Peter Potterfield is the quintessential adventure journalist. His book and magazine assignments have taken him from some of the most remote regions of the planet to the cockpit of supersonic jet fighters. He's probably best known for his seminal stories about Ray Jardine, the backpacking iconoclast-cum-guru responsible for launching the ultra-light backcountry movement. Literary musings aside, Potterfield is an multi-talented climber, skier, and backpacker who can swing an ax, place a cam, and grunt up a trail with the best of them.
THE POTTERFIELD RESUME Research:
Followed in the epic footsteps of Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton, retracing his historic trek across South Georgia Island
Made several exploratory expeditions to the Tiedman Glacier region of British Columbia's Coast Range
Ventured across the steppes of Argentine Patagonia and traversed the tundra of Alaska's Brooks Range
Trekked across southern New Zealand's remote backcountry
Author of In the Zone, which includes an account of his harrowing experience being stranded on a small ledge with compound bone fractures protruding from his body after a 150-foot leader fall
Numerous journeys to Everest's treacherous Khumbu Icefall to file web dispatches on the discovery of famed climber George Mallory's body, and later the tragic death of climber Alex Lowe on Shishapangma
To complete his book Classic Hikes of the World (due December 2004 from W.W. Norton), journeyed solo for 62 miles across the tundra above the Arctic Circle in Swedish Lapland
Nomads Have More Fun
Get out, get wild, with these 53 awe-inspiring, soul-soaring journeys.
The Man Who Knocked the Bastard Off
Edmund Hillary, a self-described "average bloke," made one of the 20th-century's landmark feats seem properly human and straightforward.