Kiwis attempt world-firsts with Hillary Expedition Grants
23 December 2014
Kiwis attempt world-firsts with Sport NZ Hillary Expedition Grants
Seven teams of adventurous New Zealanders will test their mettle when they embark on some world-firsts as part of Sport New Zealand’s (Sport NZ) Hillary Expeditions. Their skills, courage, determination and physical boundaries will be pushed to the limit – all in a bid to achieve something special in the great outdoors and inspire other New Zealanders to do the same.
The latest Sport NZ Hillary Expedition Grants will help fund Kiwi adventurers in Antarctica, Denmark, Brazil, Peru and New Zealand. All of the expeditions will involve world-class outdoor challenges and include:
• Paddling
five class V rivers in Brazil that have never been descended
before
• Multiple new canyon descents around the West
Coast, Mackenzie Basin, Wilberforce Valley and Nelson
Lakes
• Making a landmark ascent of Peru’s
notoriously technical Mount Taulliraju’s West
Ridge
• Establishing a new rock climbing route on an
iconic 313m sea stack known as Troll Finger
(Trøllkonufingur) on the remote, sub-arctic Faroe Islands
in Denmark.
• Running the full length of the South
Island consecutively with a Snow Dog team
• Creating 30
new rock climbing routes in 30 days throughout West
Coast’s Bullock Creek
• Skiing one of the world’s
largest ice caps in the South Pole.
“We are an adventurous and pioneering nation with a strong culture of excellence in the outdoors, and these expeditions embody that spirit,” says Sport NZ Chief Executive Peter Miskimmin.
He says the Hillary Expedition Grants not only honour the way Sir Edmund Hillary inspired New Zealanders, but recognise the length outdoor adventurers go to in extreme environments to achieve their goals – an attitude worthy of support and admiration.
To qualify for a grant, expeditions might include any one, or a combination, of outdoor activities such as tramping, mountaineering, rock climbing, cross-country skiing, white water and/or sea kayaking, mountain biking and sailing.
“Kiwis set their sights high and these expeditions are a great example of that. Each person will need to be physically and mentally tough to succeed. They’ll need to plan well, yet be ready to deal with the unexpected.
“Most of these are world-first challenges and I hope that, like Sir Edmund Hillary, these adventurers go on to create their own inspiring stories for other New Zealanders to share,” Miskimmin says.
Information about all seven teams and their expeditions can be found at: www.sportnz.org.nz/news-and-events/media-releases-and-updates/articles/kiwis-attempt-world-firsts-with-sport-nz-hillary-expedition-grants#exp.
For more info on the Hillary Expedition Grants, visit: www.sportnz.org.nz/get-into-sport/get-outdoors/hillary-expeditions/.
The first expedition to kick off is Gradient and Water’s on 27 December 2014 in Brazil.
ENDS