List of people who have walked across Australia

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Location of Australia LocationAU.svg
Location of Australia
Geographical extremes of Australia, and the cities at each point of the compass Australian Extremities.png
Geographical extremes of Australia, and the cities at each point of the compass

People who have walked across Australia are those who have walked either from one of the geographical extremes of the continent to another, or between cities that are on opposing shores.

Contents

The extremes of Australia for the purpose of this definition are considered to be Steep Point to the (west), Cape Byron (east), Cape York Peninsula (north), and South East Cape (south). The straight-line distance between the east and west is 4,030 km (2,500 mi), whereas the distance in the north-south direction is 3,685 km (2,290 mi). [note 1] City-pairs on opposite shores include, among others, Perth and Brisbane, Darwin and Hobart, and Perth and Sydney. [note 2]

Walkers who choose to cross Australia can follow the National Highway for large sections of their journey. Those who have successfully completed their walks across the continent have typically taken times of 365 to 897 days to do so. The traversed distances are typically around 14,300 km (8,900 mi) [1] to 17,000 km (11,000 mi) depending on the route taken.

Only seven people are known to have completed such walks alone, passing through all mainland states and territories, without a support vehicle. These include Aidan de Brune, Nobby Young, Colin Ricketts, Andrew 'Cad' Cadigan, Scott Loxley, Mike Pauly, and Terra Roam.

Completed journeys

The names of the individuals who have walked across Australia have been listed below. Sources for data contained within this table have been listed within the body of the article, or were not readily available, directly from the individual concerned.

NameNationalityStart dateFinish dateDuration (days)Starting locationFinishing location
Robert Burke Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland 20 August 18609 February 1861174 Melbourne Karumba
William Wills Flag of England.svg  England 20 August 18609 February 1861174MelbourneKarumba ‡
John King Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland 20 August 18609 February 1861174MelbourneKarumba ‡
Aidan de Brune Flag of England.svg  England 24 November 192021 February 192190 Fremantle Sydney
Aidan de Brune Flag of England.svg  England 20 September 19214 March 1924897SydneySydney
Bob MosselFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 May 197320 September 1973124 Port Augusta Burketown
Bill MosselFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 May 197320 September 1973124Port AugustaBurketown
Sue ThompsonFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 May 197320 September 1973124Port AugustaBurketown
Annabel Douglas-HillFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 May 197320 September 1973124Port AugustaBurketown
Sharka DolakFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 May 197320 September 1973124Port AugustaBurketown
Dave KunstFlag of the United States (23px).png  United States 3 November 197320 July 1974260FremantleSydney
Robyn Davidson Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 2 January 197720 September 1977243 Alice Springs Hamelin Pool, Western Australia
Dennis BartellFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 19841984unknown Gulf of Carpentaria Gulf St Vincent
Steven NewmanFlag of the United States (23px).png  United States 1 July 198520 June 1986293 Darwin Melbourne
Roger ScottFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 6 August 198822 November 1988109Darwin Dover
Ffyona CampbellFlag of Scotland.svg  Scotland 11 September 198814 December 198895SydneyFremantle
Nobby YoungFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 1 March 19931 March 1994365SydneySydney
Deanna SorensenFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 2 May 199828 October 1998180 Perth Sydney
David MasonFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 23 March 199813 November 1998236 Byron Bay Steep Point
Andrew HarperFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 25 April 199910 December 1999229 Tropic of Capricorn
Polly LetofskyFlag of the United States (23px).png  United States 29 October 200022 July 2001267Melbourne Port Douglas
Jon MuirFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 18 May 200122 September 2001128Port AugustaBurketown
Dave MckernFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 15 June 20038 November 2003146SydneyPerth
Deborah De WilliamsFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 17 October 200323 September 2003343MelbourneSydney
John OlsenFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 2004unknown167Cape York Peninsula South East Cape
Colin RickettsFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 4 January 200517 January 2006379 Adelaide Adelaide
Jeff JohnsonFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 5 April 20072 September 2007151Port AugustaKarumba
Michael MitchellFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 5 May 20083 May 2009363Cape York Peninsula Wilsons Promontory
Gary HauseFlag of the United States (23px).png  United States 19 May 20082 November 2008168 Cairns Torquay
John OlsenFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 18 June 20083 January 2009200Steep PointCape Byron
Dave PhoenixFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 1 August 20088 January 2009161MelbourneKarumba
Dave LeaningFlag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom 29 April 200921 July 200984Port AugustaKarumba
Mike PaulyFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 16 May 200919 October 2009156FremantleMelbourne
Mark GibbenFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 22 February 200918 May 200986PerthSydney
Leigh Thomson-MatthewsFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 8 March 20103 July 2010118PerthMelbourne
Sam Thomson-MatthewsFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 8 March 20103 July 2010118PerthMelbourne
Mike PaulyFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 1 March 201126 June 2011118MelbourneFremantle
Jeff JohnsonFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 24 April 20112 October 2011162Cape ByronSteep Point
Axel RaftosFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 11 August 20114 February 2012177MelbourneFremantle
Jacob FrenchFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 July 201112 April 2012268PerthSydney
Andrew CadiganFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 27 December 201014 June 2012536SydneySydney
Matt NapierFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 2 February 201328 June 2013147PerthSydney
Steve QuirkFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 10 January 201417 March 201467 Wollongong Fremantle
Jimmy HarringtonFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 19 May 20131 June 2014378AdelaideAdelaide
Brendon AlsopFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 21 February 20133 January 2014317 Geelong Cairns
Scott LoxleyFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 2 November 201315 June 2015601MelbourneMelbourne
Gary WilmotFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 16 May 201517 September 2015124Perth Brisbane
Joe EdwardsFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 1 July 201520 November 2015143CairnsMelbourne
Veronica HegartyFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 28 March 20164 November 2016221PerthSydney
John OlsenFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 31 March 201624 December 2016269Cape York Peninsula Cape Leeuwin
William SoulsbyFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 19 August 20167 January 2015142CairnsMelbourne
Arjun BhogalFlag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom 8 November 20163 May 2017167PerthNewcastle
Ove Rasmussen KjaerFlag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 5 April 201720 July 2017116Port AugustaDarwin
Ashok AlexanderFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 15 April 201727 September 2017166 Darwin Canberra
Tristan HarrisFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 1 May 201731 October 2017184 HMAS Stirling, Garden Island HMAS Creswell, Jervis Bay Territory
Terra RoamFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 22 February 20142 May 20184 yearsNewcastleNewcastle
Alwyn DoolanFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 16 August 201816 August 2019365Cape YorkCanberra
Bob HanleyFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 24 April 19756 May 19783 yearsSydneySydney
Marc SchinkelFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 2 May 20192 November 2019185SydneyPerth
Rod ValdezFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 8 May 202128 November 2021204PerthSydney
Nicolo GuarreraFlag of Italy.svg  Italy 31 March 202307 September 2023161SydneyDarwin
Tom FremantleFlag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom 3 May 202329 September 2023149PerthSydney

