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You are in: Norfolk » Features

09 September 2004 1419 BST
Gobi desert adventure preparations
Picture: The team, Pete, Kieron and Brian, take a break from test riding the buggy
The boys, Pete, Kieron and Brian, take a break from testing the buggy
Three men planning to cross 625 miles of desert using just wind power, are preparing for one of the toughest challenges they'll ever endure.

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Gobi desert adventure

FACT FILE
bullet point. The Gobi desert is part of China and Mongolia.
bullet point. Ìý Temperatures range from 45 deg C in summer to -40 deg C in winter.
bullet point. Ìý The Gobi desert is the source of some of the greatest fossil finds in history including dinosaur eggs.
bullet point. Ìý Unlike the sandy Sahara, the Gobi is comprised mainly of barren expanses of gravel plains and rocky outcrops
bullet point. Ìý The desert and the surrounding regions sustain many animals, including black-tailed gazelles, marbled polecats, and greater plovers and are occasionally visited by snow leopards, brown bears, and wolves.
bullet point. Ìý Although sparsely inhabited, nomadic Mongolian shepherds criss-cross the Gobi, moving from Altanbulag in Mongolia to Beijing in China.
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Preparations are under way for a team of three men to cross the Gobi desert using kite buggies.

Kieron Bradley, 30, and Peter Ash, 34, both from Norfolk, and Professor Brian Cunningham, of Manchester, have sent their equipment for the expedition to Mongolia and are now undergoing their endurance training.

Here, Brian writes about the team's preparations for the expedition.

Packing the crates

A few weeks ago, we all went to Pete’s garage for the crate closing ceremony as it's always a major milestone in an expedition. It was a hectic day but in the end we squeezed everything in.

Picture: the team pack their equipment into crates
This is worse than packing for a holiday!

We packed three Gobi-spec’d Typhoon buggies, plus three spare buggies as back-up and 36 wheels (we’re expecting the rough terrain to be very hard on tyres) all set up with Protex tyre sealant to reduce the risk of punctures.

We also put in 27 kites (a full set of nine kites each ranging in size from 1.8sqm to 11sqm), three tents, sleeping bags, mattresses and the rest of our camping gear along with loads of spares!

Pete and Kieron have done an amazing job in getting the buggies together in time.

As usual there was a host of last-minute things that needed to be done but in the end it all came together and the crate has now started its long journey by sea to China and then overland by rail to Mongolia.

We expect it to arrive in mid-August and be waiting for us when we get there.

Now the three of us have to work on our kiting endurance in preparation for three weeks of eight-hour buggying days.

Picture: Buggy on the sand
The team must practise riding the buggies

Endurance training

First, we’ve developed an off-line flying system that transfers the kite load from the pilot to the buggy.

This dramatically reduces the effort required and eliminates the risk of getting lifted out of the buggy by a gust of wind!

We’ve all done extended duration runs of three to four hours using the off-line system without needing a rest, while kite-buggiers using conventional harnesses have been forced to rest every half-hour or so.

In the Gobi we will have a strict policy of always flying the smallest kite that will do the job. This is precisely the opposite of what we normally do on a beach, which is carry the biggest kite we can at all times!

We’d much prefer to travel safely at an average of 10 – 15mph than risk everything by blasting along at 20 – 25mph.

We are all experienced kiters who are well used to long, hard sessions on the beach. Now that the crate is packed all we have to do between now and our departure is to spend as much time in our buggies as we can.

On a long expedition like this, we will build our kiting endurance as we go.

Picture: Specially adapted buggy
Close-up of the specially adapted buggy

Fit as horses

Last summer my wife Christine and I hiked the John Muir Trail in the California Sierras from Yosemite to Mount Whitney.

It is 220 miles and we crossed a high pass almost every day for three weeks. We had to carry all our food so our packs were huge.

When we started we wondered how we could keep going but by the time we’d been on the trail for a few days we were as fit as horses. The secret is not to push too hard too early.

In the Gobi we will start slow and hopefully finish fast. By the time we are a week into the expedition we will be capable of doing consecutive eight to ten hour days.

Finally, the secret in not getting tired is never to operate at more than about 60% of your maximum capacity. Every burst of 100% is very costly.

I’m an ultra distance runner and this really is the secret. I hope I can pass on my experience to Pete and Kieron!

Read the interview with buggy riders Kieron Bradley and Peter Ash »

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