Posts Tagged ‘Adventure’

HeartChase offers adventure in Ebensburg

Friday, April 27th, 2012

HeartChase is a new event that allows all participants the chance to have an adventure, without having to leave their town, and raise money to support the life-saving work of the American Heart Association.

The adventure takes several teams throughout their town where they are going to have to solve clues and try to gain the most points possible by completing checkpoints and finding hidden hang tags through town and be named HeartChase champions.

There is more than one way to take part in this adventure.

Community members can participate in the actual race or just contribute to worthy cause of the American Heart Association.

The committee is seeking members of the community to remember or honor a loved one by sponsoring a Game On! tag that will be hung along our game route for only $25 per tag.

Sponsoring a tag is a great way to recognize someone who has suffered or is suffering from heart disease, said Pastor Lynn Miller, HeartChase committee chair.

We want to raise awareness for heart health but also remember those people who have touched our lives.

There are 100 tags available, and tag sponsorship forms can be picked up at the Ebensburg Borough office or found on our website: www.ebensburgpa.com.

HeartChase Early bird registration is $30 per player until April 15 and includes a goodie bag.

Teams and players can register after this date until the morning of the event for $35 per player.

Registration can be completed online at www.heartchase.org by clicking lsquo;Join a Team. All participants will receive a HeartChase T-shirt for participating in this event.

An informational meeting for participants is scheduled for 6 pm April 12 in the Ebensburg Borough building.

Staff and committee will assist participants in registering and will also answer questions. For more information on joining a team, visit the HeartChase community website at www.heartchase.org.

HeartChase Ebensburg is presented by Healthsouth Altoona.

Kochi adventure awakens the hero within

Thursday, April 26th, 2012

Kochi adventure awakens the hero within

Shingo Masuda / Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

KAMI, Kochi–Ah…Anpanman! In contrast to his usual, friendly look in kids anime and picture books, the statue of the beloved national hero standing in this mountainous region in Shikoku looks rather serious. He raises his round fist toward the sky. Whats on his mind?

The statue of Anpanman stands in front of the Yanase Takashi Memorial Hall Anpanman Museum in Kami. The characters creator, Takashi Yanase, hails from the city and donated the three-meter-tall statue in July to commemorate the 15th anniversary of the museum.

Last year was a grueling year as we faced the earthquake, said curator Miyuki Semba. To protect everybodys dream [to quote Anpanmans popular theme song] in Japan today, he cant look sweet. [The serious face] came from the designers wish to convey that idea.

Walking around the museum filled with popular characters from the anime, I remembered when I first met Anpanman as a child at the primary school library more than 30 years ago.

I vividly recall how the hero tore off a piece of his own head–which happens to be a large bun filled with sweet red bean paste–and fed it to a hungry and crying child.

What an unbelievable hero! It seemed impossible to sacrifice oneself like that to save someone. But Anpanman taught me that generosity means strength.

I decided to become a journalist with the ambition of helping people in trouble. But years later, I found myself at the age of 42 with my idealistic ambition having faded away.

Yanase had not been blessed with a big hit for a long time. He released Anpanman in 1969 at the age of 50, Semba said.

That comment was a relief and a source of encouragement. It also was a strong blow from Anpanman to wake up my flaccid mind.

The city of Kami has developed along the Monobegawa river, which was Yanases childhood playground. My room at a riverside inn with an onsen hot spring overlooked the city.

===

Into the depths of the Earth

Stepping into the Ryugado cave, designated as a special national treasure, is an adventure. The standard tour weaves through the cave along a path that narrows and bulges as it goes.

A reservation is necessary to sign up for an adventure course with a cave tour guide.

Put these on, please, said Mamoru Sakamoto as he handed me a helmet, coveralls, gloves and boots. With small headlamps on our helmets to light the way, we ventured into the darkness.

The four-kilometer-long cave has many things to see. It is a natural fantasy world formed by calciferous groundwater over 175 million years. Wavy layers of a mineral called phyllite looked like an aurora, while stalactites and stalagmites took the shapes of a rhinoceros, a dolphin and even–if you look from just the right angle–Kochi Prefecture hero Sakamoto Ryoma (1835-1867) in his iconic standing pose.

