Could you run 4,000km across four African countries? This man did.
LAST APRIL, Johannesburg-born endurance athlete Gaven Sinclair returned from a 4 000km trail run across South Africa, Mozambique, Botswana and Namibia. The adventure took the 45-year-old seven months to complete, given minimal logistical necessities and budget and on the terrain he would cover, and he tackled it alone and unsupported. Why? To help fund an organisation that traces missing children.
It wasn’t Sinclair’s first solo adventure for this cause. Before that, he had cycled from Cape Town to Cairo; and although it’s been only a matter of months since he completed his mammoth run, he’s already begun to prepare for a 300km ocean swim off the coast of Mozambique. Together, all three of his adventures will make up the longest triathlon in the world.
Let’s be honest: most of us couldn’t even fathom running that far. Not only would you need the right physiology and endless hours of training; you’d also have to be willing to undertake serious risk, and give up a lot that most people take for granted.
Why does Sinclair feel compelled to embark on these adventures, when there are less extreme ways of raising money for charity?
FEARLESS AND SELFLESS
Sinclair grew up on the outskirts of Johannesburg, far from the city.
“When I was five years old, my parents bought me a small-scale scrambler, an off-road bike with automatic gears,” Sinclair recalls. “The moment I realised what the throttle allowed me to experience and feel, I was drawn to the adrenaline high.”
That was Sinclair’s first real taste of adventure. He subsequently tried other extreme sports: mountain biking, motocross, BMX racing, road racing and cross-country running.
“Through fearlessness, I began to understand the relationship between my perceived limitations and what I was actually capable of achieving.”
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