Sand Ship Discovery was an epic around-the-world drive in the early 1980s. But after a political upheaval forced the drivers to skip 1 mile of the trip, the original duo returned this year to complete the ‘final mile.’
It took more than 56,000 miles and five years to drive an American-made vehicle around the world on a north-south course (minus Antarctica). This feat involved the first land crossing of the Darién Gap by motor vehicle, which stretched 125 miles. This section alone took the team 741 days to traverse.
After that, there was still 1 mile of the land route remaining. And it took nearly 30 years to finish that final mile. The husband-wife team of Loren and Patricia Upton completed it on May 3, 2018.
All images courtesy of Outback of Beyond Adventures.
Sand Ship Discovery: An Around-The-World Epic
The Uptons accomplished this amazing feat in a 1966 CJ-5 Kaiser Corporation Jeep. They christened it the Sand Ship Discovery.
Loren turned 83 this year, and his health is fading. Patricia, along with Loren’s family and friends, knew it was now or never to go back and complete the original goal.
(Mostly) Around-The-World Goal
Biggest Challenge: The Darién Gap
The Last Remaining Mile
Prepping for the Final Mile
Final Mile Complications
Driving the Final Mile
Timeline
- June 15, 1984: Loren set off from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska
- October 1984: Loren arrived in Panama
- 1985–1986: Patricia joined the expedition, Darién Gap crossing
- March 4, 1987: Team arrived in the small river town of Rio Sucio, Colombia
- 1987: Reached furthest south point on the South American Continent, 39 miles south of Punta Arenas, Chile
- 1987: Reached southernmost point of Argentine province Tierra del Fuego, just over 71 miles east and slightly south of Ushuaia, Argentina
- August 1987: Shipment and travel on Greek freighter from Chile to Cape Town, South Africa
- September 1987: Drove farther south to Cape Agulhas, the southernmost road in Africa
- June 24, 1988: Snapped right rear axle shaft in the Sahara Desert; took 70 days of epic adventures/misadventures to get moving again
- October 1988: Could not navigate the political situation to travel the 1 mile from Israeli-occupied West Bank into Jordan
- June 16, 1989: Patricia left Loren and the Jeep in England to spend summer in America with her mother
- July 4, 1989: Completed trip at the northernmost road in Slettnes Lighthouse near Gamvik, Norway
- February 2, 2018: Jeep refurbishment completed
- February 4, 2018: Jeep shipped
- April 9, 2018: Loren and Patricia arrived in Tel Aviv, Israel
- April 26, 2018: Jeep cleared customs in Israel but would not run
- May 3, 2018, 2:20 p.m. Jordanian Time: Final mile completed