Archive for the ‘TNC Supported’ Category

Olympian Wanted for South Pole Expedition

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Owing to a recent change of circumstance, a British Olympic Athlete is sought to join an expedition to the South Pole to coincide with the London 2012 Olympics.

The successful candidate will join a Paralympian and a Special Olympics Athlete in a project which aims to reinforce some key messages of London 2012Participation, Inclusivity, Accessibility and Inspiration – and mark the 100th anniversary of Captain Scott first reaching the Pole under a British flag.

Departing in December 2011, the team will be away from the UK for some six weeks and will spend most of that time skiing unsupported across part of Antarctica.

Although helpful, no experience of polar travel, expeditions or skiing is required. Fitness, we anticipate, will not be a problem.

It is expected that applicants will not be participating in the 2012 Games as a project such as this would undoubtedly interfere with their preparations.

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Person Specification:

  • Has represented Great Britain at the Olympics
  • Enthusiastic about the project and the wider Olympics Movement
  • A team player who is willing to muck in
  • Positive in the face of adversity
  • Willing to commit time and effort to the project before and after the expedition
  • Available for at least six weeks over Christmas and New Year in 2011/2012

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More Information:

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Enquiries:

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Some things I enjoyed about the Kaspersky Commonwealth Antarctic Expedition

Friday, March 5th, 2010

At the end of last year I was involved with the Kaspersky Lab Commonwealth Antarctic Expedition – a group of seven women from different Commonwealth countries who joined forces and skied to the South Pole.

Here are some things I enjoyed about the expedition:

  1. The application form for team members made no reference to fitness or prior experience
  2. The team included a mother, an IT worker, a government employee and an outdoors instructor (i.e. a mixed bunch)
  3. They only started training, and met each other for the first time, less than a year before standing at the South Pole
  4. Bilingual PodCasts
  5. The cool interactive map charting their progress
  6. The Mojo-Meter (whose great idea was that, anyway?)
  7. Trilingual PodCasts
  8. Their unfailing consistency over two months (just look at this map)
  9. They got a major sponsor in “these difficult times” (a beacon of hope to the rest of us)
  10. The level of involvement of their sponsor
  11. Eugene Kaspersky, the president of Kaspersky Lab, flew to meet them at the South Pole
  12. I got to work with Felicity Aston
  13. My old pal Helen got to ski with them after all her hard work
  14. They sang me a Christmas Carol down the satphone on Christmas Eve (albeit just before midnight when I had previously been asleep)
  15. They asked me to help

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Walking to Work… My Next Challenge by Ewan Laurie

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

This is the first in what I hope will be a long line of a new feature entitled ‘My Next Challenge’.

Each month we’ll have a new person tell us about an upcoming adventure – what they’re doing, why they’re doing it, what they’re worried about and why they’re excited.

I first met Ewan when working for BSES and he got in touch with me last week to see if I would join him on his commute (very topical given this month’s Everyday Adventure mission). I, of course, said yes.

Here’s his plan…

I’m Ewan Laurie and my next challenge is to walk from Guildford to Wimbledon (25 miles), to raise money for Money For Madagascar, who support some of the world’s poorest people. I was lucky enough to lead an expedition to Madagascar for BSES in 2007, and the generosity of even the poorest people there has remained with me since.

I’m a teacher in Wimbledon and we have our biennial “Make A Difference Day” on Friday the 5th of March and loads of things are happening for lots of different charities. It seemed like a good opportunity to raise money for Madagascar, but how?

Some of the staff are being sponsored to walk to work and I though I’d take that a step further and walk to Wimbledon from Haslemere, where I live, which is about 40 miles. Then I realised that I had a parents’ evening the night before and wouldn’t be able to start early enough to make it on time, so I’m starting in Guldford instead (hopefully our only compromise).

If you think this is something you think you’d like to support, please point your browser at the following link and write “MADD Walk” in the “special instructions” box, so they know you’re supporting our walk:

http://www.moneyformadagascar.org/howtod.htm

I haven’t had much time to put the idea together, so I’m extra pleased that Tim’s going to join me (we go back a few years, but we’ve never done something like this together). Hopefully Roy, the Spanish Assistant is going to come too, which should add a cultural dimension.

