Daniel Byles

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Dan Byles in the Atlantic 1997
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Dan Byles in the Atlantic 1997

Daniel (Dan) Alan Byles FRGS (British, born 1974) is a mountaineer, sailor, ocean rower, and soon to be polar explorer. In 1997 he took part in the first ever Atlantic Rowing Race, the Port St Charles Barbados Atlantic Rowing Race, successfully crossing the Atlantic Ocean unsupported in a 23 foot wooden rowing boat in 101 days with his mother Janice Meek.

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[edit] Background

Byles spent his early childhood as an expatriate in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia before returning at age nine to the UK Cotswold market town of Chipping Norton. Helped by a government funded scholarship, the Assisted Places Scheme, Byles attended Warwick School. Active in the Combined Cadet Force Byles made an early decision to follow a career in the Military when he won one of ninety Army Sixth Form Scholarships awarded by the Ministry of Defence that year.

After completing A Levels in 1992, Byles took a year out. He spent some time working in his parents’ restaurant before travelling to Southeast Asia to backpack through Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore. During this trip, he spent a month studying Vipassana meditation at the Wat Ram Poeng [1] Buddhist monastery in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand.

Returning to England in 1993, Byles was awarded one of thirty Army Cadetships [2], a university scholarship scheme no longer open to non medical/dental students. He attended the University of Leeds from 1993 – 1996, where he earned a 2.1 BA Joint Honours in Economics and Management Studies.

[edit] Military career

Following university, Byles attended Commissioning Course 963 at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, where he won the Defence and International Affairs Essay Prize [3]. Although initially sponsored by the The Light Infantry Byles changed his mind while at Sandhurst, choosing instead to accept a Regular Commission with the Royal Army Medical Corps as a Medical Support Officer [4]. Immediately after graduating from Sandhurst, Byles was granted six months leave to row across the Atlantic (see below).

During almost nine years of service, Byles served overseas in Germany, the Falkland Islands, Cyprus and Kenya, and operationally in Kosovo and Bosnia. At age 27, Byles was the then youngest major in the British Army. Byles left the military in 2005.

[edit] Adventures and expeditions

Byles has taken part in minor expeditions all over the world including Canada, Bavaria, the Alps, Peru and Borneo.

[edit] Major mountaineering expeditions


[edit] Atlantic rowing race 1997

In 1995 Byles was asked by a school friend to join him in entering the first ever Atlantic Rowing Race. He accepted, but his friend subsequently had to withdraw from the team. Byles asked his mother Janice Meek to be his team mate instead. Despite neither of them being rowers or sailors, she accepted and they went on to successfully row 3044 nautical miles from Tenerife to Barbados in their boat Carpe Diem. Their unsupported crossing took 100 days, 18 hours and 57 minutes. The story of their adventure has been recorded in at least three Chicken Soup for the Soul books.

In rowing across the Atlantic, the pair achieved two Guinness World Records: they became the first mother and son team to row any ocean [5]; and at 53 Meek became the oldest person at the time to row any ocean [6], although since 2005 this record has been held by Pavel Rezvoy (66) [7].

[edit] Atlantic rowing race support yacht 2005

In 2005, Byles lent his experience to a new generation of ocean rowers when he joined the crew of the support yacht Aurora for the 2005 Atlantic Rowing Race, spending 76 days at sea.

[edit] Polar race 2007

Ten years after their successful ocean row, Byles and his mother are planning to set two additional world records in the Arctic. The mother and son team, along with team mate Richard Profit, are due to take part in the Polar Race 2007 in April 2007. This will involve walking and skiing 350 miles from Resolute Bay in Canada to the Magnetic North Pole. If successful they will set a new world record as the first mother and son team ever to achieve this feat, and Janice Meek will be the oldest woman to do so.

[edit] Charities and organisations

Returning to the UK after rowing the Atlantic, Byles’ achievement was recognised when he was made a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.

Byles is a founding trustee of The Carpe Diem Trust [8], a charity aimed at helping ordinary people to undertake extraordinary achievements.

[edit] Guinness world records

[edit] Previous records

In 2006 Byles and his mother Janice Meek were belatedly awarded a Guinness World Record certificate for being the first mother and son team to row any ocean.

[edit] Future record attempts

In April 2007, Byles and his mother Janice Meek aim to become the first mother and son team to walk/ski to any Pole.

[edit] External Links

[edit] References