Travel Grit
Travel Grit is long-form conversations with ramblers, roamers and free spirits — adventurers who have crossed continents on horseback, sailed solo around the world, and traveled thousands of miles by mule. Hosted by Bernie Harberts. For bonus episodes, Q&A sessions, and more from the world of Travel Grit, check out the companion show Gritty Bits.
Sven Yrvind: Jail to Sail - Birth of a Sailing Legend
Sven Yrvind was beaten by his teachers, locked up for desertion and learned the value of books from a psychopath. Then he built a boat in his mother's basement and sailed into legend.
In this Travel Grit episode, the legendary Swedish sailor and boat builder talks about crossing the Atlantic in his self-built twenty-foot Bris, teaching navigation to islanders on Tristan da Cunha, rounding Cape Horn solo in winter, and why at eighty-six he's still building boats and planning his next ocean passage.[Episode description goes here]
Guest: [Guest name] — [one line bio]
Links:
...
Sea G Rhydr: 5,000 Miles on a $1 Horse
Sea G Rhydr bought her horse for a dollar. Then she rode him 5,000 miles across America.
Sea started her voyage in Northern California in the fall of 2011 with two imperfect horses, a diamond hitch she'd learned the night before, and a canvas tablecloth painted with fairies and mushrooms for a ground cloth. Twenty-five months later she rode into Minot, Maine — bridle-less, flag in hand, walking pneumonia — to lead a parade honoring the long rider who had inspired her whole journey.
It's a miracle she and her mounts completed her journey. Her pack pony colicked in the wild...
Hugo Vihlen: Crossing the Atlantic in a 5' 4" Sailboat
At 62 years old, Hugo Vihlen sailed across the Atlantic Ocean in Father's Day—a boat just 5 feet 4 inches long. He hand-steered through hurricanes, ate quarter rations, and lost a kidney somewhere between Newfoundland and England. His record still stands 30+ years later.
This is Hugo's second Atlantic crossing. In 1968, he sailed April Fool, a 6-foot sailboat, from Casablanca to Florida in 85 days. But the Coast Guard towed him in 25 miles from shore. That "rescue" ate at him for 25 years.
So at 62, Hugo built Father's Day in his garage, cut 2 inches off the bow to beat his ri...
Gin Szagola: Riding a Horse Across Australia
Long Rider Gin Szagola and her wild Snowy Mountain Brumby, Fable, became the first person and horse to cross Australia coast to coast with no support vehicle or chase crew—4,400 kilometers over eight months.
In this conversation, Gin shares the complete story: training a recently wild horse in just 90 days, crossing 1,000 miles of Nullarbor desert with volunteer-organized supply caches, dealing with road trains at 80mph, camping roadside 85% of the time, and what it's really like to live with your horse 24/7.
Before Australia, Gin walked across America at age 18—failed after 4 days, went home, then succeeded on h...
Tom Sites: Finding Peace in the Great American Horse Race of 1976
This is the only audio interview available on the internet with anyone who rode in the 1976 Great American Horse Race—the longest horse race in history. As the 50th anniversary approaches, this conversation preserves Tom Sites' voice and the incredible story of the Great American Horse Race of 1976.
In 1976, Tom Sites—a Vietnam veteran haunted by severed heads and searching for peace—walked into a tack shop and bought a runaway horse named Jose Dante for $200. Six months later, he rode Jose 1,966 miles across America in the Great American Horse Race with just $500, no crew, and a single...
Reza Baluchi: Running Across Oceans
Reza Baluchi is attempting the impossible: running 21,000 miles across the world's oceans in a human-powered vessel called a hydropod — a 12-foot wheel he powers by running inside like a hamster wheel.
Reza calls in from Taiwan at midnight, making final preparations for his fifth-generation hydropod. He plans to launch in December, heading south through the South China Sea, then west through the Red Sea and Mediterranean, before crossing the Atlantic back to America.
This isn't his first attempt. The U.S. Coast Guard has stopped him multiple times, damaged one of his hydropods, arrested him, an...
Webb Chiles: Six-time Circumnavigator
Webb Chiles has sailed around the world six times and is the first American to sail alone around Cape Horn — one of the most dangerous stretches of water on earth. He's also completed one of the longest open boat journeys in modern times, sailing a 19-foot open sailboat across the Pacific Ocean and beyond.
In this conversation, Webb talks about survival, resilience, and what keeps him going after a lifetime of pushing into the unknown. At 83, he still does his age in pushups every day.
For more stories of long riders, sailors, ramblers, adventurers, and dr...