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Business Insider features Grindr ‘Straight Reporter Briefly Goes Gay In The Name Of Journalism’

Business Insider features Grindr ‘Straight Reporter Briefly Goes Gay In The Name Of Journalism’

By Noah Davis

Straight Reporter Briefly Goes Gay In The Name Of Journalism

Straight Reporter Briefly Goes Gay In The Name Of Journalism

The New York Observer sure is into experiential journalism these days.

First, they send Nate Freeman out to flaunt the ban on smoking in public parks.

Now, Freeman, who is straight, is trying to meet dudes on Grindr, the social network for single gay men.

The results? Predictably fantastic.

Five minutes after creating an account on Grindr and uploading a good-looking picture of myself holding a bottle of Chambord — when in Rome, right? — I received a message from a man wearing a button down shirt and flashing a toothy, wholesome smile. He was 32 tears old, six feet tall and 400 feet away.

“Very cute,” he chatted me.

“Oh cool,” I chatted him back. “Hey, wanna meet near 321 44th for a smoke?”

“I wanna fuck,” he responded a few seconds later.

“I don’t think I’m ready for that,” I said. “It’s 4:00 in the afternoon?”

“Damn,” he replied. “BJ?”

I’ll give him credit for persistence. “OK, have to be honest,” I said. “I’m a writer for a newspaper, and I’m writing a profile of grindr, so I wanted to try it out.”

“I’d love to play with u : )” he said.

Next week, Freeman will, well, we don’t have any idea. That’s his job.

The New York Observer features Grindr ‘Grind Up On This! A Straight Man Uploads a Cute Pic to Grindr’

Grind Up On This! A Straight Man Uploads a Cute Pic to Grindr

Grindr founder Joel Simkhai explains his hot-boy network before it hooks up with the heteros.

By Nate Freeman

Grind Up On This! A Straight Man Uploads a Cute Pic to Grindr

Grind Up On This! A Straight Man Uploads a Cute Pic to Grindr

THERE HAVE BEEN MANY HAPPY BOYS who have found their perfect matches on Grindr, the social network for single gay men, but founder Joel Simkhai has a favorite.

“There was a serviceman in the Air Force, stationed in Baghdad and Kuwait,” Mr. Simkhai said on the phone from Los Angeles, where he lives. “He used Grindr to connect with other gay men in the military—and locals!”

The smartphone application, which debuted in March 2009, employs G.P.S. technology to conjure up the profiles of gay men who are in close proximity to the user. Since its introduction, more than two million men in 192 countries have logged on. Through the social network’s chat channel, users can arrange anything from a friendly coffee date to a random quickie.

And it’s discreet. The soldier stationed in Baghdad didn’t ask, didn’t tell and didn’t care.

“He was just so thankful,” Mr. Simkhai recalled. “It literally brought tears to my eyes, and I thanked him for his service to our country.”

BORN IN TEL AVIV, Mr. Simkhai grew up in Long Island and attended Tufts. After receiving a double major in international relations and economics, he headed to New York, where, despite being young, attractive and out of the closet, Mr. Simkhai found the hook-up scene less than satisfying.

“I’ve always kind of wondered who’s gay around me,” he said. “I’ve always had the situation where I make eye contact and nothing emerges.”

Mr. Simkhai reached out to Dodgeball creator Dennis Crowley and asked if he could develop an add-on for his startup—which was later bought by Google and inspired his next project, Foursquare—for gay men to pinpoint the exact location of other gay men.

When he declined, he decided to create the thing on his own. The second generation iPhone came equipped with G.P.S., so Mr. Simkhai asked a software developer in Denmark to lay the groundwork for a startup that could utilize that technology.

Grindr has been wildly successful, at least among its target audience. Now, two years after its launch, the app is poised to grow its user base to include women and heterosexuals. Code-named Project Amicus, the new arm of the site will debut later this year.

Being straight, I had only recently become familiar with the Grindr app. I was first struck but the name, the racy insinuations of that word, the way the d and the r rub up against one another. Nice branding!

Mr. Simkhai, however, plays coy on the subject of Grindr’s sexual implications. “That’s not what it’s really about,” he said. “We looked at a coffee grinder, a social stew, mixing people up; that was the inspiration for the name.”

We told him the name reminded us of hardcore foreplay.

