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This summer, Forbes is sending Bruner to Supai, Arizona, one of the most remote places in the continental United States.
FORBES: Intense Interning: Camping in Manhattan's Heat Wave
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Course one started with Supai-grown corn, boiled on a diminutive camping stove.
FORBES: Dinner in Supai: A Date with Imaginary Michael Noer
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Most of the food eaten in Supai is no longer grown there.
ECONOMIST: Indian tribes
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The trail to Supai is spectacular desert canyon at its best.
FORBES: The Hike to Supai
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Supai has no hospital, and the clinic is rudimentary.
ECONOMIST: Indian tribes
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The location of this pot of gold lies 7 miles to the east of Holbrook, Arizona and is eponymously referred to as the Holbrook Salt Basin which lies within the Permian aged Supai Salt Formation.
FORBES: How Arizona Is Helping America Reduce Dependence On Foreign Natural Resources
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The redeeming aspect of this extreme camping adventure lies in the fact that the heat exposed us to the climatic reality that our young reporter, Jon Bruner, will be facing on an upcoming trip to Supai, Arizona.
FORBES: Intense Interning: Camping in Manhattan's Heat Wave
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In a quest to find the ultimate in lightweight luxury, I have dispatched Jon Bruner, the same intrepid Forbes reporter that I sent to Romania on five hours notice in January, to Supai, a town at the bottom of the Grand Canyon that bills itself as the most remote in the continental United States.
FORBES: Escape from the Grand Canyon: Man Vs. Mule