Geographic Expeditions (0 testimonials)

In business since 1980

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Destinations on the edge (Azerbaijan, Colombia, and Yemen) share space in the Geographic Expeditions brochure with more popular locales like Costa Rica and New Zealand. Whether you're trekking around Nepal's 26,000-foot Mount Manaslu or taking an expedition cruise through the Northwest Passage, expect face time with archaeologists, dignitaries, journalists, and other local figures—plus five-star accommodations wherever possible.

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1008 General Kennedy Avenue
San Francisco, CA
94129-0902 USA

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Prominent affiliations & awards

  • Adventure Travel Trade Association
  • : Conde Nast Traveler Award
  • : National Geographic's TRAVELER Award
  • : National Geographic's ADVENTURE Award
  • Adventure Collection

Our commitment to sustainable travel

Responsible Travel:Walking the Talk

Geographic Expeditions is a proud founding member of the Adventure Collection, an alliance of ten of the world’s finest travel companies, committed to excellence, personal service, innovation, and enriching travel experiences around the world. Adventure Collection members actively embrace the following mission statement:

The Adventure Collection is committed to the cultural and environmental well-being of the places we visit. We follow scientifically supported on-the-ground and at-sea minimum-impact practices. We seek to create inspirational experiences for our travelers, and we partner with a wide array of nonprofit organizations that further these objectives.

Of course, it’s easy to say that we’re dedicated to conservation, eco-friendliness, fighting climate change, etc. The reality is more complicated and demanding, and we’re the first to acknowledge that bringing travelers to remote and not-so-remote places inevitably has local and global environmental and cultural impacts. But—and this is something to which we devote continual thought— we believe fervently that our trips provide meaningful and important ways for local communities and governments to create sustainable forms of development, which in turn relieves pressure on resources. Our more-than-a-quarter-of-a-century of experience has taught us that, when it’s intelligently done, travel is a net plus for the visitor and the visited alike.

Here are the major ways GeoEx enthusiastically puts into practice the strategic principles we developed with our Adventure Collection colleagues.


Accountability in the Communities Where Our Offices Are Located

We’re big believers in walking the talk at home in order to be effective advocates for change abroad. GeoEx’s San Francisco office is located in the beautiful Presidio’s Thoreau Center for Sustainability. The Thoreau Center represents the cutting edge in sustainable architecture, recycling, energy conservation, volunteering, and public transportation. GeoEx also has a finely tuned direct-marketing program aimed at reducing the amount of unwanted and undelivered mail, and whenever possible, we print with soy inks and UV coatings on tree-free paper or high-quality recycled stock supplied by companies certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.

Accountability in the Field

GeoEx works diligently with conservation organizations and our partners in the field to develop practices that minimize our footprint and generate meaningful contributions to local economies. We’re mindful that our partners may have different conservation perspectives, and taking those into careful consideration, we work with local people in developing itineraries and routes; in selecting hotels, boats, and other transportation; in choosing informed local guides; in educating our travelers about local conditions and customs; and in adhering to minimum-impact standards for all our tours, treks, and voyages. Additionally, we partner with a variety of organizations to share best practices. (For example, in 2007 we worked with Conservation International to develop an international tour operator “best practices”
manual for travel to mountain areas.)

Giving Back

GeoEx supports a broad array of conservation, cultural resource protection, education, and health care organizations, including the Central Asian Institute, the Snow Leopard Trust, the American Himalayan Foundation, the Solar Electric Light Fund, and the Trust for Public Land.

Beginning in 2008, GeoEx ratcheted up our commitment to this somewhat beleaguered planet by pledging 1 percent of our net annual tour sales (as opposed to profits) to alternative energy technologies administered by the Climate Trust (www.climatetrust.org) as a way of offsetting the carbon footprint of our office, our marketing, and our trips. We also make a wide array of conservation, cultural resource protection, education, and health care grants to nonprofit initiatives in the areas we’re so privileged to visit.

Giving Back: Your Opportunity

The mantra is important and familiar: Keep abreast of global developments in conservation and sustainability. Act locally (and consistently). Cut down on waste, reuse, recycle, rethink priorities. Walk, run, bike, use public transportation, join a car pool. Put your talents to use with organizations trying to get the world on the right track. Vote. Think. Enjoy the world with loving care.

GeoEx provides all its travelers who contribute $250 or more to the Living Planet Trust (a donor-directed fund administered by the Tides Foundation of San Francisco) with a $250 travel voucher toward a future trip. These tax-deductible donations to the Living Planet Trust are dedicated to offsetting the carbon emissions generated by our travelers’ international air passage and to funding local initiatives in the destination the traveler just experienced. To donate to the Living Planet Trust, click here.

The Bottom Line

Jan Morris said it for us: “If you love something hotly enough, consciously, with care, it becomes yours by symbiosis, irrevocably.” The key word is care. And with love and care comes responsibility. We, like so many of our caring travelers, are dedicated to living up to our responsibilities to the places that have touched, inspired, and given us so much joy.