The adventure tour branches off from the illuminated main route to a more challenging route. With the help of my headlamp, I fumbled my way along.

There they are, said Sakamoto as he directed the beam of his headlamp to the rock wall. They were sleeping bats.

Expert guidance is definitely required to clamber through the narrow and convoluted maze of the cave.

Here, twist your shoulder a bit, put your hand on the ground, and then pull one foot up, the veteran cave guide explained.

But I misheard the order and almost wound up standing on my head.

Sakamoto took me to every corner of the cave, spending more than two hours underground before reaching the exit.

Outside, I got a certificate of clearing the cave. It reads, Be a man undaunted by adventures and young at heart.

Keeping the advice in mind, I ventured into the citys nightlife to seek whatever experiences might await me.

===

Travel Tip

It takes 1-1/2 hours from Haneda Airport to Kochi Ryoma Airport. From the Kochi airport, it is about a 15-minute drive to the Ryugado cave and a 40-minute drive to the Anpanman Museum.

For more information, call Kami city information at (0887) 52-9880 or visit the city governments tourism site www.city.kami.kochi.jp/kanko/

Taking The Plunge: A Scuba Adventure In Belize (PHOTOS)

Thursday, April 26th, 2012

As a newly certified scuba diver, I was looking for a getaway where I could try out my new skills — then kick back on a rope hammock and watch the boats go by. Mexico? Hawaii? My choices seemed endless, but then a diver friend told me about Belize.

My first thought? Way too far. Still, his enthusiasm spurred me to check the map and the flight schedules … and that was when I realized that Belize was only a four-hour flight from Newark or two short hours from Houston.

I was on a plane quicker than you could say Mask and fins.

The hardest thing about heading to Belize was deciding just where in this small country I wanted to dive (and where I wanted to relax on the two days before my flight when I couldnt swim with the fishes). But because the country was so small — only about 180 miles long — I worked with United Vacations to plan an eight-day adventure in several different spots.

I was itching to hit the water, so fresh off the plane, I caught an island hopper, a water taxi, and a golf cart to Ambergris Caye, recognized by many to be home to one of the worlds premiere coral reefs, plus a marine reserve full of turtles and rays. My hotel, Las Terrazas, shared a white sand beach with White Sands Dive Shop, an outfitter accustomed to showing new divers the ropes.

Seriously, for those heading to this part of Belize for the first time, you couldnt do better than the Las Terrazas/White Sands combo. The hotel is casual and comfortable, with condo style accommodations and an outdoor restaurant. (Dont miss the fryjacks, a sopapilla-like Belizean specialty, and the butter chicken is as good as the menu claims). For both the hotel and the dive shop, service comes first: The chef made homemade French fries just because I was craving something salty, and Elbert, the owner of White Sands, rearranged the staffing for my second dive because Id liked my first guide so much.

My very first dive. Just typing those words — its kind of wild! Lets just say I took the plunge. I rode out with White Sands to the Hol Chan Marine Reserve, a shallow five-square-mile underwater park where rays, barracudas, eels and dozens of varieties of fish glide by, oblivious to the tourists who come to share their space. Ive been into turtles ever since I saw Finding Nemo with my kids. Sitting on the ocean floor while a sea turtle grazed and snacked? It was one of those moments when you just wished the kids were there to see it. And while I liked the Shark and Ray Alley, where dozens of marine animals scoot around your knees, the Marine Reserve was something special: peaceful and still, gentle but for the moray eels opening and closing their jaws behind the coral.

After my first day of diving (and encountering sharks in their natural habitat), a drink sounded like just the thing — and Hidden Treasures, an airy restaurant in San Pedro, was just the place. My cantaloupe martini was frosty and sweet, perfect with fried plantains and Caribbean shrimp. And my bed back at Las Terrazas? Lets just say that while a rock slab would have offered a good nights sleep — thats how exhausted I was — the comfy bed and overhead fan hit the spot when I hit the hay.

Three days of diving and eating fryjacks at Las Terrazas, and it was time to move on. Two puddle jumpers — so small that they actually do U-turns on the runway — and an hour later, we were half-way across the country, in Placencia, a town on the countrys southern coast. Let me tell you: Francis Ford Coppolas Turtle Inn is the place to be for rest and relaxation, great food and peace and quiet — and luxury like Ive rarely seen in my travels around the world.

