lives a life straight out of a novel. Traveling the world for both work and play, the 50-year-old听has navigated massive peaks, deep oceans, and frozen tundra. He鈥檚 rowed a boat from Canada to France, climbed and skied the highest mountain in Iraq, and pedaled a fat bike 745 miles across the Arctic. Even that name鈥Laval St. Germain. It鈥檚 almost too good to be true.听
St. Germain鈥檚听full-time听job helps听him conduct these crazy feats and听explore the far corners of the globe. 鈥淲hen I was 11 or 12, my dad noticed I read a lot of National Geographic,鈥 St. Germain says. 鈥淗e said if I really wanted to see those places in the magazines, I should become a pilot. So听I did.鈥 He started studying for his license when he was 15 and was flying floatplanes and forest-fire-control planes in northern Canada by the time he was 17, what he describes as听鈥渢he typical Canadian bush-pilot life.鈥 At 21, he started working for Canadian North Airlines, a position that not only requires him to fly all over the world听but also grants him several days off between on-duty stretches鈥攖ime he uses to train and knock out extensive solo expeditions.
Aside from offering sage career advice, St. Germain鈥檚 father also sparked his longing for exploration, feeding him classic books like Tarzan, Moby Dick, and White Fang when he was a kid. In the past three decades, St. Germain has used this passion to build听a thick adventure r茅sum茅. He was without supplemental oxygen, working his way up the Tibetan side听in 2010. He鈥檚 scaled听the highest peak on all seven continents听and trekked across fields of land mines听to summit and ski Iraq鈥檚 tallest peak, 11,847-foot .
Yet听these thrilling adventures don鈥檛 always go as planned. First example: he lost three fingers on his right hand to frostbite while summiting Everest. However, St. Germain insists that having those fingers amputated听鈥渨asn鈥檛 a big deal. Once you freeze it, you can鈥檛 feel it.鈥 In听November 2018, he听attempted to ski to the South Pole and climb Antarctica鈥檚 tallest peak, 16,050-foot听Mount Vinson. But his sled, warped due to a manufacturing flaw,听kept taking a hard right turn every time he tried to ski forward, forcing him to quit 13 days and 124 miles听into the projected 745-mile cross-country trip. St. Germain ditched the faulty sled and went ahead and climbed Mount Vinson听but will have to go back to finish skiing across the continent before he can close the book on that expedition. He鈥檚 hoping to return听next year.听
Even that name鈥擫aval St. Germain. It鈥檚 almost too good to be true.听
Despite overcoming these obstacles, St. Germain says the adventures he鈥檚 most proud of are the ones that didn鈥檛 make the papers. 鈥淚 look back on some of the tough trips my wife, Janet, and I took with our kids before they were even teens听and am amazed we pulled them off,鈥 St. Germain says. 鈥淎 multi-day bike tour across the Arctic above tree line with grizzly bears and black flies,听taking them to Namibia to climb in the desert, or to Guyana to explore one of the last-frontier rainforests in the world. Showing our kids they can do tough stuff in the outdoors, that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 most proud of.鈥
St. Germain and his wife put a lot of energy into instilling a sense of adventure in their children, just as his own father did for him. Tragically, the couple lost their oldest child, Richard, to a canoeing accident on the Makenzie River in Canada five years ago. He was just 21 and beginning his own career听as a bush pilot. 鈥淭he outdoors has given us a lot as a family, but it鈥檚 taken a lot away, too,鈥 St. Germain says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the toughest thing we鈥檝e ever been through, and it鈥檚 still tough. But it reinforced my desperate struggle to cram a lot into my life. I use the outdoors as a therapy. Struggling out there, it鈥檚 cathartic.鈥 Since that devastating event, St. Germain has used his expeditions as a way to help others. He delivered a check for $5,000 to the search and rescue team on the Mackenzie River during his long-distance听Arctic fat-bike ride last spring. His row across the Atlantic raised more than $60,000 for the .
In order to stay in shape for these intense feats, St. Germain says he rarely indulges in a rest day. 鈥淏asically, I鈥檓 always training,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 my lifestyle more than anything.鈥 He has听never hired听a coach, and while he does schedule in up to three days of weight training a week, he refuses to do cardio indoors. Instead听he rides his bike nine miles听to work each way, which he calls 鈥渇ree training,鈥 and plans out epic combo听days, where he peddles to the Rockies, stashes his bike, summits a mountain, and rides home. In the winter, he听does something similar with a fat bike and telemark skis.
St. Germain also has a circuit in his hometown of Calgary that involves biking between five different sets of outdoor听stairs and running five reps on each. 鈥淚 love training on stairs, because it鈥檚 low impact and you get a lot of bang for your buck,鈥 he says, adding that his greatest stair workout happened in China when he was picking up a plane for his airline. 鈥淚 ran 7,000 steps cut into the side of Mount Tai,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was like heaven.鈥
Currently, St. Germain is planning a 186-mile听gravel ride from Calgary to Fernie, a city deep within British Columbia鈥檚 mountains. He also has a bigger expedition on the horizon that he鈥檚 reluctant to talk about because it鈥檚 in a geopolitical hot zone and the logistics aren鈥檛 set in stone. It鈥檚听likely bound to be difficult and dangerous, something that would fit into the pages of the classic literature he devoured as a child. 鈥淚 love sticking my neck out and embracing discomfort,鈥澨齋t. Germain says.听鈥淭he whole world is designed to avoid discomfort right now, but anything that鈥檚 worth doing will be uncomfortable and challenging.鈥