18 min

Sir Ranulph Fiennes Outside & Active

    • Sport

We had the pleasure of speaking with Sir Ranulph Fiennes for a behind the scenes interview at the National Snow Show where we talked about some of his incredible accomplishments, the science behind his adventures and his new book, Shackleton.

As a listener to our podcast, you can claim your FREE ticket for the National Outdoor Expo on the 19th -20th March at the NEC Birmingham by using the code OUTSIDE at checket. Head over to nationaloutdoorexpo.com for more details about the event and to claim your ticket today. 

Ranulph Fiennes is a British adventurer & novelist that is best known today for his various exploits around the world. He is especially hailed for being the first man to cross the Antarctica from one side to the other [via the pole] on foot. He holds several Guinness World Records & as an author, he released over a dozen fiction & non-fiction books, most notably biography of famous explorer Captain Robert Falcon Scott.
Fiennes was born on 7 March 1944 in Glasgow, Scotland, but he spent his youth in South Africa. After serving the Royal Army with Royal Scots Greys & Special Air Service, Fiennes began his life as an adventurer. He sailed across the White Nile in a hovercrafts (1969), explored Norway's Jostedalsbreen Glacier. His most ambitious adventure started in 1979, when he & his two friends Oliver Shepard & Charles Burton started the "Transglobe Expedition". They went from Greenwich England to the desert of Sahara, jungles of Mali & the Ivory Coast, & reached South Africa at Cape Town. From there they sailed to Antarctica & crossed it from one side to another visiting South Magnetic Pole. Next, they visited Australia, western shores of America, northern Canada & from there they successfully walked over Arctic visiting North Pole. On August 29 1982, they successfully returned to Greenwich completing their 100.000-mile long route across the globe.
In following years, Fiennes led an expedition that discovered the lost city of Ubar in Oman. Fiennes also tried two times to cross Antarctica & one time Arctic on foot without any aid. He failed on all three attempts & managed to be evacuated to safety. On May 2009, Fiennes successfully climbed on the summit of Mount Everest becoming the oldest British person to achieve that goal.



Outside and Active Podcast

Welcome to the Outside & Active podcast where we aim to inspire you to lead a healthy active lifestyle outside with interviews from guests such as Sir Ranulph Fiennes, Dame Kelly Holmes, Ben Fogle, Kadeena Cox OBE, Julia Bradbury, Sean Conway, Paula Radcliffe MBE, Anna McNuff & Jamie McDonald.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

We had the pleasure of speaking with Sir Ranulph Fiennes for a behind the scenes interview at the National Snow Show where we talked about some of his incredible accomplishments, the science behind his adventures and his new book, Shackleton.

As a listener to our podcast, you can claim your FREE ticket for the National Outdoor Expo on the 19th -20th March at the NEC Birmingham by using the code OUTSIDE at checket. Head over to nationaloutdoorexpo.com for more details about the event and to claim your ticket today. 

Ranulph Fiennes is a British adventurer & novelist that is best known today for his various exploits around the world. He is especially hailed for being the first man to cross the Antarctica from one side to the other [via the pole] on foot. He holds several Guinness World Records & as an author, he released over a dozen fiction & non-fiction books, most notably biography of famous explorer Captain Robert Falcon Scott.
Fiennes was born on 7 March 1944 in Glasgow, Scotland, but he spent his youth in South Africa. After serving the Royal Army with Royal Scots Greys & Special Air Service, Fiennes began his life as an adventurer. He sailed across the White Nile in a hovercrafts (1969), explored Norway's Jostedalsbreen Glacier. His most ambitious adventure started in 1979, when he & his two friends Oliver Shepard & Charles Burton started the "Transglobe Expedition". They went from Greenwich England to the desert of Sahara, jungles of Mali & the Ivory Coast, & reached South Africa at Cape Town. From there they sailed to Antarctica & crossed it from one side to another visiting South Magnetic Pole. Next, they visited Australia, western shores of America, northern Canada & from there they successfully walked over Arctic visiting North Pole. On August 29 1982, they successfully returned to Greenwich completing their 100.000-mile long route across the globe.
In following years, Fiennes led an expedition that discovered the lost city of Ubar in Oman. Fiennes also tried two times to cross Antarctica & one time Arctic on foot without any aid. He failed on all three attempts & managed to be evacuated to safety. On May 2009, Fiennes successfully climbed on the summit of Mount Everest becoming the oldest British person to achieve that goal.



Outside and Active Podcast

Welcome to the Outside & Active podcast where we aim to inspire you to lead a healthy active lifestyle outside with interviews from guests such as Sir Ranulph Fiennes, Dame Kelly Holmes, Ben Fogle, Kadeena Cox OBE, Julia Bradbury, Sean Conway, Paula Radcliffe MBE, Anna McNuff & Jamie McDonald.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

18 min

Top Podcasts In Sport

The Rest Is Football
Goalhanger Podcasts
Stick to Football
The Overlap
FC Bullard
Crowd Network
Football Weekly
The Guardian
The Overlap with Gary Neville
Sky Bet
The High Performance Podcast
High Performance