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Explorers Grand Slam

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The Explorers Grand Slam is an adventurers challenge to reach the north and south pole and climb the Seven Summits.

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The original concept involved the polar trips starting from accepted coastal points, involving long sledging journeys. Over time the significantly shorter, easier and less serious 'Last Degree' polar trips - from 89 degrees to the pole (at 90 degrees) - have been claimed as the Explorers Grand Slam (Last Degree). Currently, the climbing community and other leading organizations including the American Alpine Club, The Explorers Club, climbing companies such as International Mountain Guides, and the popular press all define the Explorers Grand Slam as having accomplished the Seven Summits plus (at a minimum - the last degree of) the North and South Poles. There is some consensus that a True Explorers Grand Slam means one will also have summitted all 14 peaks above 8,000 meters. Likewise, there is some consensus that a True Adventurers Grand Slam is achieved by also visiting the magnetic north and south poles.

David Hempleman-Adams became the first to complete a True Adventurers Grand Slam in 1998. In April 2005, Park Young Seok completed a True Explorers Grand Slam. In 2011, former Wales rugby union international Richard Parks became the first person ever to complete the (Last Degrees) Grand Slam within a single calendar year, doing so within seven months. Cheryl Bart is the first Australian female and the 31st person worldwide to complete the Explorer's Grand Slam. She completed the North Pole on 22 April 2013 AEST. Vanessa O'Brien became the first woman to complete the (Last Degree) Grand Slam under a single calendar year, doing so in eleven months.

In 2014 Jing Wang became the fastest woman to complete the last degree Grand Slam in 143 days and Ryan Waters became the first American to complete "True Adventurers Grand Slam" by skiing full length, unsupported and unassisted North and South Pole expeditions and climbing the seven summits.

In 2014 Ryan Waters became the first American to complete "True Adventurers Grand Slam" by skiing full length, unsupported and unassisted North and South Pole expeditions and climbing the seven summits.

On 21 April 2015 Tashi Malik and Nungshi Malik became world's first twins and siblings as well as first South Asians to complete the Explorers Grand Slam (last degree). Achieving the feat at 23 years and 10 months, they also became the youngest persons ever to complete it.

Colin O'Brady is the current world record holder for the Explorers Grand Slam (Last Degree); he became the fastest person (male) to complete the challenge in 139 days on 27 May 2016.

People who completed The Explorers Grand Slam

  1. David Hempleman-Adams
  2. Erling Kagge
  3. Fyodor Konyukhov
  4. Heo Young-Ho
  5. Park Young Seok
  6. Bernard Voyer
  7. Cecilie Skog
  8. Maxime Chaya
  9. Ryan Waters
  10. Stuart Smith
  11. Johan Ernst Nilson
  12. Haraldur Olafsson (SP non-Coastal)
  13. Khoo Swee Chiow (SP non-Coastal)
  14. Mostafa Salameh (NP non-Coastal)
  15. Newall Hunter (NP non-Coastal)

People who completed The Explorers Grand Slam (Last Degree)

  1. Sean Disney
  2. Vaughan de la Harpe
  3. Sibusiso Vilane
  4. Arthur Marsden
  5. Andrew Van Der Velde
  6. Vernon Tejas
  7. Will Cross
  8. Lei Wang
  9. Neil Laughton
  10. Jo Gambi
  11. Rob Gambi
  12. Alison Levine
  13. Randall Peeters
  14. Wang Yongfeng
  15. Ci Luo
  16. Liu Jian
  17. Wang Shi
  18. Zhong Jianmin
  19. Jin Feibao
  20. Wang Qiuyang
  21. Suzanne K Nance
  22. Richard Parks
  23. Andrea Cardona
  24. John Dahlem
  25. Matthew Holt
  26. Arnold Witzig
  27. Len Stanmore
  28. Cheryl Bart
  29. Vanessa O'Brien
  30. Sebastian Merriman
  31. Jing Wang
  32. Tashi Malik
  33. Nungshi Malik
  34. Omar Samra
  35. Maria (Masha) Gordon
  36. Colin O'Brady
  37. John Moorhouse
  38. Yahia Showgan Da Boss
  39. Andy Labay

References

Explorers Grand Slam Wikipedia


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