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Studying a Foreign Language: the Best Overlooked Adventure Tool

Next time you go abroad, consider investing in some language alongside your gear.

By: Kyle Obermann + Save to a List

In middle school I fell flat on my face trying to study Spanish. But, when I finally realized the value ofopening the books and sitting down to grapple with learning a foreignlanguage it changed my life - and especially my adventure career.Here's why you should include learning a foreign language in youradventure tool kit:

1. Document Places No One Else Has

Speaking the local language can bringyou to places that none of your friends, or anyone else, hasdocumented. Foreign countries, especially those less developed, areoverflowing with unexplored and unphotographed mountains and valleysthat are accessible to those with good navigation and route findingskills. But, unless you have the money for a translator and guidethey're hardly accessible. If you speak the local dialect you canhire a local driver and navigate to that remote village or valleymouth; you can ask the local herder along the way if the path youwant is the one that follows that river or heads up towards theridge. And, after all that work cutting out the middle man, you canstand in front of an amazing sunset and sigh with contentment –knowing that you may possibly be the first person to watch the sun godown here from your county.

Hike the Jade Dragon Glacial Trough

2. Ditch the Guide Book

Google Earth is better. If you want totruly get off the beaten path, spend the time and research to lookfor destinations not mentioned in the guide book. Destinations inpopular guides are mentioned and weighed not just because theirbeauty but also by their accessibility – and that means sometimesthe best in the book is actually not the best out there. Take thechance to do some planning on your own and use the different anglesand views on Google Earth and Google Maps to check out valleys,villages, lakes, monasteries – whatever – and then leverage yourlanguage to get there.

3. Local Knowledge, Local Routes

When you speak the local language, theamount of available routes and information expands exponentially. For more remote countries, using English to look for routes crunchesyour options down to a fraction of what actually is out there. Inremote areas of China, for example, you can hardly find a route mapworth looking at if you don't know how to search the web in Chinese.The same goes true for just finding unique trip options. Using yourlanguage skills – even if its just knowing how to type the word“topo map” into Google – changes the game when it comes tofinding and preparing for adventures that other people just can'taccess.

Hike the Zhuqing Monastery Emerald Lakes

4. Safety (For Your Wallet and Yourself)

As you get farther from the cities,locals are less likely to try to rip you off if you speak the locallanguage competently. That's not saying they sometimes still won'ttry, but at least you stand a fighting chance. Even more so, whenyou're out in the mountains it's a great measure of safety to knowthat if something goes wrong you can communicate with the next humanyou see. Plus, sign language doesn't work so well on an emergencyphone call. Bottom line: going into remote places in foreigncountries is flat out dangerous if you don't speak the language.Equip yourself with at least some key phrases before you go.

5. Just More Fun

At the end of the day, probably few of us (including myself) will be complete masters of a language other than our mother tongue. But it's sure more fun trying to work out broken phrases in a local dialect than waving your hands around trying to figure out if you should go left of right. Locals tend to appreciate it more too. When you stop repeating the same English phrase with different exasperated annunciations and increasing volume, and instead go for any scratch of local language you know locals are often much more willing to help. Fellow Explorers Kevin Abernethy and Grant Nyquist have both experienced this – whether it's trying to adapt and use Spanish in Italy or just lightening the mood with those you encounter. Being able to communicate – on any level – is just more fun.

Capture the Sunset from Mt. Laozhai

So, next time you go abroad, considering investing in some language alongside your gear. It changed my life and can change yours too.

Other fellow Explorers with international adventures that you should check out:

We want to acknowledge and thank the past, present, and future generations of all Native Nations and Indigenous Peoples whose ancestral lands we travel, explore, and play on. Always practice Leave No Trace ethics on your adventures and follow local regulations. Please explore responsibly!

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