Girl Scouts Train for the Inca Trail

Adventure is out there!

Adventure is out there!

Troop 71106 of Fort Collins, Colorado, with the Girl Scouts of Colorado Council, is  hiking the 5-Day Inca Trail Trek.  A lot of their program is travel-oriented, and they sold over 12,000 boxes of cookies this year to help raise money for their trip to Peru.

They exemplify the Girl Scout value of service to the community, when last year they raised funds to donate a high adventure gift.  In 2013, they donated $10,000 for a zip line at camp, in memory of a former troop member, who died.

You can see their Inca Trail Trek on the AWR Interactive Map:

The troop has been training for the hike all summer!

Manitou Incline, 2,000′ in one mile

Hiking Mt. Lady Washington, 13,281′, Pike’s Peak, 14,110′ and Mt. Massive 14,428′

Canoeing the Colorado River. Gem Lake, RMNP.

Peru trip t-shirts:

mt-massive-3

 

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Galapagos for Solo Travelers

Galapagos Legend

Galapagos Legend

All boats will accommodate single travelers in a single cabin with a pretty hefty single supplement. Some boats will offer the regular rate if you are willing to share a cabin.

These boats have a single cabin available with no single supplement:

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Luxury Everest Base Camp Lodges

Lodges for the Luxury Everest Base Camp Trek

Lukla Lodge

Monjo Lodge

Mende Lodge

Panboche Lodge

Tashinga Lodge

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Galapagos for People who get Seasick

Galapagos Islands on the Isabela II

Galapagos Islands on the Isabela II

The best options if you get seasick is a larger, more stable boat, or in a wide catamaran. You will want a cabin on a lower deck, mid-ship.

The Galapagos limits the number of people on a boat to 100 maximum.

Here are some of the larger boats we recommend:

You may also want to consider an Island Hopping Galapagos Tour.

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Antarctica with Activity, Whales, Emperor Penguins, Flying, & More

All Antarctica trips are not the same!  Certain departures will highlight

Antarctica Sunset

Antarctica Sunset

  • Whale Watching
  • Emperor Penguins
  • Polar Circle
  • Sea Kayaking
  • Snowshoeing and hiking
  • Photography Workshops
  • Camping
  • Scuba Diving
  • Mountaineering
  • Helicopters
  • Falkland Islands and South Georgia Island
  • Ross Sea
  • Flying across the Drake Passage
Sea Kayaking in Antarctica

Sea Kayaking in Antarctica

Active Trips with Sea Kayaking, Snowshoeing, Photography, Camping, Scuba Diving, and Mountaineering

If you want a trip with more activities, we recommend our Active Basecamp Antarctica trip. These departures include all activities (except scuba diving) at no extra charge.

Other departures may have some of these activities.  See Antarctica Departures & Pricing >>

Emperor Penguin Trip in Antarctica

Emperor Penguin Trip

Emperor Penguins

The Emperor Penguin Antartica Voyages in the Weddell Sea are typically offered late November to early December.

These trips include helicopters so that you can get close to the penguins.

Antarctica with Falkland Islands and South Georgia Island

Antarctica with Falklands and South Georgia

Falkland Islands & South Georgia Island

Trips to the Antarctic Peninsula with the Falkland Islands and South Georgia Island are a bit longer — about 19-20 days.

This trip offers great diversity of wildlife and amazing scenery.

 

Ross Sea

Antarctica Voyage across the Ross Sea with Helicopters

Antarctica Voyage across the Ross Sea

January-March 2015 may be the last opportunity for this once in a lifetime Antarctic experience!

The 32-Day Antarctica Voyage via the Ross Sea goes from Ushuaia, Argentina to Bluff, New Zealand visiting some of the most spectacular and rarely visiting areas of the Antarctic Peninsula.

Whale Watching

Whale Watching Safari in Antarctica

Whale Watching Safari in Antarctica

Our whale watching safaris are typically in March when there is the best chance to see whales.  The ship will go to special areas to find the whales.  It is common to see Orcas, Minke Whales, Humpback, and Blue Whales.

