Alastair Humphreys Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/alastair-humphreys/ Live Bravely Tue, 27 May 2025 21:29:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Alastair Humphreys Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/alastair-humphreys/ 32 32 Why I Spent a Year Exploring My Boring Neighborhood /culture/books-media/alastair-humphreys-local-neighborhood/ Fri, 12 Jan 2024 11:00:07 +0000 /?p=2656839 Why I Spent a Year Exploring My Boring Neighborhood

In this excerpt from his new book 鈥楲ocal,鈥 Alastair Humphreys鈥攚ho coined the term 鈥渕icroadventures鈥濃攆inds treasure while mudlarking

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Why I Spent a Year Exploring My Boring Neighborhood

One motivation for exploring a square each week, come rain or shine, was to make being out in nature part of my routine. I hoped that becoming connected with where I live, with its weather and seasons, would keep me attuned to the seedlings pushing through pavements, the migrating birds passing overhead, the provenance of the food I eat, and reveal some interesting new running routes too.

Taking just a few minutes every month to , which I鈥檇 done for the past three years, had certainly made me happier. Each time I returned to the tree I was surprised by how much nature had changed in the past few weeks. Fun, too, had been my year of full-moon forays, getting outdoors for a run, ride, walk or swim on every full moon, and also a year of enjoying coffee outside at least monthly. If hospital gardens help people to heal, if doctors now prescribe exercise in nature, then committing to fifty-two outdoor missions sounded like a sensible undertaking. By now the habit of heading out once a week with my camera and notebook felt comfortably established.

It was a flat, grey day beneath a flat, grey December sky. The river flowing through today鈥檚 square was flat and grey, rippling as the tide nurdled ever lower. My mood, however, was neither flat nor grey. I was looking forward to this one.

A rocky river shore on an overcast day of mudlarking.
(Photo: Alastair Humphreys)

A few off-limit jetties jutted out into the current, infrastructure for pipelines and industry. A conveyor belt rumbled along one, filling a barge with gravel, but all else was quiet. This was, perhaps, a grid square that only a map nerd like me could derive pleasure from. More than half of it was blue on my map, but that was an incongruous representation of the muddy, intimidating industrial estuary spreading out before me. I didn鈥檛 dare swim out to explore it.

Behind me, the rest of the square was fenced off by a shooting range, an electricity substation filled with fizzing power lines, a cement factory, a slime-covered canal (featuring a sofa tipped into the water, whose lurid colour perfectly matched the algae), and a police firearms training centre complete with replica streets and life-size sections of planes and trains. This brought back fond memories of getting a day鈥檚 pay back when I was in the Territorial Army at university to don 鈥榗ivvy鈥 clothes and cheerfully lob half-bricks and milk bottles at massed ranks of policemen in riot gear. It was all fun and larks until they mounted their response charge at us鈥

And so, in terms of my exploration, the square was effectively reduced to little more than the footpath along the embankment鈥檚 flood defences, plus whatever muddy 鈥榖each鈥 was revealed as the tide fell. That was fine by me as I鈥檇 studied the tide timetable and arrived a couple of hours before low tide, past a yard filled with ships鈥 anchors, ten-feet tall and tonnes galore. I was here to go mudlarking among the slimy green rocks, brown seaweed and thick grey mud of the foreshore.

A mudlark is someone who scavenges in river mud at low tide, looking for valuable items. It was a way of life in London during the 18th and 19th centuries, when mudlarks searched the Thames鈥 shore for anything of value. They earned little but enjoyed an unusual amount of independence for the period, plus they got to keep whatever they found or earned.

Lara Maiklem explores the ancient, murky, tidal foreshore of the Thames, whose ebbs and flows still churn objects to the surface that have been hidden and preserved in the mud for centuries. I had recently devoured her fabulous book (and enticing ), and was fascinated by the greedy prospect of finding treasure, Roman roofing, Tudor shoes, and messages in bottles.

I donned wellies and waterproof trousers, climbed up and over the graffiti-covered embankment wall, and dropped onto the foreshore to begin my search. Its lowest reaches were a lethal gloop of deep, sloppy, stinking mud. I settled for making my way along the line where rock and mud meet, slipping over mounds of bladderwrack, a brown seaweed studded with air bladders that help it to float upright and absorb nutrients when submerged.

At low tides, the exposed seaweed forms dense beds, which theoretically should provide shelter for all sorts of creatures. But I鈥檓 afraid I saw not a single living thing among it all. A few gulls bobbed on the river, and semi-feral ponies grazed on the embankment behind me. But the water was pretty grim.

A sofa is submerged in water turned green by algae.
(Photo: Alastair Humphreys)

Only a few pearly-white oyster shells gave any suggestion of life in the grey mud. Over the past 200 years, habitat loss, pollution and overfishing slashed the oyster population around the UK by 95 percent, though it is now on the increase again. Across the country, things are improving from the low point of 1957, when the Thames was declared biologically dead and the river was a foul-smelling drain. It is a travesty, however, that even today, not a single river in Britain is free from pollution.

