Ready for a wild ride? Then hang on for these amazing animal adventures. Ditch the petting zoo for a chance to walk with polar bears or bond with gorillas. Trade that pony ride for some horse surfing or ostrich riding. This list offers an awe-inspiring animal encounter for every budget: From free to pricey, they’re all utterly unforgettable. And if you’ve got a favorite not on the list, be sure to share it with other readers in the comments field below each photo.
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Surf On A Horse
Kiteboarding, ice swimming, bog snorkeling: There are endless variations on water sports. The newest wave is horse surfing, available in Bradenton, Florida. On Great World Adventures' beach rides, aqua-equestrians mount patient and water-loving horses for a leisurely amble along the sand before plunging into the warm water. Shoulder deep in the gentle surf, the horses pause while riders learn the basics. Then, surf's up, as riders try to stand and balance while their mounts walk through the water. Horse surfing is open to riders under 150 pounds. The equine Olympics theme continues with swimming the horses and racing them out of the water back to the beach. The experience costs $120 per person, and is most fun during the warmer weather of late spring to early fall.
Have you had another horse adventure on vacation? Share it with others in the comments section below!
Surf On A Horse
Kiteboarding, ice swimming, bog snorkeling: There are endless variations on water sports. The newest wave is horse surfing, available in Bradenton, Florida. On Great World Adventures' beach rides, aqua-equestrians mount patient and water-loving horses for a leisurely amble along the sand before plunging into the warm water. Shoulder deep in the gentle surf, the horses pause while riders learn the basics. Then, surf's up, as riders try to stand and balance while their mounts walk through the water. Horse surfing is open to riders under 150 pounds. The equine Olympics theme continues with swimming the horses and racing them out of the water back to the beach. The experience costs $120 per person, and is most fun during the warmer weather of late spring to early fall.
Have you had another horse adventure on vacation? Share it with others in the comments section below!
Swim With Great White Sharks
Are you a true thrill seeker? Here's a quick test: You're underwater, surrounded by great white sharks with only a metal cage between you and the ocean's fiercest predator. Are you: a) having a nightmare, or b) on vacation? If that sounds like leisure time to you, consider a multiday cruise with Great White Adventures to Guadalupe Island in Mexico. From August through December, you'll have the chance to dive in waters containing one of the most prolific great white shark populations in the world. Excellent underwater visibility and warm water offer ideal conditions for cage dives with sharks up to 21 feet long. There are also options for night cage dives, during which you don't see the sharks until they're right next to you, and deeper cage dives, which give you the chance to be surrounded on all sides by circling sharks. The hefty price tag of $3,195 for a five-day trip includes transportation from San Diego, three meals per day, beer and wine, and air-conditioned staterooms with private bathrooms and HDTV.
Have you dived with sharks and lived to tell the tale? Share your stories below!
Surround Yourself With Butterflies
How many butterflies does it take to make an animal adventure truly amazing? One? A thousand? A million? How about a billion? Each autumn, up to a billion butterflies migrating from North America head south to winter in the fir forests of central Mexico. The Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, which received a UNESCO World Heritage site designation in 2008, offers visitors the chance to see trees so covered in butterflies that they bend under the weight and appear bright orange. The monarchs utterly transform the landscape, carpeting the forest floor and creating a sound like rain when thousands take off at once. A trip to one of the butterfly parks open to the public within the reserve (including El Rosario, Sierra Chincua, Piedra Herrada, and Cerro Pelon) can be a day trip from Mexico City or an overnight excursion, and is suited both to independent travelers and tour groups.
What other butterfly migration spots would you recommend to travelers?
Bond With Gorillas
You'll travel far and trek deep into the jungle for one of the rarest and most unforgettable experiences of your life. Mountain gorillas, of which fewer than 800 exist in the world, cluster in just four national parks in central Africa. Guided visitors can spend time within a few feet of these great apes, the largest of living primates, watching them play, groom, tumble, and snack. Former SmarterTravel editor Molly Feltner, whose current African adventures have brought her up close and personal with the mountain gorillas, recommends a trip to Virunga National Park in Congo, where visitors can see the "gentle giants living in a great salad bowl" (think lush, rainforest-covered volcanoes). Kivu Travel (site in French; guides speak English) organizes trips to see the gorillas in the park. Feltner also offers tips on visiting the gorillas in Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda. Permits to see the gorillas run about $400, and food, transportation, and accommodations are extra.
Seen mountain gorillas or other great apes in the wild? Tell other travelers about the experience!