‡ Karumba did not exist upon Burke, Wills and King arriving. The site of the town however is widely accepted as the northernmost destination of the Victorian Exploring Expedition.

Robert Burke

Robert O'Hara Burke was an Irish soldier and police officer, who achieved fame as an Australian explorer. He was the leader of the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition, which was the first expedition to cross Australia from south to north. The expedition left Melbourne on 20 August 1860 with a total of 19 men, 27 camels, and 23 horses. Burke, along with William Wills, John King, and Charley Gray, reached the mangroves on the estuary of the Flinders River near where the town of Normanton now stands, on 9 February 1861. Flooding rains and swamps meant they never saw open ocean. Upon returning, the expedition was weakened by starvation and exposure, and was hampered by the tropical monsoon downpours of the wet season. Burke died at a place now called Burke's Waterhole on Cooper Creek in South Australia. The exact date of Burke's death is uncertain, but has generally been accepted to be 28 June 1861. [2] [ unreliable source ]

William Wills

William Wills was a member of the famous Victorian Exploring Expedition. He was originally appointed as third-in-command, surveyor, astronomical and meteorological observer of the expedition in July 1860 on a salary of £300 a year. The expedition left Melbourne on 20 August 1860 with a total of 19 men, 27 camels and 23 horses. They reached Menindee on 16 October 1860 where Landells resigned following an argument with Burke, where Wills was promoted to second-in-command. Burke, along with William Wills, John King, and Charley Gray, reached the mangroves on the estuary of the Flinders River near where the town of Normanton now stands, on 9 February 1861. Flooding rains and swamps meant they never saw open ocean. Upon returning, the expedition was weakened by starvation and exposure, and was hampered by the tropical monsoon downpours of the wet season. Wills died alone at a place called Breerily Waterhole on Cooper Creek in South Australia while waiting for rescue. Burke died soon after. The exact date of their deaths is unknown, but has generally been accepted to be 28 June 1861. [3] [ unreliable source ]

John King

John King was an Irish soldier who achieved fame as an Australian explorer. He was responsible for the welfare of the camels used during the Burke and Wills expedition who reached the Gulf of Carpentaria. King was the sole survivor of the four men of the expedition, and survived with the help of Aboriginal people until he was found on 15 September by Edwin Welch – the surveyor in Alfred William Howitt's Victorian Contingent Party. King returned to Melbourne and was hailed as a hero. King never fully recovered from the expedition, and died prematurely of pulmonary tuberculosis on 15 January 1872 aged 33. [4] [ unreliable source ]

