Subscribe to Outside Magazine
advertisement
Survival Guru

Today's Question
What should you do if you run into a cougar in the backcountry? answer

What is the number one backcountry skill people should learn? answer

Eco Adventurer

Today's Question
What are the five best environmental movies of all time? answer

What are the greenest colleges? answer

Videos Ask Dave
  • What kind of dog will make me look manlier? answer
  • Is there a sport that safely combines my twin passions for guns and kayaks? answer
  • How come most of the world's cultures enjoy eating goat, but Americans don't? answer

Online Favorites

Special Issues

Photo Galleries

save this page print this page email this page
  • share this page

Outside Magazine, March 2006

Dispatches: Virtual Adventure
Human Nature

By Nathanael Johnson


Skiing & Mountain Biking | Surfing, Paddling, & Multisport

Your Turn in the Barrel
Ron Jon Surfpark, Orlando, Florida
WILL OPEN: Fall 2006
THE CHALLENGE: Rival any classic mainland break with one exception: no flat days. A 3,000-horsepower vacuum will suck up tons of salt water then spit it out at precisely the velocity required to send a delicately curling eight-foot wave down a 100-yard trough. Operators can also shift the pool bottom to create waves with different shapes.
THE PAYOFF: Wave after perfect, machine-hollowed wave. Surfpark had planned to cap membership at 2,000, but with more than 4,000 people on the waiting list, managers may boost capacity by running waves 24/7. $750-$2,400 a year; www.surfparks.com

River to Nowhere
U.S. National Whitewater Center, Charlotte, North Carolina
WILL OPEN: June 2006
THE CHALLENGE: With 1,400 truckloads of cement and enough boulders to fill two Olympic swimming pools, build an artificial river with four Class III-IV channels. The USNWC will recycle its water, using seven 80,000-gallon-per-minute pumps to keep the flow at 1,250 cubic feet per second—and generate a hefty utility bill every year.
THE PAYOFF: Nearly a mile of river three times longer than any other man-made course—and a conveyer belt for getting boaters back to the top. Besides training Olympians, the center will offer classes in rafting and whitewater slalom. $15-$25 a day; www.usnwc.org

Under the Banner of "Hell, Yeah!"
High Adventure Recreation Center,
Ogden, Utah
WILL OPEN: March 2007
THE CHALLENGE: Gather all of the world's high-adrenaline sports under one roof. Hoping to leverage Utah's reputation for adventure, the city is using $18.5 million to turn a mall into a 125,212-square-foot gym where visitors can climb, surf, and fly indoors. Call it recreation redevelopment.
THE PAYOFF: The center will feature a 12-foot-diameter wind tunnel that lofts a faux-falling skydiver, a 72-foot-high climbing wall, and a Flowrider, which shoots a layer of water over a wave form for surfing. Surf, about $20 an hour; climb, $8 a day; fly, about $50 for 30 minutes; www.ogdencity.com




Skiing & Mountain Biking | Surfing, Paddling, & Multisport