“Even if you were to grind two people together, that’s not sex,” he said. “It is intimate, and that’s cool. We’re not scared of intimacy.”

In that case, I asked Joel if he thought it would be O.K. if I got a Grindr account of my own.

“I guess you can try it out,” he said. “It’ll be a good test.”

FIVE MINUTES AFTER creating an account on Grindr and uploading a good-looking picture of myself holding a bottle of Chambord—when in Rome, right?—I received a message from a man wearing a button down shirt and flashing a toothy, wholesome smile. He was 32 years old, six feet tall and 400 feet away.

“Very cute,” he chatted me.

“Oh cool,” I chatted him back. “Hey, wanna meet near 321 44th for a smoke?”

“I wanna fuck,” he responded a few seconds later.

“I don’t think I’m ready for that,” I said. “It’s 4:00 in the afternoon?”

“Damn,” he replied. “BJ?”

I’ll give him credit for persistence. “OK, have to be honest,” I said. “I’m a writer for a newspaper, and I’m writing a profile of grindr, so I wanted to try it out.”

“I’d love to play with u : )” he said.

A FEW DAYS AFTER I talked to Mr. Simkhai, I heard back from the military guy he mentioned. He’s a sergeant, first class, works in air traffic control and used Grindr to keep in touch with his boyfriend—they met on a military base in Mississippi—while on duty in Baghdad.

“There were about four or five other men on Grindr at my base,” he said over the phone. “We actually put together a volleyball team, all of the Grindr people. We didn’t name ourselves ‘The Grindrs’ or anything, but we were a team.”

As he moved from one corner of the country to another, the sergeant would fire up his Grindr app to touch base with the homosexual community there.

“You can go anywhere in this world, and you can launch Grindr, and you can find other gay men feet from you,” Mr. Simkhai said. “It tells our user, ‘You’re never alone.’”

That sounded good to me. When Project Amicus launches, a new mass of people will find friends, partners and one-night stands just feet away. Straights may never be as direct about sex as their gay counterparts tend to be, but the new app will at least facilitate the courtship process. All you have to do is whip out your iPhone, that instrument in your pants pocket, and say hello.

Slate Magazine features Grindr ‘The Gay Bar Its new competition By June Thomas’

Slate Magazine features Grindr ‘The Gay Bar Its new competition By June Thomas’

The Gay Bar. Its new competition.

By June Thomas

Slate Magazine features Grindr 'The Gay Bar Its new competition By June Thomas'

Slate Magazine features Grindr 'The Gay Bar Its new competition By June Thomas'

The days—and nights—when gay bars had a monopoly on same-sex social lives are long gone. As much as contemporary queers may romanticize the gay bar as a sanctuary in a lonely world, most of us now have lots of safe spaces, both real and virtual, available to us.

Not convinced? Google “gay group” and the name of your town, and the search engine should cough up a range of organizations from sports leagues to book groups, gay churches to the local men’s chorus. (I swear, half the same-sex couples who make it into the New York Times‘ “Vows” section claim to have met in gay hiking groups.) Over the last three decades, a clean and sober culture has developed as an alternative to the bar scene. New York’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center hosts at least 12 regular AA meetings, as well as a dozen other 12-step recovery groups, and events like NYC Queer + Sober are designed to “provide a safe and fun experience to the sober LGBT community during Gay Pride.”

When it comes to nightlife, gay revelers have more options than ever. Gay men have the circuit party scene—lavish multiday, multivenue annual events, such as the Palm Springs and Miami white parties—where the emphasis is on grand spectacle and production values that exceed anything that would be possible at a neighborhood bar. In some cities, groups use the Web to organize “guerrilla gay bars,” a sort of flaming flash mob in which homosexuals descend unannounced on a straight bar and turn it gay for one night only. And in most cities, freelance promoters produce regular “parties” at straight venues as an alternative to the “gay every day” bar scene. The trend took off in the 1980s, when the community’s desire for variety outpaced the supply of gay venues, and accelerated after 2000, when it became easier to publicize events via email.

