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November 28, 2007

Grand Circle Bachelor Party - Man vs Wild

To Plan Your Own Trip, Select Location Here ADVENTURE BACHELOR PARTY

www.adventurebachelorparty.com

I just got back from doing the Grand Circle in Utah:

Grand Circle

It is basically a tour of some national parks in the UT, NV, CO and AZ. I rented a car an slept in 6 parks in 6 nights. It would make for a pretty extreme bachelor party, but I would post the ideas in case people were interested. I encountered tons of deer, amazing views, and managed to trash my rental car along the way.

Here is a list of the parks I hit:

1.Zion National Park
2.Bryce Canyon National Park
3.Capitol Reef National Park
4.Arches National Park
5.Canyonlands National Park
6.Monument Valley Tribal Park
7.Grand Canyon National Park

The trip was in the last week of November. The good thing being no one was around. The bad thing, it was really, really cold.

Here are a few pictures of the chaos

Portrait6 Canyonlands Zionvalley Chimneyrock

Here is a link over to the Blog I created for the entire trip.

Darren's Man Vs Wild Adventure

February 25, 2007

Add It To The List - Appalachian Trail

Add it to the List.

This month's column is about one of those trips you must make before you die...hiking the Appalachian Trail.

I became inspired by this trip after reading the book mentioned on the right "A Walk in the Woods." Now I am not going to sit here and say I have immersed myself in this entire trip....yet, but I have bitten off a couple chunks, enough to further whet my appetite and share the experience with you.

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A brief background. The Appalachian Trail or simply The A.T., is a 2,174-mile hiking trail in the eastern United States, extending between Springer Mountain in Georgia and Mount Katahdin in Maine. Along the way, the trail also passes through the states of North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire. The trail was originally conceived by Benton MacKaye, a forester who wrote his original plan shortly after the death of his wife in 1921. MacKaye's Utopian idea detailed a grand trail that would connect a series of farms and wilderness work/study camps for city-dwellers.

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A continuous trail that extends over 2,000 miles is pretty cool, but what is even better is that the path is maintained by thirty trail clubs from various states, working together to keep the path clear and the lodges up to code. It is kinda like the adopt-a-mile signs along the freeway. How it works is that you enter the trail somewhere along the 2,000 mile stretch, like jumping on a freeway. Then you hike 10 miles each day (give or take based on your goals). Each night you aim to make it to a shelter and swap stories with the other hikers. These shelters are not quite as luxurious as the Ritz, but it gets the job done.

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Along the way you will run into these people that are attempting to hike the entire trail. The crazy part about this, besides the distance, is the timing. You need to start in Georgia as soon as the Spring hits in order to make it to Maine before the temperatures drop in the Fall! What is even crazier is that there are people that have accomplished this multiple times.

Like I said, I have not done the whole trail, and am not suggesting you try it straight out of the gate, but rather make it a great weekend adventure with the friends or family. If you ever want to do the whole trail, shoot me an email, I am open to the challenge. I can only imagine what a feeling of accomplishment accompanies this achievement.

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In my attempt to give you a glimpse into the mind of one these incredible adventurers, I have provided a link to a Journal from a man that made the entire trip from April to September. He wrote in his journal every night and posted it on the Internet. Scan through, read a couple days and maybe it will inspire you to hit the trail.

All the best.

AT Trail Journal

Darren Hitz
Hitz Adventures
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