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Why 'Challenge Travel' Is Trending Among Adventure Lovers—and Some of the Best Experiences to Book

Why 'Challenge Travel' Is Trending Among Adventure Lovers—and Some of the Best Experiences to Book

'People want bold and challenging travel experiences,' says Tom Marchant, cofounder of the outfitter Black Tomato. The company debuted its Get Lost itineraries in 2017, giving a select few clients the chance to role-play survival situations in the Peruvian Andes or Mongolian steppes. Travelers on these journeys get dropped in the wilderness and then navigate their way back to civilization. Marchant says interest in the trips has spiked, with 2024 bookings up 40 percent from the previous year.
Black Tomato is far from the only operator dreaming up next-level challenges, as travel advisors, tour companies, and even cruise lines are tailoring their offerings to what some call Type 2 fun: experiences that are difficult in the moment, but enriching in hindsight.
'Adventurers are seeking true challenge and isolation,' says Pelorus Travel cofounder Jimmy Carroll. 'These are trips where endurance, strength, and adaptability are essential.'
Here are six experiences guaranteed to test your mettle.
A CMH adventure in western Canada.
Andy Cochrane/CMH Heli-Skiing& Summer Adventures
HELI-SKIING IN BRITISH COLUMBIA
Founded in 1965, CMH Heli-Skiing & Summer Adventures has grown alongside interest in backcountry skiing, and the company now has more than 150 certified mountain guides who can safely lead fresh-track, deep-powder runs across some 3 million acres of the Canadian Cascades. CMH also has a network of comfortable backcountry lodges for multiday adventures among the iconic granite spires of the Bugaboos.
A campsite on Kubu Island, in Botswana's Makgadikgadi Pans.
OPEN-AIR CAMPING IN BOTSWANA
Many safari camps offer indoor-outdoor suites that let in the sounds of nature. Then there's Jack's Camp, the storied Botswana lodge on the edge of the Kalahari Desert. From Jack's, guests can embark on a two-night foray into the vast Makgadikgadi Pans in a convoy of ATVs before making camp on Kubu Island, an outcropping of granite that rises from the arid plain. 'They call it a 'five-gazillion-star bedroom,'' says Mark Lakin, a T+L Travel Advisory Board member who recommends the trip to his clients.
One outpost of Utah's Western Uinta Hut System.
Inspired Summit Adventures
HUT-TO-HUT TREKKING IN UTAH
The Western Uinta Hut System is a collection of strategically placed yurts that open the door to more than 100,000 acres of high-altitude terrain. The first of their kind in the state, these rustic lodgings afford adventurers comfortable (if not luxurious) places to overnight during mountain-biking, hiking, and fishing forays deep into the wilderness, says Shaun Deutschlander. She's the founder of Inspired Summit Adventures, which pioneered the growing network and offers guided trips into the mountains.
IMPOSSIBLE MISSIONS IN MOROCCO
Scaling the exterior of Dubai's Burj Khalifa may be out of reach, but doing your own stunts is possible. Working with crew members from the Mission: Impossible franchise, Pelorus Travel has put together an adventure that involves trekking in the Atlas Mountains, racing across sand dunes in Predator X-18 buggies, and rappelling from a rooftop in the Marrakesh medina. 'It will be a super immersive and high-octane experience,' says Carroll, the Pelorus cofounder.
Taking the plunge with Aurora Expeditions in Antarctica.
SCUBA DIVING IN ANTARCTICA
If simply visiting the seventh continent isn't enough, Aurora Expeditions has trips that also go under it. The expedition cruise line was the first mainstream operator to offer scuba diving in the frigid waters off Antarctica, where the sea life includes spider crabs, soft corals, and walls of giant kelp. It's also possible to spot penguins and seals, says Edwin Sargeant, an ice diver and guide with Aurora Expeditions whose favorite thing to see is the undersides of icebergs.
GOING OFF THE GRID IN PERU
Black Tomato can coordinate wilderness-survival adventures that push participants' limits. After a safety briefing led by a former officer in the Royal Marines, guests are dropped in the Peruvian mountains with little more than a map and a compass—and orders to get back to an extraction point several days' hike away. For safety, participants are shadowed by a team of pros. 'You won't see them, but they'll always be there to help at a moment's notice,' says Rob Murray-John, head of special projects for Black Tomato.
A version of this story first appeared in the July 2025 issue of Travel + Leisure under the headline 'Pushing the Limits.'
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Non-Americans Are Sharing The Things That Shocked Them The Most When They Visited, And Some Of These Are So Random
Non-Americans Are Sharing The Things That Shocked Them The Most When They Visited, And Some Of These Are So Random

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Non-Americans Are Sharing The Things That Shocked Them The Most When They Visited, And Some Of These Are So Random