Lesbian party promoters are especially busy: Even in the largest metropolis, lesbians rarely have more than one or two bars to choose from, so it’s natural for women to crave new vistas. Maggie Collier, of Maggie C Events, currently runs two weekly women’s parties in Manhattan. “Stiletto,” on Sundays, is a daytime event at the swank Maritime Hotel, and since it’s an outdoor bash, shorts and flip-flops are appropriate. On Wednesday nights at “Creme de la Femme,” the code is “dress to impress.” When I asked why she set that tone, she told me, “We should set the bar really high for variety. We deserve every possible option. Everything that the heterosexual nightlife community has, we ought to have those options as well.”

This sort of event is not popular with gay-bar proprietors. Former owner Elaine Romagnoli told me, “They will empty your room out. Your customers will all go to that event and come back at 3 a.m., when you have an hour to go, and they’re already trashed.” As easy as it is to understand the bar owners’ annoyance at losing their regulars to the irresistible appeal of the new and different, Collier is right when she says, “I don’t think that we should stop ourselves from giving women more options just because we respect—and I definitely do—these establishments that have been around forever and that do it every night.” And given the appealing economics, these regular parties are probably here to stay. Party promoters generally work on a commission basis, taking a percentage of the bar takings, so naturally their overhead is a fraction of the bars’.

Perhaps the gay bar’s biggest new competitors, however, are gay dating sites and apps. “Luke,” a gay man in his mid-30s, told me that new technology has been “the single most important development” in the world of gay dating. (Like some other people I interviewed for this series, he preferred not to use his real name when discussing his romantic life.) “From the time I came out in 1993 until about 1999, there was only one reliable place on a given night where you could peruse a catalog of gay men: at the bar or club. Now I have the Internet and Grindr for that.”

I first heard about Grindr from Irish writer Colm Toibin. At a fancy-pants New York panel on “Authors in the Age of the Internet” sponsored by the London Review of Books last April, then-55-year-old Toibin told a charming, shaggy-dog story about his adventures in gay social media. He described how he’d fantasized about a piece of technology that would marry a gay-dating service with GPS to create a device that would tell you “there’s a guy if you turn left.” Then he discovered that such a thing exists; it’s called Grindr. Grindr is a location-based phone app that displays a grid of photographs of other members in your immediate vicinity, arranged by distance. If you like the look of someone’s picture and blurb, you can chat and arrange to get together. I love the directness of the sample chat on the company website: “Hey bud I like your profile.” “Thanks man. You too. Where u at?” [Sends map] “Let’s meet. Here’s a photo.” Who said the art of seduction is dead?

Grindr launched in March 2009 and currently has more than 2 million users, one-half of them in the United States. Eight thousand guys sign up for the service every day. Grindr is strictly for Adams seeking Steves, but the company says that Project Amicus, an app for straight and lesbian users, will launch this summer.

Read more @ http://www.slate.com/id/2297608/

Neon Tommy features ‘MADE IN LA Presents ‘Bebe: The After Party’

MADE IN LA Presents ‘Bebe: The After Party’

Camille Massey | Staff Reporter
MADE IN LA Presents 'Bebe: The After Party'

MADE IN LA Presents 'Bebe: The After Party'

Red carpet, bright lights, snapping paparazzi, model mayhem and ripping runway shows—must be Fashion Week in the City of Angels.

Thursday night, MADE IN LA, a creative group of individuals including DJ Alicia, Cisko Casas, and Justin Howard, hosted a fashion show showcasing Bebe’s 2011 spring collection at the venue supperclub in Hollywood.

The celebrities came out in full force to check out the new line and lit up the red carpet prior to the show. From Grey’s Anatomy star Courtney Hope to supermodel Jaimie Hilfiger to Cirque du Soleil creative director Christine Marcello, a plethora of Hollywood talents came out looking red carpet ready.

Unlike any fashion event you’ve ever seen, ‘Bebe: The After Party’ is an interactive playground, featuring everything from provocative performances to innovative instillations to acrobatic antics, and of course, a riveting runway show featuring the hottest trends from Bebe.

Best described as “club wear with a touch of Hollywood glamour” Bebe’s 2011 spring collection is designed for any woman looking to turn heads and make the world her personal catwalk.

Read more @ http://www.neontommy.com/news/2011/03/made-la-presents-bebe-after-party

CBS News features Grindr on ‘HowAboutWe joins a growing list of mobile dating apps promising to help you find love on the go.’

CBS News features Grindr on ‘HowAboutWe joins a growing list of mobile dating apps promising to help you find love on the go.’

