In our early years travelling was primarily what it took to get from one adventure to the next with the odd day or few to see a nearby historical site. Some of the coolest things we would see came just driving down a road between point A and B, out the window of an airplane, walking from basecamp to get water or while making a side trip into town for supplies. Tried to use rest days,  bad weather, acclimatizing to altitude, etc to see interesting sites nearby our main objective. As time went by we found that "tourist" travel became as much of an adventure as the adventure activity we were pursuing.

      Learned quickly if locals recommend taking time to see something to listen and knew we had made it when the owner of a hotel in Switzerland gave us T-shirts that said "Dont Tourist Me". He and his wife asked if we really were Americans because we stopped in their little nowhere town between several major tourist areas and spent over a week skiing, ice climbing and seeing out of the way locals only places. They said the defininition of an American in Europe was someone trying to see five countries in three days, not just randomly stopping in an out of the way place and still being there a week later.

SWITZERLAND

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FRANCE

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PERU

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USA TRAVEL SECTION

MUCH MORE USA TRAVEL

  As years passed we began to add more and more non-adventure activities to every trip. From just finding the one food specialty a region prided itself on, meeting people in a crowd and going home with them for several days, leaving a famous city like Cannes for a small villiage on the French Rivera, celebrating Bastille Day in France, Inti Rami in Peru, Christmas at Temple Square in Salt Lake City (Till you have heard the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in person I cannot describe it), Christmas Eve service at a centuries old church in Zermat where service was in High German dialect and more. The majority of the coolest things we have seen were unplanned objectives and places had never heard of. Never go half way around the world without at least a month to wander and always be willing to abandon your planned itenerary for random wandering or you may miss the best.

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