Microadventures Before and After Retirement

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Travel, adventure, seeing and being in new places, is the spice of life for many of us. But there is never enough time. In the working years we mostly have to make do with a few weeks of vacation annually. By the time family obligations and house chores are done, there can be precious little time left for exploring the world each year. Even in retirement, to-do lists and routine activities can make it hard to get away for longer trips.

Muir Trail RanchThe solution? Small adventures, near home, that embody the same excitement as larger undertakings. Despite a few grand adventures — including climbing El Capitan and traveling by truck across Africa — the vast majority of my own adventures over the years have been modest enterprises. Even in retirement, I take a half-dozen overnight or 3-day trips for every month-long road trip I embark upon.

I recently learned a new word for this style of adventuring:

“Microadventures” is the title of a unique and beguiling book by adventurer Alastair Humphreys. The fascinating thing about Humphreys is that, though he is a professional explorer, he’d be the first to tell you that he’s not the strongest or fastest or most accomplished walker, cyclist, or climber of the lot. But he may just be the most creative. Humphreys is a master at concocting short, usually 1-2 day, adventures not far from home. And his book is filled with fascinating stories and beautiful photography from his escapades.

Though some of his projects could be a bit rugged for the average retiree (getting wet, eating out of cans, sleeping under the stars, are common themes), I think his mindset is perfect for us. Because it’s the ability to devise fun projects of exploration, customized to our own interests and limits, that keeps life before and after retirement interesting….

In this post I’ll recount some of my own microadventures, in addition to Humphreys’, and provide tools and inspiration for designing your own. Mixed in will be photos from some of my recent adventures just this summer….

Elements of a Microadventure

Having an “adventure” usually means trying something new, getting out of your comfort zone, pushing your limits. It means choosing a goal where the outcome isn’t entirely certain. It’s not necessarily about crossing oceans, navigating deserts, or summiting high peaks. Though it could be. For some, adventure might be taking the bus across town to a new museum. The point is to tailor an experience to your own strengths, skills, and passions — and to push yourself a little bit.

Almost all adventures, micro or otherwise, involve some travel to a different location. Any change of scenery almost immediately refreshes and challenges us. Exploring new places is exciting and stimulating. Dealing with differences forces us to adapt and learn new things. But this doesn’t necessarily mean jetting off to Bali. Are there unexplored neighborhoods, parks, or attractions near your home? Some of my best microadventures have been no more than an hour away.

hiking past Pecos Baldy LakeTraveling for an adventure implies some means of transportation. Americans are accustomed to moving about in our plush personal vehicles. But some of the best adventures happen when we leave those mobile living rooms behind, or supplement them with other modes of transportation. Mix it up! I’ve had many great one and two-day outings that combined hiking and/or biking with public transportation — trains, buses, and boats.

For almost any good adventure, it is essential to travel light. This lets you take off at short notice, adapt your plans along the way, and savor the experience without getting bogged down by possessions. Depending on the length of your trip, practice making do with a single small pack and/or piece of luggage. This is where it is useful — though not required — to have a camping mindset. Camping teaches you to make do with less. It gives you the skill set, and gear, to be self-sufficient and comfortable in just about any environment. That said, you can still concoct great microadventures without any interest in “roughing it.”

The essence of many microadventures is spending the night in a new place, perhaps someplace a little less comfortable than your own bedroom. Humpreys turns this into an art form, spending many nights in sleeping bag and bivouac sack in fields on the outskirts of cities in his native British Isles. To be honest, I’ve done little of that style of microadventure, and none of it in recent years. The geography and laws here in the U.S. make “stealth” camping less appealing, though it is still feasible and legal to camp spontaneously in most of our National Forests.

That said, I am a fan of lightweight car camping. My trusty Subaru Forester is prepacked with essential camping gear and set up for comfortable sleeping — diagonally in back with the seat down. That saves me setting up a tent on short trips. I’ve been known to leave town late in the afternoon, cook a satisfying dinner over a campfire, stay up late watching the stars, sleep in the car, and be back in town by mid-morning the next day. This makes for a great adventure, with minimal impact on my other obligations!

