The Mercury

Just seven more years for KZN adventurer

- Sphelele Ngubane

IT IS a year since Pietermari­tzburg adventurer Angelo Wilkie-Page left home on an eight-year solo journey to circumnavi­gating the globe twice – from west to east, and from the South Pole to the North Pole – without motors, sails or solar power.

Wilkie-Page, 29, is an interior design graduate from the Durban University of Technology. He has just completed one year of his eight-year expedition.

“I made it into Nome (in Alaska) today, walked in the last 20 miles (32km) as it was snowing and high winds east of Cape Nome this morning. This has been a tough segment from Fairbanks, and a great test for what is to come. Feeling strong,” he posted on his website at the weekend.

Along the way, Wilkie-Page has been speaking about his experience­s at schools and public places.

His spokesman, Patrick Cromwell, said Wilkie-Page had completed the first leg from Los Angeles to Fairbanks in Alaska, a distance of 6 500km in which he was exposed to extreme opposites of climate.

“A warm start on the west coast to cycling through the Rocky Mountains,” he said.

Cromwell said that in Fairbanks, Wilkie-Page had changed his mode of transport to a custom-built kayak and paddled down the Yukon River towards the Bering Sea.

“Winter was coming in too fast, and Angelo had to make a quick decision. In Kaltag, he flew his kayak ahead to Unalakleet, an Alaskan town on the Bering Sea, and became the first person to solo walk successful­ly from Kaltag to Unalakleet through the mountain range, in summer,” he said.

Cromwell said Wilkie-Page had, to date, covered more than 2 000km in his kayak.

“Angelo’s next obstacle is to overcome red tape and bureaucrac­y to enter Russia from the Bering Sea with his kayak.

“He will then kayak around the Russian coastline till the town of Magadan, where he will be reunited with his bicycle and cycle through Siberia, Asia, the Middle East and Africa, ending Leg 2 in Cape Town,” he said. The second leg is estimated to be in the region of a whopping 35 000km.

The third leg will see him row from Cape Town to Rio in a purpose-built solo rowing boat, whereafter he will cycle to Argentina and then back up the West Coast to end his first circumfere­nce in Los Angeles.

Cromwell said Legs 5 to 8 would be the second circumfere­nce – north to south.

Wilkie- Page’s expedition aims to raise funds for Heifer Internatio­nal South Africa.

Track him live at: www.expedition­720degrees.com

 ??  ?? Angelo Wilkie-Page, right and above, hauls his sled on the Kaltag-Unalakleet Portage in Alaska, during the first epic leg of his eight-year adventure.
Angelo Wilkie-Page, right and above, hauls his sled on the Kaltag-Unalakleet Portage in Alaska, during the first epic leg of his eight-year adventure.

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