Showing posts with label GetOutside. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GetOutside. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Utah’s Longest River Is An Iconic Outdoor Playground Through Scenic Red-Rock Canyons With Rafting And Fishing

Lightphoto/Getty Images

While Utah has 81,899 miles of rivers and streams, perhaps the most famous of the state’s waterways is the Colorado River. At 1,450 miles, the Colorado River is not just the longest river in Utah, but it’s also the sixth-longest river in the United States. Though today the famous river is known by rafters and kayakers as an iconic outdoor playground, it played an important part in the history of the Western United States and remains a vital source of water for farmers and residents in more than a half dozen western states……Continue reading

By Reannon Muth

Source: Islands

.

Critics: 

While the term national park is now defined by the IUCN, many protected areas in many countries are called national park even when they correspond to other categories of the IUCN Protected Area Management Definition, for example:

  • Swiss National Park, Switzerland: IUCN Ia – Strict Nature Reserve
  • Everglades National Park, United States: IUCN Ib – Wilderness Area
  • Koli National Park, Finland: IUCN II – Surface Area
  • Victoria Falls National Park, Zimbabwe: IUCN III – National Monument
  • Vitosha National Park, Bulgaria: IUCN IV – Habitat Management Area
  • New Forest National Park, United Kingdom: IUCN V – Protected Landscape
  • Etniko Ygrotopiko Parko Delta Evrou, Greece: IUCN VI – Managed Resource Protected Area

While national parks are generally understood to be administered by national governments (hence the name), in Australia, with the exception of six national parks, national parks are run by state governments and predate the Federation of Australia; similarly, national parks in the Netherlands are administered by the provinces.

In Canada, there are both national parks operated by the federal government and provincial or territorial parks operated by the provincial and territorial governments, although nearly all are still national parks by the IUCN definition. In many countries, including Indonesia, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, national parks do not adhere to the IUCN definition, while some areas which adhere to the IUCN definition are not designated as national parks.

Tourism to national parks has increased considerably over time. In Costa Rica for example, a megadiverse country, tourism to parks has increased by 400% from 1985 to 1999. The term national park is perceived as a brand name that is associated with nature-based tourism and it symbolizes a “high quality natural environment with a well-designed tourist infrastructure”. The duties of a park ranger are to supervise, manage, and/or perform work in the conservation and use of park resources.

This involves functions such as park conservation; natural, historical, and cultural resource management; and the development and operation of interpretive and recreational programs for the benefit of the visiting public. Park rangers also have fire fighting responsibilities and execute search and rescue missions. Activities also include heritage interpretation to disseminate information to visitors of general, historical, or scientific information.

Management of resources such as wildlife, lake shores, seashores, forests, historic buildings, battlefields, archaeological properties, and recreation areas are also part of the job of a park ranger. Since the establishment of the National Park Service in the US in 1916, the role of the park ranger has shifted from merely being a custodian of natural resources to include several activities that are associated with law enforcement.

They control traffic, manage permits for various uses, and investigate violations, complaints, trespass/encroachment, and accidents. National parks in former European colonies have come under criticism for allegedly perpetuating colonialism. National parks were created by individuals who felt that pristine, natural sections of nature should be set aside and preserved from urban development.

In America, this movement came about during the American frontier and were meant to be monuments to America’s true history. Yet, in some instances, the lands that were to be set aside and protected in formerly colonized lands were already being inhabited by native communities, who were then removed off of these lands to create pristine sites for public consumption.

Critics claim that the removal of people from national parks enhances the belief that nature can only be protected when humans do not exist within it, and that this leads to perpetuating the dichotomy between nature and humans (also known as the nature–culture divide). They see the creation of national parks as a form of eco-land grabbing.

Others claim that traveling to national parks to appreciate nature there leads people to ignore the nature that exists around them every day. Still others argue that tourism can actually negatively impact the areas that are being visited.

In the last 4 hours

National Park Service Seeks Proposals For Operation Of Lake Mead Tour Boat

.

OutdoorAdventure ,AdventureAwaits ,ExploreMore ,NatureLovers ,GetOutside ,WildernessCulture ,AdventureSeekers ,TravelNature ,HikingAdventures ,OutdoorExploration ,NaturePhotography ,ScenicViews ,WildPlaces ,TrailBlazers ,CampLife ,NatureEscape ,OutdoorFun ,AdventurousSpirit ,ExploreTheWild

Thursday, October 23, 2025

The Turkish Hiking Trail Named Most Beautiful In The World By Time Out

Shutterstock

Looking for a digital detox? We all need to get into nature every so often, and sometimes touching grass isn’t enough. Sometimes you need to head up a mountain with no signal and just embrace the slow life for a while. If you are in the mood for a trek into nature, you may as well do it properly. Luckily, Time Out has just curated a list of the world’s most gorgeous hikes for you to choose from. These are the sorts of views you usually only see as a computer screensaver, or while scrolling through your super-cool friend’s social media accounts ……..Continue reading….

