In an adventure race, you go on like this for days. Your mind shifts, your focus narrows. Things get basic and primal. Its you and the land and the task ahead. Eat. Drink. Bike. Trek. Paddle. Navigate. And repeat.Gear keeps you alive. A headlamp illuminates a cliff edge in the night. Wool base layers are your second skin, wearable for days, warm even when wet. Your shell jacket--a thin sheen, waterproof and breathable--saves you when it sleets Chopard replica watches and snows.Gear makes you fast. In an adventure race, you count every ounce. You balance survival with speed. For example, a two-pound tent that flaps in the wind, a tiny sleeping bag barely warm enough for the night, and running shoes--not boots--to keep you moving for hours and days on end. Trekking poles save your knees. Tiny pills purify water.
You haul your food between distant resupply drops, all calories counted, your bars, granola, gels, chocolate, cookies, and nuts packaged and divvied for days.You follow a topo map, your sole guide. GPS is not allowed. You trust a compass needle to direct your course through harsh, deep wilderness. In Patagonia, pushing far south in the Darwin Concord replica watches Mountain Range, we went for days without a sign of other humans.But the maps directed us ever southward, toward the tip of the continent. We raced on, straining to catch a team up ahead. The end of the Earth was beyond, and the finish line somewhere, too.--Stephen Regenold writes about outdoors gear at , where you can find additional reports and photos from the 2010 Wenger Patagonian Expedition Race.Photographs by T.C. Worley
In2007, NASA’s chief climatologist, Jim Hansen, released a study marking 350parts per million of carbon in the atmosphere as the safe level forhumanity. IWC replica watches Anything higher thanthat and we risk reaching environmental tipping points that could make ourplanet much less hospitablethe level is currently 390ppm. Writer and activist Bill McKibben launched 350.org inresponse.