Aidan De Brune

Aidan De Brune was a pseudonym of Herbert Charles Cull, who was born in London in 1874. He married in 1907, but in 1910, he left his wife and infant son Lionel, arriving in Fremantle, in October 1910. On 24 November 1920, he commenced a walk from Fremantle to Sydney, arriving in Sydney on 21 February 1921. He later worked for the Sydney Daily Mail. [5]

One day, I wandered into Mr. Gay's offices and announced that I proposed to walk around Australia—and would he pay for articles on the trip? Mr. Gay was blunt. First he told me exactly how many kinds of fools I was to think of such a trip, then came to an agreement with business-like promptitude. Within a few hours I had gathered together what I thought necessary for an 11,000 miles trip, and had left Sydney. Two and a half years later I came to Sydney again, having in the meantime visited nearly every port on the extensive coastline. More to the point, I had proved possible a trip quite a number of Sydney wise-heads had declared to be sheer suicide.

Aidan De Brune, [6]

Bob and Bill Mossel, Sue Thompson, Annabel Douglas-Hill and Sharka Dolak

This walk was undertaken to raise funds for the Royal Flying Doctor Service and partly followed in the steps of the Burke & Wills Victorian Exploring Expedition, camping at some of the Burke & Wills expedition's dig trees. It is the first documented crossing of the Australian continent entirely by foot and first by a woman. A feature-length movie Feet Across Australia was shown on national television and attracted paying audiences at many venues in Australia. 1973 was a very wet season and mud was a major problem on the Birdsville Track. Food was buried along the route in advance, otherwise all equipment was carried by the 5 team members with a small handcart. A camel from Arkaroola Sanctuary was briefly part of the expedition. [7] There was no support team accompanying the walkers.

Dave Kunst

Dave Kunst is the first person verified to have walked around the Earth. Kunst's trek began 20 June 1970 and ended 5 October 1974 (the dates in the table reflect his arrival and departure from Australia). [8] [9] During their travels, the brothers collected donations to UNICEF. Unfortunately, John (Dave's brother who was also walking with him) was killed when bandits shot him in the mountains of Afghanistan in October 1972. Dave was also shot in the chest during the same attack, but survived by playing dead. After spending 4 months recovering from his injuries, Dave resumed his journey along with his brother Pete, from the spot where John was killed. As they continued their travels, Dave and Pete were denied access to the USSR, so they flew from India to Australia. Pete returned home during the Australia-leg of the trek, where Dave continued on alone, by this time on his 3rd mule. Unfortunately, the mule died and Dave was left hauling his wagon of supplies himself. He was on the verge of abandoning his supplies, when he fortuitously met Jenni Samuel, a schoolteacher from Perth. She helped pull his wagon with her car, while he walked alongside. Dave returned to Australia for a year after completing his journey. Jenni and Dave later married and are still together as of 2008.

Dennis Bartell

Denis Bartell became the first person to walk across the Simpson Desert unassisted in 1984, while walking across Australia from the Gulf of Carpentaria to Gulf St Vincent. [10] He followed the 'French Line' – a route taken by the CGG surveyor Roy Elkins 21 years prior who also completed the walk but with the assistance of a support crew. [11] In recognition of his achievement, he was named the Australian Geographic's Adventurer of the Year in 1995. [12]

Steven Newman

Listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the first person to walk around the world solo, Steve Newman crossed 20 countries and walked some 15,000 miles during his four-year journey. [13] [14] For the Australian leg, Steven flew from Bali and commenced his walk in Darwin on 1 July 1985. He travelled south along "The Track" through Alice Springs, Coober Pedy, Adelaide, and on to Melbourne. He concluded in Melbourne on 20 June 1986, before proceeding onto Vancouver for his American leg of the journey.

Steven later published a book documenting his journey in 1989 called 'Worldwalk'. The handmade cart he used to cross the deserts was named 'Roo' and is currently on display at a museum in the USA. His backpack 'Clinger' and the tattered boots he wore across Australia were temporarily displayed in the Smithsonian after his record-setting solo walk around the world was completed.

Roger Scott

Roger Scott departed from Darwin for Dover on 6 August 1988, raising funds for the Top End Life Education Centre and the NT Spastics Association. [15] He walked via Kununurra and Halls Creek, arriving at the Eyre Bird Observatory on the southern coast of South Australia on 22 September 1988 where he encountered Ffyona Campbell on her walk across Australia. [16] He then proceeded on to Adelaide, before catching a flight to Devonport and walking to Dover. He completed the walk in 109 days, and traversed the Great Sandy Desert, Gibson Desert, Great Victoria Desert, and Nullarbor Plain on his journey. [17] [18]

Ffyona Campbell

Starting from John O'Groats on the northernmost coast of Scotland in 1983, then 16-year-old Ffyona Campbell set out to walk around the world. She departed from Sydney on 11 September 1988, and arrived in Fremantle on 14 December 1988 – a journey lasting 95 days. [19] She completed the journey with David Richard, who acted as her support crew and who waited for her every 10 miles.

