A Traveller's Research

Category: Adventurers & Explorers (Page 5 of 7)

Melanie Vogel is hiking solo across Canada, from sea-to-sea-to-sea [Updated]

On June 2nd, 2017, Melanie Vogel set out to solo thru-hike the longest recreational trail in the world. Melanie’s long-distance hike started in Cape Spear, Newfoundland the most easterly point of Canada, and will lead her trough all ten Canadian provinces and two of the three territories. She originally planed to hike to Victoria on Vancouver Island in two years, but somewhere along the way decided to include the Arctic Ocean in her hike.

When Melanie is finished, she will have solo hiked 18,000 km across Canada from the Atlantic Ocean, to the Arctic Ocean, and then to the Pacific Ocean, on The Great Trail, or as some know it, the Trans Canada Trail.

Her inspirational expedition takes her through maritime terrain, boreal forests, along the Great Lakes, the Canadian prairies, the Rocky Mountains and into the tundra and permafrost as she goes north to the Arctic.

With her choice of walking this huge country, the German born and raised adventurer is embracing Canada, to better connect to the land, its people, nature and herself.

As an ambassador for The Great Trail, Melanie wants to inspire people to get outside and discover trails in their backyard and by doing so find the connection back to nature.

Melanie Vogel is the recipient of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society’s Women’s Expedition Grant for 2019.

You can follow her journey on Between Sunsets and Twitter.

Thru-hiking Canada: Melanie Vogel's story

Between Sunsets - Travelling solo across Canada


Update 2019.12.10 » Vancouver is Awesome » This woman has been walking across Canada for 2 years and isn’t stopping yet


Update 2020.10.18 » Dan Davidson, of the Whitehorse Daily Star, writes that Melanie might spend the winter in Whitehorse as she is restricted from entering the Northwest Territories and reaching  Tuktoyaktuk and the Arctic Ocean due to the coronavirus pandemic.

 

 

Watch Noraly from ItchyBoots.com Ride through Thailand as She Makes Her Way Around The World on a Royal Enfield Himalayan

In the previous post about Noraly from ItchyBoots.com we followed her quick ride through Myanmar. With this series of videos we follow her through Thailand.

Ep. 21 – Crossing into Thailand

Ep. 22 – Chiang Rai to Chiang Mai

Ep. 23 – Chiang Mai to Pai

Ep. 24 – Off-roading with a Royal Enfield in Thailand

Ep. 25 – Riding to Sukhothai

Ep. 26 – Riding to Khao Yai National Park

Ep. 27 – Riding through Khao Yai National Park and onto Ayyuthaya

Ep. 28 – Onto Bangkok to fit some new parts to the bike

Ep. 29 – Bangkok to South Thailand

Ep. 30 – Catch the ferry to Koh Samui

Ep. 31 – Around the island of Koh Samui, and onto Khao Sok National Park

Ep. 32 – Khao Sok to Krabi

Ep. 33 – Krabi to Hat Yai

Onto Malaysia …

In 2018 We Redefined Human Limits

  • Camille Herron Set a 24-Hour Running Record
  • Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell Break Two Hours on El Cap’s Nose
  • Karel Sabbe Smashed the Appalachian Trail Speed Record
  • Hilaree Nelson and Jim Morrison Became the First to Ski Down Lhotse
  • Ida Nilsson set the Fastest Known Time on the Grand Canyon’s double-crossing classic. 5 Days Later Taylor Nowlin beat that time by three minutes
  • Lhakpa Sherpa Summited Everest a Record Ninth Time
  • Eliud Kipchoge Set a new Marathon World Record
  • 70-year-old double-amputee Xia Boyu summited Mount Everest

More at Outside

Watch Noraly from ItchyBoots.com as She Rides through India at the Start of Her Ride Around The World on a Royal Enfield Himalayan

Noraly is a 30-something, upbeat Dutch woman, who has set her sights on riding her 2018 Royal Enfield Himalayan around the world. Solo.

She started this adventure in India. Follow her as she posts videos regularly. I’ll try to keep up and update this post as Noraly releases her videos.

India

Noraly at Sunrise at Rumi Darwaza in Lucknow

Watch Ep. 1 – Delhi to Mathura
Noraly begins her RTW journey.

Watch Ep. 2 – Mathura to Lucknow

Watch Ep. 3 – Lucknow to Varanasi
Read about the ride to the holy city of Varanasi to attend a Ganga Aarti on Noraly’s blog

Watch Ep. 4 – Varanasi to Bodhgaya
Noraly battles sacred cows and others for the roads

Watch Ep. 5 – Bodhgaya to Vaishali
Noraly does a bit of bike maintenance once she arrives in Vaishali

Watch Ep. 6 – Vaishali to Darjeeling
Noraly goes in search of mountains and clean fresh air.

Watch Ep. 7 – Side trip to Sikkim

Watch Ep. 8 – Darjeeling to Cooch Bihar
Noraly heads east

Watch Ep. 9 – Cooch Bihar to Tura
Noraly got beached on her way to Tura

Watch Ep. 10 – Tura to Shillong
In search of a Royal Enfield mechanic.

Watch Ep. 11 – Shillong to Cherrapunjee, and back go Shillong
Read how Noraly got Lost in the Jungle

Watch Ep. 12 – Shilong to Lanka, Assam
Noraly heads to India’s north east. Read about her experience.

