Adventure Travel

Category: Adventurers & Explorers (Page 2 of 14)

How Kristine Tompkins and some 300 of her closest friends helped protect 15 Million acres in Chile and Argentina

Doug Tompkins; the Tompkinses on the coast of Chilean Patagonia

Outside »

The only way forward was to dive even further into her conservation work. With the help of a roughly 300-person staff at Tompkins Conservation, she exceeded her late husband’s dream of creating 12 national parks. The current count: 15, along with two marine parks and a total of 14.8 million protected acres in Chile and Argentina—an area roughly the size of West Virginia. Those numbers keep expanding, along with Kristine’s seemingly endless supply of energy to continue the work she started with her husband. “I carry Doug around in my pocket. If I get really stuck on something, I simply ask: ‘What would you do?’ I am just grateful that we have this marriage,” she said, still speaking of their union in the present tense. “It’s given me unbelievable strength.”

The 500 km Nunavut Quest, a dogsled race revitalizing a once-threatened tradition

Racer Joshua Haulli and dogsled team approach Camp 1. (Source » Canadian Geographic) Copyright © Dustin Patar

Racer Joshua Haulli and dogsled team approach Camp 1. (Source » Canadian Geographic) Copyright © Dustin Patar

Story and photography by Dustin Parr »

It was cold, colder than usual for the time of year. Some 45 kilometres to the northeast, the Ikpiarjuk (Arctic Bay) airport would tally the low of minus 31.8 C as the coldest April 18 of the last 20 years. But the sun was shining, a clear indication that the darkness and true chill of winter had been washed away by the embrace of an early High Arctic spring.

Here, at the frozen mouth of the Iqalulik river on the northwestern corner of Qikiqtaaluk (Baffin Island), a small camp began to take shape. Not so slowly, a mix of well-worn white canvas tents seemed to pop out of the equally white sea ice, joined by others of bright orange and yellow.

As the tents went up, organized activity flurried around them. Plywood, blankets, sleeping bags and stoves were pulled from their resting places deep inside the qamutiit (traditional Inuit sleds) and placed inside the tents. A small number of saw-or shovel-wielding campers ventured out to where the sea of snow drifts was undisturbed, seeking the best snow and ice for drinking and cooking water. Another group, also gripping saws and axes, chopped whole frozen Arctic char and seals into small, manageable portions for dogs. Those too young to help out kicked a soccer ball through the snow.

Read the whole article at Canadian Geographic »

Louisa & Tobi Cycle Peru, The Land of Extremes

From September to December 2022, Louisa and Tobi spent 89 days cycling 3215 kilometres through Peru, climbing a mind-blowing 55,000 meters in altitude!

After some 15 months into their world cycle tour, that they’ve called , Peru has so far been the country with the most adventure, the most remote trails and some of our greatest achievements. But it hasn’t been without many challenges.

You can also watch this episode on their Chains & Chords YouTube channel. The Video is 56 minutes.

Watch Maudi and Eric – of Wheels to Wander – overcome Iceland’s wind and rain

In this episode of Maudi and Eric world cycle tour, they battle through some harsh and rugged Icelandic conditions. Despite the cold, wind, rain, river crossings, and dirty roads, their grit and determination allow them to experience another of Iceland’s epic scenes.

Caught in the Rain | Off Road Bicycle Touring Iceland

Note: Clicking the above image will load and play the video from YouTube.

The first to drive cross the Darién Gap by land, Loren Upton was a rare example of an adventurer

Even Williams, Gear Junkie »

An overlanding and adventure driving legend has died. Loren Upton was in the first team to cross the Darién Gap by land and drove around the world on a north-south course, part of a journey that would take more than 40 years to complete. Upton is survived by his wife, son, granddaughter, and great-granddaughter. He was 87.

Born in Southern California in 1935, Upton joined the Marine Corps in 1952 and served for 4 years. Following an honorable discharge, Upton began a career in bridge and highway construction — experiences that provided the challenge he needed in his life and that helped build the skills needed to head to some of the most inhospitable terrain in the world. And then, drive across it.

Like many of us, Loren was fascinated by tales of the world’s great explorers: their goals, their journeys, and their stories.

To put his own mark on the world, Upton set a life goal of becoming the first person to circumnavigate the globe in an American-made vehicle. »

 

Beyond the wall

Driven by a desire to explore, adventure travellers have an appreciation and respect for experiences over material possessions. They are romantics that live modestly and will tolerate discomfort so they can explore new places and people and chase freedom in wilderness environments. Discomfort, annoyances, and setbacks, to a certain degree, these are all part of long-term travelling.

Adventure travellers are problem solvers and stewards of the environment. They value the freedom and ability to travel outside developed regions and away from busy crowds. They understand that greater adventures often only begin where comfort ends. That being uncomfortable means challenging your preconceptions, as well as your body.  And they welcome it as it often leads to growth. They have an appreciation and respect for diversity, local culture, and a deep desire to connect with nature.

