Around the world by hand and foot!

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071006/lf_afp/lifestylebritaintraveladventurepeople_071006174058

LONDON (AFP) - British adventurer Jason Lewis on Saturday arrived in Greenwich, south-east London, ending a 13-year round-the-world trip using only the power of the human body.



The 40-year-old completed the final leg of his 46,000-mile (74,000-kilometre) odyssey by pedalling his 26-foot (7.9-metre) boat Moksha up the River Thames.

The last effort into London followed a 3,000-kilometre bike ride from Turkey through Bulgaria, Romania, Austria and Germany to Oostend in Belgium, where the boat was waiting for him.

During his circumnavigation, he capsized in the North Atlantic Ocean, broke both legs, was chased by a crocodile in Australia and arrested on suspicion of spying in Egypt and threatened with a 40-year prison sentence.

Bearded and looking tired, a clearly emotional Lewis crossed the Greenwich Meridian line at the Royal Observatory by carrying his boat with the help of supporters and cheering well-wishers.

Lewis set off from the same spot -- zero degrees longitude -- bound for Portugal in July 1994. The 16-leg journey also included hiking, kayaking and hiking.

"It feels fantastic. I came over the line and I was choked. I blubbed (cried) like a baby," he told reporters.

"Everything I've been doing for the last 13 years has been in some way connected to this trip and tomorrow that will be no more."

Among the welcoming party was Queen Elizabeth II's cousin, the Duke of Gloucester, who is patron to the Expedition 360 adventure and who named Moksha in 1993. The name means "liberation" in Sanskrit.

Lewis has twice crossed the English Channel in Moksha as well as the north Atlantic, the Pacific and parts of the Indian Ocean.

He said his lowest points had included breaking both legs after being run over by a car while crossing the United States on rollerblades. Doctors told him at one point he risked having his left leg amputated.

Other lows included being thrown in jail in Egypt on suspicion of spying after illegally crossing the border from Sudan.

But he said the highs more than compensated.

"There have been many high moments," he added. "To be honest, it's always good to reach the other side of an ocean.

"But if it was just about the physical challenge I would have got bored.

"The 'why?' question changed over the years. I started circumnavigating the world ... but it became more about using the expedition as an educational tool to enhance children's learning experience in the classroom."

Lewis, from Dorset in south-west England, said he planned to rest this weekend before embarking on a career organising "mini-expeditions" for young people and giving talks about climate change.

He was initially accompanied on the voyage by expedition founder Steve Smith. He left the adventure in Hawaii in 1998 to pursue other interests as they attempted to cross the Pacific from San Francisco to Australia.

Pretty amazing. Took 13 years, kayak across the Pacific, rollerblade across the U.S. What would you take on a trip like that? A hell razor and ton of cash... 13 years worth
 
very interesting... and admirable in some ways.

I wonder why he chose rollerblades????
 
Apparently he only did rollerblades for a part. He mountain biked and hiked most of it. I found it very admirable myself. He started as a young man of only 26 and finished at 40 years old. Crossing the atlantic ocean took 111 days without seeing land. But he had a near fatal encounter with a whale in the middle of the atlantic which nearly capsized him as it played with his boat, he had no support as he crossed. He did face the monotony, and went partially insane from despair while crossing the Pacific. He faced pirate infested waters crossing the waters of Somalia. Got part of his paddle bitten off in fending off a saltwater crocodile attack as he crossed the Coral Sea. Was nearly blown into the great barrier reef. Contracted malaria in Latin America, and then el nino reversed water flows and forced him to backtrack to San Francisco to avoid the doldrums, a dead portion of the ocean just north of the equator. Swept out of his paddleboat into the sea. Beaten and robbed several times. Shark attacks on his paddleboat. Paddled into a civil war on the soloman islands. There's video of the shark attack and such on msn news and the expedition360 website. He actually has no home or material possessions now. I just found it wildly romantic and fascinating. He finished the expedition just on the 6th, england's time.
 
It's hard not to admire his adventurous spirt, and the spirit of others like him !

In 1995 I was working five hours drive south of a place called Caicara del Orinoco in Venezuela's Amazon. I took a weekend to catch up on some papaerwork in the city of Caircara, which lies on the Orinoco River. Being one of the only English speakers in the city, I ended getting dragged to the local hotel by a frantic co-worker telling me that some foreigners were in trouble and I needed to help. I had the good fortune to meet Brits Chris Maguire and Neil Armstrong (not the astronaut), who were on their world record breaking 13,000 mile canoe trip:

http://www.clippercanoes.com/british.php

One of them had become sick with a gastro-intestinal infection and needed some help (apparently the worse that either of them had experienced to date, and that must have been bad as they had already been travelling in their canoe for two years, also funny - huge torsos and tinly little atrophied legs). I got the company I was working for to put them up in a hotel for a week so the sick one could recover and the other could bulid a wheeled cart from bicycle parts for an upcoming 100km+ rapids portage (to break the record all portages had to be man-powered). By the time they finished the trip in 1996, they had spent three years canoeing, from Medicine Hat, Alberta, down the Mississippi, along the eastern coast of central America, the northern coast of Venezuela, up the Orinco and Rio Negro, then down the Amazon finishing their journey in Belem, Brasil.

The best thing is that neither of them had any experience in a canoe before this trip, and neither of them had any intention of breaking any sort of record when they started, they were visiting family in Medicine Hat and wanted to do a canoe trip. I can't remember exactly but I think one was a stock broker in London and the other maybe an accountant, they both quit their jobs shortly after they started the trip, after deciding to carry on.

The inpsirational part of this (to me at least) is that anyone can do something like this if they put their mind to it, it just requires drive and determination !
 
I salute his spirit.

And I'm sad to read that he arguably was in the greatest danger while crossing the US. :o
 
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