multi-Adventure (Hiking, Biking, Kayaking and Yoga)
Hiking & Walking
Biking
Cost, Flexible Payment Plans and Value
Prices are as low as $4199 per person (for an incredible 9 day multi-adventure tour in Portugal), with the ability to secure tour spots with low down payments of $150 and interest free monthly payments plans with the enrollment in AutoPay. Inclusive pricing also includes incredible boutique hotels and lodging, amazing active experiences, high quality equipment and support, delicious local cuisine and professional, dedicated Tour Directors who will ensure travelers make memories and learn about the people, places and cultures they experience. EF Adventures can also manage round trip flight packages for travelers.
“We know travel is an investment in personal growth. EF Adventures is intent on making adventure travel a more meaningful, valuable and obtainable tour option for customers who wants to see the world, while being more active, and learning something along the way,” said Durflinger.
The Survey Says: A Better Adventure Tour is in Demand
EF Adventures worked with Qualtrics Research in July 2024 to query over 1000 North American travelers who have traveled internationally within the last three years, the vast majority (84%) who plan to travel internationally again in the next 24 months.
Are travelers getting more active when traveling abroad?
- 75% of travelers said they want to be more active while on vacation.
- 79% of travelers said they liked the idea of an active vacation where they are also learning about the destination (people, history, culture and cuisine) they’re visiting.
- 80% of travelers said the idea of adventure travel was exciting to them.
More than half of international travelers surveyed (55%) said they had previously booked adventure travel activities with a tour operator or a do-it-yourself online travel company, with 85% of those travelers saying they would consider booking another more active/adventure tour in the future (with the same or a different travel provider).
What’s holding travelers back from booking adventure travel with a tour operator? Any hesitation?
When asked what was missing from their adventure travel experience, 30% of international travelers surveyed said that their immersion into the local culture could have been better. Over one-third of travelers surveyed (34%) said the overall quality of the tour was lacking, inclusive of lodging, food, transportation and equipment. And finally, 28% wanted more free time on tour to explore on their own.
Takeaway: Adventure + cultural immersion is key!
Pushing past our physical limits, overall well-being and overcoming personal fears is a part of the adventure travel experience, but these elements are only part of the equation – and not even the most important aspect of these trips for travelers surveyed. The number one reason adventure travelers want to book a trip is to “immerse myself in new cultures.”
78% of travelers strongly agreed that they would like to engage more directly with the people, places and cultures they encounter when traveling abroad. While on an adventure tour, 84% of travelers also expect to see the iconic and historical landmarks.
Traveler affinity matters.
Nearly half of international travelers surveyed (48%), said they prefer to engage in adventure travel activities with a group they most identify with or feel most connected to, e.g., solo travelers, gender-specific groups, LGBTQIA+, immediate family, existing friend or friends. The stats:
- 44% identify as women
- 24% identify as men
- 14% identify as members of the LGBTQIA+ community
- 21% of travelers want to travel with families
- 20% of travelers identify as singles
- 17% of Travelers identify as couples
- 7% of travelers identify as divorced
- 6% of travelers identify as widowed
About EF Adventures
EF Adventures is a new culturally immersive, guided adventure tour operator with more than 20 tours in 16 countries across the world. Launching in September 2024 as part of the EF World Journeys family of experiential travel brands, the company brings more than 30 years of operational experience running tours for adults of all ages. EF Adventures will offer varied forms of active travel focused on well-being and cultural immersion accessible to varied levels of fitness and age groups, including of biking and e-biking tours, hiking and walking tours, and tours with a blend of adventure activities, inclusive of yoga, watersports like kayaking, and multitude of other experiences in development.
SOURCE EF Adventures
Destinations & Things To Do
Is Whole-Body Cryotherapy the New Ice Bath? I Tried It to Find Out.

Dogsledding taught me how to endure the cold—but cryotherapy felt like a different beast. Here’s how my body reacted to the rising health trend.
(Photo: Anna Matviienko/Getty, Abigail Wise)
I went to CryoEffect, a self-described “Cold Spa” in the Chicago suburbs, in the middle of the weekday, when I was told it would be pretty empty. The only customer was a guy in the back who had just gotten out of a full-body cryotherapy treatment—basically, three minutes naked in a -200 degrees Fahrenheit freezer—and was reclining in compression boots that went all the way up his legs. He was coming to CryoEffect daily as part of a fitness project, because, as an airplane salesman, he’d made a bet with a client that he could lose 30 pounds in 30 days. If he won, his client would pay him $50,000.