I had fully intended to find priceless loot within minutes of beginning my mudlarking. Instead, I found a rusty chair frame and heaps of plastic, including a label saying 鈥楤AG IT AND BIN IT, DON鈥橳 FLUSH IT鈥. I picked up a 1980s milk bottle with 鈥楶LEASE RETURN BOTTLE鈥 embossed on the glass. All interesting enough, but where was that jewel-encrusted sword when you needed it?

Truth be told, my patience began to wane within about twenty minutes, as I had known it would. This was actually one reason I鈥檇 decided to try mudlarking in the first place, to remind myself to slow down, to savour the process of searching, and not to be so hung up on productivity or getting things done.

So I persevered, picking my way among rusty pieces of metal, crisp packets and drinking straws. We used to throw away 4.7 billion plastic straws, 316 million plastic stirrers and 1.8 billion plastic-stemmed cotton buds each year. Those numbers plummeted once they were banned: proof of the immediate impact that quick, simple law changes can have.

I stood up straight to stretch my back and to watch a ship pass down the river, filled with the romanticism of imagining all the places for which it might be bound. Nineveh, perhaps? But my maritime musings have become more accurate, if less exotic, since I downloaded the Marine Radar app, which tells you about any ships you see.

Seaweed and a discarded wheel on a rocky shore found while mudlarking.
(Photo: Alastair Humphreys)

So this was the Maltese cargo ship Celestine sliding down the estuary with a salt-caked smoke stack and a cargo of cars. Heading in the other direction, a Dutch trailing suction hopper dredger slurped up the same gloop I was searching through. Dredgers work like monstrous vacuum cleaners, sucking up sand, mud and gravel from the channel to store onboard and discharge later. I wondered what gems had unknowingly been dumped through its pipes.

I bent down again and kept looking. Now I found a metal fork, a white comb and the compulsory shopping trolley. How did they end up in the river?

A discarded condom, unopened, told its tale of a disappointed date lobbing it off a bridge on his unplanned lonely trudge home to an empty bed. A golf putter, green with slime, had me imagining a pitch and putt rage, a nice day out soured by a tantrum and the golf club arcing through the summer sky into the water.

What else did I find? A pair of red pebbles caught my eye. A smooth, tactile fragment of green bottle marked 鈥楢.A. & Co鈥. Two symmetrical shards of tile. A fragment of porcelain decorated with blue and white lines, dots and circles.

That was about it.

This was actually one reason I鈥檇 decided to try mudlarking in the first place, to remind myself to slow down, to savour the process of searching, and not to be so hung up on productivity or getting things done.

But still, I was 99 percent certain that Christopher Columbus had dined off that very plate, munching corn on the cob as he set sail to discover Australia. One can always dream鈥

Even though I found no verifiable bullion or antiques, I had enjoyed trying to imagine stories for all the mundane objects I collected and brought home that morning. All these banal discoveries were grist to the mill as I learnt how to be an enthusiastic amateur. I was like the young boy Calvin in the comic strip, digging up the garden with Hobbes, his pet tiger. Hobbes asks Calvin what he has found.

鈥楢 few dirty rocks, a weird root, and some disgusting grubs,鈥 answers Calvin from deep in his hole.
鈥極n your first try?鈥 asks Hobbes in delight.
鈥楾here鈥檚 treasure everywhere,鈥 exclaims Calvin.

This is an excerpt from Local: A Search for Nearby Nature and Wildness by Alastair Humphreys. Available from听 and all good bookshops in the U.S., as well as directly from the publisher at

Book cover of Local by Alastair Humphreys
(Photo: Eye Books)

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8 Principles for Living a More Adventurous Life /adventure-travel/advice/8-principles-living-more-adventurous-life/ Thu, 13 Dec 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/8-principles-living-more-adventurous-life/ 8 Principles for Living a More Adventurous Life

Alastair Humphreys wrote the book on quick, cheap ways to shake up your day-to-day. Here's how he builds quick and inexpensive outings around the idea.

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8 Principles for Living a More Adventurous Life

When I came up with the idea of ,听I created听all sorts of elaborate, fabulous escapades involving pack rafts, folding bicycles, climbing harnesses,听sea kayaks, mountain bikes, and vans to carry all the gear. These were all brilliant. But the idea only began to spread to a greater number of听people (with fewer听ludicrous stashes of outdoor gear in the garage) once I made the idea much simpler. Simple + short听+ local听+ cheap = an achievable microadventure, unlike听the vicarious adventure thrills you read about in magazines but never actually do yourself.

Just as the foundations of a delicious meal听are salt, fat, acid, and heat (though I would argue that an alternative route is to get yourself exhausted and cold in the hills and then melt with joy as you shovel anything edible into your mouth), so too are there staple activities in any good month of microadventures. These include听sleeping on a hill;听swimming in a river, lake, or ocean;听sitting still in a forest;听and doing something that scares or challenges you. Other ingredients听depend upon where you live, the time of year, and what motivates you to shake up your life. For instance, maybe you want to get some exercise in a fun, new way听or get head space away from your phone. Maybe you want to听spend more time with loved ones, discover (or rediscover) new places, save money, or prepare for a bigger adventure.

