a mountain biker on the Portal Trail in Moab, Utah
climbers on Mount Denali, Alaska
a guide on Rinchen Zoe La mountain in Bhutan
divers in the Eagles Nest Cave Complex in Florida
a free skier dropping down a cliff in La Grave, France
Steve Fisher kayaking on the Congo River in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Africa
people in Hang Son Doong in Vietnam
a slackliner walking across the Aiguille Dibona in the French Alps
surfer Jeremy Sherwin surfing at Shipsterns Bluff, in Tasmania, Australia
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A biker charges down Portal Trail in Utah. The exposed trail sits 200 feet above the Colorado River and demands advanced technical bike skills.
Photograph by Whit Richardson, Getty Images

The 9 Most Extreme Adventures in the World

From mountain biking to caving, here's a list of the hardest, the highest, the most challenging pursuits that athletes around the world aim to tame.

ByKristen Pope
August 17, 2017
11 min read

When extreme athletes want to test their mettle, they don’t go for a Sunday stroll. They embark on the world’s most extreme adventures, tackling the highest climbs, deepest dives, and roughest rapids on the planet. These adventures require advanced athletic achievement and a mastery of highly specialized skills—and they are not for the faint of heart.

The Most Epic Technical Mountain Bike Trail:

Portal Trail, Utah

surfer Jeremy Sherwin surfing at Shipsterns Bluff, in Tasmania, Australia

Shipstern Bluff draws top surfers to ride unpredictable waves that look like stairsteps, all while avoiding great white sharks that troll the waters.

Photograph by Sean Davey, Aurora

South Pole storms from the “furious 50s” maximize the waves in this remote stretch of southeastern Tasmania. Surfers flock here to catch sets of 20-foot waves, but access isn’t easy; either a long hike or a lengthy boat ride is required. And in 2017, one of the nearby cliffs partially collapsed from the harsh weather and erosion, making the hike even more treacherous.

The Southern Ocean swell leads to unpredictable waves producing “stairsteps,” which surfers have to drop down as they surf—all while keeping an eye out for great white sharks.

Kristen Pope is a Wyoming based outdoor, adventure, and conservation writer. Follow her on Twitter @Kristen_E_Pope.

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