Speaker.
Alastair Humphreys
Adventurer & author
Profile:
Aged 8, Alastair completed the 26 mile Yorkshire 3 Peaks challenge. At 13 he did the National 3 Peaks in 24 hours. At 14 he cycled off-road across England. After leaving school Alastair taught for a year in South Africa and travelled round the region.
Whilst at Edinburgh and Oxford Universities he undertook several expeditions, cycling from Pakistan to China (Karakoram Highway), Land's End to John O'Groats, Turkey to Italy, Mexico to Panama and across South America. Alastair ran a charity project in the Philippines and the London marathon dressed as a rhino.
After Oxford Alastair cycled round the world for 4 years.
He has raced a yacht across the Atlantic Ocean and canoed 500 miles down the Yukon River as well as walking the length of the holy Kaveri river in India.
Alastair has published three books, with one more due by the end of 2009. (He has also written chapters for Lonely Planet's 'Flightless' anthology, the Adventure Cycling Handbook, Stanorama and The Traveller's Handbook. He ran the Marathon des Sables, finishing as one of the ten fastest Brits despite breaking his foot during the race. To fight off the wanderlust Alastair managed a sub-3-hour marathon, had a miserable time during the Original Mountain Marathon, the Devizes to Westminster 120-mile canoe marathon and another one during Tough Guy. Travelling round the World Cup in a camper van was much more fun.
After spending a year teaching 10-year-old boys in a school's Special Needs department, Alastair is now training for the Bob Graham Round and preparing for SOUTH, the first unsupported return journey to the South Pole and the longest unsupported polar journey in history. In February 2009 he rowed to France with Major Phil Packer, a soldier paralysed in Iraq, as part of Phil's attempt to raise £1million for Help for Heroes.
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My Brainfood
Websites
- Ben Saunders
- A beautiful site, and excellent content.
- hIrScH
- The best cycling/travel writing I’ve come across. He nails what it feels like.
- Mark Twight
- It’s not comfortable reading, but I print out this essay whenever I’m getting mentally or physically or morally flabby.
Books
- As I walked out one Midsummer morning
- Author:
Description: It was 1934 and a young man walked to London from the security of the Cotswolds to make his fortune. He was to live by playing the violin and by labouring on a London building site. Then, knowing one Spanish phrase, he decided to see Spain.
ISBN: 0140033181 - For whom the Bell Tolls
- Author:
Description: Hemingway's evocation of the pride and the tragedy of the civil war that tore Spain apart. A young American volunteer is sent to handle the dynamiting of a bridge behind the lines of Franco's army. In the mountains he find the dangers and the intense comradeship of war - and he discovers Maria.
ISBN: 0099908603 - Wind, Sand and Stars
- Author:
Description: In 1926 de Saint-Exupéry began flying for the pioneering airline Latécoère - later known as Aéropostale - opening up the first mail routes across the Sahara and the Andes.
ISBN: 0141183195
Organisations
- Amnesty International
- For so many people on Earth, life sucks. Amnesty reminds us.
- Hope and Homes for Children
- My round the world ride supported this charity.
- The RGS
- If they would focus on what people are interested in (hardcore, groundbreaking expeditions) rather than anoraks and geography field trips.
This is my favorite DO Lecture's talk! I absolutly love it! Its kind of a motivational video for me, LOL!
Anything is possible when you listen to this chap totally inspiring.
Incredible talk... so much energy. Love the idea of micro-adventures, going to start planning my own ones!