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Jumping across 20 metro drop on Mt #Roraima #Venezuela #adventure #camelbak #icebreaker #fun #natural #lonelyplanet
Monday, August 29th, 2011Find freddo #frog #animal #iphonesia
Sunday, August 28th, 2011Leader of the Panamanian Animal Revolution #animal #panama #jail #iphonesia #natural #forest #zoo
Friday, August 26th, 2011Fishing with native Tamil’s on Adams Bridge (ancient sand bridge joining Sri Lanka and India
Friday, August 26th, 2011One seriously #chilled out two toed #sloth baking in the sunshine
Thursday, August 25th, 2011Hanging with #NASCA on indigenous Ntaria community in Central Australia
Wednesday, August 17th, 2011Special thanks to NASCA for providing me the opportunity to hang out as an ARMTour Ambassador with the Ntaria community in Hermannsburg, Central Australia. Special thanks to the Ntaria community for sharing your world and inspiring us how live.
This quote is dedicated to the people who live there and all the people who work for NASCA. ”Certainly you can inspire others with your words. Yet you can inspire other people even more with the way you live. By skilfully arguing and presenting your beliefs, you can convince others to consider adopting those beliefs. Yet you can express those beliefs even more convincingly by consistently applying them to your life. With what you say, you can get some attention. With what you do, again and again, you can build real and lasting credibility. If you wish to lift others up, the first step is to bring your own life to a higher level. Then you can bring along as many other people as you wish. It’s not selfish to follow your own authentic dreams and to create a life for yourself that’s the best you can imagine. For in doing so, you also create outstanding opportunities along the way to be of real, meaningful service to others. Your life has unique and immense value. Share that value far and wide by living your dreams and making your life a true inspiration” Unknown.
If you want to get involved check out the website. NASCA aims to be the peak body for Indigenous Sport, Health and Education in Australia and set the international standard for imaginative and effective personal development programs for indigenous communities.
‘Most people in Blue AIME Hoodies in a pic’ win special half day of adventuring in Sydney with me!
Monday, July 18th, 2011‘Most people in Blue AIME Hoodies in a pic’ win a special half day of adventuring in Sydney with Lonely Planet Adventurer Steve Crombie! Every jumper bought supports more Indigenous kids to finish school at the same rate as every Australian child. DO IT NOW! If you can’t afford jumper share link to show your support. Buy your jumper here and post your photos on the AIME page.
An example of some of the adventures you could have on ya little half day adventure. I promise I won’t make you bleed or break any bones. Well… its unlikely anyway.
*Competition closes on the 21st of July.
Lonely Planet rates Lost on Earth – 4.5 out of 5 stars!
Monday, July 18th, 2011One of their highest reviews ever. Book being reprinted as we speak. To place your order email readthebook@loston.com To read the full review read below. Taken from Lonely Planet website http://bit.ly/jkhpt1
In Lost on Earth, young Aussie Crombie plans to ride his single-cylinder Honda 650cc motorcycle from Ushuaia at the southern tip of South America’s Tierra Del Fuego, to Prudhoe Bay,Alaska; the Pan American Highway’s unofficial endpoint well north of the Arctic Circle.
Originally accompanied by two friends, what starts as another blokey road trip quickly becomes a lot more interesting when the author’s mates choose their own path and Crombie is left alone to pursue his dream – all 90,000 kilometres of it. Over the ensuing two years, our author crisscrosses South America several times, as he struggles his way north, surviving hardships, privations, romance, diseases and numerous (mechanical) breakdowns. While a steady trickle ofhermanos have completed the Pan American traverse, (Tim Cahill in Road Feverfamously took a mere 23 days), Crombie does his utmost to avoid the route-more-travelled and takes the reader on a trip through the obscurer slices of Latin America.
