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Swim with whale sharks in Baja: check.
Swim with whale sharks in Baja: check. (Christian Vizl/Tandem)

The 365-Day Bucket List

A user's list for all the travel, fun, and affiliated delights you can cram into a year

Published: 
México, Quintana Roo, Isla Mujeres. A free diver champion swims behind a whale shark, almost touching it´s tale. This image is part of a series of images called
(Photo: Christian Vizl/Tandem)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

That mental list you keep of all the fun things you want to experience before it's too late? We wrote it down. Then we came up with a chronological plan for making it all happen—in the next 365 days.

This is a packed list, and yes, we know you probably have a day job. But check even a couple of these off and you'll find the year very well spent. The goal: Get out of your comfort zone, see another corner of the world, and do at least one crazy thing like swimming naked in an Idaho hot spring or chasing the world's biggest fish. With ϳԹ's know-how on your side, you'll find it's not so hard.

Play John Muir

Blue River, Oregon; June–September; $400

Muir famously spent hours atop a tree during a winter windstorm in the Sierra Nevada, calling it one of his most exhilarating experiences in the wild. You can have an adventure that’s just as powerful, but much more enjoyable, by spending a night in one. Guides from the Blue River–based will instruct you on how to ascend a rope into the upper branches of an old-growth Douglas fir in the Western Cascades. Your bed is a canvas hammock strung between branches, where you’ll drift off to the hooting of owls.

Drive as Fast as You Can

Letting it rip at Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats.
Letting it rip at Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats. (William Moran/Gallery Stock)

Just once, stomp on the gas pedal and hold it there. The World of Speed event, held every September on the , a 46-square-mile expanse of featureless salt crust on the western edge of Utah’s Great Salt Lake Basin, invites regular people in regular vehicles to let ’em rip alongside tricked-out racing cars. You get one mile to go as fast as you possibly can. “There’s no reference point, and above 100 miles per hour, speedometers aren’t very accurate,” says Dennis Sullivan, president of Utah Salt Flats Racing Association. “But you can feel how fast you’re going.” Chicken out on your first go? No worries—you get five more tries.

Float Your Boat

Guide-free on Maine's Allagash.
Guide-free on Maine's Allagash. (Peter Frank Edwards/Redux)

The number-one reason to put the energy into a DIY river trip instead of opting for an outfitter? “You get to control who you go with,” says Mark Singleton, executive director of American Whitewater. A great river to start with is the Allagash, in northern Maine. The section between Chamberlain Lake and Allagash Village winds 60 miles, with Class II rapids, tree-crammed banks, and an abundance of moose. will rent you a canoe and supply meals for five days for $625. Two more challenging DIY options we like: the Grand Ronde, a Class II–III river in Washington and Oregon that slides through basalt cliffs and evergreen forest (raft rentals, $125 per day), and the Class III Desolation Gray section of Utah’s Green River, for classic high-desert canyons (raft rentals plus shuttle service, ).

Land a Lunker

In pursuit of Oregon steelhead.
In pursuit of Oregon steelhead. (Justin Bailie)
Central Oregon; August–November; $550 per day

Steelhead are like trout on amphetamines. These famously clever, hard-fighting fish are extraordinarily difficult—and a hell of a lot of fun—to catch. The Columbia River watershed is a mecca for steelhead fishermen when the fish make their way up rivers to spawn in the winter months. The best way to boost your odds is to hire a local guide. “We have fish that are so aggressive, they’ll chase a fly for 60 or 80 feet,” says Jeff Perin, owner of , an outfitter that runs float trips on the Lower Deschutes River. Once you hook a fish, it’ll take everything you’ve got to land it. An eight-pound steelhead could easily feel like a 15-pounder as it twists out of the water.

