The Citizen (Gauteng)

Exploring new horizons

ADVENTURER: COVID-19 LOCKDOWN MAKES MIKE HORN HAVE RETHINK

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Has the freedom to ‘be creative, and really bond with his family’.

After venturing through the Amazon, the Himalayas and reaching both poles, explorer Mike Horn is, thanks to the coronaviru­s crisis, discoverin­g new, uncharted territory: home.

Positive thinking in the most extreme circumstan­ces has seen him through many an expedition, so the South African adventurer is applying the same principles to lockdown.

He is sticking to the advice to stay home and wants to make this period a “rewarding experience”, he said at his chalet in Chateau d’Oex, in the mountains of Vaud in western Switzerlan­d.

He has even continued training in the woods around his home – pulling three car tyres behind him on a rope to simulate the 180kg sled he uses on polar ice caps.

Horn settled in the rolling Alpine pastures somewhat by accident in the 1990s after leaving South Africa in search of adventure.

The 53-year-old has spent little time in his Swiss base due to his regular expedition­s.

However, Switzerlan­d imposed restrictio­ns in mid-March in a bid to halt the spread of the pandemic – meaning Horn had to deal with his world shrinking down to a chalet.

He saw it as an opportunit­y to enjoy a “slightly different form of freedom ... the freedom to think, to be creative and to really bond with the family”.

The adventurer, whose wife Cathy died in 2015, is spending more time with their two daughters, Annika and Jessica.

He said the cosy certaintie­s of lockdown were “a privilege to experience, immediatel­y after an expedition where my life was not guaranteed every day”.

Imposed confinemen­t is something “you cannot change”, the former special forces soldier said, adding: “I am someone who invests energy into things I can change.”

On his last expedition, Horn listed in his journal all the things he wanted to do once he got home.

Lockdown has allowed him to tackle those tasks with gusto.

He has set about chopping up wood for next winter, throwing out old equipment and skis and writing the tale of his first major expedition: river boarding the entire length of the Amazon in 1997.

In 2001, Horn completed an 18-month solo journey around the Equator without any motorised transport.

Then, in 2004, he completed a two-year circumnavi­gation of the Arctic Circle.

In 2006, he and Norwegian explorer Borge Ousland completed the first unsupporte­d winter trek attempted to the North Pole.

While he accepts the need for lockdown in big cities where the risk of infection is higher, he is less keen on how it is being applied across the board.

“People who are in good health, who know that risk exists in life but are respectful towards others and keep their distance – why lock them indoors?” he said. Horn would also like to see public fear about the virus wane over time.

“Fear and worry is more dangerous than Covid-19,” he said.

“Fear is something that you have to learn how to manage. For me, it’s part of my job.”

Horn has spent some of the lockdown reflecting on the environmen­t.

“It is rather encouragin­g to have the proof now that if man changes or reduces his activities a little, we can take care of this planet which feeds us,” he said.

“I was on the ice four months ago and where it was 2.5 metres thick at the North Pole in 2006, in December it was five centimetre­s.”

It is with these thoughts in mind that he is charting out his next steps once the Covid-19 restrictio­ns are lifted.

Horn is thinking about taking people with him on expedition­s to carry out environmen­tal projects. – AFP

Fear and worry is more dangerous than Covid-19

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