Five Summer Spots to get your Outdoor Fix
Five Summer Spots to get your Outdoor Fix
by J.E.BTable of Contents
• Bonanza: Gunnison, CO • Kernville, CA • Stehekin Village, WA • Summersville, WV • Littleton, NHWhether you need a weekend of outdoor-infused peace, or are the next badass moving in to claim a place in local legend, cancel your über-spendy St. Tropez wine-tasting/windsurfing trip, pack up the Vanagon, and hit the road. Thanks to a complex process of deduction—throwing darts at a dusty map—we compiled a rockin list of spots around the country where you can paddle till blue in the face, climb until your hands are a mélange of blood and chalk, and crank until you collapse in a pool of sweat.
Bonanza: Gunnison, CO
Gunnison and nearby Crested Butte offer some of the nation’s most taxing and sublime mountain biking.
If you’re looking to climb 13,000-foot summits and drop down adjacent valleys, the classic Pearl Pass
to Aspen trail gets you higher than a liberal dentist over-supplied with Novocain.

Sierra Nevadas (not the beer, though we like that, too): Kernville, CA
Nestled in the Southern Sierras and just three hours from L.A., Kernville caters to Southern
California’s outdoor addicts and offers miles of challenges under the warm Sierra sun. White-water
fans come to Kernville for the twenty-plus miles of Class III-IV Wild and Scenic Kern River. With
winter’s snowpack in full-melt, we recommend you get your kit in gear and honk at all the mallrats
on your way to the mountains. Just north of Kernville, Sequoia National Park’s single-track winds
through nirvanic high desert terrain that might make you stop and offer oblations to the gods.
Climbers in Sequoia National Park escape the crowds bound for Yosemite and Joshua Tree,
and get free reign to test their grit on Dome Rock and The Needles—Sequoia’s granite spires that
top-out at eight thousand feet and overlook the idyllic Kern River Valley.

Raw: Stehekin Village, WA
No roads connect Stehekin, Washington to the outside world, so you have to trek, catch a ferry, or
floatplane (sweet) to get there. This level of isolation promises some of the wildest land left in
the lower forty-eight, and means you can get away from car-campers and noxious grilled-meat odors.
Lying at the North end of Lake Chelan, Stehekin Village and its superb collection of lodges, cabins,
and campgrounds makes a great base camp for exploring the Lake Chelan National Recreation Area and
North Cascades National Park.

Deliverance: Summersville, WV
Nestled in the nexus of one of the East coast’s most exciting outdoor meccas, Summersville flanks
the surging Gauley River, the gorge-ous New River, and monstrous Monongahela National Forest. The
world-renowned Gauley River drops six-hundred-and-sixty-eight heart-pounding feet in twenty-eight
miles and churns through a hundred rapids—fifty of which range from Class III to Class V-plus
(shaa-wing!). “Gauley Season” lasts only six weeks after Labor Day, but despite this short period,
top rafters and kayakers come from around the world to run the world’s seventh-most raft-able river.
Characteristic of Southern hospitality, the Mountain State doesn’t neglect climbers or bikers either.
Rock hounds have sixty miles of shear sandstone cliffs on Summersville Lake’s shoreline to ascend.
Multiple overhanging routes abound, and range in height from thirty to eighty feet. Rated one of
the top five mountain biking destinations in the US, West Virginia boasts a cornucopia of
mud-flying rides around Summersville and within Monongahela National Forest. Easy access from
much of the East coast makes Summersville a must on every Confederate and Yankee’s list.
Hidden Gem: Littleton, NH
Lodged between the placid Connecticut River and glorious White Mountains National Forest,
Littleton—despite its name—makes a big claim on being an American outdoor destination.
This pleasant New England town makes an awesome home base for any excursion you fantasize
about. Trad climbers love to play on nearby Cathedral and Whitehorse Ledges. These sublime
crags in Echo Lake State Park offer some of the best crack, friction, and face climbing in
the country, and are just the beginning of a string of trad, sport, and
bouldering options rivaling any location east of the Rockies.


Add to Del.icio.us