Red Rocks…..rocks!

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After we had all the house stuff in order we took our last full day with the Caliber to explore a local attraction in Denver, The Red Rocks Ampitheatre. just west of Denver has been puttin on rock shows within its all natural walls since the 40’s (well, they might have been opera shows at that point). seating nearly 10,000 with stunning views of denvers skyline and the rolling hills between, the amitheatre is known for its amazing acoustics that resonate between two towering rocks that flank both sides of the concert venue.

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During the day, locals flock to the area to workout, hike and imagine what it would be like to be Bono up on stage.

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We dragged Olive along and while the steps weren’t quite made for a yorkie, she managed just fine and promptly passed out with the rest of us upon returning home.

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Definitely a worthwhile trip and one i’m certain we’lll make again when some shows come into town.

Rock On!

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Adam

How do you build a life around adventure and travel?

Intentionally and incrementally. Most families who live this way did not leap from conventional to adventurous overnight. They built remote work capacity, paid down debt, tested longer trips, and had increasingly honest conversations about what they actually want from their lives. The leap feels bigger from outside than from inside.

What does an adventurous family lifestyle actually look like?

Different for every family. For some it is long-term travel. For others it is weekend adventures close to home. What connects them is intentionality about how time is spent and a preference for experiences over accumulation. The version that fits your family is the right one.

How do you balance adventure with stability for kids?

By finding stability within the adventure rather than treating them as opposites. Routines, rituals, and family rhythms travel with you. Familiar foods, bedtime routines, and predictable family dynamics provide stability even when the location changes. Kids need consistency in relationships more than consistency in geography.

What has travel taught your family?

That people are fundamentally similar across cultures in what they want for their families. That comfort zone is a smaller circle than it feels from inside. That the things worth having in life require effort and discomfort to get. And that time together doing hard interesting things is the most reliable source of family closeness.

How do you handle the pressure to live conventionally when you have chosen differently?

By getting clear on why you made the choices you made and returning to that clarity when the outside noise gets loud. Most families living unconventionally describe an initial period of explaining themselves that gradually gives way to just living the life. The explaining becomes less necessary as the results become visible.


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