Yes, the staff left homemade chocolate chip cookies in the jar in my room, and no, I was not able to stop eating until they were ALL. GONE. Yes, the Inn offered bikes to ride out and about in Placencia, and, no, I doubt anyone could find a better massage, ceviche or Belize lime pie than at the Secret Garden, a tiny spot in town that lived up to its name. And yes, the Turtle Inn had countless hammocks on the beach, and, no, I wasnt able to stay awake after the massage and chocolate chip cookies, so I slept by the ocean under palm trees for a good portion of my stay. Oh, and then there was the diving. I was starting to understand why my diver friend had insisted I head to Belize.

I had only two days left, and I could not dive for the 24 hours or so before flying back to Philadelphia. Cave tubing and ziplining, though? No risk of the bends from those. On my way to the Cayo District, an inland portion of Belize known for its Mayan ruins and beautiful landscapes, I tried a whole new kind of adventure, at Cave Branches Outpost, an all-inclusive outdoor park where I flew over the jungle attached a steel cable and then floated through caves sitting on an inner tube. Best of all, educated guides described the rock formations, art and jungle life as we went along — an afternoon well spent.

Although I had been waiting all week to get to the Lodge at Chaa Creek, a luxury eco-ranch in the middle of the Belize jungle, I thought I had to stop at the Saturday morning market in San Ignacio, the biggest town in Cayo. Id heard that Id find native Belizeans and Mennonites (both of whom have settled in Cayo in large numbers) selling folk art, produce and street food. As a toy lover, I was excited to pick up some tiny embroidered animals made of colorful cloth; as a food lover, the custard apples (a kind of soupy fruit eaten with a spoon) and the hot grilled pupusas (dough with beans and cheese folded in) put me in gastronomic heaven. Even better, the market made for some of the best photo ops in Belize. The peppers were bright, the children were adorable and the spices! Ive never seen spices like that.

And then, finally, I was there … the Lodge at Chaa Creek. The Lodge — committed to sustainable tourism — spreads out through the jungle and boasts numerous individual cottages (most with Jacuzzis, all with native art and luxe bathrooms), plus a river camp where those on a budget can enjoy the propertys amenities. And amenities they are, from an outdoor pool to an early morning bird watching walk (where we saw toucans) to horseback riding tours through the jungle (where we saw Mayan ruins) to a butterfly farm (where we walked among Belizean blue butterflies) to nature hikes (where we learned about holistic medicine). Almost everything is included in the price. While spa treatments are extra, they are special, incorporating native ingredients and offered with Belizean hospitality. No wonder this is the spot where Prince Harry and Bill Gates have both spent time in the past few months.

When it was time to leave Belize, I was so sorry to go that I booked my next trip back, this time to Chaa Creeks River Camp for Maya 2012, the celebration of the end of the Mayan calendar in December. Ill be taking my younger daughter along. Time to sign her up for scuba class.

Youth Aviation Adventure: The sky’s the limit

Thursday, April 26th, 2012

Skynews 9 Pilot James Albertson, at the Youth Aviation Adventure in Shawnee Saturday, talks to youth about flying the Oklahoma City news stations helicopter to cover events such as storms and breaking news. ED BLOCHOWIAK

RIB Adventure Tours: $45 for a high-speed Boston Harbor boat tour (worth $120)

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012

Hit the harbor with RIB Adventure Tours

While tea parties in the deep end are definitely entertaining, the drinks are often watered down and sometimes you need more of an adrenaline rush when it comes to hydro-powered fun. Satisfy your need for speed with todays deal from RIB Adventure Tours, $45 for a 75-minute high-speed rigid inflatable boat tour (worth $120). Start the season off right by buying up to six vouchers for yourself and six as gifts to use before 6/27/12.

How We Survived Adventure Gaming’s Most Hair-Tearingly Ridiculous Puzzles

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

When I spoke with Gabriel Knight creator Jane Jensen about her latest project, I had to ask about it. The Puzzle. The great cat-mustache debacle.

You know what Im talking about, right? The Worst Adventure Game Puzzle Ever? Oh, boy.

