Sunday, November 8, 2009

Health

These Vacations Will Get You In Shape

By Kerry Hannon
Posted 5/27/07

Susan Sumner, 43, wanted to "do something really hard." So, this spring, she went on vacation. With a group of like-minded women, Sumner biked some 35 miles a day for a week through Sonoma Valley wine country. "It was absolute joy," says Sumner, who runs a medical records transcription business and lives in Santa Fe, N.M. Her next goal: a rafting trip with her husband through the Grand Canyon.

Lazy days at the beach? A week of golf (by golf cart)? Not for a growing number of middle-aged travelers bent on getting healthy while they're having fun. Active travel represented an estimated $55 billion slice of the vacation market in 2006, and that figure is climbing rapidly. People get in shape so they can go on one of these trips, says Colleen Cannon, a world champion triathlete and founder of Women's Quest, the Colorado-based travel company that ran Sumner's vacation. Then they often go home and continue a fitness program. She expects some 400 women to attend the athletic getaways offered this year, up from 60 a decade ago. At GordonsGuide.com, a Web resource for active travelers, more than 1,200 tour providers list more than 10,000 trips, half again as many as were listed in 2004.

The choices appeal to a range of fitness levels, from the superfit to the couch potato. At travel site Gorp.com, for example, "easy" trips are typically fine for young kids and formerly sedentary vacationers. A "moderate" rating might require you to walk, hike, or paddle for two to three hours daily, or bike at least 20 miles. On a difficult trip, you must be a hardy soul who can hike or bike for hours over steep or rugged terrain at elevations that sometimes exceed 10,000 feet. Typically, tour operators customize activities to suit the group-making some optional or providing two routes to a destination, say. And they bring up the rear with transport in case anybody needs a time-out. Some offer luxurious accommodations and gourmet meals; others put up tents at rugged campsites.

Click on the links below for a sampling of our favorite "workout vacations" from around the country:

Rafting the Green RiverBackpacking in the Grand CanyonBiking the California CoastBiking the Sonoma ValleyBiking the Maine CoastCross Country Bike TripGlacier National Park Multisport VacationHiking in New MexicoA Pack Trip on HorsebackKayaking in South Carolina Yellowstone/Grand Teton Multisport Vacation

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