Hannah McKeand

Hannah McKeand
Born (1973-06-22) June 22, 1973
Bristol, UK
Nationality British
Alma mater University of Wales
Occupation Polar guide
Known for Antarctic solo exploration
Website http://hannahmckeand.com

Hannah McKeand is a British polar explorer. In 2006 she set the record for the fastest journey (man or woman) to the South Pole a 600-nautical-mile (1,100 km) journey she completed solo and in just 39 days, 9 hours and 33 minutes.[1] The record was broken in 2008 by Todd Carmichael of Spokane, Washington, United States.[2] She has also skied to the South Pole more times than anyone in history. In March 2008 she attempted to reach the North Pole alone and unsupported but had to abandon the trip after falling through the ice and badly damaging her shoulder and back. McKeand is a public speaker and polar consultant.[3]

Early life

McKeand was born in Bristol. Her mother Julian Burbury was an actress and her father Ian McKeand was a theatre director and now teaches at Newark College. Until she was 6 the family lived in St Andrews, Scotland where her father ran the Byre Theatre. Next the family moved to the north coast of Somerset where she spent the rest of her childhood. She attended St Audries School, and the Richard Huish College and took two years out before university to work with FEI carriage horses. She attended the University of Wales Lampeter and achieved a degree in Classics.

Early career

Her first job was a statistician for the Automobile Association, which she left after 3 years to pursue a career in theatre. She was the Marketing Manager then Head of Touring for the Watermill Theatre in Newbury, Berkshire and the all male Shakespeare company Propeller for nearly 10 years. In 2004 she first skied to the South Pole and in 2005 gave up her job in theatre to sail around the world in the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race and ski solo to the South Pole.

Current

McKeand lives between Haugastol, Norway and Salt Lake City, Utah. She has founded a company with polar guide Carl Alvey called Expeditions 365 that conducts polar training courses each spring on the Hardangervidda plateau in Norway.

Achievements

References

  1. Aislinn Simpson (29 December 2006), "Woman treks alone to South Pole in 39 days", The Guardian, retrieved 2013-03-12
  2. Landers, Rich (21 Dec 2008), "Ferris grad slogs in race to South Pole", The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Washington), retrieved 2013-03-13
  3. Adventurer quits solo pole trek, BBC, 23 March 2008, retrieved 2013-03-13
  4. Fastest solo unsupported and unassisted journey to the South Pole (female), Guinness World Records, retrieved 2013-03-12

External links

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