“What if you lose the bet?” I said.
“He’s not going to lose the bet,” said Miriam, the Cold Spa’s owner. She had a great smile and curly hair, and her wrists were adorned with crystal bracelets, which she made herself and sold at a table by the door. Each crystal helped with different things, like creativity and self-love. But most customers just bought them based on which colors they liked best.
The guy beamed. He was confident about the bet. “In two and a half weeks, I’ve already lost 27 pounds.”
“You should donate the money to the owner of CryoEffect,” said Miriam.
Did he feel, I asked, like time in the freezer was helping his goal?
“For sure,” he said. “You come out, and it’s almost like you’re crafted. Like, you’re shaped.” He sort of pawed the air, like he was patting a Greek statue. “Everything is tighter. It’s amazing! And my sinuses are better, too.”
Well, who doesn’t want to be crafted like a statue? That sounded pretty good to me, especially since I’d come to try out full-body cryotherapy myself. My reasons were simpler: I’m a long-distance dogsledder, a lover of deep cold, and I’ve spent a lot of time winter camping in 30 or 40 below zero—so I was curious about how the Cryo experience would compare. Temperatures in the walk-in freezer got down to—apparently—-260 degrees Fahrenheit, but some users described the sensation as that of standing next to a fridge with an open door. These things are not the same. How cold would it really feel? And would it scratch that cold-weather itch, even in summer? I felt uniquely qualified to evaluate.
Plus, the freezer therapy came with a bunch of supposed benefits—some of them even backed by science, like improved mood and less muscle soreness after workouts. And dozens of cryotherapy services have popped up in the Chicago area alone. Proponents argue that the cold decreases inflammation—picture an ice pack on an injury, but for your whole body—and causes your blood to redirect to your core, so that when it comes back to your extremities, it’s carrying extra nutrients and oxygen.
Do whole-body cryo fans care about the FDA’s statements that “there is very little evidence about its safety or effectiveness”? Not particularly. Search #cryotherapy on any socials, and you’ll find countless posts about pain relief, athletic performance, and improved energy. I gotta say, I believe it: regardless of direct physical effects, the intensity of three minutes in a deep freezer would make for a hell of a placebo.
Another man walked into the spa—clearly a regular, because he wasted no time slipping behind a curtain and changing into the spa-issued bathrobe, socks, and slippers before stepping into the cryo chamber, which looked like a cross between an upright fridge and a coffin. Lights flashed; white steam poured over the top. He spent the entirety of his three-minute treatment chatting with Miriam about his daughter’s upcoming wedding, even when a deafening fire alarm went off, which Miriam shouted was a false alarm from the office next door. I covered my ears; he ignored it. He seemed to be a superhero of ignoring sensory input. When his time was up, he stepped out of the tank like it was nothing.
Now it was my turn.
The inside of the freezer-coffin was lined with some sort of black quilted poly that was coated in frost. I opened the door and stepped onto a carpeted platform, which rose up until my head poked out an opening at the top. I wore a bathrobe over my underwear, but now that I was fully enclosed, I took off the robe and handed it to Miriam; no one could see my body, but I felt very exposed. The air already felt frigid. How much colder would it get? I started to get nervous.
A screen at the top of the tank read -97 degrees Fahrenheit, with 2 minutes and 54 seconds left. Within two seconds, temps dropped another 20 degrees. It felt like someone was pressing solid ice cubes to every inch of my skin. I had the urge to crouch down and make a ball, wrapping my arms around my legs to preserve heat, but I was afraid to bend at all and brush the frosty lining of the tank.
With a strong hissing sound, mist started to pour out around me, rising up to my neck. The temp dropped to -165.7 degrees Fahrenheit, which did not feel at all like standing in the open door to a refrigerator. It felt like I was standing in an oddly windless tundra—naked. I suppose, if I hadn’t seen the thermometer, I would have estimated the temperature to be around -40 degrees Fahrenheit, which is still very chilly to be naked. I guess that’s what they call a dry cold.
“Your skin receptors are talking to your brain,” Miriam said calmly, outside the coffin, as if those words meant anything at all. “Your blood is rushing to your core to protect your vital organs. When you step out of your three minutes of torture, your blood will rush back where it belongs and fight inflammation along the way.” She started listing the conditions this would help: brain fog, stress, depression, anxiety, acne, rosacea, scarring… (Conversely, the FDA warns of asphyxiation, frostbite, eye injury, and burns.)
