Wayfinders runs small-group transformative expeditions for entrepreneurs and founders — Iceland, Patagonia, the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Bhutan — blending wilderness immersion with deep group work and radical stillness. Led by Mike Brcic.
The Iceland 2026 expedition is a 5-7 day transformative journey for entrepreneurs, blending wilderness immersion, group work, and radical stillness. Set on 1,200 private acres between mountains and sea, participants will embark on a path of self-discovery, exploring the theme of resilience. Through honest reckoning with fears, questions, and weaknesses, participants will discover their inner strength. The experience includes hiking, geothermal springs, and group facilitation, led by the Wayfinders team.
The Patagonia 2027 expedition is a 9-day transformative journey through the untamed heart of Patagonia, crossing the Chile-Argentina border on foot and by raft. Participants will hike, raft, bike, and canyon through rugged terrain, and gather for deep conversations about life and business. This VIP expedition offers a unique opportunity for founders and leaders to find meaning and purpose beyond conventional success. With a focus on physical challenge, wilderness immersion, and community building, participants can expect a profound shift in perspective and a deeper connection with themselves and others.
The Santa Marta 2027 expedition is a 7-day journey to the heart of Colombia's Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, where participants will immerse themselves in the world's most intact indigenous cultures. They will tube down pristine rivers, hike through emerald rainforest in Tayrona National Park, and meet with mamos (spiritual leaders) in local communities. The experience is designed for entrepreneurs who have built their companies but are now seeking a deeper connection with themselves and the world. Through this journey, participants will confront their assumptions about progress, success, and what it means to live well, and will have the opportunity to rediscover ways of being that have been lost in the process of building their businesses.
Bhutan is one of the most protected and intentionally preserved places on Earth. The last Himalayan Buddhist kingdom, it has resisted mass tourism by design, limiting visitors and maintaining the cultural and spiritual integrity that most of Asia lost decades ago. Here, monasteries cling to cliff faces, prayer flags snap above ancient forests, and entire villages still live by rhythms that have existed for centuries. Trekking through this landscape at altitude, sitting with monks, and staying in remote guest houses is not adventure as spectacle. It is adventure as encounter with a genuinely different way of being in the world.