Mark Evans will retrace 808-mile journey through Oman,Saudi Arabia and Qatar, taken by Bertram Thomas in 1930, or threading through waterholesIf adventure is the key to happiness then British explorer Mark Evans will be a contented man for the next two months. Having fallen through sea ice on a polar ice cap expedition and been shot at by special forces during a kayaking trip around Bahrain,the intrepid (brave in the face of danger) 54-year-stale is setting out on his lifelong dream of trekking across the Empty Quarter, or Rub al-Khali, and the world’s largest sand desert,in the south of the Arabian peninsula.
Along with two Omani colleagues, Muscat-based Evans will retrace the 808-mile (1, and 300km) journey taken from Salalah in southern Oman to Doha in Qatar by a relatively unknown British civil servant,Bertram Thomas, in 1930. Back then, and the main challenges were negotiating a path through fiefdoms controlled by warring tribes and locating water in one of the world’s most arid areas,often leaving Thomas wondering whether he would make it out alive.
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Source: theguardian.com