by Adventure Scientists | Mar 27, 2012 | Uncategorized
The Hayduke Trail covers 800 miles through some of the most remote and challenging country the National Park Service, BLM, and Forest Service have to offer. It links six national parks in Utah and Arizona and is considered very difficult in each of its many sections....
by Adventure Scientists | Mar 26, 2012 | Uncategorized
It is unusual that we see six in the morning these days. Stumbling off the bus from Córdoba with limbs still half asleep we had arrived in Chilecito. Our mind in a haze, we were enthusiastically greeted by the newest member of our ever-growing wolfpack-...
by Adventure Scientists | Mar 20, 2012 | Uncategorized
Snapshot: Aconcagua towers 9,000 feet above our current lunching spot at a scrawny elevation of 13,000 feet. The sheer magnitude of the mountain is hard for us to grasp. Our best attempt at comprehending exactly what 22,841 feet is is to break the south face...
by Adventure Scientists | Mar 19, 2012 | Uncategorized
They have adopted the phrase “one of the exploration world’s last great firsts.” They are men who havesummited the world’s tallest peaks, won national championship adventure races, and completed recordsetting rows. Their journey will be...
by Adventure Scientists | Mar 14, 2012 | boating, kayaking, river
Danielle Katz and John Dye, founder and co-founder of Rivers for Change, have officially begun their 1,900 mile, human powered paddling project. Beginning in January with the lower Yuba and completing the 111 mile trip down the Russian River in February, the 12 Rivers...