We noticed you are browsing from

Request Your Free Brochure For Adventure Inspiration. Order Now

All activities
No results found
Select all activities Culture Cycling Family Mixed-Activity Multi-Country Holidays Polar Walking & Trekking Wildlife Holidays Winter Holidays
All months
November 2024 December 2024 January 2025 February 2025 March 2025 April 2025 May 2025 June 2025 July 2025 August 2025 September 2025 October 2025 November 2025 December 2025
CALL: (47) 22 41 30 30

Ask a Question

Projects in The Americas

Community Kickstart Projects in The Americas

Our Community Kickstart grants enable our leaders and operators to apply for funding to kickstart grassroots initiatives that directly support nature and local communities to thrive.  These grants could be for small projects that uplift women, encourage entrepreneurship, engage young people in conservation or regeneration of our natural world or provide help in times of need. 

In The Americas, we have been able to support on projects that train local experts within communities to continue within the tourism industry, providing once-in-a-lifetime opportunities, improving education and knowledge, and providing necessary supplies. For more details on the projects throughout The Americas that we’ve been able to support, read below.

South America

Bringing our porters to Machu Picchu, Peru

The architectural phenomenon that is Machu Picchu attracts a staggering number of tourists from all over the world every single day. Keen trekkers and day-trippers alike flock in their thousands to witness the breath-taking views at the Sun Gate in all its glory.    

Porters are the life and soul of the Inca Trail. They are the local folks employed to ensure trekkers’ luggage make it to camp everyday throughout the four-day trek. They tackle gruelling altitudes of above 4000m, treacherous conditions, and a notoriously demanding trail, all the while carrying up to 20kg of luggage on their backs. Without them, most trekkers would simply not complete the renowned trail. As trekkers embark on their final leg of the trek towards the iconic site, ordinarily, porters have already begun their descent to Aguas Calientes, where they will prepare for their next trip up the mountain. This – and the cost of entry – has sadly prohibited most Inca Trail Porters from ever visiting Machu Picchu despite its centrality to local heritage and Peruvian culture.  In 2017, Exodus took its first steps in balancing this industry-wide norm.

Our passion for giving back to those who work so relentlessly to ensure our travelers have a once-in-a-lifetime trek is burning brighter than ever. In 2019, we were proud to confirm that 164 of our Inca Trail porters had visited Machu Picchu.  Now that tourism in the region has bounced back following the pandemic, we are delighted to offer another 37 porters this experience, funded by our Community Kickstart grant.  

Porter food distribution, Peru

Peru really felt the effects of the pandemic, the country’s decrease in tourism and temporary closure of businesses made it increasingly difficult for many families to put food on their tables. Playing our part of harnessing the power of travel to rebuild livelihoods during this unprecedented time, our local operator in Peru partnered with NGO, Medlife, to provide emergency relief for vulnerable communities. Funded by the Community Kickstart Project, our operator worked with Medlife to deliver emergency food parcels to the households of porters and other staff members who have continuously worked hard to guide our clients along the iconic Inca Trail. 

Central America

Visits to coral restoration lab for students, Costa Rica

In 2024, we supported the organisation Friends of Association of the Central and South Pacific (ASANA) by providing transportation, food and visits to the Costa Rica Coral Restoration lab that is located in the Mario Ballena National Park. The main goal for ASANA for this project was to recover, restore and propagate the local community at the Marino Ballena National Park by educational and social programmes as well as using the laboratory and nursery to grow healthy coral. 73 young people from an environmental group and indigenous youth group visited the coral restoration lab and received food during the visit. In addition to this, the young students received an introductory talk about the National Park and its characteristics. Then they entered the laboratory where they learned about the reproduction process of existing coral species and how they are reintroduced to marine areas.