By: Annie McNamee

Source:  Time Out

.

Critics:

Regular, brisk exercise can improve confidence, stamina, energy, weight control and may reduce stress. Scientific studies have also shown that walking may be beneficial for the mind, improving memory skills, learning ability, concentration, mood, creativity, and abstract reasoning.

Sustained walking sessions for a minimum period of thirty to sixty minutes a day, five days a week, with the correct walking posture may improve health. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention‘s fact sheet on the “Relationship of Walking to Mortality Among U.S. Adults with Diabetes” states that those with diabetes who walked for two or more hours a week lowered their mortality rate from all causes by 39 percent.

Women who took 4,500 steps to 7,500 steps a day seemed to have fewer premature deaths compared to those who only took 2,700 steps a day. “Walking lengthened the life of people with diabetes regardless of age, sex, race, body mass index, length of time since diagnosis and presence of complications or functional limitations.”

One limited study found preliminary evidence of a relationship between the speed of walking and health, and that the best results are obtained with a speed of more than 2.5 mph (4.0 km/h). A 2023 study by the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, the largest study to date, found that walking at least 2,337 steps a day reduced the risk of dying from cardiovascular diseases, and that 3,967 steps a day reduced the risk of dying from any cause.

Benefits continued to increase with more steps. James Leiper, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, said that if the benefits of walking could be sold as a medicine “we would be hailing it as a wonder drug”. It is theorized that “walking” among tetrapods originated underwater with air-breathing fish that could “walk” underwater, giving rise (potentially with vertebrates like Tiktaalik)to the plethora of land-dwelling life that walk on four or two limbs.

While terrestrial tetrapods are theorised to have a single origin, arthropods and their relatives are thought to have independently evolved walking several times, specifically in insects, myriapods, chelicerates, tardigrades, onychophorans, and crustaceans. Little skates, members of the demersal fish community, can propel themselves by pushing off the ocean floor with their pelvic fins, using neural mechanisms which evolved as early as 420 million years ago, before vertebrates set foot on land.

Walking is also considered to be a clear example of a sustainable mode of transport, especially suited for urban use and/or relatively shorter distances. Non-motorized transport modes such as walking, but also cycling, small-wheeled transport (skates, skateboards, push scooters and hand carts) or wheelchair travel are often key elements of successfully encouraging clean urban transport.

A large variety of case studies and good practices (from European cities and some worldwide examples) that promote and stimulate walking as a means of transportation in cities can be found at Eltis, Europe’s portal for local transport. The development of specific rights of way with appropriate infrastructure can promote increased participation and enjoyment of walking. Examples of types of investment include pedestrian malls, and foreshoreways such as oceanways and also river walks.

The first purpose-built pedestrian street in Europe is the Lijnbaan in Rotterdam, opened in 1953. The first pedestrianised shopping centre in the United Kingdom was in Stevenage in 1959. A large number of European towns and cities have made part of their centres car-free since the early 1960s. These are often accompanied by car parks on the edge of the pedestrianised zone, and, in the larger cases, park and ride schemes.

Central Copenhagen is one of the largest and oldest: It was converted from car traffic into pedestrian zone in 1962. Many people enjoy walking as a recreation in the mainly urban modern world, and it is one of the best forms of exercise. For some, walking is a way to enjoy nature and the outdoors; and for others the physical, sporting and endurance aspect is more important.

There are a variety of different kinds of walking, including bushwalking, racewalking, beach walking, hillwalking, volksmarching, Nordic walking, trekking, dog walking and hiking. Some people prefer to walk indoors on a treadmill, or in a gym, and fitness walkers and others may use a pedometer to count their steps.

Hiking is the usual word used in Canada, the United States and South Africa for long vigorous walks; similar walks are called tramps in New Zealand, or hill walking or just walking in Australia, the UK and the Irish Republic. In the UK, rambling is also used. Australians also bushwalk. In English-speaking parts of North America, the term walking is used for short walks, especially in towns and cities.

Snow shoeing is walking in snow; a slightly different gait is required compared with regular walking.

In the last 2 hours
In the last 4 hours
In the last 6 hours
Earlier Today

 

 

 

 

Leave a Reply

From Brain Fog To Mood Swings: Do Supplements Help Women? 

Inside Creative House/iStockPhoto / Getty Images If you’re a woman in your 40s to early 60s, you may be looking for “natural” ways to ease b...