Her entire journey around the world took a little over eleven years to complete. She completed 31,529 km and raised £120,000 for charity. [20]

Nobby Young

Through 1993–94, Nobby Young became the only person to walk around mainland Australia, since Aidan de Brune accomplished the feat in 1922–1924. [6] The 16,000-kilometre journey, which took exactly a year to complete, is listed in the Guinness Book of Records. [21] He covered a distance of 14,900 km, while raising funds for the 'Life Education Centre'. [22]

David Mason

In 1998, David Mason walked from Byron Bay to Dalby, where he picked up three camels that would carry his supplies. From there, he walked through the Simpson Desert to Uluru, then across the Gibson Desert to Steep Point. [23] He completed the walk in 236 days, while raising money for the Fred Hollows Foundation. In recognition of his achievement, he was named the Australian Geographic Adventurer of the Year in 1999. [12] David Mason wrote a book about the walk that was published in 2014 and titled Walk Across Australia: The First Solo Crossing.

Andrew Harper

In 1999, Andrew Harper followed the Tropic of Capricorn from west to east accompanied by three camels to carry his supplies. The desert sections of his journey represented pure desert travel as he did not follow any roads or tracks enabling him to keep as true to the TOC as possible. This included traverses of the Little Sandy, Gibson and Simpson Deserts. The expedition was a fundraising walk for the Royal Flying Doctor Service and as recognition for his achievement, he was admitted as a Fellow to the Royal Geographical Society.

Polly Letofsky

On 1 August 1999, Polly Letofsky left her home in Colorado on a five-year journey spanning four continents and 22 countries. She started her leg across Australia on 29 October 2000 from St Kilda Pier on Port Phillip Bay in Melbourne, and concluded on 22 July 2001 after arriving in Port Douglas. On 30 July 2004, she concluded her journey having walked over 22,730 km (14,120 mi), having raised over $250,000 for breast cancer research, and having officially become the first woman to have walked around the world. [24] [25]

Jon Muir

On 18 May 2001, Jon Muir walked across Australia with his dog, a Jack Russell Terrier named Seraphine, from Port Augusta to Burketown. It took him 128 days, spanning a distance of approximately 2,500 km. [26] Jon's walk is unique in that he remained self-sufficient for food and water, hauling, gathering, or hunting all of his food for the walk. He filmed his journey and produced a documentary entitled Alone Across Australia .

Dave McKern

On 15 June 2003, McKern started his solo journey walking across Australia, from Sydney to Perth while only being accompanied by his dog Rupert, he finished on 8 November 2003 after a total of 146 days on the road covering a total of approximately 4000 km.

Deborah De Williams

Deborah Williams walked around Australia in 2003/2004. She aimed to break the record set by Nobby Young (who was also on her support team), the first person to walk around Australia back in 1993/1994. She broke the record on 23 September 2004. She is the first woman to walk completely around Australia. [27]

John Olsen

John Olsen has walked across Australia twice, between the northern and southernmost points, and the western and easternmost points.

His first journey commenced in 2004. Olsen walked 5,622 kilometres (3,493 mi) unsupported from Cape York Peninsula to Tasmania in 167 days, and raised a little over $10,000 for a charity working with children with cerebral palsy. On 18 June 2008, John Olsen undertook his second walk, walking from Steep Point, to Cape Byron. He travelled a distance of 4,752 kilometres (2,953 mi), raising $130,000 for the Australian Lions Children's Mobility Foundation (ALCMF) and the Australian Leukodystrophy Support Group Inc (ALDS). [28] He then walked home to Geelong after reaching Cape Byron.. The progress of Olsen's second journey was broadcast by Ian McNamara’s ABC radio Australia All Over program on Sundays. Olsen completed the walk in 200 days, finishing on 3 January 2009. [29]

Olsen's accomplishment was recognized by Sensis when it depicted him on the cover of the Geelong and Colac Yellow and White Pages directories for 2010/2011 [30]

Colin Ricketts

Colin Ricketts walked solo walk around Australia raising money for kids with cancer. He departed Adelaide on 4 January 2005, returning 15,430 km and 379 days later on 17 January 2006. He pushed a three-wheel baby jogger named 'Wilson' and followed National Highway 1 in an anti-clockwise direction. [31]

