Adventure.com
Magazine
Adventure.com is an online magazine dedicated to exploring a more conscious, compassionate and curious future of travel.
Our goal is to be the best travel publication for the world. We believe we have a responsibility to share stories of people, places and experiences that are harnessing the power of travel and adventure as a force for good. Stories that challenge preconceptions and spark conversations; stories that connect, bridge and go deeper into ideas, perspectives and worlds beyond our own.
Our readers actively support a more conscious future of travel with our Pay it Forward subscriptions, through which 100% of contributions go towards local initiatives that are improving livelihoods around the world through sustainable travel experiences. Think of it like the world’s most impactful magazine subscription. Because that’s basically what it is. Source
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| Scope | International |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Country | United States of America |
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Recent Articles
Search ArticlesI decided to learn Swahili before my next safari vacation to East Africa. Was it worth it?
When preparing for her latest visit to Kenya and Tanzania, travel writer and Afrophile Emma Gregg took a crash course in Swahili. What difference does learning a language—or a few words of it—make to a trip? I have a glowing memory of a family holiday in France when I learned my first few words of French. It was just enough to say hello and buy a newspaper, baguettes and ice cream—but I was tiny, and felt triumphant.
How the Artemis II crew trained to observe and photograph the moon: A NASA science team geologist explains
Kamestastin Lake and the surrounding region are on the territory of the Mushuau Innu First Nation. A key part of my role in the training was liaising with the First Nation, which has been following Hansen on this historic mission. A highlight for me was sitting around the fire on one of our last nights with Innu Guardians from Natuashish and hearing about how sacred the moon is to them—as it is to many Indigenous Peoples around the world.
Is the world’s most outrageous David Bowie experience found in this tiny town in outback Australia?
David Bowie means many things to many people. But to the locals of Carinda—an extremely small town in extremely remote Australia—he is an icon to be worshipped annually. Writer Tracey Croke road trips to one of the world’s quirkiest small music festivals.
This trio set out to explore unmapped waters in Brazil’s Amazon and found a rare dolphin population instead
An expedition trio, one dugout canoe and 320 miles of undocumented Amazon river. We chat to marine scientist and adventurer Charlie Young about her explorations in northern Brazil and the significance of spotting a rare river dolphin. “It had been a week since I had seen the sky,” marine scientist Charlie Young reminisces over a call from Turks and Caicos, far from the sun-swallowing forests of northern Brazil.
In photos: How is Kerala’s houseboating scene navigating its heavily touristed backwaters?
For Adventure.com photo editor Nicola Bailey, cruising the Keralan backwaters on a houseboat has been a bucket list experience. Did it live up to the hype in reality? Dozens of houseboats snake up the canal, one after the other, and I feel certain a collision’s inevitable. I’m in the backwaters of Kerala, in southern India, cruising an intricate network of waterways that wind through palm-fringed rice fields and sleepy villages.
What does a tiny gecko reveal about Madagascar’s fragile future?
Madagascar’s biodiversity is collapsing, but a small team’s fight to save one critically endangered gecko mirrors the wider struggle to protect the island’s remaining forests and the communities tied to them. Researcher Avery Tilley discovers how this small-scale project represents a much larger question: How can conservation succeed in one of the world’s most threatened biodiversity hotspots?
Greenland’s sleeper hit? Urban-Arctic streetwear. Here are the fashion designers to follow (and the shops to visit)
Urban-Arctic streetwear is ‘the look’ in Greenland, with all the style, versatility and confidence to go global, as Samantha Falewée discovered while browsing the shops of the capital of Nuuk. Set against dark Atlantic water and the hulks of distant blue-white glaciers, Nuuk’s fashion scene sneaks up on me.
I can't hear most birds-I'm profoundly hard of hearing-but high in Ecuador's rainforest, I see them in all their glory
With a progressive hearing loss that began in early adulthood, taking up birding seemed pointless for Suzanne Morphet. But, as she discovers, excellent guides and innovative technology make all the difference—and not just for the hard of hearing. “What are you hearing?” I ask my husband eagerly as we walk along a lit boardwalk early one morning in Ecuador’s tropical rainforest. The sun has yet to rise above the treetops, but I know the dawn chorus has already begun—I just can’t hear it.
Could a multi-generational trip to India bring my diaspora family closer to our heritage and homeland?
When American-born, Kenya-based writer Sarika Bansal took her parents and young family to Jaipur, she hoped this inter-generational vacation to India would help connect her children better to their ancestral homeland through crafts, cuisine and culture. A few years back, I’d traveled to Udaipur, India, with my septuagenarian parents and sprightly two-and-a-half-year-old toddler in tow, staying at some of the most luxurious hotels in the City of Lakes.
A guide to Puerto Rico, inspired by Bad Bunny’s Grammy-winning discography
After a history-making Grammy win and ahead of an anticipated Super Bowl performance this week, writer Charmaine Noronha re-listens to the Puerto Rican superstar’s discography to pen the ultimate Bad Bunny-inspired guide to PR. Last year, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio AKA Bad Bunny the ‘King of Latin Trap’, returned home to Puerto Rico for an historic, record-breaking residency titled ‘No Me Quiero Ir de Aqui’ (I Don’t Want To Leave Here).