Friday, November 22, 2024

British Sikh trekker Polar Preet sets new world record for longest solo, unsupported, unassisted polar expedition by a woman

Captain Harpreet Chandi trekked 1,397 km across Antarctica in temperatures as cold as minus 50 degrees Celsius

London: Captain Harpreet  Chandi (33), an Indian origin British Sikh Army officer and physiotherapist, has set a new world record for the longest solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by a woman,  a PTI report in The Tribune, Chandigarh, say. 

More famously known as ‘Polar Preet’, after an earlier epoch-making, solo unsupported trek to the South Pole in 2021 – See David Solomon’s exclusive report:  “Solo, epoch-making trip to South Pole by British Sikh army officer”, Jan 4, 2022 –  Captain Chandi travelled 1,397 km across Antarctica in this trip, in temperatures as cold as minus 50 degrees Celsius. The previous record was 1,381 km, set by Anja Blacha in 2020.

“It was very cold and windy but I kept my breaks very short so I didn’t get too cold,” Chandi wrote on Thursday, Jan 19 in a blog she has been maintaining while on her new polar expedition.

“I didn’t let myself stop earlier though because I wanted to get the miles in,” she said.

However, Chandi is disappointed that it was not enough to meet her original aim of becoming the first woman to cross Antarctica solo and unsupported.

“I’m pretty gutted that I don’t have the time to complete the crossing. I know that I have done a huge journey, it’s just difficult while I’m on the ice and I know it’s not that far away,” she said.

The 33-year-old from Derby in eastern England, works at a regional rehabilitation unit in Buckinghamshire, has been pulling a sledge with all her kit and battling below freezing temperatures on her new adventure since November 2022.

The University of Derbyshire, which conferred her with an honorary degree, congratulated the trekker for breaking the “record for the longest solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by any woman in history”.

It was around three years ago when she was learning about Antarctica that she decided she wanted to do a crossing of the continent.

But she did not put in her application into the Antarctic Logistics and Expeditions (ALE), which handles the permissions for such expeditions, immediately because she wanted to build up some experience.

Her application was completed early last year and it has been all about preparing for her new goal after completing Phase 1 with her South Pole expedition in 2021. On her latest mission, she has been listening to voice notes to keep her motivated.

The University of Derbyshire, which conferred upon  her an honorary degree, congratulated the trekker for breaking the “record for the longest solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by any woman in history”.

“I listened to childhood memories from my brothers, my mum telling me how excited she was about having a baby girl and how the midwife commented that she had never seen an Asian woman so excited about having a girl. And finally hearing my niece say it’s the most amazing thing she has seen anyone do in her entire life and it’s even more amazing because it’s her phuwa (auntie) doing it. It’s so precious to hear,” she writes on her blog this week.

Chandi has always been keen to push the human body to its limits and sees her adventures as part of this wider mission. 

As an “endurance athlete”, she has run marathons and ultra-marathons and, as a British Army officer, completed large scale exercises and deployments in Nepal, Kenya and a United Nations peacekeeping tour of South Sudan.

After completing her 2021 journey to the South Pole, Captain Polar Preet Chandi had written in her blog:  “This expedition was always about so much more than just me. I want to encourage people to push their boundaries and to believe in themselves, and I want you to be able to do it without being labelled a rebel. I have been told ‘no’ on many occasions and to ‘just do the normal thing’, but we create our own normal,” Chandi said. 

Continuing in the same blog she wrote: “You are capable of anything you want to do. No matter where you are from or where your start line is, everybody starts somewhere. I don’t want to just break the glass ceiling; I want to smash it into a million pieces,” she had said.

Bravo, Captain Polar Preet! The world is your oyster; revel in the fame and glory.

(Rewrite by David Solomon)

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David Solomon
David Solomon
(For over four decades, David Solomon’s insightful stories about people, places, animals –in fact almost anything and everything in India and abroad – as a journalist and traveler, continue to engross, thrill, and delight people like sparkling wine. Photography is his passion.)

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