Women Are Fastest Growing Segment of US Adventure Travel Industry
May 23, 2011
Not only have two women won the grueling Iditarod sled-dog race but Susan Butcher, who died of leukemia in 2006, won it four times.
When you hear the words “adventure travel,” perhaps you think of Venetian merchant Marco Polo, the distinguished African explorer David Livingstone, or North Pole adventurer Robert Peary. Nowadays, it conjures up images of muscular guys mushing sled dogs to victory in Alaska’s Iditarod race, or tethered to bungee cords and jumping off bridges into canyons.
MEN exploring and climbing, mushing and jumping.
But dozens of women have climbed Nepal’s Mount Everest, the world’s tallest peak. Others have mapped continents and commanded space flights. Two hundred or so years ago, it was a Native American woman who guided the explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on their journey of discovery through the Pacific Northwest.
Just last year, British ocean rower Roz Savage became the first woman to cross the Pacific Ocean alone, in a rowboat.
The Indian guide Sacagawea is depicted along with explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on Eugene Daub’s sculpture in Kansas City.
In fact, women are the fastest-growing segment of America’s “adventure travel” industry. Books with titles such as Gutsy Women and travel organizations like “Woodswomen” serve the swelling interest in women-only canoe trips, backpacking expeditions, and other strenuous adventures.
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