As a kid, Eric Larsen did a lot of camping and canoeing with his family in Wisconsin, so it makes sense that he鈥檇 grow up to be outdoorsy. But a ski-to-the-North-Pole-by-yourself kind of adventurer? That鈥檚 a level Larsen found entirely on his own.聽
If you鈥檙e not already familiar with Larsen, here鈥檚 a quick highlight reel. One of the greatest polar explorers of our age, he鈥檚 fat-biked 700 miles to the South Pole and skied to the North Pole聽during summer, when the melting sea ice is especially treacherous to navigate鈥攂oth first-of-their-kind expeditions. He鈥檚 been to the poles more than any other American and is the only person on the planet to have skied to both poles and summited Everest in the same year.
Of course, when you go as big as Larsen does, you鈥檙e going to have some hiccups along the way. Like in 2005, when he was a week into his first summertime expedition to the North Pole, pulling what he calls an 鈥渋mpossibly heavy鈥 400-pound sled across the southward-drifting ice pack. He ended up 30 miles farther south than where he started鈥攁nd was forced to abort. More recently, in January 2019, due to heavier-than-average snowfall, Larsen had to abandon an unsupported solo crossing of Antarctica, a 700-mile journey he鈥檇 hoped to complete in just 24 days, which would have set a new speed record. 鈥淒oing difficult things that nobody has ever done before鈥攖he chance of success is pretty minimal,鈥 Larsen reflects. 鈥淪o I鈥檝e probably failed more often than I鈥檝e been successful.鈥
He鈥檚 certainly done lots of both. At 12, he got a paper route so he could afford a road bike and explore Wisconsin鈥檚 back roads鈥攐ften 80 miles at a time. By college, he was getting lost in the Boundary Waters, moving without a compass, suffering through storms, figuring out the details as he went. At age 24, he was mushing teams of dogs across frozen Canadian tundra. 鈥淏y the time I did my first polar trip, I鈥檇 busted my ass so many times that I was going from 95 to 100, not zero to 100,鈥 Larsen says. 鈥淚 still fail, but I鈥檝e seen so much that I tend not to get terrified anymore.鈥
These days, Larsen spends more of his time closer to home, in Crested Butte, Colorado, educating people about the polar regions and setting out on multisport sufferfests across entire states (he calls them StateAthons). So far he鈥檚 done Wisconsin and Colorado. Next up: New York. But you鈥檒l most likely find him exploring the wilderness right out his backyard with his wife, Maria, and kids. The latter, he says, is especially important. It鈥檚 through family camping trips and after-school bike rides that Larsen has seen his kids鈥擬erritt, seven, and Ellie, four鈥攇lean many of the same lessons that have defined his life. And for an explorer-slash-father searching for balance, that鈥檚 validating.
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e on an expedition, you remove everything from your life, and existence becomes very stark,鈥 says Larsen. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 when you more sharply realize what鈥檚 important. I don鈥檛 miss seeing a movie or eating a hamburger when I鈥檓 out there. I miss my family. They鈥檙e the most important thing in my life.鈥
Whether adventure is your life鈥檚 work or just a weekend pursuit, gear up with nothing less than the greatest exploration vehicle of all time: the 2020 Ford Explorer. Built to explore. Built Ford Proud. Learn more at聽.