Polar Circle

The Polar Circle trips are typically offered mid-March.  This is a great way to check off your Bucket List!

Flying Across the Drake Passage

The Antarctica Fly-Cruise Trip flies across the Drake Passage both ways instead of the usual 2 day choppy boat ride.  These trips are either a 7-day “classic” itinerary to the Antarctic Peninsula or a 9-day trip to the Polar Circle.

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Scuba Diving in the Galapagos Islands

Scuba diving the Galapagos Islands

Scuba diving the Galapagos Islands

The most famous dive spots in the Galapagos are at Wolf and Darwin Islands. Two of our favorite dive boats are

Some boats are now offering at least 1 day of diving on their regular itinerary. These include

Scuba Diving in the Galapagos >>

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Peru Amazon at Hacienda Concepcion

Andrea Tello, one of our South American travel specialists, spent 4 days in the Peruvian Amazon at Hacienda Concepción, one of Inkaterra’s finest properties in the Amazon, near Puerto Maldonado.  These are a few interesting facts about this amazing experience!

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Getting There

  • A 35-minute flight from Cusco and 25-minute boat ride along the Madre de Dios River, take you to this wonderful lodge in the middle of the Amazon jungle.
  • Upon arrival, all travelers are transferred from the airport to Inkaterra’s Butterfly House –a welcome and information center with internet access, cold drinks and an introduction to the amazing world of butterflies.
  • Be prepared to wait for all travelers in your group to arrive, since there are several flights to Puerto Maldonado (from Lima and/or Cusco).  Once everybody has arrived at the Butterfly House, you will be driven to the pier and take the boat to Hacienda Concepción.
  • The boat ride to Hacienda Concepción is only 25 minutes in a nice, clean and stable boat for approximately 30 people.
  • Upon arrival, you will be given a briefing on the excursions and facilities of the lodge, followed by a delicious buffet lunch.

Activities

  • Please, note that excursions are almost back-to-back.  The first excursion starts after lunch and there’s another one before dinner. The next day you will have to be ready at 6am.
  • If you are staying 4 days, ask for a special “beach day“.  You can have a boat to yourself, with a waiter, snacks, drinks, your guide and the boat driver.  Do this the afternoon of day 3.  You sail to a wonderful beach in the Madre de Dios River (15 minutes from the lodge) and swim in the river, sunbathe, have drinks, and then sail to a great sunset spot!  It is $75 per person extra, drinks included.

Dining

  • Happy hour is between 6pm and 7pm daily. Excursions before dinner start around 6.30pm, so you might have to skip that cocktail.
  • Their food is awesome!  You will be in a “full board” program: buffet breakfast, delicious lunch and à la carte dinner with 2 options – always a vegetarian one.  Make sure you let us know your diet/medical restrictions.

Accommodations

  • There are 8 rooms in the main lodge and 16 Cabañas surrounding the lodge.  Triple rooms can be offered only in the Cabañas, but not the rooms.  There is plenty of space for an additional bed in the Cabañas – they have a little living room/lounge area, with a nice sofa and a hammock next to a big window that makes you feel you are in the middle of the jungle…and you are!
  • There is no power from 3pm to 5:30pm and from 11pm to 4:30am.  During this time, fans won’t work.  This is not a huge problem since you will be in an excursion between 3pm and 5.30pm and everybody is in bed by 10pm.  During Peruvian winter (June, July, August), it gets quite cool at night, so you might even use the fleece blanket they provide.  During rainy season (summer), it is hot day and night and rains pretty much 24/7.  Better to go in the winter….
  • There is very limited Internet and mobile access in the lodge.  These only work in some spots and will take a long time to connect.  Tip: The closer you are to the river, the better mobile connection.

Packing

  • You will be provided flashlights and insect repellent.  We suggest bringing a headlamp too.
  • Rent binoculars or bring yours.

Vaccinations

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Save $1000 on Fly-Cruise Antarctica for 2015-2016!

Book by September 2, 2014, and save $1000/person on any available Antarctica Fly-Cruise departure in the 2015-2016 season.