Throw an Off-the-Grid Rager

, in Fort Collins, Colo­rado, knows a thing or two about producing outrageous outdoor parties. We asked Jesse Claeys, one of the company’s event planners, to share his party-planning tips:

  1. Location is Everything: The ideal spot is bike friendly with a gorgeous view.
  2. Get Ahead of the Weather: We look at average rainfall as well as sunset and sunrise times for certain dates, then plug those into a spreadsheet to find ideal party times.
  3. Accessorize: Habitat for Humanity’s is amazing for cheap furniture and decorations.
  4. Don’t Overdo the Playlist: You just want classic songs that create good background ambience—Budos Band, Sam Cooke, Jimmy Cliff.
  5. Add a Surprise: We do something called “portaoke”—a karaoke booth among the Porta-Johns. Those kind of strange, unexpected, and interactive moments are what people talk about when it’s all over.

Sled Like an Olympian

There's no fun like four-G fun.
There's no fun like four-G fun. (Ascent Xmedia/Getty)
Lake Placid, New York; November–April; $85 per run

Lolo Jones, the Olympic hurdler turned bobsledder, has described careening down the icy track as similar to being kicked off Mount Everest in a trash can. That’s only a slightly hyperbolic way to describe what it’s like to rocket through 12 banked turns going 55 miles per hour at up to four G’s. in Lake Placid, where American sled teams captured two gold medals, a silver, and a bronze in 1932, is our favorite venue to get a taste of the action, with veteran athletes up front steering while you hold on really, really tight. “A lot of people scream,” says Joey Allen, one of the track’s regular drivers.

Trip Out on the Northern Lights

Icelandic fireworks.
Icelandic fireworks. (Luc Roymans Photography)
Iceland; November–March; $719

A cycle of more intense solar activity has caused the aurora borealis to be at its peak for the past few years, and this winter offers another ideal chance to catch it. Still, you’ll need a lot of darkness in a far-north locale—plus a little bit of luck—to witness the spectacle. One of the best spots is Iceland, where Icelandair is offering that include nonstop flights from nine North American cities, four nights’ lodging, a visit to the mineral-rich Laugarvatn Fontana geothermal baths, and a nighttime boat tour, so you can check out the lights from the North Atlantic.

Go It Alone

“A solo camping trip is wonderfully peaceful, and it’s one of those opportunities we so rarely have to confront our thoughts and anxieties. If it’s your first time, pick somewhere that isn’t super far off the beaten track. You want trails that are easy to follow, and better signed, so it’s harder to get into trouble. Before you set off, seek out people who have some experience, ask them questions, talk through your plans, and make sure you’re leaving a detailed itinerary with somebody, so they know if you’re overdue. There’s a big temptation to do high miles, to bring guidebooks, to identify wild-flowers and get into other fun and distracting projects, but personal reflection comes when you’re just sitting with nothing to do.”—Jack Haskel, information specialist for the

Face Your Greatest Fear

Heights

It doesn’t get scarier than a slackline over a 400-foot-deep chasm. During Thanksgiving week, a group of Utah highliners and BASE jumpers host an event known as Gobble Gobble Bitches Yeah, in Mineral Bottom Canyon, near Moab. Warm up on a line close to the ground, then don a harness and inch your way across the canyon.

Flying

The trick is putting yourself at the controls. , a school in Nags Head, North Carolina, offers demo flights in hang gliders over the dunes of Jockey’s Ridge State Park, where newbies soar 15 feet off the ground. $99

Confined Spaces

South Dakota’s , the third-longest cave in the world, is a trove of geological formations. On a ranger-led spelunking tour, crawl through passages scarcely wider than a basketball.

Hungry Beasts

The great white sharks that gather in the Farallon Islands, off San Francisco, are up to 20 feet long, thanks to a diet of 5,000-pound elephant seals. See them in their element on a day-long . $775

Enter the Ultimate Race

The most talked-about events in their respective sports

The World's Toughest Mudder, 2014.
The World's Toughest Mudder, 2014. (Courtesy of Tough Mudder)

Ski Mountaineering

Grand Traverse; Crested Butte to Aspen, Colorado; March 25–26; $400 per team

Teams of two set off at midnight on a that climbs over 7,800 vertical feet and ends with a 3,200-vertical- foot groomer.

