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A Street View-Style Tour Of National Parks Hiking Trails, Courtesy Of Nature Valley

October 25th, 2011 No comments

BY JOE BERKOWITZToday
fastcompany.com

 

To create Trail View, granola bar makers Nature Valley and McCann Erickson sent a ragtag team of creatives and developers on a 45-day hike to get couch potatoes interested in the real thing and raise awareness of the national parks’ plight.

Photos from Nature Valley

 

Nearly a century ago, Woodrow Wilson created the National Park Service, galvanizing a widespread movement to preserve the country’s heritage and promote tourism. At the time, President Wilson could only have imagined the technological and organizational tools that would help achieve these goals. And, almost guaranteed, not once did he imagine a huge part of this effort would be brought to us by the makers of mouthwatering granola bars.

 

Funny how things change.

 

As it happens, General Mills brand Nature Valley has embarked on an ambitious initiative called Trail View to bring the parks experience to the indoors- and outdoors-oriented alike. “Nature is something you have to get close to in order to be moved by it,” says Scott Baldwin, Senior Marketing Manager at Nature Valley. “It’s easy to just show a picture of nature, but people want to have deeper experiences.” To deliver that deeper experience, the company sent content-gathering teams throughout the Great Smoky Mountains, Yellowstone, and the Grand Canyon this past summer to digitally capture 100 odd miles of each area, and replicate them online. Eventually, users will be able to experience, in real-time, a first-person perspective of hiking these trails, clicking on embedded points of interest along the way for pop-up information and videos. It’s a virtual hiking expedition anyone can take.

 

Although Nature Valley has long been a supporter of the national parks (it’s practically in the brand name), most recently raising money through its “Preserve the Parks” campaign, the company had been brainstorming ideas for how to do more to actually preserve them. The resulting concept, developed through agency partner McCann-Erickson, is a model for how marketers can make a useful contribution to a cause without over-branding it. In addition to removing the barriers to entry so people can experience these trails remotely, Trail View will spread awareness of the parks at a time when funding is low, and digitally record them for posterity.

Yellowstone

 

“This initiative lets [Nature Valley] stand for something,” says Leslie Sims, executive creative director at McCann. “They aren’t just pushing granola bars on hikers.”

 

It was only because of Nature Valley’s long-standing relationship with the National Park Conservation Association that the company was able to garner approval for the project. The parks are famously very protective when it comes to filming on their grounds, but the company approached each park individually and promised to leave zero impact on the environment.

 

Between March and June of 2011, Nature Valley and McCann-Erickson went to work, putting together a mixed team of talent for a project with many moving parts. The agency would need a content strategy team for web distribution, a design team that would also put together custom 360 degree photography equipment, a hiking team to lead the expedition, and a skilled camera person to shoot it all. The creatives would also have to participate in the fieldwork. Both figuratively and literally, there was a lot of ground to cover.

 

Editors from Backpacker Magazine agreed to lend their expertise in national park trails and lead the hikes. Content strategy firm In the MO came aboard soon after. The project required a team with best-of-class designers who would also be able to hike, so the agency recruited digital agency Your Majesty. In a meeting with YM co-founder, Jens Karlsson, Catherine Patterson, executive integrated producer at McCann offered this simple plea: “You’re the only ones crazy enough to do this, and you’re the only ones who can do this. Also, you’re going to get to hike your asses off.”

Grand Canyon

 

Everyone involved had to engage in four to six weeks of training to ensure that nobody would get dehydrated or otherwise crap out during the shoot. Each member of the crew logged 150 miles of mandatory hiking experience, done on their own time.

 

Because this initiative marks the first application of street view-style camera technology in hikes or on mountains, the cameras required specially designed backpack rigging. “A lot of equipment was involved,” says Mat Bisher, associate creative director at McCann. “There’s a good reason why street view is done in cars.” During a June test run in the Grand Canyon, the panoramic cameras fell apart and started melting during discovery. They were supposed to be heat-resistant up to 120 degrees, but not at sustained exposure to those conditions. After customizing the cameras further, the design team suggested saving the Grand Canyon for the final leg of the hike, where they’d know to anticipate the cameras falling apart eventually, rather than at the beginning of the trip.

 

The actual filming went off without a hitch, however, barring the occasional alarming grizzly bear scratch mark on trees. From a distance, the assembled masses would have looked like a caravan of settlers. The field crew from Backpacker Magazine (or “bear bait” as Patterson referred to them) headed up the front, setting the pace and keeping the operation environmentally sound. Shortly behind them were the agency creatives, who scouted locations and points of interest. The next wave included the tech team–who kept lenses clean, adjusted settings, and kept the cameras out of contact with each other–as well as master cameraman, Brandon McLane. Finally, trailing behind, was a sweeper team, who made sure nothing was left behind. Although some of the crew only stayed for shorter periods, the hike lasted 45 days total.

 

The biggest surprise along the way, according to Catherine Patterson, who stayed for the entire hike, was the sparse tourist traffic on the trails. “We anticipated having to avoid filming crowds, and blurring out logos when we did,” she says, “but there was hardly anyone hiking at all some days.” Seeing firsthand the lack of tourism in tough economic times only made the prospect of evangelizing the national parks more attractive to everyone involved.