This applies to the 7-day “classic” Air-Cruise trips or the 9-day Polar Circle trips.  There is a $500/person discount on the 5-day “express” trips.

Contact us to book!

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32 Day Ultimate Antarctica Voyage via Ross Sea

This is a once in a lifetime opportunity!  It may never be offered again!

Antarctica Trip with Ross Sea

Antarctica Trip with Ross Sea

Join us for an exploratory  voyage to the Antarctic Peninsula, to the rarely visited volcanic Peter I Island, to the huts of the British explorers Ernest Shackleton and Robert Falcon Scott on Ross island, to McMurdo Station and the Dry Valleys and to Campbell Island, home to the Southern Royal Albatrosses.

There are 2 trips in January-March 2015.  One will go from Ushuaia, Argentina to Bluff, New Zealand, and the second trip will go in reverse.  The M/V Ortelius will be your home for this adventure.

Helicopter transfers:

Helicopters will take you to the ice shelf.

Helicopters will take you to the ice shelf.

During those voyages we will transfer our passengers ashore by zodiac. But, we will surely also operate our two helicopters if zodiacs cannot be used.

Potential candidates for helicopter transfers are Cape Evans (hut of Scott), Cape Royds (hut of Shackleton), Ross Ice Shelf at Bay of Whales and Kainan Bay, and Peter I Island.

ITINERARY

Day 1: Ushuaia

In the afternoon, we embark in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, the southernmost city in the world located at the Beagle Channel and sail through this scenic waterway for the rest of the evening.

Day 2 – 3: At Sea

Day 4: Antarctic Peninsula 

Royal Penguins

Royal Penguins

We arrive in the Antarctic Peninsula and sail in the early morning through the spectacular Lemaire Channel and land on Pléneau Island, where Elephant Seals haul-out on the beaches. Gentoo Penguins, Kelp Gulls and South Polar Skuas are confirmed breeders. Pléneau Island was first charted by the French Antarctic Expedition of 1903-05 of Jean-Baptiste Charcot and was named after his expedition’s photographer Paul Pléneau. We will also visit Petermann Island with colonies of Adélie and Gentoo Penguins and Imperial Cormorants (Blue-eyed Shags). Petermann Island was named after the German geographer August Petermann who was a member of a German Expedition in 1873-74.

Day 5: Polar Circle

M/V Ortelius

M/V Ortelius

Sailing south through the Penola Strait, we cross the Polar Circle and arrive at the Fish Islands. The small islands lying east of Flouder Island are called the Minnows, first charted by the British Graham Land Expedition (1934-37) of John Rymill. Detaille Island was discovered by the French expedition of Charcot (1903-05) and named for a shareholder in the Magellan Whaling Company. From 1956 till 1959, The British Antarctic Survey had their “Station W” located on Detaille Island. On both locations we may observe Adélie Penguins and Blue-eyed Shags.

Day 6 – 7: Bellingshausen Sea

Here is where we may see our first pack-ice.

Day 8: Peter I Island

Or in Norwegian Peter I Øy is an uninhabited volcanic island (19 kilometres long) in the Bellingshausen Sea. It was discovered by Fabian von Bellingshausen in 1821 and was named after the Russian Tsar Peter I. It is claimed by Norway and considered a territory on its own. It is sporadically visited by passenger vessels.

On earlier landings, we saw groups of Elephant Seals and colonies of Southern Fulmars and Cape Pigeons.

Day 9 – 14: Amundsen Sea

Orca Whales

Orca Whales

These days we sail through the Amundsen Sea along and through the outer fringes of the pack-ice, which, depending on ice-conditions, will give us glimpses of the Antarctic Continent, while we take advantage of the west-going Antarctic coastal current. The sailing along and through the ice is very lively, with sightings of single straggling Emperor Penguins, groups of seals on ice-floes, and also Orcas and Minke Whales along the ice-edge, often accompanied by different species of fulmarine petrels.

Day 15: Ross Ice Shelf

Ross Ice Shelf

Ross Ice Shelf

We approach the Ross Ice Shelf, a floating mass of land-ice, with a front 30 meters high. We intend to offer a helicopter landing on the Ross Ice Shelf.