Microadventure: Go From Home

The simplest of all microadventures is to step out the door of your home and go somewhere you can easily reach by foot, bike, or public transportation, returning home the same way.

mountain bike Bear CreekHumphreys loves to hike and camp from home. He relates with relish the joy of sleeping on a hilltop overlooking a nearby village. This might not be practical for urban dwellers in the U.S., unless you’re near a National Forest or Park. But how about walking or biking to a new trail, campground, or bed & breakfast on the outskirts of your town?

One of my most memorable adventures was an all-day bike ride. I got dropped off at our local ski area in the morning and rode my mountain bike down miles of rocky, forested trail alongside a mountain stream. I then pushed over a steep ridge, reconnected with the paved road, and cycled back to our front door, just in time for dinner.

Microadventure: Mixed Transportation

The next step up in microadventuring fun is to mix in several modes of transportation. This leverages the distance you can travel, and gives you many more options. Humphreys loves to take advantage of his country’s extensive train system to ride out to a rural location, and hike or bike from there.

But, even in the U.S., with its focus on auto travel, there are many opportunities to leverage other modes of transportation:

Just a month ago on our California trip, we headed out one day from remote Mono Hot Springs, driving rutted single lane road to a small outpost on Florence Lake. From there we caught a small ferry across the lake and then hiked in five miles to Muir Trail Ranch deep in the heart of the Sierra. We returned the same way in the evening, ferrying across the lake before sunset. It was an exciting and spectacular day in the mountains, and on the water.

Florence Lake FerryI love to combine biking and hiking for interesting adventures that maximize both modes of travel. Sometimes I’ll bike from home to a trailhead, lock the bike and take a hike. Sometimes I’ll get dropped off somewhere with my bike, do a hike, then ride home.

One of my favorite tricks involves auto, bike, and foot travel: I’ll drive to a high point and lock my bike there. Then I’ll drive back to a connecting trailhead and park the car. I’ll then hike up to the high point, unlock my bike, and ride it back to the car. This is a great formula for a long hill climb that you’d rather hike. Do the uphill on foot, and coast back on your bike!

As the national parks have introduced public shuttles on regular schedules to combat congestion, they’ve also made it easier to craft interesting microadventures that involve hiking or biking across wild terrain connected by shuttle stops. Acadia National Park and Devils Postpile National Monument are two places I’ve done this in person.

You can even find ways to mix up the transportation for routine chores around town. Last winter I had to pick up our small RV after maintenance in the neighboring city. I got up early and caught the train down, strapping my bike into the luggage compartment with the other commuters. At the train stop in the big city, I hopped on my bike and rode ten miles to the RV dealer. There I paid for the service, strapped my bike on back of our rig, and drove it all back home!

Microadventure: Car Camping

Car camping is one of the easiest adventures. All you need is a free evening and a nearby campground. Most people can throw together enough equipment and expertise to make it through a night in the woods with their vehicle nearby. The point isn’t to be perfectly comfortable, it’s to have an adventure! Humphreys savors cooking dinner over a fire with friends. I can vouch there is no evening that isn’t made better by a crackling campfire. And car camping is the perfect opportunity to build one.

There are several parks and campgrounds less than an hour from our home where I’ve camped for a night on short notice. I like to go mid-week and off season when there is always space. I’ll check my camping gear in the car mid-afternoon, hit the grocery store, drive and set up camp in the woods or desert, build a fire for warmth or cooking, then stay up late watching the embers and the stars. Once when I didn’t have time to camp, I just went for a sunset hike and cooked a picnic dinner, then drove home after dark.

Car camping also makes for a great microadventure in the context of longer trips. Last spring, at the start of a four-day trip to conduct some business in a nearby town, I car camped for a night at spectacular Great Sand Dunes National Park. I arrived late afternoon, set up camp, went for a hike until sunset, cooked dinner, slept in the car, and left early the next morning. Keeping a minimal set of camping gear in my car semi-permanently makes preparing for such trips much easier. I just add food and clothing, and I’m ready to go!

Microadventure: Short Backpacks

Though backpacking won’t be for everyone in their later years, I’ve found it’s the ideal activity to challenge myself in the outdoors. Backpacking still demands self-sufficiency, route-finding, and problem-solving, but is more appealing now than the strenuous rock climbing adventures of my earlier years.

