The Sun (Malaysia)

The sisterhood of travellers

> On Women’s History Month, we salute the fearless, adventurou­s female explorers who may not be household names – but should be

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THE FEMALE spirit can be a fearsome thing. It is brave, intrepid and curious. It can be seen in the countless women who put naysayers and doubters in their place by breaking world records, outperform­ing their male counterpar­ts, and commanding plain old r-e-s-p-e-c-t.

While Amelia Earhart is perhaps the poster woman of female travel trailblaze­rs – as the first woman aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, here’s a salute to names that may not be as well known but still managed to carve their own distinct paths.

Ida Pfeiffer (1797-1858) Austrian adventurer and travel writer Ida Pfeiffer decided to embark on an around-the-world journey by herself at the age of 49 in 1846.

That’s before Google Maps, Skype, Instagram and easyJet.

The trip would take her to Brazil, Chile, Tahiti, China, India, Persia, Asia Minor, and Greece.

Pfeiffer would go on to document many of her globetrott­ing adventures into travel books, including A Woman’s Journey Round the World, that would be translated in seven different languages.

Junko Tabei (1939-2016) An obit in The Guardian describes the late Tabei as not only the first woman in the world to summit Mount Everest in 1975, but also a woman who challenged cultural stereotype­s in her homeland (Japan) about a woman’s role in society.

“She was frequently told that Everest was no place for a woman, and that she should stay at home to look after her young children.”

Even after an avalanche nearly thwarted the expedition, Tabei would claim the title of first woman to climb Mount Everest at the age of 35.

Nellie Bly (1864-1922) “Anything you can do, I can do better!” said Bly.

We just love this American globetrott­er’s saucy chutzpah.

Journalist Bly took a record- breaking trip around the world in 72 days, and wrote about it in her book, Around the World in Seventy-Two Days, published in 1890.

Bly was also a hardball investigat­ive reporter who went undercover at a women’s mental asylum in New York City where she reported on the dismal conditions in her book, Ten Days in a MadHouse.

Jeanne Baret (1740-1807) Baret’s story has all the markings of a Shakespear­ean play – Twelfth Night to be exact.

In the late 18th century, the French woman would board a navy ship disguised as a man and embark on what would become a three-year odyssey circumnavi­gating the globe as the assistant to naturalist and botanist Philibert Commerson, who was also her lover.

It was the only way for her to skirt the ban on women aboard French navy ships.

Together, the two would collect samples around the world in places like Montevideo, Patagonia and Tahiti.

In 2012, Baret’s contributi­on to the world of botany was recognised with a new plant species from Peru christened Solanum bareae.

Cassandra De Pecol (1989presen­t) Fast-forward a few centuries, and we meet American explorer Cassandra De Pecol, who last year nabbed the Guinness World Record for visiting all sovereign nations on the planet in the fastest time.

That’s 196 countries in one year and 193 days (or 559 days).

Along with setting two Guinness records (she also holds the record for fastest female to visit all sovereign countries), De Pecol said her purpose in mounting the expedition was to promote awareness for world peace through the Internatio­nal Institute of Peace Through Tourism. After achieving her life dream at the age of 27, she has moved on and trained to compete in Ironman, worked to get a pilot’s licence, signed up to travel into space with Virgin Galactic, and is plotting out her next Guinness World Record attempt. – AFPRelaxne­ws

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 ??  ?? All around the world ... De Pecol (below) is the latest in a long line of female adventurer­s, including (from above left) Pfeiffer; Tabei; Bly; and Baret.
All around the world ... De Pecol (below) is the latest in a long line of female adventurer­s, including (from above left) Pfeiffer; Tabei; Bly; and Baret.

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