In the Bay of Whales at the eastern side of the shelf, close to Roosevelt Island (named by the American aviator Richard E. Byrd in 1934 for President Franklin D. Roosevelt), Roald Amundsen gained access to the Shelf and ventured to the South Pole, where he finally arrived on 14 December 1911. Also the Japanese explore Nobu Shirase had his camp in this area at Kainan Bay in 1912. For us it is a chance to be flown to the ice shelf.

Day 16: Ross Ice Shelf

Along the Ross Ice Shelf, we sail to the west.

Day 17 – 21: Ross Island, Cape Royds, Cape Evans

Shackleton's Hut, Cape Royds

Shackleton’s Hut, Cape Royds

In the Ross Sea we intend to visit Ross Island, guarded by Mount Erebus, Mount Terror and Mount Byrd with all the famous spots which played such an important role in the dramatic British expeditions of the last century such as Cape Royds with the cabin of Ernest Shackleton. We also intend to visit Cape Evans with the cabin of Robert Falcon Scott; from Hut Point, Scott and his men set out for the South Pole. We will further make attempts to visit the US-station McMurdo and Scott Base (New Zealand). If ice and weather conditions are favorable, we will use the helicopters to offer landings. From Castle Rock we will have a great view across the Ross Ice Shelf toward the South Pole. We will have a view into Taylor Valley, one of the Dry Valleys, where on our planet you are closest to the conditions on Mars. For the Dry Valleys we plan to use our helicopters. This is just one example of helicopter use during this epic voyage.

Day 22 – 23: West Coast of Ross Sea

Sailing northward along the west coast of the Ross Sea, we pass by the Drygalski Ice Tongue and the Italian Station in Terra Nova Bay and further Cape Hallet.

Day 24: Cape Adare

This is the place where people for the very first time wintered on the Antarctic Continent. The hut where the Norwegian Borchgrevink stayed in 1899 is surrounded by the largest colony of Adélie Penguins in the World.

Day 25: At Sea

We work our way through the sea-ice at the entrance of the Ross Sea.

Day 26: Scott Island

We sail along Scott Island.

Day 27 – 29: At Sea

Day 30: Campbell Island

Campbell Island is a sub-Antarctic New Zealand Reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with a luxuriant and blooming vegetation. The fauna on Campbell Island is fantastic with a large and easily accessible colony of Southern Royal Albatrosses on the main island and breeding Wandering, Campbell, Greyheaded, Blackbrowed, and Lightmantled Sooty Albatrosses on the satellite islands. Also three penguin species, Eastern Rockhopper, Erect-Crested and Yellow-Eyed Penguins breed here. In the 18th century seals were hunted to extinction, but Elephant Seals, Fur Seals and Sea Lions have recovered.

Day 31: At Sea

Day 32: Arrive Bluff, New Zealand

We arrive in Bluff (New Zealand) where passengers depart for their home bound journey.

PRICING

Start End Embarkation – Disembarkation Quadruple Porthole Triple Porthole Twin Porthole Twin Window Twin Deluxe Superior
JAN 09 FEB 10 Ushuaia – Bluff, New Zealand $24,950 $27,200 $31,800 $32,850 $34,500 $36,200
FEB 11 MAR 13 Bluff, New Zealand – Ushuaia $24,950 $27,200 $31,800 $32,850 $34,500 $36,200

 *** SPECIAL: Single travelers, booking a single porthole cabin receive a 30% discount!

Crossing the Date Line

The trip in January has a total duration of 31 nights / 32 days. However, looking at the starting and ending dates of the voyages, it “seems” that it has a duration of 32 nights. This is explained by the fact that we cross the “date line” at 180 degrees longitude. Crossing the International Date Line results in a day being added. In any case, the duration of the voyage is still 31 nights / 32 days.

See all of our Antarctica Expedition Cruises >>

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Hike the Inca Trail and Help Children

Inca Trail Trek with Make A Difference June 2015You are Invited!