I need to get to work roughly on time, so the plan is to drive from Wimbledon straight after the parents evening, grab a bite to eat and start trundling through the night.

You can plan a rough walking route on Google Maps by typing in two postcodes and selecting the “walking” option from the drop down menu in the “get directions” function. It’s slightly worrying that the website then warns you that there might not actually be a footpath along sections of the route, so torches are going to be important!

We’ll be setting off on Thursday evening and you can follow our progress on Twitter (the updates are visible on the right hand side of this web page).

What’s your next challenge?

If you’ve got an adventure planned or an idea in your head and you think it’s something I can help with or which might make a good feature like the one above, why not drop me a line?

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8 places I have received satellite phone calls from an expedition

Monday, December 7th, 2009

High and dry in the Inylchek Valley

1. Shepherd’s Bush bus station at 4am having fallen asleep on a night bus after a particularly big night out in Clapham

2. The guest bedroom of my friend’s house at an inappropriate hour (twice)

3. Various bus lanes and side streets around the capital whilst straddling my bike (these occasionally end up with me sat cross legged on the floor with papers spread across the pavement)

4. My flat, on and off for 8 hours on the first day of my Christmas break

5. In the foyer of the BBC Television Centre (I was there to pitch an idea about skiing to the South Pole and the call came in from Antarctica just as the girl came down to fetch me – the timing couldn’t have been better!)

6. The Explore Conference 2009 whilst mingling at the bar (I felt a strong urge to wave my phone around and let the room know just how rock-and-roll I was)

7. Lost in a forest halfway through cycling the Devon Coast-to-Coast

8. At my desk in my first month at work, very nervous and not knowing how I should talk to someone on a satellite phone (I went with very slowly)

…and I’m pretty knew to this game. Who else has got a story?

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10 things I learned at the Explore Conference last weekend

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Laram Kk’ota Chico

I spent last weekend at my favourite event of the year – the RGS Explore Conference – at which I was very lucky to be a speaker and a panellist. I was also privileged to both ask and be asked for advice on a number of occasions.

I find the event quite hard work because, although I love talking to people and giving/getting help, it doesn’t come naturally to me and it takes a lot of energy. That, coupled with all of the inspirational stories and excitement, made for a concentrated learning experience of a weekend (and I’m not the only one).

Here’s what I’ve got:

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#1 – Just because you’ve got a microphone, doesn’t mean you’re right

The lights, the sound system, the crowd, the venue. They all create an atmosphere that easily sucks you in and I quickly found myself nodding along to things the speakers were saying with which I didn’t really agree. Two points stand out:

The first was the assertion that people shouldn’t go on an expedition without having a purpose. And, to qualify that statement, “first this and that” and “fun”, clearly didn’t qualify.

Nonsense!

I believe that expeditions have the potential to deliver strong messages and elicit significant change, and would often encourage them to do so. But I also respect those that go for the hell of it and would far rather go on one of them than concoct a dilute excuse for a scientific/charitable/noble purpose.

The second thing I disagreed with was Glen Morris’ position on flying. Specifically, that he doesn’t do it because he thinks it’s bad for the environment. Well, I won’t argue with the basic premise, but I wouldn’t follow it to the same conclusion. I think travel is too important a tool for understanding our world to be restricted by a veto on flights. (Having said that, Mr Morris, I thought your talk was great and would never have guessed your age).

N.B. I hope you’re not agreeing with me just because I’ve got a blog.

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#2 – To ask for help is to be vulnerable

Following one of the many great talks on the weekend, I approached the speaker to ask for some pointers on something he had spoken about. Perhaps I caught him at a bad time or simply asked the wrong question, but I was not prepared to be treated with the disdain and condescension with which I was received.

What surprised me even more, however, was my own reaction. As soon as I had escaped his grasp, I fled the room and hid, quite literally, in a corner while I calmed down. I didn’t know this guy from Adam and had asked a very mundane question yet I felt like a tiny bug crushed beneath a giant foot.

Why?