Jeff Johnson

On 5 April 2007, Jeff Johnson walked from Port Augusta to Karumba to raise money for the DeafBlind Association of NSW. Motivated by the then recent death of his deaf-blind niece, he raised approximately $5,700 for the charity towards the purchase of a bus for transport of deaf and blind children using wheelchairs. [32] He completed the walk in 151 days, finishing on 2 September 2007. [33]

Deanna Sorensen

Deanna Sorensen is a Canadian veterinary nurse and motivational speaker. [34] After leaving Perth and crossing the Nullarbor, she travelled south from Port Augusta to Adelaide, along the coast through Mount Gambier to Melbourne, then up the Princes Highway through Eden to Sydney. The total distance of this route, taken from road maps and route markers, is 4895 km; with an additional 170 km of additional distance on side-roads and excursions making her total journey a little over 5000 km. She completed her journey in 180 days. [35] [36]

Michael Mitchell

Michael Mitchell left Cape York on 5 May 2008 on his 'Great Australian Cancer Bush Walk'. [37] He aimed to raise $1 million for cancer research, and was motivated to act because some friends and their siblings (Mick and Maree Egan and Michael's mother, Monica) were living with cancer. [38] He followed the National Bicentennial Trail and The Australian Alps Walking Track for a large portion of his journey. [39]

Michael was able to raise $50,000 for the Cancer Council. The walk was completed in the aftermath of the Black Saturday bushfires. [40] He finished on 3 May 2009 upon arriving at Wilsons Promontory. [41]

Gary Hause

Gary Hause departed from Cairns on 19 May 2008, and arrived in Torquay on 2 November 2008. [42] The leg across Australia was completed as part of his journey around the world on foot.

Dave Leaning

Dave Leaning walked south to north leaving Port Augusta on 28 April 2009 and arriving in Karumba on 21 July. This followed the Englishman's feat of skiing the length of Norway. The effort was made to raise funds for the Halo Trust. [43]

Mike Pauly

Mike decided he would walk from his home in Fremantle to Federation Square in Melbourne via Coolgardie after being diagnosed with osteoarthritis in both knees as a result of being overweight, and reading of Deanna Sorenson's account of walking unsupported across the Nullarbor. He vowed to complete the walk before his 70th birthday, in a bid to raise funds and awareness for Arthritis WA. [44] [45]

On 16 May 2009, at sixty-nine years old, Mike set off on his lone 3617 km journey walking across the Nullarbor. [44]

Dave Phoenix

In 2008, Dave Phoenix walked from Melbourne to Karumba following the route taken by Burke and Wills in 1860–1. [46]

Mark Gibbens

Mark Gibbens left Perth on 22 February 2009, and arrived at Civic Park in Sydney on Monday 18 May 2009. He walked solo for 5200 km in 86 days using his mate Colin Rickett's buggy named "Wilson". Mark undertook the walk to raise money for research into cancer, and as a tribute to a close friend and mentor who died of cancer in 2007. [47] [48] Proceeds from Mark's walk were distributed through cancer research organizations in each state he has walked through, namely the Children's Leukaemia and Cancer Research Foundation in Western Australia, the McGuinness/McDermott Foundation in South Australia, the Victorian Prostate Research Consortium, and the Australian Cancer Research Foundation in New South Wales. [47]

Leigh Thomson-Mathews

Leigh set off from Perth on 8 March 2010 with his brother Sam. [49] [50] Sydney was their original destination, but the two decided to complete their journey in Melbourne, arriving on 3 July 2010. [51] [52]

Sam Thomson-Mathews

Sam set off from Perth on 8 March 2010 with his brother Leigh. [49] [50] Sydney was their original destination, but the two decided to complete their journey in Melbourne, arriving on 3 July 2010. [51] [52]

Mike Pauly

In 2011, then 71-year-old Mike Pauly walked from Melbourne to Perth to raise funds for Arthritis WA. This was Mike's second walk across Australia, having previously walked from Fremantle to Melbourne in 2009. Mike completed both journeys despite suffering from Osteoarthritis in both of his knee joints. [53] [54] [55]

Jeff Johnson

Jeff Johnson walked 4791 km in 2011, and raised $68,000 for the Newborn and pediatric Emergency Transport Service (NETS) in the process. This was his second walk across Australia, having recently walked from north to south in 2007. [56] [57] [58] [59]

Jacob French

Jacob French walked across Australia in 2011–2012. He completed the walk wearing the white 'Storm Trooper' armour from George Lucas' Star Wars films, and raised $88,523 for the Starlight Children's Foundation in the process. [60] [61] [62]