Road Biking

Death Ride; Sierra Nevada, California; July 9; $135

Roughly two-thirds of the 3,500 riders who set out to do the every July finish the 129-mile route, which climbs 15,000 feet over five passes. $135

Open-Water Swimming

Trans Tahoe Relay; Lake Tahoe, Nevada and California; July 16; $600 per team

Some 1,400 racers compete in teams of six in this of 60-degree-plus Lake Tahoe (no wetsuits allowed), which has become one of the world’s largest open-water swims. $600 per team

Triathlon

New York City Triathlon; NYC; July 24; $310

Swim in the Hudson, bike up and down the West Side Highway, and run through Central Park in the in the country. $310

Trail Running

Cranmore Hill Climb; North Conway, New Hampshire; July 10; $25

Compete with elites at a that often serves as the U.S. Mountain Running Championships but is open to athletes of all abilities. The course changes every year, but you can expect more than 2,000 vertical feet over about eight miles. $25

Mountain Biking

Leadville 100; Leadville, Colorado; August 13; $345

This follows 100 miles of mixed trails and tops out at 12,400 feet. Too much? Consider the new three-day stage race, which follows the same course at a saner pace. $345

Obstacle Racing

World’s Toughest Mudder; Las Vegas; November; $554

In the rolling desert outside Sin City, have 24 hours to make their way through as many laps of the five-mile course as possible, stumbling up wall climbs, off cliff jumps, and through fire lines in pursuit of $160,000 in prizes.

Ski with the Birds

Soaking in Silverton.
Soaking in Silverton. (Grayson Schaffer )
Silverton, Colorado; December–April; $179 per flight

The epicenter of heli-skiing is British Columbia, where a weeklong trip easily costs $7,000. But you can get a single glory run at , in the San Juan Mountains of southwest Colorado, for less than the price of a couple of lift tickets at Vail. A chopper offers rides to the top of the area’s 3,000-foot lines, where a guide leads four skiers down. When you’re done, lap Silverton Mountain’s double chair ($139 guided), which accesses secluded hike-to chutes, bowls, and glades that hold powder for weeks after a storm.

Own the Grand Canyon

Hard to beat this view.
Hard to beat this view. (Black Richard Verdoorn)
Arizona; April–May, September–October; $74 for a four-night permit

In the spring and fall, when the hiking highways on the South Rim are mobbed with tourists, the trails on the relatively undeveloped North Rim are blissfully empty. Temperatures in the shoulder seasons hover in the mid seventies, making your lonely descent to the Colorado River even more pleasant. Apply for a backcountry camping permit up to four months in advance for the 11-mile (each way) . It traverses a ledge along a thousand-foot cliff, down steep rock bands, into a canyon, and finally to an ancient granary in an amphitheater on the riverbank.

Live on the Edge

Telluride's via ferrata.
Telluride's via ferrata. (Daniel Sohner)
Telluride, Colorado; June–September;

Via ferratas—climbing routes with metal rungs and cables, first developed by Allied forces in World War I—enable nonclimbers to safely access steep, exposed peaks. Arguably the best one in the U.S. is the via ferrata in Telluride. Hire a guide from Mountain Trip to show you the way. Or bring your own harness and quickdraws, drive up the Black Bear Pass road from town one switchback past Bridalveil Falls, and locate the well-worn path on the west side of Ajax Peak. The mile-and-a-quarter route leads across airy expanses of rock that in some spots plunge over 400-foot cliffs. Below, a verdant valley dotted with tiny Victorians unfolds, flanked by waterfalls and some of the most rugged peaks you’ll find anywhere in the lower 48.

Take Over an Island

Three gems you can have all to yourself.

  • Spruce Island, Maine: The ultimate New England escape: an 80-acre island, 20 minutes by motorboat from the bustling lobster harbor of Stonington, featuring two stone homes that sleep 18 people and include kayaks, horseshoe pits, beach campfires, and, of course, lobster pots.
  • Eagle Island, Georgia: Tucked into a marshy coastline, this ten-acre homestead feels remote, but you’ll hardly be roughing it. The three-bedroom main lodge has a king-size loft, an outdoor shower and fireplace, and a hot tub. Fill your days touring the marsh by kayak and catching blue crabs off the dock.
  • Deepwater Island, Ontario: A three-bedroom luxury home with a huge deck, a gas grill, a kayak, and two canoes, located on a three-quarter-acre speck of granite in the ultra-clear Georgian Bay, surrounded by the Massassauga Provincial Park. In a word: perfection.