Ecological/Environmental Impact

World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has been a world leader in protecting wildlife and wildlife habitats for more than 40 years. We have worked with WWF hither and yon for many years and are staunch supporters of their mindful, effective work. (www.worldwildlife.org)

Under the super-charged leadership of our friend and longtime trip leader Dr. Robert Thurman, Tibet House has been a spearheading partisan for the preservation and presentation of Tibetan culture since 1987. Founded at the request of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Tibet House sponsors exhibits, seminars, retreats, talks, and a myriad of Tibet-related programs. (www.tibethouse.org)

An organization with deep, passionately nurtured roots in Tibet and Nepal, the American Himalayan Foundation is a leading light in bringing human-scale health care, educational, cultural, and environmental benefits to the region. (www.himalayan-foundation.org)

Sociological Impact

Globio is a unique international children’s educational nonprofit that supports and develops sustainable biodiversity educational programs that use innovative technologies and community partnerships, empowering children to increase their skills, knowledge, and desire to create a biologically diverse and healthy environment. (www.globio.org)

Give2Asia is a U.S. nonprofit that facilitates personalized charitable giving to Asia. Through Give2Asia’s donor-advised services, you can commit your support to a specific issue, a particular town or region, or even an individual organization encountered on your trip. (www.give2asia.org)

Since 1965 World Monuments Fund (WMF) has been hard at work on conservation projects in more than 70 countries. We are great fans of WMF, the only private, nonprofit organization devoted to the conservation of historic art and architecture worldwide. (www.wmf.org)

The Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature is an independent, voluntary organization devoted to the conservation of natural resources in Jordan under the patronage of Her Majesty Queen Noor. It is one of the few voluntary organizations in the Middle East that has been given such a public service. (www.rscn.org.jo)

Founded in 1999, the Center for Khmer Studies is an international, nongovernmental, not-for-profit membership-based consortium of universities, organizations, and individuals dedicated to study and teaching of Khmer civilization and the cultures of the Mekong region. (www.khmerstudies.org)

Founded in 1959, under the auspices of UNESCO and the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, the Charles Darwin Foundation is dedicated to the conservation of the Galápagos ecosystems. The Foundation’s Charles Darwin Research Station, with a team of over 200 scientists, educators, volunteers, research students, and support staff, conducts a variety of research and environmental education programs. (www.darwinfoundation.org)

Economic Impact

The Gobi Revival Fund is a new NGO that seeks to help the nomads of Mongolia’s Bayankhonogor region, in the heart of the Gobi, to recover their losses after recent droughts and harsh weather. Livestock grants, educational help in this remote area, and health initiatives are at the top of the Fund’s list. (Creating a web site will just have to wait a little longer; admirers can reach the Gobi Revival Fund via its founders’ e-mail: Genghis-exp@magicent.mn)

Established by Bhutan’s Queen Asi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuk, the Tarayana Foundation (“Service from the Heart. Toward Gross National Happiness”) focuses on bringing health care to the kingdom’s remote towns, providing assistance to elderly villagers in need, and supporting the Folk Heritage Museum in Thimphu, which has done much to keep artisan skills alive and well. For more info, visit their web site: tarayanafoundation.org.

Best Practices

The Trust for Public Land (TPL) is a highly effective nonprofit land conservation organization that conserves land for people to enjoy as parks, community gardens, historic sites, rural lands, and other natural places. Since 1972, TPL has worked with willing landowners, community groups, and national, state, and local agencies to complete more than 2,700 land conservation projects in 46 states, protecting nearly 2 million acres. (www.tpl.org)

3 most popular Trips (out of 117 total)

Northern Vietnam: Tribes and Treks

Northern Vietnam: Tribes and Treks

Hanoi Airport, Vietnam for 7 Days • from $2,800* per person

Provider: Geographic Expeditions

We’ll travel by jeep and on foot in Vietnam’s lush northern hills, the little-known “Tonkinese Alps,” walking in 4000-foot hills, past emerald rice paddies and riots of bamboo, pine, and orchids, through small farms and villages, staying in delightful small hotels and guesthouses. Postcardy Sapa is our base for day hikes and village visits, and then we’re off to equally engaging Tam Duong for another couple of wandering days before we board an overnight train for Hanoi. more

Offered Year-round
Exertion level: 4
Boutique accommodations
Max group size: 18 people
Must form your own group? Yes (custom departure). Price based on group size.

An Explorer's Antarctica (2011/2012)

An Explorer's Antarctica (2011/2012)

Ushuaia Airport, Argentina for 12 Days • from $4,890* per person

Provider: Geographic Expeditions

We board our expeditionary vessel in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. Our ice-hardened ships are surprisingly comfortable; they have bar/lounges and libraries and feature private baths for most cabins (they also have a clinic and physician on board, and satellite telephone and fax capacities for incoming calls and faxes). On-board naturalists lecture, hobnob, and help identify the lavish wildlife.Leaving Ushuaia, we head south into the Drake Passage toward notorious Cape Horn, encountering pack ice and epic bergs—a floating, and thus… more

Offered November-March
Exertion level: 4
Boutique accommodations
Max group size: 18 people
Must form your own group? No

Jordan Explorer

Jordan Explorer

Airport near Amman, Jordan for 9 Days • from $4,410* per person

Provider: Geographic Expeditions

On this journey, we travel from Amman to the evocative Desert Castles of Qasr Kharana, Azraq, and the World Heritage Site Qasr Amra, getting a refreshing look at the transcontinental avian crossroads of the Azraq Wetlands along the way. Then to the unexpectedly lush Ajlun Forest Reserve for some serene walking in its oak, pine, carob, wild pistachio, and wild strawberry trees. And on to Mount Nebo, and Petra, the astounding city carved from living rock, surely one of the… more

Offered April-October
Exertion level: 4
Boutique accommodations
Max group size: 18 people
Must form your own group? No

View all 117 Trips by Geographic Expeditions

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