In Gabriel Knight 3, Gabriel needs to get a motorbike to continue the story. But in order to get it, he has to disguise himself as long-suffering Detective Mosley. And in order to do THAT, he has to make a mustache out of cat-hair. Though Mosley doesnt have a mustache… so Gabriel will also have to draw a mustache onto Mosleys license so that his cat-mustache-using disguise looks like Mosleys ID.

Wow.

I asked Jensen about this puzzle, which has long been a whipping-boy for game critics the world over and even held up as a prime example of why adventure games died.

Honestly, that puzzle was not added by me, it was something that a producer put in. I had another solution in mind that they thought wouldve been too expensive. But… I didnt love it at the time, but if you think of a lot of the puzzles that Sierra and Lucasarts did, you think about Leisure Suit Larry, you know… so yes, that puzzle. The length of the sequence and the lack of hints made it really difficult. I certainly would not do anything like that today. I think its kinda overblown.

Overblown or no, that puzzle has become something of a terrible-adventure-game-puzzle icon. The kind of thing that no one on earth couldve solved without a walkthrough.

But it does feel like a lot of other adventure games have similar roadblocks. I thought it might be fun to go through some of gamings classic super-stumpers and copy the relevant walkthrough for each section.

Adventure-game walkthroughs are funny! Theyre really short, since in truth, there arent that many things you do in an adventure game. The puzzles we may have spent hours simply staring at are unraveled into a series of terse sentences. Lets start with the puzzle of the hour:

Gabriel Knight 3

USE the piece of masking tape on the shed door hole (behind church).
USE the spray bottle on the cat (behind church).
PICK UP candy from the bowl on the desk (hotel lobby – you can pick this up as early as day 1, 10:00 am).
TALK to Mosely about his passport (Moselys room).
USE the candy on the table under the painting depicting the street scene (hotel second floor).
PUSH the room buzzer for room #33 (hotel lobby).
PICK UP the passport from Moselys pocket as he eats the candy you left on the table (hotel second floor).
PICK UP the gold coat (Moselys room).
PICK UP the black pen from the desk while Jean is away (hotel lobby – you can pick this up as early as day 1, 10:00 am).
PICK UP the packet of syrup from the buffet table (hotel dining room).
USE the black pen on the passport (inventory).
USE the black fibers on the syrup to create a mustache (inventory).
USE the cap on the gold coat (inventory).
USE the mustache on the gold coat (inventory)
USE the disguise on Gabriel (moped rental area).

Walkthrough Link

Phantasmagoria 2: A Puzzle of Flesh

Yep, the game where you used a rat to get a wallet. (Side-note: Does anyone else remember how the first Phantasmagoria smelled? It smelled so weird, so plastic-y. It was one of the strongest smells Id ever encountered as a kid.)

Okay, the Phantasmagoria 2 walkthrough:

Click on the rat cage. Click the mail on Curtis. Take the photo from the coffee table. Go to the Front Door. Open door. Return to Living Room. Click on couch. Click on rat cage. Use rat on couch, use granola bar on couch. Put rat back in cage. Go to WynTech.

Well, that was easy!

Walkthrough Link

Kings Quest V

Another classic terrible puzzle that involved throwing a pie at a Yeti. Thats really all you have to say about it. This is the game that Jensen said made her so mad that she wrote a long letter to Sierra. I wonder if she mentioned the Yeti.

Put on cloak and when Graham gets hungry, eat lamb. Walk north. Throw rope on rock that juts out from left and climb. SAVE. Walk on back stones and east, cross over log, go right. Use sled on self, go east. Give eagle the lamb. Walk north. When you can, play harp. Walk north and throw the pie at Yeti.

Walkthrough Link

The Longest Journey

Easily one of my two or three favorite adventure games of all time, but man, that fucking puzzle with the rubber duck and the electrified key was some dumb crap. Heres the walkthrough from a more literary example than the others:

When youre finished, take some bread from the basket on the table and then head back to Aprils apartment in the Border House. Once there, look out the window and use the bread that you got from the caf¿ and use it on the blue inflatable duck. The seagull will come down and cause the metal grating to sink. Pull on the chain and youll get the clothesline that you untied earlier.

