EXPEDITION NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
Here are Highlights from the October 5th anniversary issue of Expedition News. If you'd like to receive the complete version each month, please contact us for subscription information.October 1999 - Volume Six, Number Ten
Climbing a Peak Because It's Not There
In the Chinese Pamirs, just off the Silk Road near the Pakistan border, Mustagh Ata (24,758-ft. / 7546 m) is about as unEverest as a mountain gets. And that's exactly how Montana climber Daniel Mazur likes it. In fact, his own Web site calls it the easiest 7500 meter peak in the world.Measuring Kili -
Local
and international surveyors began an expedition last month to determine the
exact height of Mount Kilimanjaro. The expedition, dubbed "The Kilimanjaro Expedition 1999," hopes to resolve
years of controversy over the exact height of the mountain.
EXPEDITION FOCUS
Since well
before the days of Christopher Columbus, explorers have sought funding to fuel
their passion for exploration. Columbus promised his sponsors a share in the
riches of a new world. Sir Ernest Shackleton, chronically underfunded, raised
funds through magic lantern shows, the sale of commemorative stamps, and charged
admission to a museum he created on his ship "Nimrod".
Skip ahead 70
years to find Minnesota explorer Will Steger likewise resorting to creative
tactics to raise the $11 million he would need to cross Antarctica 3,741 miles
in seven months. Steger gave slide presentations, visited sponsor trade shows ad
nauseam, tolerated media visits during crucial training sessions, even named a
sled dog - Shaklee - after one particularly deep-pocketed benefactor.
Explorers soliciting funds today have a choice: undergo the same demands
for their time and energies, or simply emulate wealthy Chicago commodities
broker Steve Fossett whose frequent - and ultimately unsuccessful - balloon
circumnavigations were entirely self-funded.
For five years this month,
EN has chronicled the projects of hundreds of explorers. Often we're asked to
actively participate in fund-raising, a role we politely decline. Instead, we
offer the following advice to those whose expedition dreams - however creative
and newsworthy - extend beyond their financial wherewithal.
For a free
copy of EN's 10 Not-So-Easy Steps to landing the sponsor of your dreams - and a
subscription form to Expedition News - send a self-addressed stamped envelope to
the below address
MEDIA MATTERS
IMAX Pablum
- The New York Times trashes the music of the otherwise
critically praised Everest IMAX film in its Aug. 15 Arts & Leisure section.
"Everest," now playing at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, is
called "visually resplendent and grippingly dramatic" by critic Joseph Horowitz.
The music, on the other hand, is considered a "generic" New Age melange of
soaring strings and - signifying triumph and travail - cymbal crashes and
timpani rolls. Calling it "unabating symphonic pablum," Horowitz believes its
pulsating percussion track is common to National Football League highlight
films. He urges future IMAX directors to consider using real music by gifted
composers.
- Ed Viesturs, 40, is called "this country's most
successful mountaineer" in a Sept. 27 Wall Street Journal "Breakaway Report" by
Ben Brown. On track to become the first American - and only one of a half-dozen
climbers in history - to reach the summit of the world's 14 highest peaks, Brown
says Viesturs is also good at connecting what he does with what entrepreneurs
and small-business managers do, because he is a small business.
"His is
a sport with no leagues, no seats to sell, no tournaments or playoffs with TV
deals. So he supports his family and his ambitions by guiding others on big
mountains, by creating partnerships with sponsors and by speaking to executives
eager to model his style of high-altitude, high-pressure performance," Brown
writes.
EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS
- Join TOP EXPLORERS as ZEGRAHM EXPEDITIONS travels to Earth's remote and compelling places.
September finds us among MELANESIAN ISLANDS of Vanuatu & Fiji with oceanographer JEAN-MICHEL COUSTEAU.
In December, adventurer WILL STEGER is aboard in ANTARCTICA exploring the Peninsula, South Georgia & the Falklands.
Oceanographer SYLVIA EARLE leads first-ever submarine expeditions observing SIXGILL SHARKS in July, 2000.
Best-selling author CAROLINE ALEXANDER tells the story of Shackleton during a CIRCUMNAVIGATION OF SOUTH GEORGIA, November, 2000.
For reservations and more information:
ZEGRAHM EXPEDITIONS
1414 Dexter Avenue N. #327 Seattle, WA 98109
Phone: 800-628-8747 or 206-285-4000
Fax: 206-285-5037
Web: http://www.zeco.com
E-mail: zoe@zeco.com
Y2CAVE
- Spend New Year's Eve with your best friend in a 20 million-year-old Tarahumara Indian cave in the mountains of Copper Canyon, Mexico.
Copper Canyon Hiking Lodges have a deluxe, week-long hiking adventure for $3,250 pp, including a night in the cave, great grub, fancy wines and Indian guides. Stay in a mountain lodge near Cusarare River, and its sister lodge, a 200-year-old hacienda, in the bottom of the canyon.
1-800-77MEXICO
coppercanyon@earthlink.net
http://www.sierratrail.com
EXPEDITION NEWS. is published by:
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Tel: 203 855 9400
Fax: 203 855 9433
E-mail: editor@ExpeditionNews.com
Editor/publisher: Jeff Blumenfeld
Copyright © 1999 Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. ISSN: 1526-8977.
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Highlights from EXPEDITION
NEWS can be found at www.expeditionnews.com; credit cards
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