It was hard to focus on what she was saying, which was surely the point; she was well-practiced in distracting people from the pain of cold. Still, the sensation of cold won over. It felt like thick needles were stabbing slowly into my shins and arms.
“You’ll be amazed how well you sleep tonight,” said Miriam cheerfully.
With 53 seconds to go, I started laughing from the pain. Miriam recommended that I put my arms up above the tank. “That leaves the girls exposed,” she warned a few seconds too late. My forearms were covered with the biggest goosebumps I’d ever seen.
With ten seconds to go, she traded me the mittens for my room-temperature bathrobe, which felt unbelievably toasty, like it had been warming for hours in the hot sun.
Normally it takes me a long time to warm up after being in deep cold—a half-day inside, at least, for the bone-chill to go away. I can mush in the morning, sit by a fire all afternoon, and still want a hot bath to warm up fully for bed. But within seconds of stepping out of the freezer-coffin, I felt fine again, except that my legs were as numb to touch as if they’d been novocained. It was kind of fun to poke them. My clothes, when I put them on, felt balmy. I wanted to skip around. I stepped back onto the street and everything seemed brighter. Almost sparkling. I had survived!
Apart from a brief euphoria, I noticed no other effects of the treatment, though to be fair, most advocates of cryotherapy recommend a series of sessions in order to get the benefits. But it certainly gave me a feeling of accomplishment far beyond what I’d normally get from three relatively passive minutes of my day. Would I do it again? Sure—but I’m more likely to DIY it by stepping outside in pajamas on a winter morning before I drink a cup of coffee, or running out of a sauna and into a snowbank for fun. If I’m a believer in cryotherapy, it’s because I am, above all, a believer in the power of cold—to invigorate, to calm, and to cast the world in beauty that wouldn’t be quite as visible at other times. Sometimes winter really can cure what ails you—and if a freezer-coffin can help me glimpse that on a summer day, consider me sold.
Blair Braverman is a columnist and contributing editor for Outside, a long-distance dogsledder, and author, most recently, of Small Game and Dogs on the Trail.
She’s completed some of the toughest dogsled races in the world, including the Iditarod, the Kobuk 440, and the Canadian Challenge, and co-runs the dog team BraverMountain Mushing with her husband, Quince Mountain, in northern Wisconsin. They share the team’s many adventures on Patreon.
Blair’s a contributor to The New York Times, Vogue, Esquire, This American Life, and elsewhere. She recently hosted the BBC Radio 4 show Animal and is survival correspondent for the podcast You’re Wrong About. She’s spoken about resilience in the wilderness for companies including Microsoft and Google.
Her favorite pieces she’s written for Outside are about competing on the Discovery show Naked and Afraid, being a woman alone in the woods, learning to write, and mischievous sled dog Blowhole.
Destinations & Things To Do
37 Kids Bringing Lake of the Clouds to Life 0.00

PPPPPP. Military people will immediately recognise this most fun of all the acronyms. For those unfamiliar, prior planning prevents piss poor performance.
Last night we had an updated weather forecast suggesting thunderstorms may roll through camp in the morning. With this knowledge, I packed everything in my pack before falling asleep, safe in the knowledge that I could break camp quickly and head over to the hut to avoid a soaking wet tent.
Sure enough, at 415am the thunder and lightning arrived. Fortunately Chestnut heard it as I was dead to the world, and I heard him start to pack in his tent that was next to mine on the platform. Because of PPPPPP, I was able to instantly stuff my quilt into my pack, then stuff my air mattress, put on my shoes and get out of the tent, break down the tent and stuff the tent at the top of the pack. Time taken: five minutes and thirty seconds from waking to walking toward the hut. I even impressed myself a little.
Safely ensconced inside, the storm rolled through and poured down. The next section of trail is above tree line, so we now had a nervous wait to hear the updated forecasts from Mt Washington that is delivered to all huts and campsites in the Whites at 7am. The first of two free nights gifted by a hiker that left the trail a few days ago depends on being able to not get zapped by a huge clap of electricity while heading for Lake of the Clouds.