Go back to the cafe and youll see the blue duck, which is now deflated, sitting in some piping. Go over and pick it up and then go to the subway, which can be reached either by taking the path branching off to the left near the Border House path, or by going to the park and then taking the left path. Go down the stairs and look at the gene scanner. Click on the buttons to get a Weekly pass and then use the cashcard on the lens to pay for it. Walk through the scanner and before you get on the train, go into your inventory and combine the clothesline with the clamp.

Look at the sparks to find a large iron key resting on the tracks and then inflate the blue duck and use it on the clamp to get a makeshift fishing pole. Use it on the iron key.

Walkthrough Link

Grim Fandango

The kitty hats, which are handed out Tuesday. Man. One of the most difficult examples of hidden clues, this one can only be solved if you noticed that the guy at the counter says that Tuesdays are when the kitty hats are handed out. And yet in the walkthrough…

Pull out your ticket printer and print up a ticket for Week 2, Tuesday,
Race 6, and use it at the Photo Finish window. (NOTE: Week 2 can be
found by reading the plaque on the statue of the cat, Race 6 can be
found by looking at the photo, and the day of the week is Tuesday, when
the kitty hats are handed out according to the guy at the ticket
counter). Head to the VIP lounge, and use the photo you got on Nick,
whos youre new lawyer. Youve got the tools, youve got the card,
youve got a job, now you need Glottis.

It sounds so simple! Oh, right, when I noticed the guy say that one thing. About kitty hats on Tuesday. Sure.

Walkthrough Link

Ill close it out there, but there are many more (I just know that there are some great Phoenix Wright puzzles Im leaving out).

In this cool recent video, Tim Schafer and Ron Gilbert talk about the concept of stuck-ness in video games, and whether or not thats an essential part of the experience. Have modern audiences gotten too impatient to deal with puzzles like the cat-mustache and the kitty-hat?

(Also: why do so many puzzles involves cats and rodents?)

Its a good question, and one I hope well see answered in interesting ways as people like Jensen, Schafer and Gilbert make all-new adventure games for all-new audiences.

In the meantime, its actually really fun to go back to the walkthroughs and read them again. Er, I mean, to read them for the first time! Because hardcore adventure gamers like us never needed walkthroughs back in the day, did we?

Trip guide attempts river rescue

Sunday, April 22nd, 2012

Ariana Altier was looking up the Trinity River at the rapids her Adventure Outings group had just passed through when out of the corner of her eye she saw it.

A car had slammed into the rocky embankment, rolled down the hillside and landed in the river.

SF Food Adventure Club: Ten Risks You Simply Must Take (PHOTOS)

Friday, April 20th, 2012

This article comes to us courtesy of The Bold Italic.

By Beth Pickens

What constitutes food adventure depends on your own culture, religion, location and family norms.

My own 82-year-old grandmother, who has lived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, nearly her entire life, recently ate her first bagel and was amazed to eat something – in her words – “so different.” Lucky for us, our City by the Bay’s history is steeped in outlaws and explorers, and that sensibility is alive in our willingness to eat anything, in every possible combination (hangtown fry, anyone?). San Francisco’s history, geography, and numerous diasporas honoring every diet and allergy, along with our obsession for “the good life,” result in a city of never-ending exploration in eating.

I founded the SF Food Adventure Club after dinner with a group of food-obsessed friends during which we constructed a three-page list of foods we want to eat before we die. In August 2009, I organized our first adventure and issued badges to the friends and strangers who showed up to eat durian fruit. Fifteen adventures later, we’ve made headway: ostrich eggs, human placenta, pulled pork made from jackfruit, and accusations of being “a bunch of hipster cannibals.” Check. Live octopus, roasted guinea pig, and putrefied shark meat. Not yet, but 2012 has just begun.

Here are 10 of my favorite food adventures:

Aerial Adventure Park Eyed For Lanesborough

Friday, April 20th, 2012

And artists rendering of the entrance of a proposed outdoor adventure park in Lanesborough.

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. A New York company is eyeing the development of an aerial adventure park near the Hancock border.

Feronia Holdings LLC owns land that encompasses the access road to the Brodie Wind Project. Officials say they want to build a seven-acre park that includes hiking trails, zip lines and ropes courses in what they say is the most environmentally friendly way. They plan to partner with Ghent, NY, company Tree-Mendous to build the ropes courses.