CBS News features Grindr on 'HowAboutWe joins a growing list of mobile dating apps promising to help you find love on the go.'

CBS News features Grindr on 'HowAboutWe joins a growing list of mobile dating apps promising to help you find love on the go.'

When it comes to your love life, not surprisingly, there’s an app for that. A few actually. But one new addition to the mobile dating scene promises to get people to stop staring at that little screen, and start being social. Popular dating site HowAboutWe launches its new location-based iPhone app today, answering the age-old dating question: “Where can I meet someone?”

The answer in the smartphone era, it turns out, is right around the corner — and right now.

Here’s how it works. Users post a perfect first date description in the app, then get connected in real time to one or more people nearby who are game.

For instance, a guy in DC who writes: “How about we grab a hot dog at Ben’s Chili Bowl,” might get an instant “yes!” moments later from a girl three blocks away — and that afternoon they’re enjoying chili dogs together.

The start of something beautiful? Perhaps. The app features real-time access to thousands of nearby date ideas, adding a little serendipity to digital dating.

Still like looking at that little screen when it comes to love and romance? Ok, fine — better try these apps:

Skout: This app lets you see who’s around you and browse their profiles, including photos, notes and comments, as well as chat with multiple users.

Grindr: This app was designed with gay guys in mind, using a location-based mobile network to determine a user’s location and instantly connect them with nearby matches.

Zoosk: Zoosk lets you receive “flirts” on your phone from nearby users, upload pics and tag them, and peruse a list of local singles.

Lovetricity: Prefer a party trick to woo ladies at the bar? Try this one: two people place a thumb on the app’s “love-sensing” pads and the app measures the chemistry — from “Burning Hot” to “On Life Support” — between you two.

Tune in and join the conversation every Tuesday at 10 A.M. PST / 1 P.M. EST for the latest episode of What’s Trending on CBSNews.com

The What’s Trending show is produced by Shira Lazar Productions and the Disrupt Group, who are solely responsible for the content, opinions and viewpoints.

Edge – New York, New York ‘Cruising in the Age of Gay Mobile Apps’

Edge – New York, New York ‘Cruising in the Age of Gay Mobile Apps’

by Joseph Erbentraut
EDGE Contributor

When Grindr CEO and founder Joel Simkhai went about creating the gay dating smartphone app for the iPhone that has now become a two million-user, multi-operating system enterprise, he was simply looking to build a mechanism to make it easier for gay, bi, and otherwise curious men to meet each other.

But as the phenomenon continues to spread to new platforms (including the Android and Blackberry, as of last month), demographics, (via its lesbian- and straight-inclusive Project Amicus) and inspire other apps (namely Scruff and the latest addition, GuySpy) who tweak the formula to add other components and capabilities, it appears increasing likely that the when, how, and where of queer men and very possibly others meeting and hooking up will never be quite the same.

The trend has led to some hysterical, terrified headlines — as a May 27 Vanity Fair article proclaimed, “Grindr: Welcome to the world’s biggest, scariest gay bar.” Still other queer pundits fear the post-Grindr era will contribute further to the demise of gay men meeting the good, old-fashioned away — in bars, parks, and a variety of gayborhood hotspots and haunts — as the younger, tech-savvy generations turn instead to pursuing guys exclusively via mobile devices.

But despite all the histrionics, anecdotal evidence seems to point toward a contrary effect as many gays are using GPS dating platforms like Grindr and GuySpy to supplement, rather than replace altogether, the sometimes sticky, shady world of gay barhopping and face-to-face human interaction of all types.

That was exactly the intention, according to Simkhai, who told EDGE he felt apps like his are actually helping to “get people back into the bars.” The users of his app spend an average of nearly an hour and a half logged on and are literally located all over the world these days — half the app’s users live outside the United States and metro centers like London and Tokyo are among their most popular locales.

“You’re no longer confined to a computer to meet someone virtually,” he noted. “You can do it anywhere and it’s more integrated into your real life. You don’t have to stay at home; instead you can go out, live your life, and can even go to a bar and use it.”

And, subsequently, you can find out if the IT guy with serious gay face or that temp with the almost-too-perfectly tapered trousers plays for the queer squad.