 

The first stage of Trail View will debut online in February 2012. It will operate as its own platform, with an exploratory feel. Once utility is up and running, Nature Valley will add layers for user-generated content, social networking and mobility, and perhaps form partnerships with travel sites—encouraging visitors to actually take a trip to visit the parks. Eventually the company hopes to digitally map other locations and build an educational, curated layer to the initiative. “This is not just a piece of entertainment,” says Bisher. “We’re committing to an ongoing proposition.” As this proposition is aligned with the National Park Service’s original goals, Woodrow Wilson would have likely approved.

 

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

June 18th, 2009 No comments
This is page 1 of a 2 page post.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Between North Carolina and Tennessee

Great Smoky Mountains National Park is a beautiful place to plan your next family vacation. If your preference is a camping trip, look no further for an outdoor adventure as this place has many campgrounds! If it’s a backpacking trip you’re interested in, this park has a number of backpacking trails that will keep you busy for many years. There’s fly fishing, wildlife galore, beautiful scenery for outstanding outdoor pictures, history, whitewater rafting and tubing the rivers, and some of the friendliest people you’ll ever meet. The surrounding area also offers plenty for a family, couple or individual to keep you busy for many visits to one of the most visited National Park areas in the country! Check below for Great Smoky Mountains National Park information. Photo ©2008 StuMarks & Adventure-Crew, Inc

Uniqueness

The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is one of the largest protected areas in the Eastern United States and is one of the most pristine natural areas in the East. A tour through the park offers visitors breathtaking mountain scenery, including panoramic views, tumbling streams, and mature hardwood forests stretching to the horizon. World renowned for the diversity of its plant and animal life, the beauty of its ancient mountains, the quality of it’s remnants of Southern Appalachian mountain culture, and the depth and integrity of its wilderness sanctuary. Over 10,000 species have been documented in the park and scientists believe an additional 90,000 species may live here. It was once a part of the Cherokee homeland, but today the Smokies are a hiker’s paradise with over 800 miles of hiking trails. Hiking ranges from easy to difficult with 30 minute walks to week-long backpacking trips. The Appalachian Trail runs for 70 miles along the park’s top ridge.

Although there are no mountain bike trails in the park, bicyclers are allowed to travel the 11 mile loop of Cades Cove to enjoy the wildlife and 19th century homesteads. Cades Cove offers many activities from hayrides, horseback riding and hiking, to a mill and a few antique churches. It is the heaviest visited attraction in the heaviest visited national park in the nation. It is rated the number one place to see deer and black bears, as well as the Pileated Woodpecker-an exciting adventure to just come across as you meander down the woodland path leading to some of the old homesteads. They also allow bicycling on the lower sections of Deep Creek and Indian Creek trails and on the closed-to-motorized-traffic section of the Foothills Parkway. The Deep Creek trails are 2 miles and 2.9 miles. The Foothill Parkway is nine miles one-way, but is a very steep grade.

In the Smoky’s high country, over 85″ of rain falls on average each year, feeding over 2,100 miles of rushing mountain streams and rivers that flow through the park. The park abounds with the two ingredients essential for waterfalls—water and an elevation gradient. Waterfalls dot the waterways throughout the park, attracting over 200,000 visitors each year to the park’s better known falls. There are several water falls, ranging from small to pretty spectacular, that you can hike to reach. These hiking trails range from easy to strenuous and are well worth the effort. One of the falls, Grotto Falls, has the distinction that you can even walk behind it as you continue on down the backpacking trail! Only one can be seen from the road, so if you enjoy waterfalls, get out those hiking boots. After a hot, summer day of hiking, the Deep Creek area on the North Carolina side offers opportunities to cool off by tubing the shallow river nearby the camping site there.

Several roads throughout the park can be driven to see beautiful scenes of mountain grandeur off the beaten track. You’ll be able to get plenty of gorgeous outdoor pictures or even that special national park picture as you pose at the branch of the Appalachian Trail off of the New Found Gap visitor stop-off, where thousands of adventurers, past and present, have hiked the multi-state trail. A 60-minute audio cassette tape is available to serve as your personal tour guide as you drive the Newfound Gap Road that crosses the Smokies’ crest. It includes explanations of landmarks, interviews with former residents, and more. All items may be purchased at visitor centers. As weather sometimes influences the condition of the park roads, check with the park district to see which roads are open when you want to travel. You also won’t want to miss Clingmans Dome where the steep, but paved, path leads to an observation tower, elevation 6,643 feet, where on a clear day you can see for miles. A road guide and self-guided auto tour booklets are available for several popular, and a few quieter destinations in the park. Some of the distinct road names you’ll see are Balsam Mountain/Heintooga Road, Cades Cove Loop Road (closed to motor vehicles on Wednesday and Saturday mornings until 10:00 a.m. during May and September to allow bicyclists and pedestrians to enjoy the cove), Little Greenbrier Road, Parson Branch Road, Rich Mountain Road, Roaring Fork Road, and Roundbottom/Straight Fork Road.

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Smoky Mountains National Park Video

June 14th, 2009 No comments


Enjoy an insider’s tour of the most visited national park in America. Get a taste of the great outdoors, local attractions, and even some street food in this brief but exciting tour of Smoky Mountains National Park.