What better way to deal with a breakup than run the 1,400km Great Himalaya Trail solo? Andrew Porter did it, and did it quick, setting a new record of 28 days, 13 hours, 56 minutes. This is his journey.
In the distance, I can finally see the ridge marking the border to India. There is a 1,000m deep valley between us, but with over 60,000m altitude gain behind me, this final hill is actually a formality.
I take occasional shortcuts through the jungle and bamboo, but stick mainly to a road. I thus cover 40km, but just as it is getting dark I reach the border post in Pashupatinagar.
I have crossed the width of Nepal, west to east, and have completed the Great Himalaya Trail in a new record time of 28 days, 13 hours and 56 minutes for the 1,406km route. This beats the previous record of 49 days, 6 hours, and 8 minutes set by Sean Burch in 2010.
It marks the end of eight months of intense planning, training, and preparations. I blame the idea to attempt it on a book by Robin Boustead, The Great Himalaya Trail - A Pictorial Guide which dodges the real truth that this journey was actually an overreaction to a breakup.
ROBIN, NAWANG, THE ROUTE
I received assistance and useful advice from Robin Boustead while planning. He then hooked me up with the Thamel based trekking company Adventure Mountain Club.
I had a dedicated guide, Nawang, who assisted with resupply points along the way and with issuing permits. I also received plenty of useful advice from both Nawang and the trekking company. Without them, this trip would not have been possible.
Denne historien er fra Issue 22-utgaven av TRAIL.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra Issue 22-utgaven av TRAIL.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Heat Cheat
In his How Or Why series, coach SEAN TAIT, founder and Running technique coach at Off the Mark, digs deeper into specific issues troubling TRAIL readers.
Pacing The Way To Change
Seeing a need, Jo Keppler ran 130km to raise funds for the Southern Lodestar Foundation breakfast programme on Saturday 6 November 2020.
Die Ander Tafelberg(e)
Dalene van Staden developed Die Ander Tafelberge* project, recruiting Caro Jordaan and Magan Hanekom to summit all 15 Tafelberge in the Western Cape, ending with Cape Town's Table Mountain.
Dodge The Super Plods
We all want to get faster, not slower. But the plods are real – if we overdo our training. Stay fast with Joburg-based coach Neville Beeton.
Grounding Is It The Missing Link?
Durban biokineticist Stephan Terblanche has been in private practice for almost 25 years. One of his biggest frustrations is that some patients do not get better, regardless of treatment, for unknown reasons. He believes that a lack of grounding is a major factor.
THE ALIENS ARE HERE
Why do we run? There is no simple answer.
Meeting Rona
Being young and fit doesn't faze COVID-19. Salomon runner THABANG MADIBA (36) experienced this for himself.
For the Love
RACHEL MANYATHI is an ultra runner and high school teacher whose life centres around kindness, and mountain adventure.
Cultivating FLOW
High-performance coach CRAIG CAROLAN shares the Tao of Mike and positive psychology to help you reach maximum gratification on the trail.
Bites & Stings
Life support medic ALET MAARTENS is a Gauteng-based trail runner with a few tips to keep you safe against summer bugs with big appetites or short tempers.