It’s hard not to draw a parallel with Ted Simon’s Jupiter’s Travels, published over a quarter of a century earlier. Both writers are solo motorcyclists; both are imprisoned in South America; both suffer greatly from transport of dubious mechanical reliability. However, while journalist Simon’s prose is sculptured and aloof, Crombie is refreshingly unrestrained, and sometimes boisterously low-brow. Moreover, whileJupiter’s Travels peters out (one needs to read the sequel, Riding High, to fill in the blanks) Lost on Earth is perfectly paced, reaching a fabulous do-or-die climax. And let’s not forget, Simon’s bike had an extra cylinder.
Crombie is always entertaining and his passion (and ability – he speaks both Spanish and Portuguese) to converse with the locals brings a depth to encounters that most adventure travellers only dream of. He’s constantly indebted to the kindness of strangers as he single-mindedly flogs both body and machine relentlessly towards his goal. And the closer he gets, the more questions he asks, the more he reveals of himself and his motivation.
This cracking tale of sheer determination should be mandatory reading for any young, would-be adventurer.
Steve Waters, while working at his computer in LP’s Melbourne office, day-dreams of driving his six-cylinder 3000cc ’65 Holden HD Premier from Tasmania’s Cockle Creek to Nordkapp in Norway.
Experienced Boat Captain needed for sailing expedition around the Pacific
Monday, July 18th, 2011Looking for experienced boat captain (preferably an MM) for hazardous 10,000 nautical mile journey. Two long months of extraordinary adventures in the Pacific on custom 60 foot catamaran with motley crew of explorers – ready to leave within 30 days. Honor and recognition in case of success. Any takers? email me – Steve@loston.com
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Monday, March 28th, 2011Lost on Earth review in Alpha Magazine
Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010(4 from 5 stars) Two pages into Steve Crombie’s 90,000km travel journal, I was getting frustrated with the present tense. Two chapters in, I was frustrated that I wasn’t exploring the forests of South America on the back of a customised motorbike, meeting strange locals, eating strange food and meeting strange but beautiful women. It’s a remarkable tale, written in an immediate style that has you feeling every bump, sweeping corner and jaw-dropping scene. You can’t put it down and when you finally do, you want to run out and explore the world.
To purchase Lost on Earth click here.
Posted via email from Singapore to Sydney by the Seat of My Pants
What happened to Wolverine?
Tuesday, September 21st, 2010To find out the full story check out Goba’s blog story here…
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Sunrise interview on Channel 7 about Lost on Earth
Wednesday, September 15th, 2010To buy the book click here:
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New Adventures
Wednesday, September 15th, 2010To keep up to date with new adventures check out Facebook
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Sign up to loston.com
Wednesday, September 15th, 2010Sign up for more information on the Lost On… Yamaha WR250R that we are giving away!
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Lost on Earth video teaser
Tuesday, September 7th, 2010“Lost On Earth” the book. Official Release today! Pls fwd
Friday, September 3rd, 2010After many years of slaving “Lost on Earth is ready for consumption. Enjoy!
Posted via email from Singapore to Sydney by the Seat of My Pants
Dirtbike to Roadbike. WR250 to FZ1N… 250cc to 1000cc
Friday, September 3rd, 2010There comes a time when everyone needs a change. Time to slip onto something that bumps up my pulse rate a little. Sorta like jumping from the back of a hyena onto the mane of a lion. Love Yamaha!
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Jumping on a Yamaha XT660R tomorrow… maybe turn it into a Lost On… machine?
Thursday, August 5th, 2010Swapping the Yamaha Tenere for a Yamaha XT660R tomorrow… will be nice to drop a bit of weight and slide a little lower around the corners…. Dreaming about stripping it down and building it back up to a Lost On… Thoughts anyone?
Features
- Punchy 660cc liquid-cooled, 4-stroke, single cylinder engine with SOHC four valve cylinder head to improve intake efficiency.
- Rocker arms with roller bearings fitted for the first time on a Yamaha motorcycle in order to reduce engine’s friction related power losses (50% less than without bearings).
- Lightweight aluminium forged piston, with an anodised surface treatment applied on the piston head to reduce oil consumption and to increase heat resistance.
for more information click here:
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