
Ken Roberts - Across Continents
Life can bring you into contact with some amazing characters and Ken is no exception. We first met on a Wilderness Medical Training course about a year ago, where Ken was preparing for an adventure of mammoth proportions. His plan was to cycle around the world. Not just cycle a few routes through a few countries, but to literally cycle around the world – starting and finishing in the UK. Preparation is everything and Ken was meticulous, even down to obtaining the specialist medical training we provide at WMT. Ken set off in September 2010 and is currently a few miles short of Mongolia. His journey aims to raise awareness and funding for ‘The Outward Bound Trust‘.
There is far too much news and information about Ken’s adventure to be told in a few short blog paragraphs and I suggest anyone wanting inspiration on a different scale should visit his website ‘acrosscontinents.org‘, where you will find regular updates.
Well done Ken – keep going!
James
Posted in Expedition medicine, Travel, charity work | No Comments »
When one thinks of the Nile first thoughts will undoubtedly centre around the great pyramids and temples of Egypt, or perhaps even the 19th Century explorers John Hanning Speke and Sir Richard Francis Burton. Unless one goes searching, little else is told of this great river and the lives and countries it flows through on its 4000 mile journey to the waters of the Mediterranean.
In May earlier this year ITV screened a four part programme entitled ‘Joanna Lumley’s Nile’, where this intrepid presenter travelled the length of this great river highlighting the many other great cultures, peoples and lands dependant on this special river.
Starting at the Nile Delta her journey took her down through Egypt, across Lake Nasser and into Sudan. At Khartoum the river swells as the Blue Nile, flowing down from the highlands of Ethiopia is joined by the White Nile, flowing north from Lake Victoria. After visiting the source of the Blue Nile, Joanna travelled down through Southern Sudan, into Uganda, stopping briefly at the majestic Murchison Falls. From here she journeyed up through the jungles of Rwanda, finally reaching the source of the Nile furthest from the Mediterranean.
Why am I telling you all of this? Well I was fortunate enough to be part of the small team of 7 who filmed this great adventure. As a travel and expedition health specialist, or expedition medic, my role was to keep the team healthy, or fix them should they break. Providing expedition medical support on such a journey was one of the most amazing experiences one could have. Being part of a film crew enabled us to get to locations seldom visited, meet people rarely seen by the outside world and gain more of an understanding of what this great river means to so many people.
As for working with Joanna Lumley – ‘is she as nice in real life as she appears on TV?’ – She’s nicer!
James
Tags: expedition health specialist, expedition medic, expedition medical support
Posted in Expedition medicine, Expedition medics, Film Crew Medical Support, Travel, Travel Health Links, working abroad | No Comments »
This year’s Wilderness Medical Training winter conference for expedition medics has just come to a close. It was a fantastic event with some great speakers including Emmanuel Cauchy, a mountain rescue Doctor and international expert on frostbite, and Nick Mason, high altitude medicine specialist and Olympus Cameras sponsored photographer. 60 delegates from across Europe enjoyed morning and evening lectures interlaced with practical sessions and of course, some great skiing. If only all our work could be like this…
Posted in Expedition medicine, Expedition medics, Expedition training | No Comments »