Category Archives: New hut systems

summit huts

Hut News October 2018

Hut News October 2018

Passing along a backlog of hut news items accumulated over the past months, mostly concerning US huts:

American Prairie Reserve Hut System Opens

This summer the American Prairie Reserve opened two yurts, the first in a planned 10 hut

American Prairie Reserve Yurts

John & Margaret Craighead Hut, near Judith River

system in a vast prairie reserve near along the Missouri River.  Guests reserve the entire yurt, which sleeps up to 9 people in 4 bunk rooms.  Fully equipped kitchens, compost toilets and common areas are provided. The huts are self-service, but a full-service option is available through an outfitter.  Congratulations to Mike Kautz and his colleagues in launching this ambitious effort!

 

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LandPaths Sonoma County

LandPaths: a hut system dedicated to land stewardship

Planning LandPaths hut system: hut-to-hut

dedicated to hands-on land stewardship

by Sam Demas, May 2018

QUESTION: What kind of organization is planning a new hut system and is dedicated to connecting people with the land by:

  • sponsoring regular trekking and kayaking trips for youth, families, and others?
  • operating several community gardens and environmentally themed summer camps?
  • offering workshops, classes and outings linking teens to the outdoors?
  • conducting early literacy reading programs in the outdoors?
  • successfully partnering with local schools, government agencies, non-profits and land owners?
  • focusing efforts on working with the Latino community and offering scholarships to up to 40% of participants in their programs?

ANSWER:   LandPaths, a unique land trust in Sonoma County, California.

Over the past 22 years LandPaths’ dynamic, creative, and values-based approach to land stewardship has engendered widespread respect and tremendous community support. This is staffed by 17 consummate cooperators and operate in a wide range of partnerships. They successfully fund-raise to provide scholarships for many educational programs targeting youth from Santa Rosa and Sonoma County.  

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Adirondacks Hamlets to Huts Test Run

Adirondacks Hamlets-to-Huts Test Run

North Creek Circuit, May 8 – 13, 2018

This post reviews the  Adirondacks Hamlets to Huts (AdkH2H) concept as a community-based hut-to-hut system, reports the key results of a test run, and outlines unique features and next steps for this new hut-to-hut system.

Adirondacks Hamlets to Huts Test Run

Launching a new hut system! Photo by John DiGiacomo, courtesy AdkH2H

 Fifteen hardy hikers signed on for a guided test run In early May of Adirondacks Hamlets-to-Huts’ first hut-to-hut trip: the 47 mile North Creek Circuit, which is scheduled to officially open Spring 2019.  But first, as part of a thorough planning process, the founders Joe Dadey (Executive Director of AdkH2H) and Jack Drury (Leading Edge, LLC) wanted substantive feedback from experienced trekkers.  Participating in the opening of a new model for hut systems in USA was a thrill all of us, and a special treat for a hut nut like me!

It was a great trip!  It seems clear they will be ready next year to open this circuit to the public (there may be a “soft opening” in Fall 2018).  This is first of a projected five or more hut-to-hut trails that will be implemented in the amazing 6,000,000 acre Adirondack Park, which is as large as Yosemite, Glacier, Yellowstone, and the Everglades combined. This vast and unique combination of wilderness and private lands makes the park an incubator and lightning rod for ideas about how people and wilderness can live and hopefully thrive next door to each other. 

The AdkH2H Concept

This initiative builds on existing trails and lodging infrastructure and “connects the dots” among a wide range of Adirondacks trails, lodging, scenic wonders, and recreation opportunities. Long term, they plan for 5 or more distinctive, four-season, community-based hut-to-hut recreation experiences.  AdkH2H is grounded in a strong commitment to economic development in an economically depressed region, and is based on a strong ethos of environmental protection.  The idea is to create a series of five or more hut-to-hut trails throughout the Adirondack Park that will eventually be tied together into a park-wide system. 

Each hut-to-hut trail will link multiple Adirondack communities (hamlets).  Skiers and walkers will start and end their journeys by spending the night in one of the communities.  Most importantly, along each of the the Hamlets to Huts trials they will stay each night in existing accommodations and eat in local restaurants (or shape in local grocery stores).  The idea is to:

 

“create a spectrum of lodging, from primitive, yet upscale, planform tents and yurts, to existing rental cabins and bed & breakfast accommodations, to eco-lodges, and five star hotels.  It will range from low-cost, hostel-type lodging to expensive, amenity-rich, upscale lodging. Some lodgings will be self-service, where visitors prepare their own meals, while other lodgings will be full service and provide meals.”

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