Because, I think, it takes a lot of guts to ask someone for help. You’re putting yourself out there, exposing yourself and it leaves you vulnerable in someone else’s hands.

I only hope that, of the many strangers bold enough to approach me this weekend, I did not make any of them feel an ounce of what I did on Sunday morning.

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#3You can get a real kick out of helping people

The highlight of my weekend came at Saturday lunch time and, for once, the food was not to thank. In fact, I was desperately hungry and trying my damnedest to get to the feeding station but I just couldn’t get there.

People kept talking to me.

It was brilliant. I’d just had my ten minutes of fame and complete strangers were introducing themselves, telling me their grand plans and asking for advice on a vast range of topics. I have no idea if my ramblings were of benefit to anyone in the building but they all smiled, shook my hand and said ‘thank you’ and that was more than enough to make my day. No, my weekend.

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#4Some guy wants to ride an electric motorbike around the world

A group from the University of Aberdeen are heading to Nepal; another bunch of guys are organising a caving expedition to Montenegro; a girl with a nose-piercing is climbing Kilimanjaro for her local hospice; a well-spoken videographer is looking for expeditions to join; someone far more experienced at rickshawing than me had also thought about a long distance trip in one; a medical student from UCL wants to put together a research expedition to one of the poles; a chap with rough-edged business cards is taking DoE groups to China; and a petite blond girl is trying to think up expedition ideas that her local paper would like.

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#5An expedition can still capture a nation’s imagination

Last year a documentary was aired on the BBC called The Man Who Cycled The World. The star, Mark Beaumont, had filmed his successful attempt to break the speed record for cycling around the globe. His time has already been beaten by another Brit, James Bowthorpe whose record, in turn, is already under threat by Julian Sayarer. And, I was told (by a guy with an apple for a head) that there are several other Britons in hot pursuit.

Whether or not you think such a record is a worthwhile pursuit, I think it’s fantastic that an expedition can inspire so many “normal people” to up-sticks and have a crack at doing something great.

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#6Food from a box isn’t necessarily bad

The chicken on Saturday was good, but Sunday’s salmon was great.

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#7If you ask a question, have the decency to listen to the reply

Watching some fantastic footage and stories from Anthony Geffren unfold on screen, I found my lip curling involuntarily. The videos were fantastic but, for me, the dramatised slogans and voice overs were not – “The most daring expedition ever!”, “The most hostile environment on the planet!”.

So, when the time came, I stuck my hand up and asked him if he ever felt a conflict between the realistic portrayal of the expeditions or scientific research he filmed, and the need to produce a compelling product.

My question at least impressed my mate who was sat next to me. “Good question” he offered with a nod of approval. Buoyed with machismo, I licked my finger and drew a vertical line in the air – “Tssst!”.

As I turned back to the stage, nodding smugly, I realised that Anthony, understandably, was looking directly at me, giving me his answer and I hadn’t even bothered to listen. More’s the pity since, from what I did hear, he gave a very good response.

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#8Friedriche Nietzsche never owned a bicycle

It was on my bike ride home that I reflected on my weekend and composed the list you’re reading. I was tempted to pull over at the side of the road, whip my laptop out and start typing.

But, apart from being cold and dark, I realised that I should probably stay on because it’s often my bike rides that give me inspiration. It was on the saddle that this piece came to me and it was rolling on two wheels that I thought up this one. In fact, I have come to cherish even the most mundane of commutes and the most miserable of cycling conditions simply for the opportunity they give my brain to run free.

Friedriche Nietzsche once said: “All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking“.

My conclusion?

Clearly, Mr Nietzsche didn’t have a bike.

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#9You may know more than you think

I am no expert on expeditions and hope that I never become so complacent as to think that I am. But, many of the questions posed to me on the weekend struck me as being incredibly basic. But, upon reflection, perhaps they’re only basic if you’ve done them before.

It’s easy to take for granted the knowledge that we all have but don’t underestimate how useful that information could be to someone else who hasn’t done the things that you have.

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#10Cycling through Richmond Park at night is much more fun with your lights off

Opportunities for such solitude and boyish, adventurous indulgences are rare in Central London but this was pure hedonism.

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