PATHWRANGLER NAMED HONOREE AS PART OF OUTSIDE’S ACTIVE TRAVEL AWARDS

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SAN FRANCISCO, CA | MARCH 12, 2013 PATHWRANGLER has been selected by Outside, America’s leading multimedia active-lifestyle brand, as a recipient of its second annual Active Travel Awards.  PathWrangler was honored as an Honoree. The full list of award winners will be published in the April issue of Outside magazine, available on newsstands March 12, 2013, and at Outside Online.

To select this year’s awards, Outside tapped our global network of correspondents, who spent months on the road traveling from the Philippines to Switzerland to Namibia and then some, to report a definitive roundup of the best new adventures, secret paradises, mountain epics, stunning beaches, airline deals, gorgeous islands, and more. The result is 42 fresh trips that we guarantee will change your life, plus smart travel strategies, the best travel gear, and five exciting new frontiers.

PathWrangler is proud to be awarded honoree of Outside Strategies to “Plug-In.”  With all these beautiful destinations and incredible activities to do, PathWrangler is the tool that brings it all together and makes these dream trips a reality. 

Outside magazine has long been one of the world’s most trusted advisors for active and adventurous travelers,” says Outside Editor Christopher Keyes. “In addition to truly award-worthy destinations and travel providers, this year we unearthed a handful of amazing new frontiers in active travel. Our annual edit franchise honors the year’s best trips, hotels, lodges, luggage, islands, and new destinations that will be an invaluable travel resource for years to come.”

Simply put, PathWrangler makes creating experiences and telling those stories easier than ever before.  Planning an adventure trip or an outdoor excursion is like herding cats. It is maddening to get everyone and everything prepared. Our web app brings the conversation together in an interactive place designed specifically for adventure and outdoor enthusiasts to dream and organize their trip together, and then share their stories after.  Over 100 Tour Operators, Outdoor Clubs and Outdoor Wilderness Programs and thousands of outdoor enthusiasts are using PathWrangler to run better trips and share them with their friends.

In celebration of the Outside Active Travel Awards, PathWrangler is offering its award-winning product for free in preparation for a new premium rollout in the upcoming months.  That means unlimited trips and users for any individuals or business that sign-up now.  Please sign-up here to take advantage of this offer.  Please contact us at info@pathwrangler.com if you’d like any help in getting you or your organization started.

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About Outside

Outside is America’s leading active lifestyle brand. For more than 35 years, Outside has covered travel, sports, adventure, health, and fitness, as well as the personalities, the environment, and the style and culture of the world Outside. The Outside family includes Outside magazine, the only magazine to win three consecutive National Magazine Awards for General Excellence, The Outside Buyer’s Guides, Outside Online, Outside Television, Outside Events, Outside+ tablet edition, and Outside Books. Visit us on www.outsideonline.com and www.facebook.com/outsidemagazine.

Contact PathWrangler

For further press inquiries or other requests, please contact CEO Doug Heinz at doug@pathwrangler.com and 415-309-2242.  Please visit us online at www.pathwrangler.com, www.facebook.com/pathwrangler and @pathwrangler.

Share Your Adventure with the World

A year ago, we created the first way to build your own adventures and organize them with your friends, clients and associates in one, central, integrated place on a map.  Six months ago, we built a way for everyone to tell their own stories and share photos with each other.  After doing this, we made all kinds of enhancements to the product that made doing all of these things easier and better.

Today, we’re pleased to announce that you can now publish your trips, as well as your individual stories with the public.  We’ve integrated with Facebook so you can easily publish them to your friends and family.

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Your PathWrangler Story on Facebook

Benefits to You

PathWrangler is now almost seamless.  We can’t create the ideas for you, but once you get an adventurous idea, you can build it, invite others, organize together, share your experiences as they happen and then share them with the world.

For the Traveler: it is the best way to organize and journal your trip.  We make it easier to store your memories.

For Trip Organizers: not only is the the best way to organize the many trips that you run, but it helps you to get business.  As your clients/members share their trips with their friends, it is a way to get those crucial testimonials and word of mouth referrals naturally.

