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(Photo: Overlanding 101)

With These 5 Tips, You Can Overland The Entire Planet

After writing the book on extreme overlanding, Scott Brady distills his tips into five critical pieces of advice.

Published: 
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(Photo: Overlanding 101)

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In 2014, Scott Brady, the founder of Overland Journal,聽became the first person to cross all seven continents by four-wheel drivea frequently off-grid endeavor that had him tackling some of the most extreme terrain on earth. In 2018, Brady went on to complete the first 4WD crossing of the Greenland ice sheet, south to north. While these kinds of聽 objectives might seem out of reach for the average car camper, Brady begs to differ: He says it鈥檚 way simpler than you think.

Brady has distilled everything he鈥檚 learned about vehicle-based adventure travel into his first book: . It鈥檚 a collection of practical guidance around skills and equipment, mixed with tales of the real-life experiences that taught him all those lessons.

鈥淩ead this and go,鈥 says Brady, who also publishes the magazine and podcast, and聽. The book provides the practical knowledge you鈥檒l need along the way, along with plenty of inspiration聽for trips of your own.

While 256 pages of tips are great, I wanted to see if Brady could simplify his advice. So, I called and asked him for his best tips for new travelers. Here are the five he gave me.

Brady defines overlanding as, “vehicle-based adventure travel,” and says that can include trips both near and far. (Photo: Overlanding 101)

Go As Soon As Possible

鈥淚 think people are afraid to fail or afraid to have mishaps,鈥 says Brady. 鈥淏ut I think that鈥檚 what the definition of adventure is: It鈥檚 when something has gone wrong.鈥

Brady鈥檚 first piece of advice is that, if you want to start having adventures, the best way is to just pick up and go. If you wait until you鈥檙e able to buy a certain vehicle, or equip it with just the right gear, or think you need to learn some specific skill before taking off, you鈥檙e going to spend time waiting rather than traveling.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need to have the entire REI catalog,鈥 he explains. 鈥淕o lighter, go less expensive, and go now. You鈥檙e often better off without all the crap anyways.鈥

In Overlanding 101, Brady tells the story of the very first overlanding trip he took when he got out o the Air Force in 2002. To tackle Arizona鈥檚 Camino del Diablo鈥攁 140-mile off-road route along the Mexican border鈥攈e geared up with both a roof rack and trailer to carry all the equipment he thought he needed. But it turned out that bringing a portable shower, gallons of extra gas, and enough water to survive out there pretty much indefinitely actually did more to frustrate him than to ease the journey.

鈥淚n all the buying and grasping, I missed the point of going in the first place,鈥 he says.

a 4wd van
In the book, Brady explains how to choose the right vehicle for your journeys, and how to most effectively equip it. (Photo: Overlanding 101)

Get Buy-In From Your Travel Partners

鈥淲hat I think people get wrong often, which usually results in the experience going poorly, is that they don鈥檛 talk to their travel companions,鈥 Brady says. 鈥淪ome dude will get it in his mind to drive the TransAmerica Trail, and drag his wife and kids along without ever having a conversation with them about what they want to experience along the way.鈥

鈥淟ike maybe his daughter鈥檚 super into geology, and she really wants to understand the rocks and the history, or his son really wants to learn how to drive, and if you don鈥檛 have those conversations, then you don鈥檛 have their buy-in,鈥 he continues. 鈥淧eople usually fail pretty quickly as a family when that happens.鈥

Throughout the book, Brady reiterates that it鈥檚 the people鈥攂oth the ones in the car with you and the ones you meet along the way鈥攖hat are the point. Plan trips around them, not around some artificial goal or empty accomplishment.

4x4s crossing a river in Iceland
In his new book, Brady breaks down the skills you’ll need to tackle dangerous obstacles safely. (Photo: Overlanding 101)

Focus on the Trip, Not the Gear聽

Overlanders tend to be overpackers. But in reality, only a few pieces of gear really matter. 鈥淵ou need some form of identification, some form of communication, and some form of commerce,鈥 Brady says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 truly need anything else.鈥

Not only do people spend way too much time getting wrapped up in equipment, Brady says, but that investment can ultimately get in the way of the experience as stuff starts to break, get lost, or get stolen. But if you have a passport, a credit card, and a cell phone, you have the tools you need to solve pretty much any problem, no matter where you are in the world.

鈥淚 see people get really bummed out when they lose stuff. They let it ruin their trip. But in the grand scheme of things, if your laptop gets stolen, it鈥檚 OK. Learn to let those things go and focus on the journey.鈥

overland camping
Learning to camp comfortably is a skill all its own. It can look as complex as this, or as simple as a cheap backpacking sleep setup.

Slow Down

鈥淎nd after you鈥檝e done that, slow down some more,鈥 says Brady. That鈥檚 both a philosophy, and practical guidance. Slowing down will make tackling obstacles both easier and safer, while giving you time to enjoy the experience.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 one thing I struggle with,鈥 Brady continues. 鈥淚鈥檓 always in full attack mode. I鈥檝e always wanted to accomplish goal after goal after goal, and a lot of times, I don鈥檛 remember what I did afterwards.鈥

鈥淪o if I was to give someone advice, it would be to plan a little less,鈥 he says. 鈥淧lan fewer miles, spend more time in that little village. Take an hour to sit in that cafe and just watch people go by.鈥

Scott Brady in Africa
On his most recent trip, Brady drove an Ineos Grenadier across Africa, from south to north. (Photo: Overlanding 101)

Find a Way To Give Back

鈥淭hese experiences give us so much,鈥 Brady says. 鈥淚鈥檝e changed significantly by seeing the rest of the world. Strangers are聽no longer 鈥榦ther鈥 anymore鈥攖hey’re someone I had lunch with, or someone that helped me on my journey. Once you start to spend time with people in other places, you start to be a lot more understanding of the fact that they are different, but in the best ways possible.鈥

In that spirit, it’s important to respect the communities and ecosystems you travel across, Brady says. 鈥淭read lightly, leave no trace, find ways to minimize your impact,鈥 he suggests. 鈥淚nstead of leaving that campsite super early in the morning, take five minutes to police it for trash.鈥

If you can, do more than just erase signs of your passing鈥攍eave the place better than you found it.聽Brady says adding value to the people and communities you visit can be as simple as buying someone a beer, then taking the time to enjoy it with them. Or, it can be more involved. On one of his first forays into Baja, Mexico, Brady met some people who run an orphanage in Muleg茅, a small town on the Sea of Cortez. The next time he drove through, he made time to stop by the Costco in Los Cabos, and bring them weeks鈥 worth of shelf-stable breakfasts for the kids. Now he has positive memories of a positive contribution, not just a fun trip.


鈥溾 is available this week in paperback, audio, and Kindle formats.

Lead Photo: Overlanding 101

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