One of the best things about travel is that it opens your eyes to how people from different parts of the world live. On the flip side, if you have ever wondered about what non-Americans thought of American culture and its unique quirks, it gets covered in r/AskReddit when someone asked, "Non-Americans of Reddit, what's something that absolutely shocked you when you first visited the US?" The reverse culture shock was real. Here's what people had to say: 1."One British boyfriend of mine was flabbergasted at the size of my parents' bathroom sink." —YourMothersButtox 2."As someone who grew up in the UK and moved to the US, the distance between places was the biggest thing to get my head around." —Dazzling-Antelope912 "Agreed. Where I grew up, if you didn't have your own car, you might very well die of exposure trying to trek your way to the grocery store." —reliablepayperhead 3."The cars, which looked normal on TV, were twice as big as normal cars back home." Photosvit / Getty Images, Falun / Getty Images —bartvanh Related: 4."The accommodations provided for physically disabled people in public transit and public places. I felt genuinely happy that there is a country that takes its protections seriously. You would not want to catch yourself in a disabled state in my country." —NigraDolens "The ADA — Americans with Disabilities Act — is an amazing piece of legislation." —Massive-Lime7193 5."The listed price in stores not being what you pay. So, coupled with my unfamiliarity with US coinage, I bought everything with notes and ended up weighed down with pocketfuls of loose change at the end of each day." —akiralx26 6."All the ingredients in medications on TV, and advertising medication on TV." —TripMundane969 "I live in Australia, and it was shocking to see medicine being in advertisements." —moonchild365 "We saw an ad for Nexium that was then followed by an ad for a class action against Nexium. It was wild." —themisst1983 7."The gaps around the stall doors in public restrooms took some getting used to!" —BareBonesTek "We hate it, too." —pandorumriver24 8."So many cereal options." —roastplantain 9."Portion size. You get a TON of food at a restaurant." —CombatWombat1973 Related: 10."How straight and white people's teeth were!!!" Friends / Via —Fit_Acanthaceae6191 11."I've been living in the US for a year. One thing I am absolutely livid about is that you have to pay to find out how much tax you owe. You can do the calculations yourself, but I wasn't confident enough to do it, so I did what most Americans do and used a proxy to file my taxes, and I had to pay $50. Like, this is insane. How the IRS doesn't just tell you how much you owe is baffling to me. This felt like a scam." "In France, your taxes are already filed automatically because the equivalent of the IRS knows your employment status, along with how much you make, and your family situation. 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I'm a Travel Expert and a Mom, and This Unexpected 2-Country Itinerary Is Perfect for Families
I'm a Travel Expert and a Mom, and This Unexpected 2-Country Itinerary Is Perfect for Families

Travel + Leisure

timean hour ago

  • Travel + Leisure

I'm a Travel Expert and a Mom, and This Unexpected 2-Country Itinerary Is Perfect for Families

Travel is a transformative experience, especially for children and teens. But planning trips for the whole family isn't always easy. As a parent and travel advisor, I've seen firsthand how travel pushes young minds to become more curious, adaptable, and tolerant, all while presenting the opportunity to disconnect from an increasingly digital world. Norway and Sweden might not seem like the most obvious family destinations, but these Nordic countries are quietly gaining traction for multi-generational travelers. Their proximity to each other makes for the perfect two-nation vacation that combines stunning scenery, rich culture, and a sense of laidback luxury. Here's how to craft the perfect itinerary for your family. 29/2 Aurland, a boutique hotel near Njardarheimer. MONTAG/29/2 Aurland Hotel Our journey begins on Norway's dramatic west coast, where reenactors in the Viking village of Njardarheimr offers an engaging glimpse into local heritage. There, try archery and axe-throwing, taste Viking recipes, or learn traditional handicrafts. For an exhilarating ascent, the next stop is Loen, just a few hours north of Njardarheimr. Take the Loen Skylift, which soars 3300 feet above the fjord to the top of Mount Hoven. Just a short walk away, a summer-only zipline offers an adrenaline rush, propelling visitors over the upper fjord with incredible panoramic views toward the famous Gjølmunne Bridge. The exceptional 29/2 Aurland is just a short drive from Njardarheimer and has incredible views of the fjords. This boutique hotel, complete with a smokehouse and garden, is the perfect base from which to cycle through the mountains and valleys, visit family-run farms, and take to the water in a traditional Oselver rowboat. The Union Øye opened in 1891 and has hosted a number of historic celebrities from German emperor Wilhelm II to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the writer behind Sherlock Holmes. Tucked away in a secluded fjord hamlet, the location is perfect for adventurers seeking to e-bike or kayak, and the whole family can embrace local traditions with an exhilarating cold water plunge in the fjords before warming up in the floating sauna. Treehotel's with its unique UFO-shaped room. Peter Lundstrom/Treehotel The second part of this trip begins in idyllic Vaxholm, known as the capital of the Stockholm archipelago. There, you'll find pastel wooden houses, hiking trails, a 16th-century fortress-turned-museum, and serene waters perfect for kayaking. Travel companies like Jacada Travel offer local experiences, like learning to make traditional cinnamon buns with local bakers, to take your experience one step further. Next, head up north to the Swedish Lapland, where the magical winter landscape is perfect for family activities like dog sledding and snowmobiling. Travelers can also go hiking or mountain biking, or take photography workshops to capture the Lapland's natural beauty. Visits to the indigenous Sámi people in towns like Jokkmokk offer rich cultural experiences. Learn about Sámi history and traditions, shop local artisan crafts, and follow herders to meet reindeer. Ett Hem's a hotel in Stockholm's Östermalm district. Nestled in Stockholm's upscale Östermalm district, Ett Hem is a stylish red brick townhouse with a home-away-from-home feel. The hotel offers a haven of laid-back elegance with a distinct sense of lived-in luxury and warmth. The Treehotel is a unique treehouse stay in the arctic north of Sweden. With eight incredible rooms situated above ground, ranging from a UFO to a bird's nest, it's sure to spark joy and wonder in the whole family. Plus, the location is perfect for seeing the northern lights between September and April. Kate Herz is a member of Travel + Leisure's A-List and specializes in Norway and Sweden trips. You can create a tailor-made itinerary with Herz by contacting her at [email protected] .