Andrew Cadigan

Andrew "Cad" Cadigan finished a solo walk from Sydney back to Sydney in June 2012. He walked unassisted via Tasmania, Melbourne, Adelaide, Albany, Perth, Broome, Darwin, Townsville, and Brisbane. Cadigan undertook the walk in honor of Chris Simpson, a friend who had died from complications related to myelodysplasia, and raised over $65,000 – $25,000 for The Cancer Council and $40,000 for the Leukemia Foundation. Shortly after completing the walk, while holidaying and recuperating in Thailand, Cadigan suffered head injuries in a motorcycle accident, and later died in hospital in Sydney, on 5 October 2012. A book, written by his author father Neil, about his walk and tragic death was released in 2014. The Leukemia Foundation has struck a research PhD into myelodysplasia, named in honour of Cadigan and Simpson, with a trust called Cad's Cause continuing to raise funds. [63] [64] [65] [66] [67]

Matt Napier

On 2 February 2013, Matt Napier set off from Perth to walk to Sydney via Adelaide, Melbourne, and Canberra to raise awareness of Global Poverty. Matt's walk was unique in that he bounced an AFL football the whole way to symbolize the important role sport plays in alleviating extreme poverty around the world. Matt went through 6 footballs on his trip and was assisted by his wife Wendy who was his support crew. They finished their 4,501 km journey in Sydney live on Channel Seven's Sunrise Program [68] on 28 June. The trip came on the back of Matt Cycling from Perth to Canberra (3908 km) the year before to also raise awareness about world poverty.

Brendon Alsop

On 21 February 2013, Brendon Alsop set off, with his dog Jojo, from Geelong to walk around Australia on the Fatmans Great Aussie Trek. Motivated to lose weight, Alsop walked unaided, pushing a pram, up the East Coast of Australia. With resources running out, he amended his destination to Cairns and completed his 4000 km trek when he dived into the Lagoon in Cairns on the morning of 3 January 2014. [69] Losing 35 kg and raising $12000 for the Australian Cancer Research Foundation and the Andrew Love Cancer Centre in Geelong. Alsop dedicated his trek to friends and family members who had lost their lives to cancer. The trek was followed by his mother, Beth Alsop, who died of cancer 34 days after Alsop completed it. [70] [71]

Scott Loxley

On 2 November 2013, Scott left Melbourne and began walking solo around Australia covering every state and territory wearing a Star Wars Sandtrooper costume.

Scott Loxley officially crossed the finish line on Monday 15 June 2015 at the Monash Children's Hospital, after over 15,000 km of walking around Australia to raise funds which exceeded $110,000.

Gary Wilmot

Wilmot devised a plan for a run/walk between his home course at Canning River via Adelaide, Melbourne, Canberra, and Sydney, visiting other parkrun courses where practical and finish in South Bank, Queensland.

His aim to raise awareness and much-needed funds for the Heart Foundation was a success. His two-man support crew were Ben Sutton and Ols Nicholls.

Gary left Perth on 16 May 2015, and arrived in Brisbane on 17 September 2015 with a celebratory "free 5k run" taking place on 19 September.

John Olsen

John walked diagonally across Australia to honor the memory of his late wife Vida, and to raise awareness and funds for leukodystrophy which claimed her life in 2014.

John departed from Cape York Peninsula on 31 March 2016, and trekked diagonally across Australia through Alice Springs before finishing in Cape Leeuwin on Christmas Eve 2016. [72]

In excess of $40k in donations was raised for Leukodystrophy Australia.

Ashok Alexander

Ashok Alexander, who is an IT professional and businessman by trade, decided to walk from Darwin to Canberra to "highlight unfair business practices". [73]

He took about five and a half-month to cover a distance of 4,032km made of 5,771,768 steps to finally reached Canberra Parliament House on 27 September 2017, to coincide with his older son's birthday, who also walked with him the initial three days. [74]

Tristan Harris

Tristan "Banger" Harris is an ex sailor serving over 27 years in the Royal Australian Navy as a Paramedic. [75] He walked across Australia from Ocean to Ocean in 2017 raising funds for Legacy Australia. [76] Departing on 1 May 2017 from HMAS Stirling, Garden Island WA completing the journey on 31 October 2017 at HMAS Creswell, Jervis Bay NSW he walked solo, carrying all food, water and shelter in a child walker. The walk took 184 days, walking 4,358km and raised over $15,500 for Legacy along the way. [77]

