"Lufthansa Magazin" 7/8 2002
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THE ADVENTURE BUG BITES Lufthansa Magazin, 7/8 2002 [also in German] In boats on wild torrents or crossing jungles and deserts on foot - more and more vacationers are looking for action and adventures in nature By Juergen Bischoff Life is short and the Grand Canyon is long - especially when you paddle your way down it in a kayak." This is how author David Quammen begins his description of the trip he made down America's most famous canyon. Along with 15 others, he spent the best part of three weeks paddling 226 miles down the Colorado river from Lee's Ferry to Diamond Creek in a bobbing boat, passing between cliffs rising sharply on either side, through life-threatening rapids and under waterfalls. Why would a 53-year-old with a good job even consider taking on something like that? To "rinse your-self in the river, measure yourself against the rock; find yourself to be a tiny, wet creature, insignificant within the larger and longer scope" of things. "That's the notion that put me on the trip roster," writes Quammen, which more or less answers the question. In addition to this, a friend of his already had a license for the Grand Canyon tour, and that's not some-thing that's easy to come by. The authorities only allow eight teams in per week, although there is demand for several times that number. Vacations promising action and adventure plus challenging thrills and intact nature are more popular than ever. Today, more and more tourists are selecting their holiday destination not according to coun-try or landscape but with a view to the ultimate challenges offered and the opportunities to experience strong feelings. They spend the best time of the year on camelback in the Gobi Desert, riding motor-cycles through the Sahara, fighting heroic battles against legions of leeches on muddy jungle trails, sailing freighters up the Amazon, or searching southern Africa for the Big Five: lions, elephants, rhinos, buffalo and leopards - on foot, of course. After all, safari is simply the Swahili word for journey or travels, and travel is etymologically linked to the French word travail, meaning physical exertion, toil or strain. Adventure trips, as Leonhard Reeb, CEO of the Deutsche Reisebüro-Verband (German Travel Agents Association) confirms, are very much in vogue nowadays: "People are no longer content to just take walks in the country anymore, they go hiking in the Himalayas instead." A survey conducted by Hamburg's BAT-Intitut für Freizeitforschung (institute for leisure research) revealed that, in Germany, more than a quarter of all holidaymakers intend to spend future vacations immersing themselves in an in-tense experience of nature in (as far as possible) untouched surroundings: an eventful back-to-nature experience, so to speak. The variety of trips is huge. With Biosphere Expeditions, a British organization, amateur nature and wildlife fans can spend a couple of weeks a year participating in scientific projects. "We offer people a vacation that combines adventure with meaningful work," says biologist Matthias Hammer, 34. "You can bungee-jump anywhere, but I think it's more exciting to tramp through the jungles of Ecuador by night or to look for fresh wolf tracks in the eastern Carpathian Mountains." Sightseeing, shopping and sunbathing on the beach are not part of the itinerary at Hammer's expedition agency. There, they specialize more in tracking techniques and satellite navigation. Vacationers interested in organized survival trekking through the jungles of this world also want to get close to nature. Southeast Asia and South America offer ideal conditions in which to test your own limits. "It can happen in the rainy season that your clothes don't dry for days and you have no choice but to sleep in a damp hammock," reports one survival trekker, who went bushwacking in Guyana with a group of other survivalists. "Carrying heavy packs, a machete and bottles of water, we made good progress through the jungle at first. But the trail grew ever steeper, our muscles began to ache, our blood pressure rose, and we became incredibly thirsty." The reward for their toils is not only the sight of the spectacular Kaieteur waterfall, but also encounters with aras, apes - and of course, poisonous snakes. Jörg Wünning, 33, from Erlebnis-Reisen, an agency in Lüneburg, caters for people with special vaca-tioning interests. One of his expeditions is a flight from Chile to the Amundsen-Scott station at the South Pole. Another is a
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