It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves.

» Sir Edmund Hillary

Adventure travellers will appreciated the fleeting pleasures of the first daylight, a warm dry breeze, the smell of sunbaked rocks after a summer rain, the cool breezes as daylight starts to wane, the pressures of salty ocean wind beating against the skin, the solace only found in complete silent solitude and surrounded by the extraordinary.

Adventures are not on perfectly planned expensive holidays in exotic locations doing adventurous things. They are not doing extreme sports and adrenaline junkie stunts. Those activities are drama for sports, entertainment, and other things.

Adventure travellers are solid, honest, pragmatic, low-key, steadfast, consistent, independent, adaptable, resilient, passionate, persistent, tenacious. They believe in personal responsibility, integrity, bucking up, planning ahead, dreaming. They don’t take shortcuts. They tread lightly, have kind hearts, long term objectives, and persevere.

They expect much from their gear because they depend on it, and sometimes must push it to its limits to survive. They know their gear intimately, they maintain it, and when possible, they restore it. The vehicle-dependant adventurer traveller’s vehicle is their largest and perhaps most important piece of gear. But adventure is not about the gear. The gear facilitates their journey. But getting there is only part of the experience. A passion for the natural world is what drives many adventurers.

Adventure becomes hubris when it blinds you to the suffering of the human beings next to you.

» Mark Jenkins

The things that keep us comfortable, also often bind us, and hold us back. The unknown of a long journey is confusing, bewildering, challenging, lonely, as we are reminded of what we left behind, and the long road that lies ahead. Leaving the calm, the familiar, our safe place, in pursuit of the unknown, is at times harrowing, but at often breathtaking, and empowering as we grow from our self discoveries.

When adventurers return from long expeditions, and take time to reflect, they are tempered with the certainty of greater knowledge found only beyond the wall. The adventure traveller feels more alive on long explorations, in far-away places, exploring the rest of the world, not knowing what tomorrow will bring. This is where the adventurer finds himself.

When we face the hardest of trials, we find ourselves and what we are made of. This is the key that keeps the adventurer moving forward, pushing personal boundaries, beyond his personal wall.

I judge you unfortunate because you have never lived through misfortune. You have passed through life without an opponent—no one can ever know what you are capable of, not even you.

» Seneca

83 year-old Kenichi Horie sets record for the oldest person to sail solo and nonstop across the Pacific Ocean

Sixty years ago, in 1962, Kenichi Horie was the first person to sail the Pacific Ocean solo and nonstop.

The Japanese adventurer has achieved a number of other long distance solo voyages, including sailing around the world in 1974.

Nikkei Asia »

Well-known Japanese yachtsman Kenichi Horie, 83, arrived on June 4 off the Kii Peninsula in western Japan after crossing the Pacific, becoming the oldest person to sail solo and nonstop across the world’s largest body of water.

Horie set sail from San Francisco on March 26 on a voyage lasting 69 days. The trip, which covered about 8,700 km, went relatively smoothly. But he had to battle through bad weather at times, sailing into a storm and high seas immediately after leaving San Francisco. In his online diary, he wrote, “Can’t do anything but wait for it to pass.” In a later entry, he simply wrote: “I’m fed up.”

Associated Press »

It was the latest achievement for the octogenarian adventurer, who in 1962 became the first person in the world to successfully complete a solo nonstop voyage across the Pacific from Japan to San Francisco.

Sixty years later, he traveled the opposite route.

Elsewhere » The Guardain / AFP / CNN /

Alexandra David-Neel –Traveler, Opera Singer, Monk, Free Spirit

Alexandra David-Neel

Alexandra David-Neel (via Explorersweb.com)

In 1924, Alexandra David-Neel, the Paris-born, Buddhist scholar, travel writer, relentless explorer, and former opera singer, crossed the Himalaya in winter to reach the sacred city Lhasa. She became the first European woman to do so.

Explorersweb.com »

On the border of Tibet, at 4,000m, the two lived in a cave between 1914-1917. They braved freezing temperatures and scrounged for food. They spent most of their time meditating. Twice, they attempted to infiltrate the forbidden city of Lhasa in disguise.

Tibet was a common beacon for foreigners. But the country was strictly closed. David-Neel and Aphur entered illegally and were swiftly expelled.

With World War I at Europe’s doorstep, the pair set off in the opposite direction, first to Japan, then onward to Korea and China. For two years, they translated Tibetan books, living as monks in China’s Kumbum Monastery.

But again, David-Neel was restless. She struggled to stay in one place for long, and Tibet beckoned. She and Aphur set off again to attempt to enter Lhasa. This time, they succeeded.

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