Terra Roam

On 2 May 2018, Terra Roam became the first non-binary adventurer to walk 17,200 km solo unsupported around Australia. [78] It took 4 years in sections divided between seasons and injuries. The first section was a 1,250 km "warm up" lap around Tasmania carrying a backpack. The following 3 sections Roam pushed a custom built barrow they designed and named Dory, with a carrying capacity of 200L for the outback. When Roam reached the east coast they switched back to a backpack for the remaining distance to get away from roads and take the scenic tracks and paths through national parks, state forests and beaches. Not all their breaks were planned, when a truck driver tried running them down from behind on the Barkly Highway they took time off to recover from the trauma and adjusted their route to leave that region. When injuries to their feet and pelvic imbalance were beginning to cause blackouts they took a 6-month break for rehabilitation and after a fall broke and dislocated their ankle only 900km from completing their lap they were forced to take another 6 months off. Longest walking day was 67 km, outback average was 45 km/day, east coast average was 20 km/day. 20 pairs of shoes including 5 pairs of thongs for 2,500 km because they couldn't afford shoes. Hottest day was 45'C, coldest night was −5'C, most water drunk in one day was 10L. Roam walked through 2 cyclones, 2 floods, an earthquake, fires, fly plague, heatwaves and a blizzard, faced death threats from a stalker, fought off a wild dog attack and survived attempted murder. [79]

Alwyn Dolan

For 12 months, Alwyn Doolan walked from Cape York in Queensland to Parliament House in Canberra with the intention of delivering a message to the federal government on reconciliation. After his 8,500-kilometre journey, Gooreng Gooreng and Wakka Wakka man Alywin Doolan hoped that he would pass on his message sticks to Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Unfortunately, his open invitation for the PM to meet with him was declined. Mr Doolan (at the time of writing) planned to walk back to Woorabinda in Central Queensland, roughly 1,500 km away, with three message sticks still in tow. [80]

Bob Hanley

61-year-old Bob Hanley was of failing health and his doctor predicted that he would soon be confined to a wheelchair due to advanced spondylitis, with the prospects of not much more than six months to enjoy life at any level. [81] Rather than taking life easy as directed, Bob set out on a walk around Australia, pushing a wheelbarrow. He was recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the holder of the record for the world's longest walk pushing a wheelbarrow, 14,500km [82] in a few days longer than 3 years.

Marc Schinkel

Marc Schinkel completed his unassisted walk across Australia as a meditation practice inspired by the Buddhist monks of Mount Hiei. He tracked his daily efforts using a Garmin triathlon watch and uploaded the GPS, heart rate as well as other biometric data to each point on a Google map for his family and friends to view as he progressed. [83]

Marc was interviewed by Heather Ewart during his crossing of the Nullarbor Plain and appeared in the ABC's TV show Back Roads, Series 6 Episode 2, Nullarbor (Part 2) – Turning Back Time. [84] He completed his walk with a 111km ultra-marathon from Northam to Cottlesloe Beach over the 1st and 2 November 2019 [85] after failing to cross the continent twice before succeeding on his third attempt.

Ivor Houston

Ivor Houston walked solo and unsupported across Australia to raise money and awareness for refugees in Australia. Born and raised in the Blue Mountains and hosting a Malaysian family for the last 18 months, Ivor has a close experience with the problems Australians have at assisting refugees and asylum seekers. His fundraising was donated to Act for Peace and Blue Mountains Refugee Support Group. Ivor is also the youngest person recorded to have walked solo and unsupported across Australia at the age of 22 upon completion. [86] [87] [88]

Nicolo Guarrera

Nicolo Guarrera walked from Sydney to Adelaide and from Adelaide to Darwin in 2023, covering a distance of more than 5500km. He followed the Mid Western Highway for the first section of his walk, then Sturt Highway until Adelaide. From the capital of South Australia, he walked north along the Oodnadatta track and Stuart Highway, taking a deviation on the Lasseter Highway while heading to Uluru. He then walked the Mereenie Loop until Alice Springs. The last part of his journey was along the Stuart Highway, until he reached Darwin and the Indian Ocean on September 7th 2023. His walk in Australia is part of a broad project to walk around the world. Before Australia, he had already walked across Western Europe and South America. He left his home on August 9th 2020 and by September 2023 he walked a total distance of 20.000km. [89] [90] [91]

Tom Fremantle

Tom Freemantle walked from Swanbourne Beach, Perth, to Bondi Beach, Sydney as part of "Tom's World Walk" walk around the world. Tom completed his walk unsupported, pushing his buggy Koko the whole way, carrying all his equipment and supplies. Tom covered a total of 17,615km on the world walk and has raised over £45,000 during his world walk for a number of charities. [92] [93] [94] [95]

Further reading

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nullarbor Plain</span> Geographical feature in Western Australia and South Australia

The Nullarbor Plain is part of the area of flat, almost treeless, arid or semi-arid country of southern Australia, located on the Great Australian Bight coast with the Great Victoria Desert to its north. It is the world's largest single exposure of limestone bedrock, and occupies an area of about 200,000 square kilometres (77,000 sq mi). At its widest point, it stretches about 1,100 kilometres (684 mi) from east to west across the border between South Australia and Western Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Burke and Wills expedition</span> Australian exploration expedition (1860–61)

The Burke and Wills expedition was organised by the Royal Society of Victoria (RSV) in Australia in 1860–61. It initially consisted of nineteen men led by Robert O'Hara Burke, with William John Wills being a deputy commander. Its objective was the crossing of Australia from Melbourne in the south to the Gulf of Carpentaria in the north, a distance of around 3,250 kilometres. At that time most of the inland of Australia had not been explored by non-Indigenous people and was largely unknown to European settlers.