Weather
At 7am the storm had passed so we wandered back over to the campsite to hear the forecast. Fortunately it was great news, with the front passing through in the morning, and a pleasant afternoon incoming. With this good news, we decided to celebrate by making Sofia surprise pancakes. We snuck up to the caretaker cooking area and prepared the food. Sofia was suitably surprised by our efforts and we spent the morning hanging about the hut after the pancakes waiting for the weather to clear.
The hut croo then fed us some leftover cake. As keen readers will note, I now have about six days of food in my pack and I continue to consume almost none of it. This is not a problem I have ever run into hiking anywhere else in the world. It is causing me equal parts concern and hilarity.
Hiking
After almost 48 hours of excellent rest at the hut and campsite, it was time to get hiking once more. The climb out of the camp was a reasonably easy affair, and the views slowly opened up once we gained the ridgeline.
Reasonably clear weather was the order of the day post lunch, and after a few short hours the Lake of the Clouds came into view. I headed into the hut and claimed the first of two free nights of hut accommodation that had been gifted to me by a kind hiker that left the trail a few days earlier.
Lake of the Clouds
This hut is by far the most utilised and popular in the Whites. It was like entering a madhouse. The noise of the people was overwhelming, a full house of humanity after spending a month not seeing more than a handful of people in one place.
I chilled out in my bunk through the remainder of the afternoon, writing some blogs and reading a book. At 6pm the croo announced dinner and they definitely did not need to call me twice.
The four course dinner was extraordinary. I chatted with my table mates, and was the only thru hiker among a number of overnight hikers. This led to many questions about my level of insanity and why I would want to spend months at a time in the wilderness.
The great part of being the only thru at my table was the desire of everyone to see that I was well fed. Huge advantage of looking like a zombie. I ate so much food I thought I would explode.
Chestnut had managed to get WFS at the hut. Lake of the Clouds is the one hut to take four people for WFS each night and tonight there were only two. I am genuinely curious as to why more thru hikers are not taking advantage of the free dinner and sleeping quarters, especially at this location three quarters of the way up Mt Washington. I can only assume it’s a combination of lack of knowledge of the program and the (general) desire of most thrus that I’ve met to hike all day and not looking to time a hut stay.
All too soon the meal was over. I toddled off to bed with a very satisfied tummy. I wonder if I’ll eat any of the food in my pack tomorrow.
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To learn more, please visit the About This Site page.
Destinations & Things To Do
The Nipple, Fireworks, and Endless Lakes: PCT Days 94 to 98

The morning’s hiking was fairly unremarkable. I got started a bit late, traversed the minor ups and downs, and met a hiker called Big Rig at a water source. I like easy days like this, it means I can turn off my mind and just walk.
The afternoon was more interesting however. Immediately after lunch I began a fairly long climb up the side of a mountain called The Nipple.
Most of the trail up here was above the treeline and the wind was crazy strong. It was rocky and open and the path was a little rough but the views were very good. I didn’t take the side trail up to the peak as it looked straight up and my ankle was feeling pretty tired. Walking this area meant I was constantly bracing myself against the wind but it also meant that, when I passed behind a rock outcropping on the descent, the sudden absence of that wind caused me to stagger to the side.
I got below the trees, out of the gale, and found a small campground to crash in. There was another hiker already here and to my surprise, they were a SOBO (southbound) PCT section hiker! I’d not met any SOBOs before and we chatted a bit over dinner, giving each other details of the upcoming terrain.
Day 95: Look at the Fireworks
Like the previous day, the morning was uneventful. I went over Carson pass easily and reached the trailhead shortly after, passing many day hikers on the way in. The information station there had a trail magic setup with snacks and sodas and I was all to happy to take advantage of it. I saw Presto again here and met a hiker called Celery.
The way onward was easy mountain hiking. It reminded me a little of the Tuolumne area of the Sierra as there were very many day hikers and weekend backpackers hiking around me. I’ve been a little careful up until now not to align my blog posts with any specific dates but it’s important to share here that today was the 4th of July so people were out and I knew there would be fireworks tonight. I could’ve made South Lake Tahoe today but I wanted to avoid the madhouse of a tourist town on a holiday so I’d planned to find a campsite with a view of the lake and watch the spectacle from a distance.
I found the perfect site, about 4 miles from the road, and found Presto and a hiker called Sketchy were already there. The show started at 9:30, past when I’m usually fully asleep, so I ate an early dinner and dozed for a few hours to try to keep myself well-rested for tomorrow. Come 9:15 I climbed a very large boulder set into the hill side next to my tent and enjoyed the show from there. The explosions were visible but far enough away to almost completely inaudible.
