Archive for the ‘Family’ Category

Zephyr’s Newest Focus – Yellowstone!

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

From my conversations with our travelers, I would guess those of you reading this have either never been to Yellowstone National Park or visited years ago as a kid. Although Yellowstone hosts more than three million visitors per year, in my trip there two weeks ago I noticed a good percentage of visitors are from outside the US. For some reason, Asians and Europeans seem set on viewing Yellowstone while Americans must have other priorities.

We’d like to change that – at least for our Zephyr participants.

We have been running a Family Adventure in Yellowstone for four years now and it has been wildly successful in terms of trip ratings and repeat customers. I was just there with 15 participants and my co-guide Kris and we all had a blast horseback riding, river rafting, going on short hikes, and viewing the wildlife in and around Yellowstone.

In fact, these Yellowstone trips have been so successful we have decided to expand and create a new division, Yellowstone Adventures, for 2009. This will include three separate trips:

  • Our tried and true Active Yellowstone Adventure, designated for families but in 2009 open to everyone. This trip runs August 2-6.
  • A Yellowstone Winter Adventure from January 10-14 that will include cross country skiing and snowshoeing plus a two-night stay at Old Faithful, accessible only by snow coach in the winter.
  • A Yellowstone Trek in the amazing Bechler region of the park, with horseback support so we only carry our day packs. This trip will run September 5-9 next year but is also scheduled this year September 28 through October 2 and we still have space available.

While our website won’t be updated for a few days, for a sneak preview of these three tours see www.zephyradventures.com/types-yellowstone.htm.

What makes Yellowstone so fantastic? I find it funny that Kris in our office has loved Yellowstone since her college days when she worked there one summer and Reno, also in our office, is one of the biggest fans of the Park I know. I, on the other hand, went there as a kid but it was only recently I started becoming such a fan.

One of the great things about Yellowstone is that it is BIG and every time I go I seem to find a new waterfall, a new geyser, or a new hiking trail. I also love the varied seasons in the park. 66% of visitors come during the three summer months leaving only 34% during the remaining nine months. Yet the spring, winter, and fall offer more amazing colors and animal viewing experiences than the summer months.

I think my favorite thing about Yellowstone, though, is that it just makes me feel connected to nature. Even in the high-tourism season of August, half our group this past trip got up at 6:00 AM to do a quick drive through the Hayden Valley, searching for animals. At that time of the day mists rose from the Yellowstone River, the bison were snorting and chasing each other, and it felt like we had Yellowstone to ourselves. I can’t wait for the next trip.

Colorado Family Multisport

Monday, August 13th, 2007


I just returned from our Family Multisport Adventure in Colorado – the third Family Adventure in the past three years I had the pleasure of guiding.

For an introduction to our Family Adventures and how they operate, please scroll down to the post of last August about our Lake Tahoe trip. That posting will give you a good idea of our philosophy of providing activity levels for everyone, separating the kids and adults enough to let the kids bond and give the adults some relaxation, and keeping everyone together at other times as one big fun group.

Colorado is the perfect place for a family vacation. Once we left Denver and the airport, we had wide-open spaces, 14,000-foot mountains, and rushing rivers in our backyard. During this six-day tour we rode horses, rafted on a whitewater river, biked, skated, and hiked. We also watched a rodeo, visited a ghost town, and played with puppies at a local dog sledding operation. We had a ton to do during the day and good food to eat at night.

We had a very large group of 28 participants plus three guides. Even when we split in two groups, it was amazing to see all these people on horseback, riding through aspen groves on a real Colorado ranch. The river rafting, where we had a private group of five rafts floating down the river, was probably the highlight for many in the group. However, I know the younger kids loved being licked to death by the puppies at the dog sled kennels.

For me personally, the highlight of the trip was our “split” dinner in which we divided into the “fogies” and the “fun group”. My co-guide Reno took the adults to a nice dinner while our other co-guide Sonya and I took the kids out for pizza. We had reserved an entire dance club and game room (not normally open that evening) for our evening kids meal. After wolfing down five pizzas, the group immediately spread out to play games: pool, air hockey, and darts. Funny enough, the hit game of the evening was shuffle board – at least until Caleb, Erica, and Mari took over as DJs to light up the dance floor.

The great thing about this evening was that we had kids from six different families who were winging darts, hitting pool balls, and throwing whatever it is you throw in shuffleboard as if they were fast friends with decades of past experiences together. These were kids from all areas of the country with different backgrounds and different ages. Yet, they bonded as one fun group.

I don’t have kids myself but I do have a niece (Erica) and nephew (Brian), who were on this trip with my brother Dave and sister-in-law Sharon. I was also a kid myself once and remember squabbling with my two brothers in the back of our station wagon, asking repeatedly when we would arrive to our destination. I have the feeling that normal “family vacations” are at least as stressful as they are fun and rewarding.

This tour was not that way at all, neither for the parents nor the guides. We try hard to make these trips fun for the parents as well as the kids. We keep the group together at times, because we know parents love watching their kids have fun while experiencing new activities. At other times, we split them apart so parents can relax, have a glass of wine, and engage in some adult conversation – all while knowing their kids are well looked after by our guides.

As guides, frankly, these tours are not that difficult. The kids simply know how to have fun and that makes our job easy.

Come join us next year on a Family Adventure in either Yellowstone National Park or Glacier National Park, two jewels of the US park system and great places for family fun.

Lake Tahoe Family Multisport

Sunday, August 13th, 2006

Because I just ran two trips back-to-back, this posting is right on the heels of the previous one about our Colorado Adventure. While both trips were multisport adventures, the one in Lake Tahoe, as a Family tour, was wildly different.

We only started running Family Adventures last year, with an initial Yellowstone trip done as a test. It was incredibly successful and we had all 14 participants from that trip sign up for the Lake Tahoe Family Adventure this year. In addition, my niece and nephew, Erica and Brian, brought with them their parents (my brother Dave and sister-in-law Sharon) and their grandparents (my parents Spencer and Beverly). So, this was indeed a family trip for me!

Our family adventures are designed with both the parents and kids in mind. The key concept is to structure the tour so some activities are enjoyed by everyone as a group while other activities are done separately. For example, on one day our entire group went rafting on the Truckee River, coming home with wet clothes and exciting stories of the “Jaws” rapid. The next day we split the group for a hiking day. Most of the parents and older kids did a long hiking route of six miles that went uphill to the top of Squaw Valley. The short route, attended by all the younger kids and some of the parents, took a gondola ride to the top where the group did a shorter hike. So, everyone enjoyed the rafting together but those parents who wanted a workout could do the tougher hike without worrying about their kids.

After three days, because of the activities I was leading, I found that I had spent most of my time with the adults and older kids. I hadn’t yet bonded (on this trip at least) with the younger kids. One of my best experiences of the tour was to quickly change that! Getting done early from a biking day, I drove the kids back to the hotel and the outdoor pool. I jumped in with Erica, Brian, Wendy, Adam, Noah, and Rebecca and was the immediate center of the kids’ attention. For the next two hours, I got a workout by throwing balls, playing Marco Polo, and carrying kids around on my back.

It was great fun and I think indicative of the family tours. The kids just want to have fun and that is what happens on the family tours. While the parents might love that they are not responsible for making decisions, don’t have to drive a car, and can leave their kids in our hands for much of the tour, the kids simply want to have fun. And whether it is singing in the car, playing games in the park, or taking part in our scheduled activities, they definitely know how to do it!

Next year we will have two Family Adventures: Yellowstone and Colorado. I am sure glad we added the family trips!