UA
 

Американец впервые в одиночку пересек Антарктиду

Корреспондент.net,  27 декабря 2018, 10:40
23
8144
Американец впервые в одиночку пересек Антарктиду
Фото: Instagram/ colinobrady
Спортсмен Колин О'Брэди без посторонней помощи пересек всю Антарктиду

Это путешествие является первым в истории. На него американский спортсмен потратил 54 дня.

Американский спортсмен-экстремал Колин О'Брэди впервые в истории пересек Антарктиду в одиночку. На эту опасную экспедицию мужчина потратил 54 дня. Об этом пишет The Guardian.

Мужчина пересек континент, не прибегая к посторонней помощи. Друзья и поклонники могли следить за передвижениями О'Брэди при помощи интернета.

В ходе экспедиции мужчина преодолел путь длиной в 1,5 тысячи километров. Причем последние 32 часа пути оказались для него самыми сложными.

"И пусть последние 32 часа оказались самыми сложными в моей жизни, они, по правде говоря, принесли мне лучшие моменты, которые я когда-либо испытывал", - отметил он.

Финальные 129 километров О'Брэди преодолел почти за сутки, без остановок. Таким образом, американец установил мировой рекорд.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Day 54: FINISH LINE!!! I did it! The Impossible First ✅. 32 hours and 30 minutes after leaving my last camp early Christmas morning, I covered the remaining ~80 miles in one continuous “Antarctica Ultramarathon” push to the finish line. The wooden post in the background of this picture marks the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf, where Antarctica’s land mass ends and the sea ice begins. As I pulled my sled over this invisible line, I accomplished my goal: to become the first person in history to traverse the continent of Antarctica coast to coast solo, unsupported and unaided. While the last 32 hours were some of the most challenging hours of my life, they have quite honestly been some of the best moments I have ever experienced. I was locked in a deep flow state the entire time, equally focused on the end goal, while allowing my mind to recount the profound lessons of this journey. I’m delirious writing this as I haven’t slept yet. There is so much to process and integrate and there will be many more posts to acknowledge the incredible group of people who supported this project. But for now, I want to simply recognize my #1 who I, of course, called immediately upon finishing. I burst into tears making this call. I was never alone out there. @jennabesaw you walked every step with me and guided me with your courage and strength. WE DID IT!! We turned our dream into reality and proved that The Impossible First is indeed possible. “It always seems impossible until it’s done.” - Nelson Mandela. #TheImpossibleFirst #BePossible

Допис, поширений Colin O'Brady (@colinobrady)

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Day 47: THIS TOO SHALL PASS. After having my best day of the expedition yesterday, I nearly had my worst day today. I went to battle hard with my personal demons today. My anxiety started building last night after listening to a huge wind storm grow outside. The rattling of my tent kept me up and I began to get more and more nervous knowing I had to go out in it. I did my usual morning routine and then stepped into the madness. As expected, it was brutal. Blowing snow, sub zero temps and zero visibility. I packed off and headed out into the whiteout. I just entered a part of the route known as “Sastrugui National Park” aptly named for having the biggest sastrugui on the route. Pretty much the worse place to find yourself not being able to see where you are going. Due to the massive sastrugi, it’s also the one stretch where no plane can land so you are in dire straights if an emergency occurs. That really started playing on my mind after I fell hard 5 times in the first hour. What if I broke a bone or a ski? Maybe I should stop? I bargained with myself and finally decided I had to set my tent back up, less than two hours into the day. I told myself in my tent if I wanted to keep going that I could put on my long skins for better grip on the uneven surface and then continue. But I knew the effort it would take to put up the tent in a storm, it’s unlikely I was going any further. I fought to get the tent up, got inside with my skis, skins and stove, and put on my long skins. It was now decision time. Go back out? The voice in my head told me to stop, wait out the storm, rest. But the other voice told me I needed to keep moving forward or I’ll run out of food. My mind was ripping me apart. I closed my eyes and decided to meditate for a couple minutes repeating my favorite mantra: “This too shall pass.” One way or another I’d find my way out of this. Calmed and with renewed resolve I got back outside, fought to get my tent down and packed and continued onward. The storm outside never got any better, in fact it got progressively worse. However I managed to calm the storm in my mind and knock out 21.5 miles today. A great day all things considered.

Допис, поширений Colin O'Brady (@colinobrady)

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Day 40: SOUTH POLE!!! I made it!!! What a day. I expected to be happy reaching the South Pole, but today has quite honestly been one of the best days of my entire life. It was whiteout conditions approaching the pole as it’s been for days. I spent about an hour there - taking photos and soaking in the moment before continuing onward. I am deeply honored to be adding to the 100 year lineage of the @explorersclub flag. Just having that fabric in my hand at the pole, knowing all of the other hands it’s touched over the generations, gives me chills. Shortly after leaving the pole the sun came out and I was overcome with one of the deepest feelings of happiness and calm that I have ever experienced. I truly felt I was tapping into all of the love that was being sent my way from all over the world. Deep, deep, deep gratitude - I’m shining my love right back at you. Some perspective on today’s accomplishment (which for me feels completely humbling, putting me in rare company.) Only 28 people before me have completed coast to pole crossing; skied from the coast of Antarctica to the South Pole, solo, unsupported (no resupplies), and unaided (no kites). Only 2 people before me have done so on this route. For all of these people the South Pole was a very worthy finish line, but I still have unfinished business as I try to be the very first to complete a full traverse and reach the opposite coast. Onward!! #TheImpossibleFirst #BePossible

Допис, поширений Colin O'Brady (@colinobrady)

 

Ранее сообщалось, что женщина во время тура в Антарктиде оказалась в ловушке из-за любознательных и дружелюбных тюленей.

 

Новости от Корреспондент.net в Telegram. Подписывайтесь на наш канал https://t.me/korrespondentnet

ТЕГИ: рекордАнтарктидаспортсмен
Если вы заметили ошибку, выделите необходимый текст и нажмите Ctrl+Enter, чтобы сообщить об этом редакции.
Читать комментарии
Загрузка...