Catch a Buzz in the Back of Beyond

It tastes better when you earn it.

The Grand Canyon's Phantom Ranch.
The Grand Canyon's Phantom Ranch. (Grand Canyon Lodges)

Phantom Ranch Canteen: Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Take a 7.8-mile, knee-busting hike down 2,546 vertical feet on the South Kaibab Trail to Phantom Ranch, a collection of 1920s stone and wood cabins. The sells snacks, first-aid supplies, and, most important, ice-cold Tecate. Warning: last call is at 3:30 P.M.

Ebenezer's Pub and Restaurant: Lovell, Maine

Lovell isn’t on the way to anything except a few White Mountain trailheads, but beer connoisseurs make the pilgrimage to this , about 90 minutes by car from Portland, to sample the selection of 35 drafts and 90 bottles, including rare Belgian brews.

Golden Saloon: McCarthy, Alaska

After a week in the bear-thick wilds of Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve, this in end-of-the-road McCarthy serving hard-living locals and hard-charging backpackers can seem downright civilized.

Roll Through the Backcountry

Riding the Whole Enchilada.
Riding the Whole Enchilada. (Stanislav Sedov/)
Colorado and Utah; June–October; From $670

Supported hut-to-hut mountain biking gets you into serious wilderness on sensational trails—without the burden of packing all your supplies. The is the 215 miles between Durango, Colorado, and Moab, Utah. By day, travel light with only your clothes, snacks, water, and repair kit, choosing between intermediate fire roads and expert singletrack. There are plenty of challenges, from stream crossings to 12,000-foot passes to steep slickrock. Evening brings you to a hut stocked with water, beer, food, sleeping gear, and unobstructed views of snow-covered peaks. “There’s a lot of long-distance riding in the U.S., but this is the only time I felt this level of remoteness,” says Sandra Musgrave, a former pro racer from Austin, Texas. The final leg features one of the most celebrated stretches of trail riding in the country—the Whole Enchilada, a forearm-pumping, 7,000-foot technical descent from the top of the La Sal Mountains, down over requisite slickrock, to the Colorado River.

Shut the Hell Up

Barre, Massachusetts; Year-Round; From $210

Meditation has become so hip recently that the incessant hype has drowned out the simple fact that learning to sit in calm silence is a transformative skill. Skip the apps and get trained with a crew that’s been at it for 40 years. The runs one of the oldest and best centers in the country on a wooded property in central Massachusetts. Retreats range from two nights to three months,with fees on a sliding scale.

Get Intimate with a Grizzly

Alaskan greeting party.
Alaskan greeting party. (Design Pics/Offset)
Admiralty Island, Alaska; July–August; $475 for flight, $35 for cabin

Any number of Alaskan outfitters offer day trips to sandbars to watch bears fishing. But you’ll have a more memorable experience if you get two friends to go in on a floatplane charter with Ward Air from Juneau to Admiralty Island, which harbors one of the state’s greatest concentrations of brown bears. The six-bunk Admiralty Cove Cabin, one of many simple shelters in the region operated by the U.S. Forest Service, is near a creek overlooking a huge tidal meadow. Bears pack the estuary to gorge on salmon, so they’re easy to spot—and decidedly carefree about your presence. ,

Take an Unplanned Road Trip

“You need to give it enough time—at least a week. Use your phone only as a camera and music source. I always have a print atlas and the Gazetteers for whichever states I’ll be in. And when you pack your clothes, cut the pile in half—extra stuff complicates things. Ignore websites and just get on the road and talk to people. You’re going to meet a guy in a convenience store who tells you to go to the coolest place, and that’ll change your trip. Say yes to absolutely everything. This is about wandering. It’s about sitting in the front seat and talking with your best friend—or just staring out the window and doing some thinking. It’s about getting a sense of the scale of the country and creating the mental space that you don’t have at any other time in your life.”–Brendan Leonard, author of

Go All In

Sometimes blowing your savings or vacation days is worth it.