I'll Miss My Passport Stamps
I'll Miss My Passport Stamps

Skift

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  • Skift

I'll Miss My Passport Stamps

Part document, part conversation starter, stamps are a physical reminder of where you've been. Their demise may be progress for some, but it's a loss nonetheless. On Experience Colin Nagy is a marketing strategist and writes on customer-centric experiences and innovation across the luxury sector, hotels, aviation, and beyond. You can read all of his writing Colin Nagy is a marketing strategist and writes on customer-centric experiences and innovation across the luxury sector, hotels, aviation, and beyond. You can read all of his writing here Last week, I landed in Bali after a long trip from the States. I expected a scrum at the airport based on my past visits. But this time, no one wanted to see much from me. The e-gates blinked green and waved me through. It was efficient and painless, and it's an experience coming soon to many other destinations. Biometric gates (already the default at most major airports) will quietly take over the world. Swipe your passport, stare into a camera, pass through. Progress, obviously. But it also marks the end of something tactile and oddly poetic: the humble passport stamp. I'm often obsessed with frictionless movement: cities with great transit, airport security checks – like in Portland, Oregon – that are incredibly well considered and flow nicely. But I also have to tip my hat to one of the last physical souvenirs of travel: proof of passage, memory in miniature, national bureaucracy as accidental art. I still keep my old passports in a drawer. They're soft at the edges and veering on delaminated in some places. They are bulging with extra pages with stamped ink and laden with colorful security stickers on the back. A red entry from Denmark, precise as everything else there. The beautiful Arabic from Oman, stamped before I headed into the Empty Quarter to camp. A crisp Hong Kong imprint from when it still felt independent, before Chinese politics tightened. Rugged Zimbabwe ink, smudged by a friendly female border agent's thumb on a hot afternoon near Buffalo Range. A full-page Tanzanian visa, glued in at a desk in Kilimanjaro after an arrival on KLM. Each one is a reminder that you went from here to there, and someone witnessed it. Stamps weren't just functional: they were meditative. Palau stamps used to be a full-page environmental pledge into every visitor's passport (they've since been made smaller). They're a promise of stewardship you must sign, a stamp as a moral contract. One of the few places that asks not just where you're coming from, but what kind of guest you plan to be. The use of passport stamps began in the 1800s, and became widespread in the early 20th century. Stamps tracked movement, yes, but they also became soft power made visible. What countries let you in easily? Which made you wait while they cross-referenced Cold War databases? The stamp was the state, condensed as tight as a bouillon cube. And like all analog signals, stamps contained beautiful accidents and personal touches. The European Union is phasing out physical passport stamps for travelers entering Schengen countries, and its e-gates promise none of these memories: just a scan and a silent swing. Maybe a barely audible click if you're lucky. The new way is more secure. Given wait times and surges in travel, it is probably better for everyone's sanity. But I miss the ceremony and the quiet ritual (and occasionally stressful moment) where your passport gets studied, the stamp gets pressed, and for a second you're acknowledged. I used to really love the gentle accumulation of stamps over time. They told you who'd been where, and when. A passport was part document, part conversation starter. As the physical world goes ephemeral (signatures become biometrics, keys and cards become phones, stamps become scans), we decide which traces matter. Passport stamps never pinged or tracked or lit up. It was colored ink and the odd signature, layering upon other ink into a quiet little mosaic sitting in a book. And I am very happy I lived during a time to experience and collect them.

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