~ Field Notes ~

What businesses get from supporting expeditions, and how to get them to support yours in 2023

What businesses get from supporting expeditions, and how to get them to support yours in 2023

To increase your chances of success of getting an expedition paid for (and to stop you wasting your precious free time), you should understand a little about the mechanics of how business works, and the sales and marketing functions of it, otherwise you’ll probably be wasting your time approaching people who don’t have the money to support you, don’t see the value in your project, or a combination of both.

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A short hike in the Hindu Kush: scaling mountains in Kabul, Afghanistan.

A short hike in the Hindu Kush: scaling mountains in Kabul, Afghanistan.

We meet in a quiet corner of Kabul, a neighbourhood that’s largely untouched by the security issues. I know the city moderately well and so this eases my apprehension well. Although I do understand that If I’ve misjudged anything about my plan to get alternative perspectives of the beautiful mountains, the consequences could be severe.

It’s winter and the whole city is covered in a blanket of snow, meaning that movement is much slower, but the city does appear quieter than when I was last here.

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Bending and straightening: what life’s like four months after the accident.

Bending and straightening: what life’s like four months after the accident.

It is four months since the accident, and I’ve been out of hospital for a few weeks. Christmas would usually be spent driving hundreds of miles to the north to see my family however I choose not to struggle with the British rail service.

The effort it would take to get across London from the south coast (itself already experiencing difficulties from flooding) and then many more hours on the trains just seems beyond me at this stage – so my girlfriend and I settle for a quiet one at home watching Netflix and drinking too much tea.

It takes me many days to overcome the feeling that I’m letting people down, but I get reassured that I’m not.

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On the other side of life
Mountaineering, Climbing, Resilience, Accident, Aosta, Italy, Matterhorn Chris Shirley MA FRGS Mountaineering, Climbing, Resilience, Accident, Aosta, Italy, Matterhorn Chris Shirley MA FRGS

On the other side of life

I have been thinking a lot about time recently.

Somehow, I always perceived time as being linear. Everything having its own beginning and ending. Its own past, present and future.

But it was the evening of the accident when I felt the true meaning of time. I have heard it being described before, in books, in films, by other people with remarkable stories - that in certain moments in life, time can stop.

Stand still.

Cease to exist as it did before and change your life forever.

The night I received the message about the accident was the moment when life and time truly stood still. I can still remember some of it, how alien time felt. I remember my knees getting weak and shaky. The outside world disappearing. The truth is, it is a feeling like no other, one that I hope that you would never experience.

And yet, it was once of the rarest moments of my life when I felt time as raw as I ever have.

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What 3 months in hospital taught me about isolation (by a former-Royal Marine and ocean rower)

What 3 months in hospital taught me about isolation (by a former-Royal Marine and ocean rower)

Late last year, I had a big fall whilst trying to climb the Matterhorn mountain – tumbling fifty metres which put me in coma for eight days and hospital for almost three months. After spending a week in a coma, I woke up with a traumatic brain injury. The Italian doctors had found three lesions (damage in the brain) which affected my short-term memory, speech and vision in one eye. At first I didn’t recognise my girlfriend, family or close friends whom had all flown to be with me throughout the coma. But as time went on, I started to become more like the person I was before – but some perspectives had changed.

It was undoubtedly the hardest period of my life, but these basic principles helped me to endure it and come out stronger.

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The 7 principles I follow for taking on physical challenges that intimidate me

The 7 principles I follow for taking on physical challenges that intimidate me

82 years old and completing an Ironman triathlon. That’s a 2.4-mile (3.8-km) swim, followed by a 112-mile (180-km) cycle, and finishing with a 26.2-mile (42.2-km) run. Just think about that for a second longer.

It’s stories like hers that motivate me to keep going when the journey ahead seems impossible to move forward.

In the next few years, I'll be aiming to complete the Silk Road Mountain race, a 1700-kilometre continuous bikepacking race in Kyrgyzstan, and one of my biggest personal challenges since a mountaineering accident in 2019 almost permanently stopped me from doing things I love altogether.

There are the 7 principles that I use to fit training to previous adventures that I’ll use to get myself to the finishing line.

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What it’s like to traverse the Aonach Eagach ridgeline in Scotland

What it’s like to traverse the Aonach Eagach ridgeline in Scotland

My research told me that the Aonach Eagach ridge is considered one of the most difficult and exposed scrambles in Scotland, and requires a high level of fitness, experience, and proper equipment. It also offers spectacular views of the surrounding mountains and valleys that you can find emblazoned across Instagram. That was enough for me to give it a go!

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