Chamonix beckons.
Chamonix beckons. (Alexandre Buisse)

Lock Eyes with a Mountain Gorilla

Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda is easy to access and home to more groups of habituated mountain gorillas than anywhere else on earth. leads four-day trips out of Kigali. $1,880

Circle New Zealand's South Island

A sparse population, alpine peaks, world-class whitewater, paddle-perfect fjords, stunning cycling, and a “freedom camping” ethos that allows you to park your luxury almost anywhere makes the South Island the premier road-trip destination on the planet. $1,500 for a two-week camper-van rental

Cross the Ocean

The right way to do it: as part of a sailing crew. Online hubs list openings for sailors on boats making crossings. Many captains don’t require extensive experience, and they’re happy to offer passage if you’re willing to work hard for it. Free; and

Ski Chamonix

This French mountain town has long been the proving ground for the world’s best skiers and mountaineers. Get the most out of it by hiring a guide from the exclusive . From $394 for up to six people

Get Lost in the Amazon

It takes a flight from Cusco, Peru, over the Andes to Puerto Maldonado, followed by eight to ten hours in a motorized canoe, to get to the , a spartan 18-bedroom lodge that houses both travelers and scientists. The payoff: outside your door is a vast, uninhabited stretch of forest teeming with macaws, capybaras, caimans, and monkeys. From $788 for four days

Chase Shackleton

Brave the turbulent Southern Ocean on a ship bound for the planet’s most remote continent to see spectacular mountain ranges, bizarre ice formations, thousands of seals and penguins, and a landscape legendary for its mesmerizing white enormity. From $7,050 for a

Soak in Solitude

Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, Idaho; July–September; Free

A general rule about hot springs: the harder it is to get to them, the fewer sketchy naked dudes you’ll encounter in the water once you get there. Idaho has an abundance of both geothermal activity and remote wilderness, resulting in like Shower Bath Hot Springs in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness. To find them, you’ll first need to negotiate the four-wheel-drive-only Sleeping Deer Road, northwest of Challis, then hike 4.5 miles on the steep, occasionally washed-out Mahoney Trail, past the 1910 ranger station, and up a canyon that narrows to the width of a hallway. Stumble through the fast-moving, thigh-high waters of Warm Springs Creek until you arrive at the hallowed place where it rockets out of the hillside and over the canyon lip, creating hot, deep, clear pools of varying temperatures. Chances are, the only sketchy naked dude around will be you.

Swim with a Monster

Eye to eye with a whale shark.
Eye to eye with a whale shark. (Christian Vizl/Tandem)
Baja, Mexico; August–October; $200 boat charter

There’s a reason that swimming with whale sharks is on every scuba nerd’s bucket list: it’s the easiest, safest way to get up close and personal with a creature the size of a school bus. Divers seek out the docile leviathans in tropical waters worldwide, but one of the best spots to see them is Bahia de Los Angeles, just 300 miles south of San Diego down the Baja peninsula. (Schedule two days for the drive—this is Mexico.) Stay at one of the handful of basic inns or managed campgrounds in town. In the morning, when the water is glassy, to bring you and up to seven friends out in a skiff, spot the sharks, and tell you when to jump in.

Climb a Random Mountain

“This is not a trophy summit that you can brag about at a cocktail party. You’re not getting a feather in your cap. This is the essence of climbing—you’re doing it because you love the process. It starts with a search for a beautiful mountain that’s going to call out to you. You don’t always find these things on the Internet. Sometimes it’s a little mention in a climbing publication that catches your interest. You go, Oh wow, look at this place that no one goes to. Once I pick a mountain, I do initial research on Google Earth, then figure out how much time I’ll need and make a detailed trip plan. Don’t let anyone tell you the golden age of exploration is over. There’s still a huge supply of peaks that are rarely climbed or have never been climbed.”—Mark Synnott, professional climber and owner of

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