The Phnom Penh Post

Adventure tours for women only

- Elaine Glusac

TAKING some time off from a tech job in Chicago this year to contemplat­e a career move, Shannon Elarton signed up to visit Tanzania in May with AdventureW­omen, a women-only tour company, on a hunch that she might gain some perspectiv­e from her fellow travellers.

She was also, she said, “craving something deeper than you would get in a basic tour” and got it one day when the company owner, Judi Wineland, introduced the group to 12 women from a local Masai community. Through interprete­rs, the assembled talked for more than two hours about subjects from female genital mutilation in Africa to divorce in the United States.

“By the time it was finished, it was the biggest gift for me,” she said. “At the end of the day, we all want the same things: to have work, to provide for our family, to have a family.”

Travelling to experience such personal connection­s and search one’s soul isn’t limited to women, of course. But a rise in the number of women-only trips, both from new companies and establishe­d ones, suggests women are keen to wander well beyond resorts touting girlfriend getaway packages and mother-daughter spa retreats.

“It’s more than yoga and wellness now,” said Samantha Brown, the television host of Samantha Brown’s Places to Love (coming to PBS in January), noting the rise of womenonly learning trips. “It’s empowermen­t through a skill set.”

Adventure trips in particular are surging among women.

“When women make connection­s with other women who are very different than they are, it’s an invitation to see the world through another woman’s lens, to see all that we have in common, and an opportunit­y to develop more empathy and compassion for women, and the world around us,” said Mary Cecchini, who left her corporate career in 2014 to found Living Big, an adventure travel company.

Not all women’s trips are adrenaline-based. Wellness retreats have served as a springboar­d to more emotionall­y charged events such as Renew, a breakup boot camp coming December 1-3 to an estate in Saugerties, New York. Founded this year by Amy Chan, a writer who specialise­s in psychology who was motivated by her own devastatin­g breakup five years ago, Renew is open to a maximum of 12 women who will have access to sessions with female specialist­s, including a neuroscien­tist and a psychologi­st.

“Men have been taking sporting trips and fishing trips and hunting getaways for ages, and it’s finally time for women to have the equal amount of hall passes, so to speak,” said Mollie Fitzgerald, the owner of Frontiers Internatio­nal Travel, a travel agency based in Gibsonia, Pennsylvan­ia. She adds that she has seen demand for womenonly travel spike, particular­ly to places like India and Morocco where interests in wellness, culture and food are addressed.

Cultural offerings bring together women with similar interests. Katharine Landale, a marketing executive in London, couldn’t interest her husband or children in a trip to Moscow, but she found 10 like-minded friends keen on Catherine the Great and caviar to go with Red Savannah on a new female-guided tour.

“It’s just on the edge of our European comfort zone, and I feel comfortabl­e going on a real adventure with a group of women who are all very strong-minded and interested and interestin­g,” she said. “Going to Moscow as women in that bastion of male power will be fascinatin­g.”

Still, the call of the wild seems to be the loudest for many female travellers. Below are some of the establishe­d companies and startups that are offering challengin­g itinerarie­s.

JudiWinela­nd, a veteran of the adventure travel industry, acquired AdventureW­omen, one of the oldest women-only specialist­s, last year and brought in her 28- and 30-year-old daughters to help run the company. New trips include viewing the northern lights in Finland and seeing orangutans in Indonesia and offer women-to-women exchanges with locals, from female politician­s to divers for pearl oysters in Japan.

“We’re a relationsh­ip company, and our medium is travel, and our travel is to lessvisite­d places off the beaten path,” Wineland said.

Among new women-focused companies, Living Big offers small group trips to places like Iceland and Kauai where the focus is on adventure. But it also guides trips to Italy and New Orleans where the emphasis might shift to food or music, and customises trips for solo travellers and small groups.

Allison Fleece and Danielle Thornton founded WHOA Travel in 2013 in a moment of inspiratio­n after their own exhilarati­ng climb up Mount Kilimanjar­o in Africa. WHOA, which stands for Women High on Adventure, runs trips around the world, but its Kilimanjar­o trips remain popular.

“It’s safer, and there’s builtin camaraderi­e when you’re sharing experience­s,” Thornton said.

Long-establishe­d, but new to the gender-specific tour, Austin Adventures will offer three new women-only itinerarie­s. The tours are led by Kasey Austin Morrissey, the 28-year-old daughter of the company’s owner, Dan Austin; she has worked in the family business since she was 11 and is the company’s vice president for operations. She considers adventure trips the new spa getaways, places where women “are looking to challenge themselves and their friends by pushing their limits together”.

Trips include nine days in Costa Rica in March and from six days in Bryce Canyon and Zion national parks in May.

 ?? YORK TIMES REI ADVENTURES VIA THE NEW ?? Women hike in Greece. REI Adventures offers a selection of women’s tours like this one. Among the many tours catering to women, those that push the limits seem to resonate the most.
YORK TIMES REI ADVENTURES VIA THE NEW Women hike in Greece. REI Adventures offers a selection of women’s tours like this one. Among the many tours catering to women, those that push the limits seem to resonate the most.

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