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The Expert in Baby Boomer Travel

Travel Copywriter
Whitewater rafting trips are one good option for baby boomer adventurers. Photo from Whitewater Connection

Whitewater rafting trips are one good option for baby boomer adventurers. Photo from Whitewater Connection

Over the past several years, I’ve had the following exciting, sometimes scary, often challenging, but ultimately exhilarating adventures:

  • Summiting a peak in British Columbia, then rappelling down the side of a cliff onto a glacier.
  • Whitewater rafting in Nepal on class IV and V rivers.
  • Riding a camel in the Sahara and Sinai deserts.
  • Hiking for a week over the hills and dales of County Kerry in southwest Ireland.
  • Feeling the rush of whales diving directly under my Zodiac and surfacing less than 20 yards away in Glacier Bay, Alaska.
  • Biking 45 miles from the top of Maui’s Mount Haleakala to the shores of the Pacific, the world’s longest downhill bike ride.
  • Swimming with piranhas in the Amazon.
  • Mushing a dogsled team in Finland.

And I’ve done them all after the age of 50.

Camel ride, anyone?. Photo by Dennis Cox/WorldViews

Camel ride, anyone?. Photo by Dennis Cox/WorldViews

The reason I was able to do them? Every one of them was on a guided tour, and every one of them was organized by an experienced tour operator and led by an expert guide or guides.

All New Experiences

Until those trips, I had never rappelled down a cliff, ridden a camel, swum with piranhas, or biked down a volcano at dawn hoping that my brakes wouldn’t go out and send me careening over the mountainside.

Yes, I’d had plenty of adventures on my own in my younger days. But none of them was any more memorable than those listed above.

In fact, the older I get, the more satisfying it becomes to know that I can still go adventuring and not only live to tell about it, but look forward to my next opportunity to stretch my personal boundaries.

But again, I thank my guides’ expertise for that – and whoever keeps the bicycle brakes in repair, the mountaineering gear in good working condition, and the piranhas at bay.

Baby Boomers: An Adventurous Generation

I’m not alone.

Baby boomers – those of us currently in our 50s and 60s – tend to be an adventurous bunch in general.

A leading U.S. adventure tour operator, Peter Grubb of Idaho-based ROW Adventures, calls boomers “very important” to his business, especially on international trips, where they form the majority.

Hiking trips are ideal for ages 50 and up. Photo from Walking the World

Hiking trips are ideal for ages 50 and up. Photo from Walking the World

These trips may range from sea kayaking in Baja and whale watching in British Columbia to snorkeling in the Galapagos and venturing to Machu Picchu. Boomers, Grubb notes, often have more time and money to spend on such trips than other age groups.

Boomers also join many of ROW’s domestic adventure trips, which include rafting, hiking, kayaking and canoeing in America’s Pacific Northwest and beyond.

While some trips require only moderate physical conditioning, “We find plenty of in-shape boomers!” Grubb says, and ROW generally doesn’t have to modify its itineraries for 50-plus-only specialty trips.

Risk-Taking Not Required

None of this is to say that you can only enjoy adventure travel if you’re in terrific shape or a natural-born risk-taker or adrenaline junkie.

In fact, while there are never any guarantees of complete safety, and a whiff of danger can add a certain frisson to your trip, adventurous travel needn’t be truly risky in the hands of experienced, watchful tour guides.

A Galapagos iguana, best seen on a stress-free guided trip. Photo by Clark Norton

A Galapagos iguana, best seen on a stress-free guided trip. Photo by Clark Norton

Nor does it necessarily require great strength or endurance.

You can find terrific hiking and bicycling tours that allow you to proceed at your own pace, as long as you can reach your designated lodging site by dinner time – when excellent regional food and wines are often the rule. Many such tours even include support vans that will give you a lift if you get too tired.

But these kinds of trips are still far more adventurous – and likely to result in interesting interactions with the local people — than, say, jetting off to a beach resort and lying in the sun for a week. (Not that a little R&R doesn’t have its place at times).

 So keep these key takeaways in mind when you get the urge for adventure:

  • You don’t have to be in your 20s and 30s or in top physical condition to experience adventurous travel. Folks in their 50s, 60s – and beyond – can continue to be active travelers who seek out often challenging trips around the world.
  • Expertly led guided tours can lead to all new adventures that you might never think of trying otherwise – and keep you safe in the process.
  • By defining what adventure travel means to you, you can create experiences that push your comfort level, yet are fully rewarding.

Note: An earlier version of this post originally appeared in Stride Travel, the world’s most comprehensive marketplace for guided tours, river cruises, and organized adventures.

Readers: You can subscribe to my blog and get notification of every post by simply typing in your email address and clicking on the blue Subscribe button or downloading my free report, How to Ride the Coming Wave of Boomers. Thanks!

 

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According to government and private surveys:

  • Leading-edge baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1955) and seniors account for four out of every five dollars spent on luxury travel today.
  • Roughly half the consumer spending money in the U.S.--more than $2 trillion--is in the hands of leading-edge baby boomers and seniors.
  • Baby boomers (born 1946-1964) travel more than any other age group.
  • When asked what they would most like to spend their money on, baby boomers answered “travel” more than any other category, including improving their health or finances.

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