On Thursday, Adventure Ethics published a story based on our investigation of the outcome of a solo fatbiking-packrafting expedition, launched this spring by AndrewBadenoch and based on a Kickstartercampaign we wrote about this past winter.
Andrew Badenoch has responded to this article and directly to me via Twitter,
two direct emails, and two lengthy posts on his 77Zero website. One of these posts
is a
response to this article, the other recounts the various delays and logistical
issues that he encountered. He also wrote a direct
message to his Kickstarter backers (viewable only to backers).
"There is no colder part of the Earth than the surface of the Antarctic
icecap in winter." —AccuWeather.com expert senior meteorologist Jim
Andrews
No one has ever attempted to cross Antarctica on foot during winter, when temperatures can dip below -120 degrees Fahrenheit. At the ripe old age of 68, 25 years after he said such an expedition was impossible, Sir Ranulph Fiennes said he will be the first to try. We've listed all of his reasons for going below, along with the rest of the details about the quest he is calling The Coldest Journey.
In 2010, Gareth Jones and Aaron Chervenak quit their day
jobs and split for the Amazon with little more than a portable canoe,
paddles, cameras, and camping gear. They paddled for weeks, ate piranha, drank coffee made from
river water, set up their hammocks, and drifted off to sleep, or not, to the growl of jaguars. They caught a bug for the region, and two
years later they've returned with a bit more of a goal. In early October, the men
will set off on a 15-month quest to paddle, hike, and bike from Brazil’s northernmost point to its
southernmost point. Here's a bit more on the expedition they've named "Brazil 9000."
After nearly two years of planning, meetings and
refining the Riverview Project, the team at Below the Surface is ready for its
most epic road trip yet—the Exploring with a Purpose East Coast
tour. Over six weeks, your Readers of the Year will be driving from San
Diego to Washington, D.C., Boston, New York, New Jersey and back, to bring more
people into the mix to help protect our rivers.
Driving hard and fast from our San Diego
headquarters in our trusty (and sometimes testy) 1990 Ford F250 "Dark
Chocolate," I find myself 45 minutes east of Denver perched on a orange
"homer" pail, taking a break before pushing through to St Louis
to visit our friend "Muddy" Mike Clark, wild man of the Upper
Mississippi. Dark Chocolate is filled with adventure gear, our
computers and batteries are being charged up by solar energy gathered with
GoalZero's Sherpa solar kits and we're hand-pumping our way through the nearly
152 gallons of recycled vegetable oil that powers our truck. Eleven-hundred
miles into a 9,000-mile driving, paddling and speaking odyssey, we're brimming
with enthusiasm.
Along the way, I picked up Mark "Holy
Man" Downey, the team leader from a group of guys that paddled the entire
24,00 miles of the Mississippi River from Lake Itasca to the Gulf of Mexico in
June. His trip represented the hope and promise of the work we do at
Below the Surface—inspiring people to Explore with Purpose. This
group took the beta version of the Riverview Mobile App and gathered over 2,000
pictures of their adventure to contribute to the Riverview Project.
This road trip is so much more than a great ride,
it is the actualization of many dreams. Since launching the Riverview
Project and working hard to bring on paddler/explorers, sponsors, partners and
advocates for protecting our rivers we've realized that the most
important element of our project is having a sustainable, grassroots and free
way for people, businesses and organizations throughout the world to participate. We felt that the best way we could plug both river and ocean enthusiasts as
well as people who've never been on the water into the Riverview project is by
leveraging what we all carry with us—the ubiquitous smartphone and attending mobile apps.
The Riverview Project was featured in an article in
the New York Times after a series of meetings with the U.S. Geological
Survey. The timing couldn't have been better. I was on a
plane flying back from Washington, D.C., when I met an earnest young reporter who
was excited to be heading to San Diego to visit her grandparents and
surf. As a direct result of our light conversation on the plane, she
posted the following hyperlinked article on the New York Times Green blog. This
article initiated a conversation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
which ultimately joined our team to provide the resources to develop an Android-
and iPhone-based mobile app.
As we're not programmers by training or curiosity,
this has been a bit of an undertaking, but one that we've been blessed to be
supported on by many indvividuals and groups. Through reading, asking
reams of questions and patience, we've created the Riverview Mobile
app. This allows people to create an account representing themselves or
their organization, snap a picture, geotag, type in comments and upload their
"riverview" to our maps and cross-promote on Facebook.
We're in the process of integrating all the code for the app into our website
and Google's Earth map! To quote our friend Shelby Stanger in the
Readers of the Year article from December 2012, "Call it Conservation
2.0."
The goal is to inspire more paddling with all
manner of vessel. We want to deepen the sense of community and
connectedness to our waterways and coastline, share the excitement of a new
expedition, promote our partner organizations and be able to demonstrate how important
our waterways and coastline are beyond
commerce and being receptacles for diluting wastewater and runoff
effluent.
We'll be paddling and speaking all fall at events
from Washington, D.C., to Boston. We'll keep you updated as we
progress, and let you know when the Riverview App is available.
We all want to capture a money shot, whether that is literally a photograph, or a video, or a perfectly baked apple pie or a novel or a painting. Sometimes everything just comes together and diligence is rewarded.
It took Russ Ricketts, who wrote this guest post on river snorkeling for Adventure Ethics, about two years to land this video of a school of Chinook Salmon on its journey up the Wenatchee River, looking for natal streams to spawn. I asked him for the backstory.
Where were you? Was it a place you’ve shot before? The footage was shot in the Wenatchee River, right behind my house in Leavenworth, Washington. This hole is famous for fish, and it's heavily fished because of that reason. I only swim when there's no fishermen. Otherwise it's just disrespectful.
How did you go about making the camera housing? Nothing special, just a GoPro camera with the dive housing that corrects the fish-eye view. The real difference is the rubber-coated five-pound chunk of lead I attach the camera to. The currents are strong down there and a camera will just get blown off the rock you place it on. No footage then!