Category: Trekking and Excursions
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2010-02-09
Categories: Aeronautics, Trekking and Excursions, Hunting And Fishing, Paintball Games and Airsoft, Climbing and Mountaineering, Navigation, Camping and Hiking, Biking & Cycling, OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES AND WILDERNESS, Horseriding, INDEPENDENT LIFESTYLES, Backpacking, OUTDOOR PRODUCTS AND SERVICES, Outdoor Gear, Survival Gear, Nautical and Marine Gear, Nautics and Water Sports, Mountain and Climbing Gear, Bouldering, Rafting, Canoeing and Paddling, Military and Combat Gear, Kayaking, Extreme Cooking, Skydiving, Parachuting, Air Dropping
Getting your outdoor gear is just a part of what you need
Surfing the web it becomes apparent that outdoor gear is indeed, a very important part of what outdoor enthusiasts look for; it also becomes apparent that outdoor apparel has become fashionable. That's okay, as long as the main point of getting gear and equipment is not missed: You don't guy gear to look cool, but to be more comfortable and safe.
Always lovely to have new gear, but don't forget to use it properly.
Of course, we are free to purchase whatever we want, and if you are not a pilot you are still entitled to get a flight jacket if that's what you like; what would be bad is to believe that you are actually a pilot just because you bought that jacket, and while this example might sound a little bit outlandish or extreme, such things do happen, for example, when someone interested in mountain climbing but with relatively low experience buys climbing gear and attempts to use it in ways that go well-beyond his or her skill level believing that using such stuff depends just on buying it.
In the case of some outdoor or extreme activities people know where the limit are; for example, regular pilots generally know and assume that they should not get into the cockpit of a plane designed for aerobatics without proper training. That is so because the whole learning system in aviation is constructed on the basis of getting licenses to use increasingly complex aeronautical equipment. You can buy a plane all right, but you will not be able to use it if you don't get first the proper license. Something similar happens in the case of nautical activities and a few others, but there are many fields in which, while it may be discouraged to act without proper training, it is actually very easy to do so: If you have a brand-new plane sitting on the tarmac at your local airport, it would be hard to attempt to fly it without a license because airports are generally filled with people - even small ones - and someone in a position of authority will probably stop you, but who will take a look at what climbers or hikers or kayaking enthusiasts do?
Don't forget that the single, most important piece of equipment that you have is your own intelligence; if you are getting started in something like mountain biking, kayaking, climbing, etc. it is fundamental that you don't try to do more than you are capable of. Getting new gear is great, but sometimes it could lead to a false sensation of security when experience is somewhat lacking.
Source: Pablo Edronkin, Andinia.com
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2009-12-10
Categories: Trekking and Excursions, Hunting And Fishing, Primitive Comfort, Paintball Games and Airsoft, Camping and Hiking, Horseriding, Homemade Stuff, Surviving Severe Weather Events, Backpacking, Outdoor Gear, Survival Gear, Nautics and Water Sports, Mountain and Climbing Gear, Severe Snow Storms, Cold and Blizzards, Bouldering, Rafting, Canoeing and Paddling, Kayaking, Surviving Nautical, Marine and Naval Disasters, Footwear, Outdoor and Wilderness Survival
How to dry your gear
After a lot of rain or snow falls, your outdoor gear will almost certainly get soaked with water; learn how you can do that without damaging your expensive stuff; just watch this vide to learn.
This was recorder after a real-life rainy night. English subtitles available
Source: Andinia.com
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2009-09-30
Categories: ADVENTURES, EXPLORATION AND EXPEDITIONS, Team Leadership, Trekking and Excursions, Africa, History, Books, Novels and Tales, Extreme and Exotic Travel, Overlanding, INDEPENDENT LIFESTYLES, Safaris, Society and Culture
The Voyages Of Morton Stanley
Henry Morton Stanley was one of those characters that discover their true vocation in the middle of their lives; from journalism he went wholeheartedly into exploration just because of an assignment given to him by his boss.
Mr. Morton Stanley was a journalist of the New York Herald when his boss summoned him to his office and gave him an unusual assignment: Find Dr. David Livingstone in Africa and publish the news. The journalist had then no experience whatsoever related to exploration or any other outdoor activity, for that matter, and the British missionary had been missing for months. But he managed to put up an expedition and make a spectacular trek thorough uncharted terrain until he found Dr. Livingstone in Ujiji, uttering the famous words: "Dr. Livingstone, I presume..."
Some historians now challenge the way in which the meeting allegedly took place and even say that it didn't happened in Ujiji, but the truth is that Mr. Morton Stanley then went on to become one of the major figures of the European conquest of Africa during the last part of the nineteenth century, and led some of the most spectacular, ambitious and bloody expeditions of the era.
Source: Andinia.com
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