The curiosity factor appears to be the leading motivation for many gays to download apps like Grindr, whether it’s in their workplace, in a bar, near their home, or even in their childhood hometown. While many GPS dating apps have a bit of a reputation as purely a tool proceeding hookups, as more and more users take the plunge, it appears guys are using the technology to meet up for purposes far beyond a no-strings-attached frolic.

David from San Francisco, Calif., said he has been a Grindr user since late 2009, just about six months since the app debuted. He said the app has taken on the most utility for him during his travels to other cities and countries due to the ease with which one can meet guys who pique one’s fancy, or identify popular hotspots to hang with hotties face to face. While never a fan of online dating sites previously, he considers himself a new convert thanks to the app.

“It’s definitely a nice plus for travelers to get more of a sense of the local scene,” said David. “Some call it addictive but it is very effortless and easy to use on a day-to-day basis.”

Josh, another Grindr user who said he checks the app several times a day, said the app was helpful when he moved recently to Cleveland. One guy he began talking with eventually became one of his closest friends and remains so today. He also said the app has helped him locate folks to head to bars with, rather than encouraging him to stay at home and “chat eternally” with no intention of following up in person — as some feared GPS apps might encourage.

But there are some drawbacks to the apps, as several users interviewed for this story noted. Of course, there are the headless six-pack torso men, fake profiles, and trolls that are to be expected in any sort of online dating realm. But the streamlined design of an app like Grindr can blur users’ intentions.

Max, a twenty-something Grindr user in Chicago, indicated there are typically two types of guys on the app: “Those that want to fuck and those that want to meet other local gay guys and have polite conversation.” It can be difficult to tell who’s who, particularly when there is no specific “looking for” category for no-frills fun. Grindr, in fact, has some particularly stringent rules against the use of provocative (i.e. full frontal) photos that suggests that sort of motive. The vagueness has led him to use the app less often than he previously did.

“I think that if more conversations were like ’You wanna hook up?’ ’Yes.’ ’You got a big dick?’ ’Yes.’ ’Let’s do this,’ I would be more willing to take the time to Grindr but consistently you are [on there,] an hour passes, you know this guy’s life story but are no closer to hooking up than an hour before,”

Lady Gaga Turns Grindr CEO Joel Simkhai into a Monster — Literally

Lady Gaga Turns Grindr CEO Joel Simkhai into a Monster — Literally

Lady Gaga Turns Grindr CEO Joel Simkhai into a Monster — Literally

THE SHOT: Joel Simkhai, founder and CEO of Grindr–the gay sex app for agoraphobics–gets a little carried away on his own profile to promote their Gaga sweepstakes. Want a chance to win an autographed copy of Born This Way on vinyl? All you have to do is “monsterfy” your Grindr profile photo, thereby giving up any hope of getting laid for a week.Although some users trolling the app may have an innate predisposition for looking monstrous (example 1, example 2, example 3), we are all for efficiently spotting Lady Gaga’s gay fans and keeping them exactly where they are — 340.4 miles away.

BBC Chanel 4 News features Grindr as a prime example of how mobile apps move us from virtual life to real life.

Check out this news coverage from the BBC’s Chanel 4 Nightly News where they highlight Grindr, as the prime example of how mobile social apps are pushing people from the virtual realm into connecting in real life.

End of virtual reality: How apps like Mobli and Grindr connect us to real life

 

Associated Press / Salon.Com – How would Weiner do on Grindr?

How would Weiner do on Grindr?

The congressman’s photos may have been embarrassing, but on gay hook-up sites, they would have fit right in

Associated Press / Salon.Com - How would Weiner do on Grindr?

As Anthony Weiner’s leaked photos have been endlessly circulating in the media, one question has been popping up again and again: Who, in God’s name, would have found them sexy in the first place? For most women, it seems, receiving a headless photo of a flexing man or a close up of an erection is about as arousing as finding a toilet brush in your mailbox. But one of the most noteworthy things about those photos, aside from the fact that they reeked of pathetic narcissism (and that Anthony Weiner, clearly, works out) is that they looked almost identical to the countless photos that exist on gay hook-up sites and apps, like Manhunt and Grindr.

So if you’re still wondering who could have been turned on by that photo of Weiner clenching his chest, the answer is: Gay men.

