02/07/2026
Here is a fully rad day out in the heart of Sydney + it has heart
Seriously Radders you need to get on the Step Out for Cancer train and come along - it is a great morning out and for an incredible cause
Tour de Cure Australia
24/06/2026
The central argument of "Why Adventure is Good for Us" is that adventure isn't about climbing mountains or travelling to remote places—it's about deliberately stepping into the unknown in ways that reconnect us with ourselves, other people and the natural world. The author argues that adventure is not a luxury but an essential ingredient for a healthy, meaningful life.
Key takeaways
1. Adventure is an act of freedom
Adventure begins the moment we choose uncertainty over comfort. Every time we step outside our routines we reclaim a sense of freedom from the expectations, pressures and predictability of modern life.
The author describes adventure as leaving "safe harbour" and sailing into the unknown. It is in these moments that we discover who we really are - not who we think we are.
Key lesson - Growth never happens inside your comfort zone.
2. Adventure doesn't have to be extreme
One of the strongest messages is that adventure is available to everyone.
Adventure can be:
- Sleeping under the stars
- Exploring a local forest
- Walking a trail you've never visited
- Swimming in a river
- Travelling alone
- Taking a different route home
It isn't measured by danger or distance.
It is measured by curiosity.
3. Nature is the real teacher
The article argues that wild places slow us down enough to notice life again.
Nature offers - silence, perspective, awareness, presence
Instead of rushing toward goals, adventure invites us to simply experience where we are.
4. Adventure builds resilience
Every adventure contains uncertainty.
Weather changes.
Plans fail.
You get lost
You're uncomfortable.
These moments force us to adapt rather than control. The result is resilience - not because adventure is easy, but because it repeatedly reminds us that we are capable of handling more than we imagine.
5. Adventure reconnects us with ourselves
Modern life constantly pulls our attention outward:
phones
work
deadlines
social media
expectations
Adventure turns our attention inward.
Walking quietly through nature allows thoughts to settle
We begin asking better questions.
We notice what really matters.
Rather than escaping life, adventure helps us return to it more fully.
6. Connection is the real destination
The article suggests the greatest adventures aren't about summits or records. They're about relationships.
Adventure helps us reconnect with:
- ourselves
- family
- friends
- strangers
- nature
- community
The destination becomes secondary to the experience of shared moments and meaningful conversations.
7. Challenge creates meaning
The article rejects the idea that life should always be comfortable.
Some discomfort is necessary.
Rain.
Cold.
Long walks.
Uncertainty.
These experiences strip away distractions and leave us with what matters most.
The challenge isn't the goal.
The transformation is.
The underlying philosophy
Adventure is portrayed less as recreation and more as a way of living.
Instead of asking: "Where should I travel?"
the article encourages asking: "How can I become more alive today?"
Adventure is about remaining curious, present and willing to be changed by experience.
Why adventure is good for us
I’ve been asked a lot about what I do and the benefits of adventuring, travelling / being outside in nature for our mental and physical health. It’s not easy to provide a simple answer.So I’ve set myself the task, to begin to unpack this in a few key points, in order to provide an answer based...
23/06/2026
When was the last time you did something adventurous?
Not reckless. Not extreme.
Just something that nudged you beyond the edge of your comfort zone.
Adventure has a way of waking us up. It gets us outside, away from screens, routines and distractions. It reminds us that the world is bigger than our daily to-do list and that we're capable of more than we often give ourselves credit for.
Sometimes adventure looks like climbing a mountain, running a trail or exploring a new place. Other times it's as simple as saying yes to an opportunity, meeting new people, trying something different or taking that first step into the unknown.
Adventure expands your view of the world. It deepens your connection with yourself. It strengthens relationships with the people who matter most. It builds community. And it reminds us that nature is still one of the best places to find perspective.
Life was never meant to be lived entirely inside our comfort zone.
So, when was the last time you did something adventurous?
And what's the next adventure calling your name?
Get off the couch - put down your phone - go do something exciting and story worthy.
28/05/2026
A great opportunity to have a cool run or walk experience in Sydney capturing iconic venues and at the same time making a difference - check out Step Out for Cancer
The run is particularly cool as it has a feature where you test yourself with the most 1k laps in 2hrs
Grab some friends and lock in your entry at super early bird pricing
Tour de Cure Australia
Step Out for Cancer
GET A MOVE ON 🏃💥
Super early bird pricing for Tour de Cure Australia’s Step Out for Cancer ends THIS SUNDAY.
