Shouting from my shed

Get the latest news, updates and happenings via my shed-based newsletter.

IMG_6960

Everybody wants more Adventure in their Life

 

Almost everybody would like more adventure in their life.
To enjoy more sunsets, swim in beautiful rivers, cook on campfires and sleep under the stars.

Here is how you can do all this, even within your busy life of work, commuting and family.

I am a professional adventurer. I have cycled round the world, rowed across the Atlantic Ocean, and walked across deserts. But I have spent the last couple of years doing adventures close to home, showing people that you don’t need lots of time or money to have an adventure. You don’t have to be fit and “outdoorsy”. You don’t need to live in a log cabin in Alaska.
Adventure is closer than you think!

Here’s a few pointers to help you get going…

  1. Don’t worry if you are not an “adventurous person”. Everyone has to start somewhere. Start small, but do start.
    Jump
  2. The hardest thing about living adventurously is beginning. Making the effort to get out the front door. Go for a walk under a full moon. Local, familiar places look different and exciting after dark. Look at the ordinary with fresh eyes and you can see adventure everywhere.
    A Harvest Moon Walk
  3. Shake up your commute. Make the most of the long summer evenings. Walk or cycle your commute just once. It might be far, it might be hard, but you’ll be proud of it for years to come as you commute into work.
    sunset cycling
  4. Arbitrary Journeys are the best way to expose yourself to adventure. It doesn’t matter where you go or what you do. All that matters is that you go, and do. Walk a lap of your home at a radius of a couple of miles. Cycle from where your Mom was born to where your Dad was born. Hike from the highest point in your county to the lowest point in your county. The journey doesn’t matter – it is what you see and experience along the way that is exciting.
    IMG_4912
  5. Swim in a River. Wild swimming is like a metaphor for life. Daunting to consider (if the water is chilly!), the first step is the hardest, once you are in it feels just fine, and afterwards you look back at it glowing and excited and proud.
    Wild Swim Microadventure
  6. Stop cursing your 9 to 5 and how it hinders your adventures. Flip it round and think about your “5 to 9”. Look at the opportunities not the constraints. What are you going to do with your 16 hours of daily freedom? (I know we all have commitments and responsibilities, but try to think more positively about your free time.)
    A Night on a Hill
  7. Sleep on a Hill. If you normally leave work, go home, watch TV and go to bed, consider trying this instead. Leave work, head out of town (even in a big city you are only an hour from some countryside), sleep on a hill under the stars, then head back into work in the morning. Crumpled, perhaps, but what a memorable experience!
    5 to 9 #microadventure
  8. You don’t need piles of expensive gear to get out for a night in the wild. A sleeping bag, sleeping bag and cheap bivvy bag or tarp are all you need.
    Packed for a #microadventure
  9. You can make a brilliant camping stove from a beer can.
    Beer Can Stove
  10. The legalities of wild camping are not as complicated as you may imagine. In the US Google “primitive camping” to find local, safe, beautiful places to camp. In the UK wild camping is perfectly legal in some areas, happily tolerated virtually everywhere else.
    Microadventure

If you want some encouragement and inspiration from other normal, busy people who are squeezing adventure into their lives, search online for #microadventure.
Good luck!

This post first appeared on the Huffington Post.

Read Comments

You might also like

Not Very Glowing Book Reviews – Blackout Art Sometimes, as an author, you receive glowing book reviews. That is a lovely feeling. Sometimes, as an author, you receive not very glowing book reviews. That is a less lovely feeling. I have been having some fun with my #notveryglowingbookreviews, […]...
10500 Days (and almost as many words) “My thoughts first turned to adventure 10,500 days ago today. The idea of adventure for me at first was simple and uncomplicated. It was the prospect of excitement, fun, and novelty that were pulling me forward, and the push of […]...
Survey results: What direction shall I go next? I recently asked the wonderful readers of my newsletter for a bit of advice on what things I should focus my attention on for the next few months and years. I thought I’d share the results here, partly to show […]...
 

Comments

  1. I like the ‘sleeping on a hill’. Simple but effective. Not sure my bed hair would suit me but your right, it is a great way to have a little adventure.

    Reply

 
 

Post a Comment

HTML tags you can use: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

 

Shouting from my shed

Get the latest news, updates and happenings via my shed-based newsletter.

© Copyright 2012 – 2015 Alastair Humphreys. All rights reserved.

Site design by JSummertonBuilt by Steve Perry Creative