Share Your Trips Today

Start building and sharing your trips on PathWrangler today!  Please contact us if you have any questions.

We’ll be sending out more details around these exciting new features from some of trips and users that we find particularly inspiring.  If you want to submit a trip, contact and share it with us and we’ll put it up on our blog!

Hydrospeed Down Europe’s Alpine Rivers

Whitewater rafting without a raft in Class III and IV rivers is how to best describe the adrenaline sport of hydrospeed or riverboarding.  Equipped with a foam board, diving suit, helmet, life jacket and fins one can get up close and personal with the river, waves and rocks and have a full contact whitewater experience.  Hydrospeed is quite popular in Europe and there are some pretty fast moving alpine rivers in a few countries to try it out on.  There will be no fear of falling into the water because you’ll already be in it!

Arve River | France
Discover the breathtaking canyons of the Mont Blanc valley along the 62 miles of this icy cold river that passes through the picturesque alpine hamlet of Chamonix.

Dranse of Thonon River | France
Over 4 miles long this fast current river in the Haute-Savoie region, with its numerous rocks and boulders, is supplied by rainfall in the Northern Alps and is a branch of the river that feeds into Lake Geneva.

Giffre River | France
One of the most beautiful alpine rivers located in the Haute-Savoie region and runs through Samoëns.  It’s also the location of the Gorges de Tines and a popular spot for rafting.

Isère River | France
Popular among kayakers this 14 mile long surging river is fed by the Vanoise National Park glaciers and consists of some slow current spots as well as gorges and rapids up to Class IV.

Dora Baltéa River | Italy
Located in the heart of the Val d’Aosta this mythical river is 104 miles long and is considered one of the most beautiful glacier rivers in the Alps.

Soča River | Slovenia
Known as “the Emerald Beauty” this river’s remarkable blue-green water stays this color for 86 miles from the Julian Alps to the Adriatic Sea.

Tour operators like Chamonix Hydroglisse, Kariboo Adventure, Soca Rafting and XPoint will give you the equipment you need along with an experienced instructor to guide you in these rough waters.  Dare to leave the raft behind and get immersed in the rivers of Europe with a truly action-packed sport.

Living the Dream! An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting and Operating a Successful Adventure Travel Company

PathWrangler is pleased to announced the release of our free eBook, “Living the Dream: An Entreprenuer’s Guide to Starting and Operating a Successful Adventure Travel Company.”  This book was written by Christina Heyniger and myself and features Chunnie Wright and Mona McPhee.

So, what it this about?  Let’s take you to our first chapter:

“Do you want to build a successful adventure travel business? LIVING THE DREAM gives you a framework for not only starting and getting your new adventure company off the ground, but also how to operate and grow it with dazzling service. Inside this book you’ll find information about how to:

  • Get your business off the ground as quickly and inexpensively as possible
  • Focus your efforts on core business aspects
  • Provide outstanding service to your clients
  • Throw out big, clunky business plans or ideas that are too grand in favor of focusing on bite-sized problems
  • Quickly launch, modify and constantly improve your business to adjust to the market, client demands and economic realities

The book presents a series of steps that draw on the “Lean Startup” methodology created by Eric Ries and has since launched top web software companies and is being extended to numerous other sectors. We are combining our experience with Lean Startup with the know-how and experience of people who have created and built leading adventure travel companies to bring you this adventure travel start-up manual.

Benefits to You

“In the old days, adventure travel was only for a very limited number of highly adventurous people. Nowadays everyone is into adventure travel. Anything out of person’s comfort zone is called ‘adventure travel.’ The whole industry has just skyrocketed. At the same time we have a huge amount of competition, much more than in the past.” - Tony Neubauer, Myths and Mountains

LIVING THE DREAM will explain how you can build a competitive adventure business with a distinctive personality. The methods presented will challenge you to embrace the challenges of a limited budget and turns those limitations into an advantage. Being small and agile isn’t a stage of your business, it is a mindset that lets you provide much better personal experiences to your clients.

Following the steps in this book will help you organize your adventure travel startup, get clients in the door and run better trips.

