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BBB Better Business Bureau Reliability Program Member

4 Web sites hope to gain a solid foothold with adventurous travelers

Like well-heeled climbers determined to scale Mount Everest, cash-infused Web sites are struggling to muscle in on a burgeoning adventure-travel market that can encompass everything from cooking schools in Tuscany to subsistence camping in the Outback.

''It's the fastest growing area of online travel,'' says David Kirby, editor of Interactive Travel Report.

The biggest buzz surrounds a quartet of competitors billed as ''one- stop, full service'' sites for the Patagonia crowd.

All four chant the Internet mantra of commerce, content and community by offering tour, book and gear purchases, destination and activity information and online forums laced with advice from resident experts and/or avid readers. Recognizing the complicated nature of adventure travel, none provide direct online tour booking. But they already supply, or plan to add, such gee-whiz features as live online customer service and gear checklists tailored to specific kinds of trips.

But like so many other travel Web sites, these often deliver far less than their jam-packed home pages promise -- and could end up languishing in base camp while their customers head elsewhere.

Here's a closer look.

iExplore.com

Like its closest competitor, Away.com, iExplore defines the adventure travel market broadly. Aimed less at buff Gen Xers and more at baby boomers who might raft the Grand Canyon one year and eat their way through Japan the next, it sells 4,000 tours through about 100 tour companies. Can't find anything that fits? iExplore.com says its 25- person call center can customize most trips, as well as answer destination questions and suggest gear.

Strengths: iExplore.com does a fairly good job of grouping related information in one place. Click on a tour, for example, and the resulting page will provide links to background research (including Insight Guides and Lonely Planet), recommended reading and gear, in-house experts and reader reports, and ''trip details'' that incorporate day-by-day itineraries.

Weaknesses: Travelers can't do a specific search for an activity and/or destination. And while iExplore touts its stable of experts (certified PADI divemasters and former trip leaders for Mountain Travel/Sobek among them), those experts may have to cover a lot of ground -- including, in one case, all of Central and South America.

Adventureseek.com

Launched in December, this site sells about 4,000 active tours from 250 North America-based outfitters. A still-rudimentary ''trip wizard' ' helps match travelers to trips and lets them compare features; would- be buyers can call a toll-free number that redirects them to the selected outfitter, link to the outfitter's site, or fill out an online reservation form with a promised response within 24 hours.

Strengths: Adventureseek's clean design doesn't bludgeon readers with choices. The site encourages participation by awarding ''AdventureMiles' ' for becoming a member, submitting trip reports and buying trips. Miles can be redeemed for selected books or gift certif- icates at partners R.E.I. or Lonely Planet guidebooks (which also supplies destination content).

Weaknesses: The ''free miles'' gambit hasn't paid off yet. A ''community center'' includes a picture of the week, but no trip reports or outfitter critiques. And while Adventureseek boasts its staffers have ''carefully interviewed'' each outfitter for its ''extensive and evaluative profiles, '' it doesn't share its selection criteria with readers.

Away.com

Designed to ''challenge the mind, body and senses'' and financed in part by Gannett Co. (parent of USA TODAY), this new site created from the recent merger of GreenTravel.com and AdventureQuest.com casts a wide net. (Just how wide? A recent reader travelogue, promoted on the home page, promises the low-down on a Royal Caribbean cruise.) Travelers can choose from among about 1,000 tour companies. Trips are categorized by activity, destination and channel (adventure, ' 'green'' and cultural); booking is through Away.com's call center in Portland, Maine.

Strengths: Recognizing that adventure travel doesn't always entail a two-week commitment and a willingness to pop anti-malarial pills, the site's personalized ''MyAway.com'' feature supplies weekend escape ideas, including applicable last-minute, Internet-only airfares.

Weaknesses: Away.com is crammed with information, including the full text of 80 Moon Handbooks, but site navigation is cumbersome. A search for ''Napa Valley biking'' turned up such ringers as an article on Balinese food and a bike tour from Prague to Vienna.

GORP.com

The name stands for Great Outdoor Recreation Pages, though the allusion to hikers' nuts-and-raisin mixture is apt. Thanks to last month's launch of a travel service and in-house call center that can book more than 3,500 tours through 450 operators worldwide, GORP has moved far beyond the how-to-build-a-canoe contingent. But this Internet trailblazer -- the site was launched in 1995 -- is still aimed squarely at outdoor enthusiasts.

Strengths: Robust content (the site mixes staff and freelance articles with guidebook excerpts from several outdoor publishers) and a fervent, gather-around-the-campfire sense of community that includes both expert advice and frequent reader contributions. Gear supplier PlanetOutdoors.com has a live help feature that lets sales staff ''push'' relevant information directly to buyers' computer screens.

Weaknesses: GORP's recent expansion into the role of online travel agent risks alienating some of its loyal, do-it-yourself readers. International coverage is spotty: While GORP pitches more than a dozen tours to the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, travelers won't find any background information (or links to that information) on the site.

E-mail lbly@usatoday.com

Copyright 2000, USA Today, a division of Gannett Co., Inc.



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