Its one of the most environmentally friendly projects you can do, Gerhard Komenda, CEO of Tree-Mendous Adventure Parks, said on Monday. The trees are not harmed.

The companies said Feronia Forests Adventure Park could bring in eight to 10 permanent jobs and four or five seasonal jobs. They want to build a sugar shack and equipment rental shop at the base and then hiking trails up to the courses. Komenda said the ropes courses will range in difficulty and the obstacles are not screwed or bolted into the trees and can be taken down easily.

Its activities a whole family can enjoy, said Paolo Cugnasca, a principal of Feronia, said. It can be surprisingly demanding. The kids love it.

Feronia is trying to monetize timberland without harming the environment, according to attorney Jonathan Sabin, who represents the company. Sabin said it is one of the more exciting projects with which hes been involved.

The company is ready to invest more than $1 million into bringing the project to fruition. However, since the zoning bylaws including the ones approved at last weeks special town meeting specifically allows outdoor adventures courses, the company may be using a citizens petition to add language that would allow them to receive permits.

With restrictive zoning, if it is not specifically listed then it is not allowed, Sabin said. Outdoor adventure is something relatively new to all of us.

Sabin said he spoke to the towns Planning Board in the past about the project but the board was already in the middle of a multi-year re-evaluation of the bylaws so the companies held off.

We consciously decided not to meddle in three to four years of work, Sabin said.

On Monday, they had hoped to get the Planning Board to endorse adding outdoor adventure parks but board members who were present indicated that after the just finished, massive bylaw retooling, it was unlikely the board would take the lead in presenting voters with yet another change. The board itself did not meet for lack of a quorum.

Feronia representatives were told to go through the Board of Selectmen or take it upon themselves to get 10 certified signatures to place a warrant article on the annual town meeting.

Sabin said he hoped the Planning Board would sponsor the change because it would likely be the group that would grant a special permit for the project.

Adventure Park Proposal: Lanesborough

Breathless adventure on a “dangerous” beat

Tuesday, April 17th, 2012

A self confessed excitement junkie, Rajendar Menen tries to compress two or more decades of breathing life on the streets of Mumbai into less than 200 pages and comes up with a hurried account of his experiences. Admittedly they are varied and rich in nature with a few of his escapades thrown in for good measure along with some pulp Buddhism.

For the wide-eyed or uninitiated into Mumbais reality, it can be a spectacular revelation. But if you know even a bit about the city and its street life, the narratives may not hold you in thrall.

While Menen criticises the nomenclature of a prostitute which was changed to the politically correct commercial sex worker, he cannot resist calling prostitution the oldest profession. Parts of the description read like a brisk tourist guide to Kamathipura, the Welcome brothels, or Juhu beach and Colaba.

Human angle

This guide, however, gives you a human angle of the people who inhabit these places and how wretched their lives are. From prostitutes to eunuchs to young boys with monkeys, strugglers on the beach and people dying of AIDS or those who simply sit on the street, Menen has them all wrapped up in furious little interviews which almost seem clinical.

Roller-coaster ride

He goes to Nepal to meet young Tulasa Thapa who is on the verge of death after being extricated from a brothel, her body ravaged with venereal disease. That is the most moving account in the book because he lets you see her for what she is.

For the most part Menen fills you up with his narrative but it is a roller-coaster ride from one wretched life to another.

Menen sees what you have to see, tells you what he thinks, how he is ogling at pretty toes or watching someone press a girls buttock, or how women offer him marriage or a gold chain. There is a twinge of remorse when after one of the longer interviews of a woman he knew for two decades, he says that he too has used her in a way.

Menen thinks that ladies bars are an extravagant and harmless way to spend time but is sympathetic to the poor girls who were victims of moral police and are now forced into prostitution. He portrays himself as a do-gooder as well, helping the dead and dying to the Missionaries of Charity and ends the book rather abruptly with an interview of an Irish woman who came to India to work for Mother Teresa on the Lords bidding!

With a longish account of Dominic DSouzas harassment after he was arrested for contracting AIDS, and his subsequent death you are reminded that Menen was primarily a reporter covering HIV.

He wants to silence his critics who tell him he has slept with the women he has interviewed with a caveat that he was on a dangerous beat. Amen!