LIVING THE DREAM challenges you to be opinionated. Forgo being all things to all people and build something that has a distinct image — one that you’re proud and excited about, and that stands out from the crowd.

Who LIVING THE DREAM is Written For

If you are

  • An adventurous type who is tired of the day-to-day slog in the office, who has always wanted to start a business that allows you to explore your passion and work with great people around the world;
  • Currently operating an adventure business you would like to improve, perhaps by streamlining your operational activities or standing out more effectively from your competition;
  • Overwhelmed with the costs of adopting, creating and keeping up with the technology required to stay current in today’s online world;

Then LIVING THE DREAM is for you.”

More to come.  Stay tuned!

Why Tech Companies Suck at Adventure Travel

This week, the Adventure Travel Trade Association held its annual World Summit (ATWS) in Lucerne, Switzerland.  For the uninitiated, the ATWS brings together over 600 delegates from 55 countries whose business is, wait for it, adventure travel.  Media, tour operators, destinations, government tourism boards, agencies, technology companies and even a guy who drove his solar powered car around the world advocating for clean technology.

Everyone comes together to see what we can do to support our industry as a whole, while building relationships with others that can support our individual businesses.  For PathWrangler, we primarily seek out tour operators and adventurers who want to manage their trips better and improve the bond between them and the clients who buy their products.  So, the purpose of this post is show how it looks like from a tech company’s perspective coming to this conference and what I’ve taken away from it.  In short, I feel that tech companies currently, have failed in adequately addressing the needs in of our industry.

Technology has had a difficult time finding any real traction with Adventure Travel providers.  Previously, in my time at OpenTable, I saw the restaurant industry move from paper and pencil to 1′s and 0′s in a way that has forever changed the industry.  While the adventure travel industry is clearly in the digital age, they’ve been using 1995 technology to run their businesses and interact with their clients and also sell their trips.

Tech companies haven’t really been able to acquire a foothold in this industry.  There are aggregators who are trying to build the “Travelocity of Adventure Travel,” companies utilizing GPS technology to show where you are on a trip anywhere and anytime, social media integrators, and travel journals to name some prominent types.  From a purely technological perspective, there is some decent stuff out there, but if that is the case, why hasn’t anyone been able to get a significant foothold with actual users yet?

We tech guys feel that we are on the cutting edge of innovation, but our biggest failing is that we can sometimes get stuck in an echo chamber.  When we pitch our businesses to investors and to other tech people, we are told to format our idea in particular way, “We are the (blank) for (blank).”  Like, “We are the LinkedIn for Adventure Providers,” or “We are the Travelocity for Adventure Travel.”  People come to understanding of new ideas through things they previously understand and these elevator pitches are necessary to communicate easily.  However, what happens when the assumptions for tools made by previous companies are insufficient?

Since we’ve launched in March, Tour Operators have been expressing a lot of frustrations in dealing with tech companies.  They don’t think that people in our industry “get” what they do.  What I am witnessing are two people who go out on a date with common interests (tech companies want to build a business supporting the industry, Operators want cool technology to run their businesses better), but they are speaking two different languages and they have two entirely different agendas.

A Tour Operator’s main purpose is in enhancing the human experience.  Their vocabulary is filled with terms like “living,” “being alive,” “fun,” “life changing,” “natural”, while we are talking about “seemless integration,” “…click here and this happens…”, “mobile platform,” “widget,” “embedded,” and even worse: “robust.”  So, firstly, we aren’t even speaking the same language.  But most importantly, we have yet to build any technology that enhances the human experience that Operators are creating for people every day.

Some of our problems are inherent to who we are: tech people think in constructing frameworks.  We like formulas because they are easier to build.  If only people would behave like “x + y”, our answer of “z” would be perfect.  While process is important to any business, existing frameworks have fallen significantly short because they haven’t been able to prove they understand the language of the human experience in a way where the frameworks that we do create are ones that enhance people’s experiences and make the businesses that support them do it better.  In other words, techies feel that our existing formulas are sufficient because they’ve worked in other industries and verticals.

