High Adventure
Who hasn’t looked at a map and thought, what if? Ed Ewing introduces five stories from people who did
'There isn't really a scene at all.' Duncan Penry's account of flying the Bamiyan Valley in Afghanistan arrived like a blast from another age. The photos were in the post, on a long trek across the world in a dusty brown envelope, not streaming at warpspeed down a fibre-optic cable. His account, elegantly written and capturing the desire, the feel and the excitement of flying an unknown place in an unknown land set our pulses racing. We wanted more. And so we present five campfire tales, brought to you from around the world, by pilots bound together only by an invisible thread connecting their love of the air and the desire for adventure. From the dust of Afghanistan we surf the giant dunes of Madagascar – revealed here in print for the very first time as a phenomenal soaring location – head to the Golden Mountains of Mongolia, the icy peaks of the Himalaya and finally the volcanic ridges of Famara. Ladies and gentlemen, let the adventure begin...
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Cross country | Edition 134 | Adventure
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The dune stretches nearly 30km
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The Bazaruto Dune There is dune flying, and there’s Dune Flying. Ten times the size of the Dune du Pyla, off the coast of Madagascar in Africa, sits the Bazaruto Dune. Gavin McClurg and friends discovered this magical place. Photographs by Jody MacDonald
Adventure - MOZAMBIQUE | Edition 134 | Cross country
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