By JP Chartier from Gutter Pup Adventures - check out his site for more interesting travel stories
Listed below are seven terribly
adventurous and interesting people. Their heroic achievements stand in
direct defiance of the accepted standards and behaviors of the time,
which is what makes them so intriguing. They did things most only talk
about or dream of. They had the courage to stare life in the eyes and
demand more from it, a normal human existence would not be acceptable!
Included on this list are individuals who braved through impossible
conditions to conquer their dreams and ultimately inspire people like
myself.
MIKE HORN (1966- ) |
Horn is a Swiss explorer and adventurist.
He became famous after completing a solo journey around the equator
without motorized transport. He then completed a two-year
circumnavigation of the Arctic Circle by himself! In 2006, he and a
Norwegian explorer named Borge Ousland became the first men to travel
without dog or motorized transport to the North Pole during permanent
darkness. He also led a team on a three-year, around the world voyage
called the Pangaea Expedition. During this teaching and study trek, they
used only a yacht, canoes, kayaks, bikes, paraglides, skis and a sail
boat to explore the South Pole, Australia, Asia, Russia, Iceland,
Greenland, the Himalayas and the North Pole! Because of his life
experience and gift of gab, Horn is sought after today by sports teams
and businesses for his motivational skills.
JOHN GODDARD (1924-2013) |
Goddard has lived an unbelievable life,
dare I say, quite possibly the most amazing life ever! When he was
15-years old, Goddard decided that he would not live a life filled with
regrets, so he wrote down a bucket list
of 127 things he wanted to accomplish in his life. This list includes
climbing the worlds most perilous peaks, navigating its major rivers and
exploring its most remote regions. You’ve got to see it, he’s marked
off everything he accomplished, unfortunately he wasn’t able to complete
the whole list before his death, though he got very close.
JOHN FAIRFAX (1937-2012) |
Fairfax was an ocean rower and
adventurists who in 1969 became the first person to row across an ocean
by himself. In 1971 he became the first person to row alone across the
Pacific Ocean. Besides rowing across oceans all alone, Fairfax was quite
the adventurist in all aspects of his life. At age 13, Fairfax left his
home in Argentina to live in the jungle like “Tarzan,” where he
survived by hunting and bartering skins with local peasants. At 22-years
of age, Fairfax drove across America to San Francisco, when he ran out
of money he returned to his mother in Argentina by bicycle! Then a short
time later he fell in with pirates and was apprenticed for the next
three-years in the smuggling of whiskey, cigarettes and guns. After
escaping from the pirates, Fairfax became the first person to row solo
across the Atlantic Ocean, a feat which took him 180-days. During the
journey, he had to dive underneath the vessel to clean off the
barnacles, while chipping away underwater, a shark tried to attack him
but Fairfax ended up killing it with him bare hands and a large knife!
Two-years later, he and Sylvia Cook became the first people to row
across the Pacific Ocean, and they did it in 361 days.
LAKPA TSHERI & BABU SUNUWAR |
These two men are listed together because
the two of them went on the ultimate adventure in 2011. First they
climbed the largest mountain in the world, Mount Everest, then the two
of them paraglided off the mountain down to sea level, a forty-five
minute flight. But this was just the beginning of their journey, after
paragliding they bicycled to the headwaters of a mountain stream which
led them to the Kosi River in Nepal. From the Kosi they paddled to the
Ganges River in India, then finally onward to the Bay of Bengal, a
37-day trek.
RANULPH FIENNES (1944- ) |
The Guinness Book of World Records says
he’s the “World’s Greatest Living Explorer,” enough said. Fiennes
undertook several expeditions and was the first person to visit both the
North Pole and South Pole by surface, and he was the first to
completely cross Antarctica on foot. At the age of 65, he climbed Mount
Everest, becoming the oldest Briton to do so. Despite suffering a
heart-attack and undergoing double bypass heart surgery just four-months
prior, Fiennes completed seven marathons in seven days on seven
continents! On top of all this, he is also a prolific author, politician
and speaker.
WILLIAM MONTGOMERY McGOVERN (1897-1964) |
McGovern was an American adventurer who
was credited with exploring uncharted areas of the Amazon, Peru and the
Himalaya’s. He reported on the Mexican Revolution from the front, then
became a Buddhist Priest, all by the age of twenty. When WWII broke out,
he served four-years operating behind enemy lines at Guadalcanal, and
during the closing days of the war he crossed the Rhine with General
Patton. McGovern was a very intelligent man and could speak 17
languages. Here are a few of the other professions he dabbled in: He was
a professor at Northwestern University, an anthropologist, a
journalist, lecturer, military strategist, plus the author of several
books. And it is reputed that he was the inspiration for the character
Indiana Jones. All I can say is what a life! The seven men I’ve listed
above are great adventurers, however they aren’t household names like
the Lewis & Clark’s or the Marco Polo’s of the world, but great
adventurists who lived life to the fullest none the less.
Who are some of your favorite adventurers? What is their claim to fame?
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