June 12-20, 2015 – Inca Trail to Machu Picchu

SIGN UP NOW >>

If you have always wanted to visit Machu Picchu AND make a difference in the lives of vulnerable youth, this is the trip for YOU!

Explore the magnificent architecture and vibrant colors of Cusco; then head to the Sacred Valley for a lesson on the history of Incan civilization. We set off on this 5-day journey along the Inca Trail to the spiritual site of Machu Picchu. There, we will have a guided tour, and a chance to climb Huayna Picchu to round off our incredible Peruvian adventure! Enjoy this once in a lifetime experience while raising money to educate orphaned children in Tanzania, where school is not free.

ITINERARY:

June 12: Arrive to Lima, in evening, welcome and hotel transfer.
June 13: Transfer to Airport for flight to Cusco. Afternoon walking tour.
June 14: Full day tour of Sacred Valley.

June 15-19: 5-day Inca Trail to Machu Picchu Trek!

  • June 15: Car to trailhead at km 82, hike to Llaqtapata, camp overnight.
  • June 16: Hike to Llulluchapampa, camp overnight.
  • June 17: Hike to Phuyupatamarca, camp overnight.
  • June 18: Hike to Machu Picchu via the Inti Punku (sun gate). Shuttle to hotel.
  • Overnight in Aguas Calientes.
  • June 19: Guided tour of Machu Picchu w/ option to climb Huayna Picchu.
  • Return by train for overnight in Cusco.

June 20: Free morning and transfer to the airport for your flight to Lima. Depart Lima…or the option to continue with an extension to the Amazon!

PRICING:

The land-only price for this 9-day itinerary is US$1695/person, double occupancy (contingent on 12 participants).

  • Single supplement for hotels is US$180/person.
  • Fundraising Goal for children’s education: Minimum of US$1500

SIGN UP NOW >>

Question and Answer with Theresa Grant of Make A Difference Now

1. How does MAD Now raise funds for education?  What are some projects that you have funded?

MAD raises funds through individual sponsorships of the children. The children’s profiles can be found at:  http://www.gomadnow.org/come/children_profile.php

2. What is so magical about the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu? 

The views of the Andes are incredible and there is NO better way to enter Machu Picchu’s Inca City at the end. It’s an incredible reward after four days of climbing. It’s truly everything you’ve ever dreamed it would be!

3. Do you have a favorite spot inside Machu Picchu ruins? 

Honestly, I enjoyed being above the ruins most of all and looking down. I like the view from the end of the Inca Trail. I felt like the postcards I had seen for so long had finally come alive.

4. Should everyone climb Huayna Picchu, if possible?

The trail can be quite challenging in many places and I would only encourage the physically fit. However, the view from the top is spectacular.

5. What training do you recommend for people before they hike the Inca Trail?

Hiking at high a higher altitude than you are used to and continuously increasing this altitude.

6. What would you recommend for people to acclimatize to the altitude of Cusco (11,000 feet)?

In Swahili we say, “Pole, pole. Hakuna haraka!” or “Slowly, slowly. There is no hurry!” Slow down and allow yourself to adjust. Take short walks around Cusco, drink plenty of water and nap. And don’t forget to have Coco Matte Tea in the morning. It does seem to help and it’s good for you!

7. Is there something that a lot of people pack that they really don’t need to?   Is there something that people tend to forget to pack?

I’ll be honest … I brought over-sized facial products along that I thought I “needed” and meds for everything. Ditch the heavy stuff!  A must bring item if you are camping is down washable slippers. No one wants to wear their hiking boots around after hiking all day. Give your body a treat, plus they are warm and cozy at night! Oh one other thing that we all loved were ginger candies. They help with altitude and they are quite delicious!

8. Can you share an interesting story about an interesting local person you have met in Peru?

I loved our guide Tommy Ramos. He was fascinating to all of us. We just wish we had could have cookie cutter him. He was more than happy to talk to us about Peru’s history, economy, education etc. He also took time to speak with us both in English as well as Spanish so we could advance our Spanish speaking skills!

Machu Picchu with Make A Difference

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