Witness A Massive Crab Migration
Live your own National Geographic special with a well-timed trip to Australia's Christmas Island. Each year, at the start of the rainy season, the Christmas Island red crab makes an epic journey from the rainforest to the coast to breed. With an approximate population of 120 million of the species on the island, the synchronized mass migration of the bright red crabsâsome measuring nearly five inches acrossâis a spectacle people travel from all over the world to witness. The usually solitary crabs gather in broad "streams," stopping traffic, scaling cliff faces, and climbing over whatever stands in their path. The migration can last up to 18 days, culminating at the high tide during the last lunar quarter, when the females release their eggs (which hatch on contact with the water) into the ocean. The Christmas Island Tourism Association announces estimated crab migration dates around June.
Have you witnessed a large-scale animal migration? Tell us about it!
Walk With Polar Bears
The sheer variety of ways to observe polar bears in the wild adds adventure to an already exciting pursuit in Churchill, Manitoba, the polar bear capital of the world. You can walk among them on polar bear treks for the biggest thrills and the best photo opportunities, or sleep close to them on their terrain in a tundra buggy lodge. And the cautiously curious can still get close from the comfort of a tundra buggy day tour. Throughout late fall, catch the polar bears as they congregate in large numbers in the region. During the colder months, you can see polar bears and the northern lights in the same trip. In summer, watch polar bears out on the flowering tundra, then hop a boat to see beluga whales. Trips are expensive, starting at about $2,500 and topping out at close to $10,000, but include the pricey two-and-a-half hour round-trip flight from Winnipeg, plus accommodations, meals, and activities.
Have you seen polar bears in the wild? How did you do it?
Help Sea Turtles
In this case, the animal adventure is helping an endangered species begin its own adventure. All seven of the world's types of sea turtles are on the endangered species list, with threats ranging from destruction of nesting habitats to incidental capture by commercial fisheries. A volunteer vacation to Costa Rica, Mexico, the Caribbean, or another turtle nesting site offers the chance to help the survival of one of these species on your next beach trip. Activities vary among organizations, but can include recording nesting activity, relocating eggs, and patrolling beaches. Watching a mother bury her eggs in the sand or cheering for baby turtles as they make that first trip from beach to ocean are just a few of the moments that make volunteering an unforgettable experience. Some organizations offer the chance to learn Spanish, live with a local family, or spend days off exploring nearby sights. Costs range from a few hundred dollars to around a thousand dollars per week, which generally covers food, accommodations, and program support.
Have you seen sea turtles while diving or snorkeling? Have you ever been on a volunteer vacation?
Dogsled on a Glacier
It's a true Alaskan trifecta: dogsledding across a glacier you reached by helicopter. Alaska Icefield Expeditions' trek packs three amazing experiences into just a few hours. From Juneau or Skagway, take a flightseeing tour over mountains and ice fields on your way to Mendenhall or Denver glaciers. There, meet 250 friendly Alaskan huskies and their Iditarod and Yukon Quest mushers. Then head out on the glacier, where you can help the musher drive your sled or just enjoy the ride. Before your return flight, play with husky puppies and learn more about the life of mushers and sled dogs. Tours run May through early September, and cost $489 per person (guests over 250 pounds pay an additional fee).
Have you been dogsledding before? What advice do you have for newbies?
Watch 20 Million Bats Take To The Skies
Gotham City doesn't have the only world-famous bat cave. Bracken Cave, about 20 minutes from downtown San Antonio, is summer home to the world's largest bat colony. From March to October, as many as 20 million Mexican free-tailed bats make their home in the cave owned by Bat Conservation International (BCI). On select evenings, BCI members can stand 30 feet away as one of the largest colony of mammals on the planet swirls skybound in a massive column, with the flapping of 20 million bats' wings echoing in the air. Membership starts between $30 and $35, and members can bring up to three guests. This part of Texas is also home to the world's second-largest bat colony: Hill Country Adventure's Frio Cave is the seasonal residence of 10 to 12 million bats. Watching the spectacle on select evenings costs $12 per person. And, around the same time of year, Austin's Congress Avenue Bridge is a popular (and free) spot to watch the evening emergence of another colony of 1.5 million bats.
Is watching a bat exodus a "must" or a "no way" for you?
Ride An Ostrich
You may not be able to fly on the back of a soaring eagle, but in South Africa, you can hold on for dear life atop a speeding ostrich. The Oudtshoorn region is known as the ostrich capital of the world, and it's one of the few places where you can get this close to the largest bird in the world. At the Cango Ostrich Show Farm you can see chicks, stand on eggs (to see just how strong they are), tour the farm, pet a friendly resident named Betsie, and feed the birds. And if you're up for itâand weigh less than 165 poundsâyou can ride an ostrich, too. Rides tend to be fast, short, and unforgettable. Tours cost about $10 ($5 for kids), and advance booking is recommended.
Would you ride an ostrich, or do you plan on sticking to horses?
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