There are two expeditions capturing my imagination right now—Ben Saunders and Tarka L’Herpiniere's quest to retrace Scott's journey to the South Pole and Paul Salopek's seven-year walk around the globe. In The New York Times, Salopek reflects on "bipedal journalism" and the lessons of his journey.
Later in the day, I saw there messages in Salopek's Twitter stream—AND then there is simply the act of traveling through the world at three miles per hour — the speed at which we were biologically designed to move. There is something mesmerizing about this pace that I still can’t adequately describe.
"I arrived in Kumasi with no particular goal. Having one is generally deemed a good thing, the benefit of something to strive toward."
— Out of Eden (@outofedenwalk) November 24, 2013
"This can also blind you, however: you see only your goal, and nothing else, while this something else (con't.)
— Out of Eden (@outofedenwalk) November 24, 2013
(con't) --wider, deeper--may be considerably more interesting and important."
— Out of Eden (@outofedenwalk) November 24, 2013