No matter what, it鈥檚 important to make the barriers to entry as low as possible. That means choosing activities that are local, easy to organize, short enough to be compatible with real life, and cheap. If you鈥檙e trying to become more microadventurous, here are a few things to听remember.

Don鈥檛 Overspend on Gear

All you need to get started is your basic outdoor getup:听warm clothes and raingear, a water bottle, a headlamp, your backpack. If you鈥檙e going to camp out, you鈥檒l need a sleeping bag, bivy bag, and sleeping mat. If you鈥檙e up for some wild swimming, you鈥檒l need your swimsuit. (Or perhaps not.)

Get the Right Mindset on Timing

How can you fit adventure into the realities of a nine-to-five听career? Simple鈥攆it it into the five-to-nine. That鈥檚 the听16 hours of theoretical听daily freedom we all tend to undervalue and fritter. When somebody asks me, 鈥淲hat is a microadventure?鈥澨齀 say, 鈥淟eave work at 5 P.M. Head out of town. Sleep on a hill. Wake up at sunrise. Get back to your desk for 9 A.M.鈥澨齋imple, but you will remember it a year from now.

Supershort Outings Can Be听Super Worth It

We often love the idea of living more adventurously听and dream that we could somehow do that with our lives. The idea is glorious, but making it happen can be daunting. I am besotted with wild swimming, jumping into rivers, lakes and oceans at every single opportunity. But at this time of year听the water is cold, and the prospect of getting in is nerve-racking. The first step in is a shock. But a few more seconds pass, I听plunge, and then I am in! I鈥檓 doing it! Whooping! Delighted! Often in this season, this is the end of the operation鈥擨 leap out of the water, grinning, and get dressed and warm as quickly as I can.

Breaks Are for Taking

Long before听work e-mail听and social media started screaming for our attention 24/7, some wise government officials in Japan coined the phrase听(forest bathing) to encourage people to become healthier by taking strolls in the forest. I love the idea of bathing in a forest, that feeling of being submerged beneath the green (or glorious fall colors), far from the tribulations of an overflowing inbox. Turn off your phone, go for a walk in the woods, and slowly you will learn to slow down, observe, listen, be calmer. What do I do when my work life becomes insanely busy? Turn off my computer and go for a walk in the woods. I never regret it.

There鈥檚 Always Something New to Try

Make an effort this month to seek out something that scares or challenges you. It could be entering a longer race than you have done before, whether that鈥檚 the wonderful 听or the Barkley Marathons. It might be taking a chilly dip or your first night of camping out.听One of the key aspects of microadventures is learning to look differently at the familiar, to see wilderness and excitement around your hometown, rather than thinking you can only live adventurously if you fly to Patagonia. A way that I love resetting how I look at somewhere familiar is to go for a walk in the dark. Pick a route you know well, perhaps your morning run听or the route you walk your dog听or your favorite out-of-town trail, and go walk it听.听The well-known becomes mysterious. A mile becomes a long way. Once you鈥檙e brave enough, turn off your headlamp. I love letting my eyes adjust to the moonlight听and paying attention to different senses. You notice the smells of the fields. I remember once hearing a rabbit run past me into the undergrowth. I have never paid such close attention before.

Don鈥檛 Be Afraid to Ask an Expert

One of the regular problems of adventure听is that newcomers can feel intimidated by the expertise, fitness, and elite nature of it all. Microadventures are the exact opposite.听Everyone is welcome. And here鈥檚 the thing: once you summon up the nerve to begin, to approach an expert听and say that you are new but keen, you will always find that they are only too eager to help get you started.听Google your local climbing wall, give them a ring, and say, 鈥淚鈥檝e never climbed before, I鈥檓 totally unfit, really scared of heights, can鈥檛 do a single pull-up.鈥 Staff听will say, 鈥淕reat! Come along and try it out! You are very welcome.鈥

Don鈥檛 Be Afraid to听Be the Expert

However much of a novice you might feel (see above), the simple fact that you are reading this means that you鈥檙e听more knowledgeable and motivated than loads听of your friends. So take on the challenge of introducing a friend to the outdoors. You鈥檒l get a real buzz from being the expert, and your friend will enjoy trying something new. It could be as simple as taking your camping stove to the park and making coffee. At the very least, this is an evening or a day that you will not soon forget. (And how often can we say that about the times we meet a friend for coffee or go to a bar or go out for a meal?)

Support Local Wonders

Have a look on Google for the state parks nearest to where you live. There are more than 10,000 in the U.S.鈥攁n incredible resource, and a great privilege to enjoy. Make the effort to explore one you鈥檝e听never been to, and do your bit to support their upkeep. The more people that use, enjoy, and care for the wilderness regions of the U.S., the more the government will value them and take care of them.

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