<i>Indian Pacific</i> Passenger train service in Australia

The Indian Pacific is a weekly experiential tourism-oriented passenger train service that runs in Australia's east–west rail corridor between Sydney, on the shore of the Pacific Ocean, and Perth, on the shore of the Indian Ocean – thus, like its counterpart in the north–south corridor, The Ghan, one of the few truly transcontinental trains in the world. It first ran in 1970 after the completion of gauge conversion projects in South Australia and Western Australia, enabling for the first time a cross-continental rail journey that did not have a break of gauge.

<i>Burke & Wills</i> 1985 Australian film

Burke & Wills is a 1985 Australian adventure film directed by Graeme Clifford, starring Jack Thompson and Nigel Havers. The film is based on the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition across Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert O'Hara Burke</span> Irish soldier, police officer & explorer

Robert O'Hara Burke was an Irish soldier and police officer who achieved fame as an Australian explorer. He was the leader of the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition, which was the first expedition to cross Australia from south to north, finding a route across the continent from the settled areas of Victoria to the Gulf of Carpentaria. The expedition party was well equipped, but Burke was not experienced in bushcraft. A Commission of Inquiry held by the Government of Victoria to investigate the failure of the expedition was a censure of Burke's judgement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William John Wills</span> British explorer (1834–c. 1861)

William John Wills was a British surveyor who also trained as a surgeon. He was the second-in-command of the Burke and Wills expedition, which was the first expedition to cross Australia from south to north, finding a route across the continent from the settled areas of Victoria to the Gulf of Carpentaria. He and the expedition leader Robert O'Hara Burke both died of exhaustion on the expedition's return journey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Francis Birtles</span> Australian adventurer (1881–1941)

Francis Edwin Birtles was an Australian adventurer, photographer, cyclist, and filmmaker, who set many long-distance cycling and driving records, including becoming in 1927 the first man to drive a car from England to Australia. Birtles had set a speed record driving from Darwin to Melbourne the previous year.

Karl Bushby is a British ex-paratrooper, walking adventurer and author, currently attempting to be the first person to completely walk an unbroken path around the world. Bushby's trek is known as the Goliath Expedition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Quiet Achiever</span>

The Quiet Achiever, also known as the Holden Solar Trek, was the world's first practical long-distance solar-powered car powered entirely by photovoltaic solar cells.

Augustus Frederick Oldfield (1821–1887) was an English botanist and zoologist who made large collections of plant specimens in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Deborah De Williams</span> Australian ultramarathon runner

Deborah Anne De Williams is an Australian ultra-marathon athlete. She is the first woman to walk around Australia and the first woman to run around Australia.

Since its settlement by Europeans, Tasmania has been traversed in many ways, often going unrecorded.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">European land exploration of Australia</span>

European land exploration of Australia deals with the opening up of the interior of Australia to European settlement which occurred gradually throughout the colonial period, 1788–1900. A number of these explorers are very well known, such as Burke and Wills who are well known for their failed attempt to cross the interior of Australia, as well as Hamilton Hume and Charles Sturt.

Dr Ludwig Becker's Grave is a heritage-listed grave at Molesworth Station, by the Bulloo River, Bulloo Downs, Shire of Bulloo, Queensland, Australia. He was buried in 1861. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 5 August 1994.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Burke and Wills Dig Tree</span> Historic site in Queensland, Australia

The Dig Tree is a heritage-listed, blazed, eucalyptus tree at Nappa Merrie Station, Durham, Shire of Bulloo, Queensland, Australia. It was blazed on 21 April 1861. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 28 February 2003.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aidan de Brune</span> Journalist, author, pedestrian

Aidan de Brune, journalist, author, pedestrian, was the first person in recorded history to walk around the perimeter of Australia, unaccompanied and unassisted.

A Romance of the Burke and Wills Expedition of 1860 is a 1918 Australian silent film. The plot is fictional and is loosely based around the Burke and Wills expedition.

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Notes

  1. Distance calculated by author using the resources of Geoscience Australia.
  2. As recognised by Guinness World Records as an official city pair for "Fastest Journey on Foot Across Australia world record" . Retrieved 19 April 2024.

* Steve Newman, Polly Letofsky and David Mason personally contributed information about their respective journeys in the creation of this article. Their contribution is received with thanks from the author of this article.