One of the speakers at ATWS recommended to auditorium full of Tour Operators, to paraphrase, “More and more people are using their mobile devices.  The way that you are expressing your current offerings are insufficient.  You need to change them so you can tap into this market.  People need to be able to book your offerings on their mobile device.”  While his reference about mobile usage was correct, his thoughts of why users haven’t adopted any of these aggregators/booking sites in a meaningful way is wrong.  Really, really wrong.  The current formula and frameworks that tech companies are offering are the ones that aren’t adequate.

While mass adoption of a particular tool set within the adventure travel will indeed require some new thinking on the part of adventure travelers and tour operators, it won’t happen until they feel like the new tool sets out there are doing something that can enhance the human experience in a meaningful way.

ATWS brings together an amalgamation of passionate misfits the world over.  However, these very people may be the ones that point those of us misfit geeks, who want to serve this community, toward building something that enhances the human experience far beyond just providing another plug-in or derivative product.

Sufferin’ Succotash

Pt Powell

“We shall draw from the heart of suffering itself the means of inspiration and survival.” ~Winston Churchill

Although my legs had 2 hours to warm-up, they were full of lead; burning with each half-step I took up the 30-degree, talus slope.  My breathing was out of rhythm and it felt like there was even more talus in my head due to the 6-hour drive and 4- hours of restless sleep from camping out next to my car in the parking lot the night before.  I was only at 9,000 ft and looking up at the 4,620 ft I needed to gain across inhospitable terrain (more talus, snow fields and frigid snow-melt river-crossings) to get to the top of 13,620 ft Point Powell.  It all seemed further away than the galaxy that George Lucas created (where he only went 2 for 6).

And that would just be the halfway point.

I suffered every step of that trip, yet somehow when I was less than a mile from the car — cuts all-over my legs, soaking wet pants from glissading down the snow fields with a misstep onto a loose log crossing Blue Lake, and a 2-inch layer of Sierra dirt over everything else that managed to stay dry – I was grinning ear-to-ear.  My climbing partner and I were even planning our next adventure with a enthusiam that completely ignored the last 15 hours.

Were we completely insane?  13 hours earlier everything inside of me wanted to be sitting at a cafe in San Francisco with my friends eating a fat brunch and drinking too much way too early.  Instead, I spent it in a constant state of punishment.

Like many other axioms in life, this dynamic is built on a paradox: the process of intentionally suffering ultimately leads to tranquility and completeness.  At the beginning of the trip, my body was out of sync; flailing and looking for a way out.  Yet with each step, my mind would relax and focus with my steps harmonizing with my breath.  Although the air was getting thinner as I gained altitude, my breathing became restful and constant.  It was still just as painful, but I’d transcended.  I’d found my groove.

There is a common bond that Adventure Travelers and outdoor enthusiasts share to varying degrees with each other: it isn’t often about “trill seeking” for its own sake.  Of course, one does not need to dash up and down 13,000+ ft mountains to get to the same place.  The rush that comes through suffering is an act of consciousness: putting your neck on the line and pushing your mind and/or body beyond its limits produces clarity of vision and tests your heart.

Taking yourself out of a comfortable place, steering into an unknown and difficult path ultimately clarifies your vision and tests your heart.  You adapt as you go.  As a result, you end up seeing the world in a much different way – it is just as crazy as it ever was, but you hit your groove and start to roll with it a little better.

So, don’t put off that “adventure” you are dreaming about because it just seems like it will be a little tough to manage or that it seems a little ambitious due to work/family/jai-alai practice or anything other rational excuse that everyone else has to deal with.  You’ll be glad you did it.

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Head on over and start building your next adventure today.  Simply put, we make building and storing experiences easier than ever before. We’ve built a collaborative web tool that makes trip planning not only easy, but fun.

We make businesses better.  If you are a tour operator, club, expedition or guide, we can help you get started with PathWrangler.  To schedule a metting, please contact us directly at info@pathwrangler.com.

