Background to Kingsley Holgate
The Zulus call Kingsley “Nondwayisa uya Shinga” -
the African Lilly Trotter – a water bird that stalks the
rivers of Africa on long legs. Quite an apt name for someone who
has become one of Africa’s greatest present day explorers.
Unlike many of Africa’s early explorers who had scant regard
for local tribes, etiquette and custom, Kingsley has immersed
himself in African cultures especially that of the Zulu. Kingsley
is a founder member of Shakaland, South Africa’s leading
Zulu cultural attraction, a living museum situated in the heart
of Zululand. Kingsley has spent much of his life exploring the
African Continent in the footsteps of the early explorers (see
his latest book, Africa In The Footsteps of the Greatest Explorers).
The first of which was an epic journey from Cape to Cairo, in
inflatable boats and back-up four wheel drive vehicles, along
Africa’s major waterways – registered with the Royal
Geographical Society as a World First.
Considered a bit of David Livingstone himself Kingsley Holgate
the Grey Beard of African Adventure is one of Africa’s most
colourful Modern day Explorers. Well known on local and National
Geographic Television, Kingsley is also a fellow of the Royal
Geographical Society and a well-known author. His adventures many
of which are world firsts include his son Ross and wife Gill.
As a family they completed a 1993 Cape to Cairo journey in open
boats, the Zambezi and Congo Rivers in the footsteps of Livingstone
and Stanley and a circumnavigation of Lake Turkana the
world’s largest desert lake. Following in the footsteps
of the early explorers the Holgate family has survived countless
attacks of Malaria, the threat of bandits, wild animals and the
danger of unexploded landmines.
Called ‘Extreme Latitude’ and travelling on foot,
by bicycle, bullock cart, dugout and Land Rover Kingsley Holgate
and his adventurous family have circumnavigated the world by land
following the Tropic of Capricorn, a journey that became a seven
part series on the National Geographic channel was highlighted
in the Captain Morgan commercial and resulted in a successful
book called “Following The Invisible Line – Capricorn”.
Their most recently completed Odyssey was called the African Rainbow
Expedition. A journey by Land Rover convoy, Arab sailing dhow
and inflatable boats up the East Coast of Africa from Durban to
the Somali border and back. This One Net One Life expedition in
which tens of thousands of mosquito nets were distributed to pregnant
mothers and children under the age of five was the most successful
ever undertaken in Support of Malaria Prevention.