Watch Ep. 13 – Lanka to Kohima, Nagaland
fighting dust to get to Kohima

Watch Ep. 14 – Kohima to Imphal
on some of India’s worst roads

Watch Ep. 15 – Imphal to Moreh and into Myanmar 
Noraly’s last day of riding in India.

Onto Myanmar …

Colin O’Brady claims to be the first person to ski unaided across Antarctica. But is he?

Update added below.

According to his website, Colin O’Brady has completed the first-ever solo, unsupported, unaided crossing of Antarctica. He has reportedly arrived at the Ross Ice Shelf on the Pacific Ocean.

Aaron Teasdale, writing for National Geographic »

Using solely his own muscle power, O’Brady skied 932 miles pulling a 300-pound sled over 54 frigid days across the coldest, windiest, most remote continent on Earth, crossing from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean via the South Pole. After a remarkable 80-mile continuous push over the last two days, almost five times his strenuous daily average, he emerged from the TransAntarctic Mountains onto the Ross Ice Shelf a little before 1 p.m. EST, December 26 and stamped his name into the annals of polar lore.

Peter Winsor, writing for Explorersweb »

But was O’Brady’s crossing really unassisted? O’Brady and Rudd have been skiing on a packed road all the way from the South Pole to their finish line. Known as the McMurdo-South Pole Highway, or the South Pole Overland Traverse Road (SPOT), it is a flattened trail groomed by tractors towing heavy sledges. It conveys personnel and supplies from McMurdo Station to the South Pole. Flags every 100m or so make navigation easy during whiteouts, and all the crevasses were filled in by the original construction crew. Most importantly for a skier, it eliminates the rock-hard, bumpy sastrugi that the wind shapes out of loose snow.

“It is a highway,” says veteran polar guide Eric Philips, “[that] more than doubles someone’s speed and negates the need for navigation. An expedition cannot be classed as unassisted if someone is skiing on a road.”

In polar travel, while “unsupported” means no supply drops, “unassisted” additionally requires no outside help of any kind to make the distance easier: no kites, dogs, roads or navigation flags. Norway’s Borge Ousland crossed Antarctica alone and unsupported in 1996-7, but his journey is not considered unassisted because a kite towed him part of the way.

Update 2020.02.03 

Aaron Teasdale, writing for National Geographic »

National Geographic also reported on O’Brady and Rudd during their treks in 2018, and when O’Brady completed his journey, described it as “historic” and “unsupported.” After reviewing those stories and gathering more information, we’ve amended them with an editor’s note.

Prominent leaders of the adventure and polar communities were less enthusiastic about O’Brady’s claims. Conrad Anker, Alex Honnold, Mike Horn, Borge Ousland, and others spoke out against him, accusing O’Brady of exaggerating his accomplishment or worse.

Over the last several months, National Geographic has investigated O’Brady’s claims. He agreed to three phone interviews but recently stopped responding to requests for comment. We also spoke with an array of leading polar explorers, including some of O’Brady’s mentors, many of whom believe he has distorted the truth in pursuit of fame.

O’Brady “didn’t do what [he] advertised,” says Australian polar explorer Eric Philips, cofounder and president of the International Polar Guides Association. “This wasn’t some Last Great Polar Journey. Rather, it was a truncated route that was a first in only a very limited way.”

37-year-old Teacher sets world record rowing solo across the Atlantic Ocean

Reuters:

A high school science teacher from Cincinnati, Ohio, has rowed solo across the Atlantic Ocean, setting a record for a west-to-east crossing.

Bryce Carlson arrived at St. Mary’s in the Isles of Scilly, off England’s southwestern tip, late Saturday — 38 days, six hours and 49 minutes after setting out from St. John’s, Newfoundland.

Teacher Breaks World Record Rowing Solo Across North Atlantic Ocean

 

World record-holding Russian adventurer says the world needs more explorers

Fyodor Konyukhov is a 66-year old ordained priest who, in 2016, set a world record for the fastest solo around the globe in a hot-air balloon, has previously climbed Mt. Everest twice, and has been to the North and South Poles, believes the 21st century is off to a “disappointing” start.

Radio Free Europe (2016):

“I was 10 years old when Yury Gagarin flew [into space], and soon after that the first men walked on the moon,” Konyukhov told RFE/RL in an interview. “At the time, I was convinced that by the 21st century we would already have scientific stations on Mars and settlements on the Moon. But the 21st century came and all we do is wage war, make money, and stuff ourselves.”

The Earth’s oceans, he lamented, also remain largely uncharted.

“There are seven billion people on this planet but we lack curiosity, we don’t seek adventures,” he said. “Humans should be more curious — they should strive to discover new worlds.”

Watch: Travelling the World With a 71-Year Old Kayaker

Traveling the World With a 71-Year Old Kayaker

Great Big Story via YouTube:

At the age of 34, Aleksander Doba paddled his first kayak. From there began a love affair with the sea that continues nearly four decades later. Driven by a fearless curiosity, Aleksander took to exploring the world from the seat of a kayak. In 2017, at the age of 70, he kayaked across the Atlantic for the third time, spending 110 days solo at sea. His entire journey from New Jersey to Brittany, France, took him 5,039 miles across the ocean, battling tropical storms and treacherous waves. For some, his expeditions seem impossible, but with every new adventure, Aleksander discovers a new, beautiful way to see the world.

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