I hiked long sections of the Appalachian Trail in high school and college and still dream of doing a long “through hike” on one of the major trails. But, for reasons of health and logistics, that just hasn’t happened yet, and may never. Meanwhile, my standard backpacking itinerary has been the two-night trip. That’s long enough to get the authentic experience of vagabonding outdoors, without the planning and commitment required of a long trek. To keep it interesting and avoid backtracking, I’ll do a loop or lollipop or shuttle a point-to-point hike if possible. I’ve done a dozen or more such trips in recent years in New Mexico, Colorado, and California. While they haven’t set any records for endurance, each has been memorable in its own way.

Even short, one-night backpacks have their merits: This June I arrived at Great Basin National Park late one afternoon after driving all day, and found that the car campgrounds were full. Bummer. The mountains were calling and I wanted to stay and explore this stunningly beautiful and relatively unknown park.

Checking with the rangers I learned that, though the campgrounds were full, there were relatively few restrictions on backpacking: I only needed to hike in off the road a ways. So I grabbed my backpack out of the car with just the essentials for one night.

tent at Pecos Baldy LakeIt was only an hour or two to sunset when I hit the trail. After a couple of miles, I found a beautiful campsite near an alpine lake and spent a memorable night out, spotting Cygnus and the Northern Cross in the ink-black sky for the first time in years. The next morning I hiked past another alpine lake, toured a rare grove of ancient Bristlecone pines, and was back at the car and on my way for the next leg of my trip by 10 am.

And don’t think that backpacking can only be done in remote, wild places. Humphreys hiked the beltway around his city for several days, in winter!

Microadventure: Thematic Journeys

If roughing it or being outdoors is not your thing, or not your main thing, consider a short road trip built around a theme. Humphreys suggests recreating a historical journey. A couple of years ago I did a several-day road trip through extreme southern Arizona, tracing the path of the Apache Wars. I visited Chiricahua National Monument and the site of Geronimo’s surrender, among other memorable spots. The Apache theme made the trip more meaningful and memorable to me, especially having just read several books on the subject.

Also that year I did a two-day drive through the mountains of western North Carolina visiting many of my favorite hiking, biking, and climbing spots from the past, with a special focus on the numerous waterfalls in the area. It was a poignant adventure down memory lane, lasting barely 36 hours. Spending the night in an old-school but beautifully-maintained motel in Cashiers, NC made it all the more memorable.

Humphreys also likes traveling from a high point to the sea or vice-versa. In many coastal cities it’s easy enough to do that in a single day. When I’m new to an area I love to the go to the highest point and scout out the terrain. Why not connect those expansive views with one of the spots you can see down below — a beach, a park, an attraction — to create the perfect microadventure!

Retired or Not, Craft Your Own Microadventures

Though I didn’t have a word for it at the time, the “microadventure” concept evolved naturally for me out of my working years. There were long stretches, especially in the final years of my career, when the job was just a job and I looked elsewhere for passion. Finding time to travel was essential to keeping my sanity on the long trek to financial independence.

Minaret Creek campfireIn the years leading up to my retirement, I had negotiated a generous vacation package. But, usually, instead of taking those weeks all at once, I parceled out my time off into 3-day weekends. One summer I was able to take Fridays off straight through from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Those small blocks of free time were my salvation, allowing me to get away for a long day of hiking or biking, or a night of camping, while still spending time with family, taking care of house projects, and developing the personal interests that eventually turned into this blog.

Microadventures, whatever form they take in your life, can be essential to preserving your mental health while still working. They provide a taste of freedom and let you try new activities and push your comfort zone while still meeting family obligations and holding onto the security of a career.

Once in retirement, microadventures are every bit as fun and rewarding as before. I love that I can unplug from my routine life for a day or two whenever I want now to enjoy a night out somewhere new under the stars, getting a fresh perspective on the big questions in life.

So next weekend — or maybe even on a weekday — throw some gear in your car, or pack a bag and buy a train ticket, or hop on your bike — and give it a try!

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