Fewer people have skied solo to the South Pole than have been into space. To date, no-one with a disability has ever attempted a solo, unsupported expedition to the South Pole. In 2024, I am aiming to be the first disabled person to ski solo and unsupported across 911 kms of Antarctic tundra – an expedition I expect will take 40 days.
I joined the army in 2013, training at Sandhurst to become an officer. In June 2014, just eight weeks after commissioning into the British Army, I was in the gym when I suffered a devastating stroke. The neurological damage left me paralysed down one side. It took years of rehab before I was able to walk again, and even then with restricted movement down my left side.
During my recovery, I became a member of the Armed Forces Para-Snowsport Team (AFPST), which fuelled my love of cross-country skiing. This led to me to become one of the first athletes in a new GB Para Nordic ski team. Para classifications and my unique physical limitations eventually made it impossible to compete at the highest level, however this experience laid the foundations for my plans to be the first disabled explorer to reach the South Pole.
Through the expedition to the South Pole I am hoping to break boundaries within the disabled community and push the limits of human potential. For me, the South Pole expedition is about challenging myself, about pushing myself further than I've ever pushed my body before.
My hope is that this expedition will highlight that no challenge is insurmountable, whether someone is disabled or not, and hopefully raise significant funds for those organisations who helped me in my recovery and my expedition.
I am trying to raise funds for four amazing charities that have supported me along the way - the Armed Forces Para-Snowsport Team (AFPST), the Adaptive Grand Slam (AGS), and the Invictus Games Foundation (IGF) and Team Forces.
Raising for
£440
raised of £10,000