Day 96: The Bliss of New Shoes
Only being a few miles from town meant I was under no pressure to get up early and I made sure I slept in. The few miles into town were all downhill too. The last mile or so was through a section of burned forest, the first I’d seen on trail. The trees were grey and still and it was just a little eerie. Thankfully the mile went fast and I soon found myself with thumb out at the road. A cop pulled someone over right in the pullout section I was hitching from so I put my thumb down, thinking nobody was going to stop while that was going on. Entirely unprompted however a car pulled over and asked if I needed a ride into town! The driver named Tom and his wife Claudia were here for the holiday and were very excited to meet a PCT hiker. They dropped me off just across the street from the hostel where I would be staying. I dropped my pack off and picked up the new shoes I’d shipped here. I don’t think I can properly communicate the bliss of walking in new, supportive, grippy shoes after going miles in worn out footwear.
The rest of the day was town chores and relaxing. I purchased a new CNOC dirty bag to repace my broken one, wandered around town a little (chock full of tourists), and picked up some cheap backpacker meals from Sierra Trading Post. When I got back to the hostel I showered and did laundry then took advantage of their computer lab to write up a few blog posts. I headed to a well-rated burger place for dinner and discovered that just by walking down the street I had crossed into Nevada. I’d been paying relatively little attention to the map beyond the trail so it was a surprise when I crossed at an intersection and suddenly went from clothing stores to casinos. The burger was good though.
Day 97: Into Desolation Wilderness
Town meals are particularly exciting after long stretches on trail and the mountain of pork, eggs, and salsa over tortilla chips I ate at a local diner was divine. I packed up, showered, then kept blogging for the last hour before I had to check out. South Lake Tahoe has a Grocery Outlet thankfully so I headed there first for my resupply, then stopped by a more conventional (but more expensive) grocery store for the few items I couldn’t find. I ended up staying at this store, a Raley’s, for a little longer, using their Wi-Fi to get a few more posts finished and scheduled to go public. For anyone curious, I do most of my writing on the notes app on my phone and that can be done anywhere, but images and various configuration chores need to be done with an internet connection.
A local named Sydney gave me a hitch back to the trail and I was back among the trees. The burned trees unfortunately, large stretches of trail were blackened and dead.
I walked past Berkeley Echo Lake Camp, a summer camp I once CITed at in my teens, then past Echo Lake itself. A lot of people were here as well but as I hiked further they thinned out. I’d spent too much time in town though and it was getting dark as I climbed up from the lakes into Desolation Wilderness where I would be able to camp.
Day 98: Lakes I Want To Revisit
The late night meant I was up later than I’d liked and I think I need to start being more conscious of how I hike out of town. If I get back to trail too late, I don’t get to my campsite until too late as well and that throws off my hiking and sleeping schedule until I get to the next town.
The morning walk was past an absolutely gorgeous lake, Lake Aloha. The water was the blue I’ve only previously seen in tropical ocean and all the islands looked to inviting. I wish I’d known how great this lake was, I would have packed additional food and maybe spent a day here. Ah well, it’s just somewhere I’ll have to come back to I suppose.
The rest of the day was more lakes, though none quite as stunning as the first. I crossed over Dicks Pass in the afternoon without too much trouble. There was only a little snow at the top, a far cry from the snow fields of the high Sierra. There were more lakes on the other side of course.
I reached the tent site I’d planned for around 6:30 but it was quite full so I had to hike another hour to find an open spot. The mosquito swarm descended as the shadows grew long and I walked fast, slapping at my arms constantly to dislodge the bloodsuckers continually landing there. I love most insects but mosquitos are the true exception and I loathe them so.
Trail Stats:
Catholes: 33
Stops to filter water: 152
Resupplies: 16
Hitches: 19
Zeros: 15
Crys on trail: 13
Blisters: 12
Gear repairs: 19
Miles Skipped: 212.3
Significant Water Crossings: 100
Falls: 3
This website contains affiliate links, which means The Trek may receive a percentage of any product or service you purchase using the links in the articles or advertisements. The buyer pays the same price as they would otherwise, and your purchase helps to support The Trek’s ongoing goal to serve you quality backpacking advice and information. Thanks for your support!
To learn more, please visit the About This Site page.
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