Over the last decade, gay hook-up sites have completely changed the way that gay men find each other, interact with each other, and have sex with each other — and many of them are premised on the posting of photos very similar to Weiner’s. Manhunt, one of the most popular of these sites, is primarily a catalogue of men looking for sex in your particular neighborhood. Click on any man’s profile picture and it will take you to an description of their interests, height and penis size, among other details, and a trove of photos of them kissing their biceps or lounging around their apartments in their underwear or doing bicep curls in their jacuzzis or, often, pictures of their erect penises. You can chat with other men on the site, exchange photos and then, if you’re interested, meet up to have sex or go on a date.

And Manhunt is just one of many sites and applications that fill this purpose. Dudesnude is a dating and social networking site premised entirely around people posting naked pictures of themselves. Big Muscle and Big Muscle Bears do the same for, respectively, gym queens and gym queens with body hair. And Grindr is a wildly successful iPhone app that allows gay men to hook up based on their current geographical location. Log onto Grindr and it’ll tell you that there’s a man 1,200 feet from you looking for someone with a hairy chest and a foot fetish. Each profile has information, like height and weight, but the most important thing is the photo. If you log onto Grindr in your apartment, your screen will fill up with a hundred men looking to connect with other men, an army of headless, flexing torsos.

In the Grindr universe, photos like Weiner’s are constantly traded back and forth, partly to prove that men are who they say they are but also because they’re a part of the flirtation process that precedes an actual flesh-and-blood meeting. What’s a clearer sign that you’re aroused by him than sending  a picture of your erection? And for some users, just the exchange of these kinds of intimate photos is an easy substitute for sex.

How would Anthony Weiner have done on Grindr? We uploaded Weiner’s shirtless shot to a phone, and logged on in midtown Manhattan. Almost immediately, men started sending him messages. “More pics,” one 31-year-old man, wearing an oversized baseball cap and standing on a beach, asked immediately. When Weiner responded with the image of himself posing with his cats, and then the picture of his bulging gray briefs, the man answered by asking Weiner’s age, and sending a shirtless photo of himself in his underpants.

Over the course of the next 24 hours, Weiner’s Grindr profile received six more messages from people who were intrigued and interested in potentially meeting up. Their entreaties ranged from a straightforward “hey handsome” to “where you at?” to a man sending a picture of himself upside down on a trapeze.

So why are gay men so much more receptive to these kinds of photos than straight women? It might be because men are simply more turned on by visual cues than women. (A point made by Cindy Meston in this interview with Tracy Clark-Flory.) It might be because gay male culture has always had a much greater emphasis on casual sex than the straight world, and if you’re going to hook up with someone and never talk again, you’re probably going to be more interested in what his chest looks like than how he feels about current events like, say, Anthony Weiner. Throughout much of gay history, men were only able to connect through furtive glances, behavior that remains firmly ingrained in the way we interact.

Ironically, one could actually also argue that Weiner’s conspicuously hairless, gym-built torso is also the curious end result of this particular aspect of gay culture. The obsession with hyper-muscular torsos that emerged in gay culture in the  1980s helped foster a widespread obsession with the body that fed the metrosexual craze of the 1990s. Weiner’s carefully sculpted, quite possibly waxed, torso belies a male vanity that would not have been acceptable before gay men managed to convince straight men that it was a good idea to spend $200 a month on a gym membership and go to a tanning salon.

As the revelations around the Weiner scandal keep getting more and more unpleasant, much of the remaining sympathy for him seems to be withering. But the fact is, in a different context, his actions wouldn’t have seemed all that questionable — and they probably would have gotten him laid.

  • Thomas Rogers is Salon’s Deputy Arts Editor. More: Thomas Rogers

Outside Magazine features Northwest Passage – Best Outfitted Weekend Trips Outside Magazine

Outside Magazine features Northwest Passage – Best Outfitted Weekend Trips Outside Magazine

Outside Magazine features Northwest Passage - Best Outfitted Weekend Trips Outside Magazine

Outside Magazine features Northwest Passage - Best Outfitted Weekend Trips Outside Magazine

Outside Magazine June 2011

Wisconsin Hat Trick
On the Northwest Passage‘s three-day Devil’s Lake Multi-Sport trip, guests paddle the 360-acre lake, climb on 100-foot quartzite walls, and hike through northwoods forests. The group stays in a campground with hot showers. Guides provide all equipment and food; BYO sleeping bag. $365 per person; departures in June and September; nwpassage.com

 

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