The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Explorers for life

Michael Alexander speaks to husband and wife explorers Luke and Hazel Robertson about teamwork in life and adventure

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W hen Luke Robertson became the first Scot to ski solo and unsupporte­d to the South Pole in 2015, shortly after brain surgery to remove a suspected brain tumour and with an artificial pacemaker, his endeavours inevitably made headlines.

But less than two years later, he and his adventurer wife Hazel showed further strength of character when, together, they embarked upon an gruelling expedition from the southernmo­st tip to the northernmo­st point of the Alaskan mainland.

Over some 80 days, they kayaked, cycled and ran across and through rainforest, glaciers, tundra and the Arctic Ocean on a journey of more than 2,000 miles.

The couple, who are Explorers in Residence for the Perth-based Royal Scottish Geographic­al Society, have also been on expedition­s to Arctic Norway and Greenland, and taken on adventure challenges in the Sahara, the Alps and lots in Scotland too.

Now, as the 34 year olds, both originally from Stonehaven, return to their former school, Mackie Academy, to give a public presentati­on called Polar Adventures: Stories from Antarctica to the Arctic, they hope their experience­s of exploratio­n – and in Luke’s case overcoming medical adversity – can inspire people of all ages to engage with the environmen­t in a positive manner and find confidence in themselves.

“We’ll be talking about my solo expedition to the South Pole, which was solo in the physical sense but not in the sense of logistics or organisati­on,” explained Luke.

“Then we’ll be taking the audience to Alaska – where we did a journey from the southernmo­st point kayaking and cycling through the mainland up to the north of Alaska and the Arctic coast – talking about changes and the people we saw there.

“The most recent polar adventure we did was in Northern Norway. We spent time with reindeer herders and witnessed and took part in the spring reindeer migration.

“We understood some of the difficulti­es and challenges people are having up there with the industrial­isation of the Arctic.

“We really just try to inspire people about using exploratio­n every day in their own lives to bring more confidence about themselves and use the outdoors as a tool to really inspire people.

“The aim is to share stories, to make people laugh and kind of bring some things we’ve learned to the audience.”

Luke and Hazel are also Arctic guides for the Polar Academy.

This transforma­tional charity takes teenagers who’ve been bullied, have anxiety and other issues going on in their lives on a 10-month training programme, ahead of helping guide them in Greenland on a real Arctic Expedition over 10 days.

One of the young adults from the Polar Academy, Alex Cochrane, will be at Mackie Academy to talk about her inspiratio­nal story and her life-changing experience­s, as part of the first half of the evening.

The second half will be an inconversa­tion-style event hosted by renowned local photograph­er and author Andy Hall, where he and the audience will get to ask the couple any questions they’d like.

We try to inspire people about using exploratio­n every day in their own lives to bring more confidence about themselves.

Hazel, who underwent bear, moose and earthquake training during the four years she lived in Alaska as a child, explained how those experience­s of the great outdoors and being part of another culture became a “catalyst” for the adventures she enjoys now.

But as well as the personal developmen­t side, there’s also the wider empathy that has been achieved by spending time in other environmen­ts and cultures – with first-hand experience of climate change also becoming more apparent.

“In Alaska, going back to glaciers where I had been 20 years before, and

seeing the different levels – that was quite something,” said Hazel.

“When we were in the Arctic, lots of tundra collapsed into the sea as there were more storm surges and things.

“People being affected by flooding and erosion, villages having to relocate in many places... When you hear the stories from these places, it makes you reflect on your own life a bit as well. “It’s had quite a big impact.” Luke, who was “pals” with Hazel for a long time before they became a couple, said geography field trips to Switzerlan­d and Iceland organised through a “very enthusiast­ic” geography teacher at Mackie Academy were two of the most formative things that happened to them in their teenage years.

The trips helped instil a “sense of adventure and wanting to explore the world and understand how it works”.

While Luke’s own medical experience­s have helped him appreciate life more and have, in their own way, become “psychologi­cal training” for some of the arduous trips he’s been on since, his wider aim is to inspire others to overcome their own challenges while at the same time developing an appreciati­ve, responsibl­e understand­ing for the great outdoors.

“Overcoming the brain tumour and being fitted with a pacemaker made me aware we can all be so much stronger than we think we can be,” he said.

“At the time, it was hard to think about them as positives. But in hindsight, they are two of the best things that ever happened to me.

“I really hope what I can do is inspire people without having to go through those things that they can do things they never thought they could do and push themselves beyond what they ever thought they could do.”

Luke is also keen to push the environmen­tal protection message.

When people connect with the world, whether it’s in Scotland for a walk in the woods or planning something a little bit bigger, their sense of appreciati­on and desire to protect it grows inside as well.

“When you go to these places as well, you think about your own life and try to learn about what’s going on – it taps into that instinct to help the planet essentiall­y,” he added.

“I think youngsters nowadays are more and more environmen­tally conscious. The Polar Academy is the perfect example of that.

“In Greenland, for example, they are seeing the changes first hand.

“Last year’s expedition was cut short by six days because it rained, the temperatur­es were so high – the young adults who were coming back were wanting to understand more about what’s happening.

“That can only come through exploring the world and being curious.”

 ??  ?? Luke and Hazel use their adventures to inspire selfconfid­ence in others. Their expedition­s have included camping on Norway’s Finnmark Plateau (main pic); reindeer herding (bottom right); and traversing Alaska (below). In 2015, despite only recently overcoming a brain tumour, Luke became the first Scot to ski solo and unsupporte­d to the South Pole (bottom left).
Luke and Hazel use their adventures to inspire selfconfid­ence in others. Their expedition­s have included camping on Norway’s Finnmark Plateau (main pic); reindeer herding (bottom right); and traversing Alaska (below). In 2015, despite only recently overcoming a brain tumour, Luke became the first Scot to ski solo and unsupporte­d to the South Pole (bottom left).
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