Save 30% on your registration with code SOFC30 - then put those savings towards your fundraising goal to help change the lives of Aussie kids facing cancer.
📅 Sunday 11 October 2026
🎟️ Register now before prices rise!
🔗 www.stepoutforcancer.com.au
24/05/2026
Top 4 reasons to race the Gloucester Mountain Man TriChallenge this year 🏔️🔥
1. It’s a genuine adventure
This is not your standard multisport race. Gloucester Mountain Man throws you into a mix of mountain biking, paddling and trail running across rugged terrain, river crossings, forest tracks and open country. It’s raw, challenging and incredibly rewarding.
2. The course is next level
Set in the stunning Gloucester and Barrington region, the event combines a 22km mountain bike leg, 11km paddle down the Barrington River and a 9km trail run back into town. Big scenery. Big effort. Big payoff.
3. You can race your way
Go solo if you want the full test or grab your mates and enter as a relay team. Whether you’re chasing a podium, a personal challenge or just an epic weekend away, there’s a place for you on the start line.
4. It’s the kind of event you never forget
There’s something different about events like this. The community, the atmosphere, the challenge and the shared suffering create stories that stay with you long after race day is over.
📅 Race Day — Sunday 13 September 2026
👉 Entries are open now
Gloucester Mountain Man Tri Challenge
Gloucester Tri Challenge
Barrington Coast
28/04/2026
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/business-endurance-sports-travel-bouker-pool-sbuec/
This is a great article - here is a summary of “The Business of Endurance Sports Travel” by Bouker Pool based on the available content and context:
🧠 Core idea (the big shift)
The endurance sports economy is moving from spectator-driven (fans watching) to participant-driven (people doing).
In this model, the athlete is the customer, the content, and the community all at once.
🌍 What “endurance sports travel” actually is
People are increasingly travelling specifically to participate in events (marathons, triathlons, cycling, etc.).
These trips aren’t just races - they’re full experiences (destination + event + community).
Think: “I’m not going to Tokyo for Tokyo… I’m going because I’m running there.”
💰 Why it matters (economic impact)
Endurance events are becoming economic engines for destinations:
Travel bookings (flights, hotels)
Extended stays (athletes + supporters)
Repeat visitation and loyalty
Sports tourism is massive and growing, with hundreds of millions of trips tied to sport annually.
👉 Key point: these participants spend more and stay longer than typical tourists.
🔥 The “Sweat Economy”
Pool frames this as part of a broader shift:
People want active, meaningful experiences, not passive consumption.
Events become:
Personal milestones
Social identity markers
Community rituals
👉 It’s not just a race - it’s a life event people build around.
🧩 What makes it powerful
It combines multiple value layers:
Participation (entry fees)
Travel spend (hotels, food, transport)
Sponsorship (targeted, engaged audience)
Content (social sharing, storytelling)
One participant = multiple revenue streams.
🚀 Strategic opportunity (this is the kicker)
Endurance sports travel is still underbuilt and fragmented.
Big opportunity to:
Package events + travel + experiences into integrated products
Create destination ecosystems, not just one-off races
Build repeatable, scalable “event tourism” platforms
👉 Translation: this isn’t just events - it’s a platform business waiting to be built.
⚠️ Implicit challenge
The industry hasn’t fully caught up:
Too many standalone events
Not enough joined-up experiences
The winners will be those who:
Think beyond race day
Design the end-to-end journey
🧭 Bottom line
Endurance sports travel is a high-growth, experience-led market where:
The participant is the product
The event is the catalyst
The destination is part of the story
And the real play?
👉 Turning one-day events into multi-day, high-value experiences people travel for on purpose.
The Business of Endurance Sports Travel:
Destination Events, Economic Impact & the Rise of the "Sweat Economy" When a runner books a flight to Tokyo for a marathon, she isn't just entering a race. She's funding a hotel room, filling a restaurant, hiring a local guide, and becoming a walking billboard for a destination.
16/04/2026
thoughts on this one - I am not sure 🤔
Vastnaut One Founding Backer Deposit Deal
Vastnaut One, the world’s first AI-powered 4x4 exoskeleton, is launching soon. Pay a $10 refundable deposit now to secure the best price.