Scuba Dive in a Museum…

…an underwater museum that is!  Located in the sea on the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico within the National Marine Park of Cancun, Isla Mujeres and Nizuc, is a museum created by sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor.  It’s comprised of over 400 life-size reinforced cement sculptures within two galleries.  The PH-neutral clay has allowed algae to form and invertebrates to proliferate.  This will in turn provide a new underwater habitat for coral to flourish while attracting colorful marine life.  The museum also hopes to attract divers and snorkelers away from the Peninsula’s delicate coral reefs and to give them some relief from all the traffic.

The museum is now a few years old now, which means the ocean’s inhabitants are well on their way to establishing it as their own.  Local dive operators, like AquaWorld, divePro Cancun Diving and Scuba Cancun, can outfit your trip and guide you to this unique place.

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New TARPA Initiative: Real Adventures

One of the elements of travel that we keep hearing from clients and travelers is the need for authenticity.  At PathWrangler, we try to get you as immersed as we possibly can.  However, to be a true adventurer, we not only want to put you into the shoes of the indigenous cultures, we want to put you into the shoes of the pioneers of adventure and exploration.  What did it feel like to be Ernest Shackleton, Marco Polo, Dr Livingstone, Ferdinand Magellan, or Sacagawae?

Head researcher, Mikey Clarke reveals how we can bring your trip to the next level:

On your next adventure, there is an option to take our vitamin anti-pills for an extra bout of authenticity – these anti-pills helpfully leach nutrients from your body to let you experience the pleasures of scurvy, just like the old-time adventurers!  This is for the adventurer who will have none of this plasticky, tourist-trap crap.

Another example of how TARPA is leading the travel industry in research.

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Stay tuned for the big PathWrangler announcement (which is certainly NOT a TARPA program).

PathWrangler and Cat Juggling

Just got off the phone with a client who is running some amazing rafting trips.  I learned that path to enlightenment with PathWrangler is the following:

  • Phase 1: Cats wandering aimlessly; mewing, scratching, breaking things, ripping up carpet and, in some cases, hanging from drapes.
    • Get PathWrangler Account.
  • Phase 2: Herd Cats…herd happier cats.
    • Herding Cats becomes too easy and effortless.  New inspiration is needed.
  • Phase 3: Cat Juggling: xnectf_cat-juggling-from-the-jerk-1979_shortfilms

Tired of cats running rampant?  We make it all better.  Check us out!  I only hope Nathan Johnson doesn’t get to us first!

Rocks Worth Climbing in South America

South America offers great routes for rock climbing.  There are a few spectacular settings south of the equator; ideal spots to hone your spider-like skills, both mentally and physically:

Agulha do Diabo (Brazil)

Not far from Brazil’s famed city of Rio de Janeiro is Serra dos Órgãos National Park and within it lies the 6,725 ft. high Devil’s Needle. Although it is not the tallest peak in the park (Pedra do Sino holds that title at 7,425 ft.), it is an impressive rock formation in the heart of the park and has quite the view at the summit.  It is a challenge even for the most experienced climbers.

Cerro Torre (Patagonia, Argentina)

Stretching to 10,262 ft. in Argentina’s stunning area of Southern Patagonia Ice Field is the erect granite spire known as Cerro Torre.  It is imposing at first sight and is considered to be one of the more difficult mountains to climb and reach the summit due to the mushroom of rim ice that is caused by ever present strong winds.

Las Torres (Torres del Paine National Park, Patagonia, Chile)

The vertical jagged peaks of The Three Towers in the Torres del Paine National Park of Chile vary in height from 7,415 ft. to 8,204 ft. and command breathtaking views of the mountains of the Paine massif and the valleys below.  There are other rock climbs in the Park, but these are the most popular.

Mount Roraima (Venezuela, Brazil, Guyana)

It has been said that Mount Roraima was the inspiration for the novel The Lost World.  This mammoth tepuis mountain rises high into the clouds to 9,219 ft.  This archaic geological sandstone rock formation borders Venezuela, Brazil and Guyana with high sheer cliffs and has a tropical ecosystem consisting of waterfalls, misty forests, gorges and unique flora and fauna that can only be found here.

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