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Kate Leeming (born 1967) is an Australian extreme endurance cyclist and explorer, known for several long distance cycling expeditions. She has cycled more than twice around the world at the equator.[1]

Dr.
Kate Leeming
Kate Leeming, cyclist
Born1967 (age 56–57)
NationalityAustralian
Occupation(s)Cyclist, explorer, real tennis professional
Notable workOut There and Back (2007, book), Njinga (2014, book and film), Diamonds in the Sand (2021, TV series)

Background

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Leeming was raised in Northam, rural Western Australia, graduating from the University of Western Australia in the 1980s and qualifying as a teacher (Geography and Physical Education). She spent 12 years (1990-2002) in the UK and France, initially as a hockey player, then a fitness trainer before becoming a Real Tennis professional. During this time she cycled 15,000 kilometres (9,300 mi) through Europe, from Spain to Turkey, and on to Nordkapp, Norway.[2]

Leeming is divorced. As of June 2024, she lives in Melbourne, Australia and is a professional in real tennis at the Royal Melbourne Tennis Club.[3]

Expeditions

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Leeming undertook the "Trans-Siberian Cycle Expedition" (with Greg Yeoman) in 1993, becoming the first woman to cycle across the new Russia unsupported, ending in Vladivostok on a bike that was suffering metal fatigue. The 13,400 km journey took 5 months and included long stretches following the Trans-Siberian railway in swampy conditions. Sponsorship was donated to support the children of Chernobyl.[2]

The "Great Australian Cycle Expedition" (2004/2005) was 25,000 km, largely unaided, and following a circuitous route beginning and ending in Canberra. It included the first bicycle crossing of the Canning Stock Route by a woman. The book Out There and Back (2007) documents the trip.

On 16 August 2010 she became the first person to cycle an unbroken line from Africa's most westerly to its most easterly points; from Pointe des Almadies, Senegal to Cape Hafun, Puntland, Somalia. She cycled 22,040 km over ten months, supported by a small team for some of the journey. Crossing 20 countries in 299 days, access through the final stretch in Somalia was granted by breakaway states, including Puntland where al-Shabaab rebels threatened the convoy. Sponsorship was used to support "Breaking the Cycle in Africa", highlighting development needs and activities of war-torn and poverty-stricken nations, particular the education of girls.[4] A prizewinning documentary awaits wide distribution and the book Njinga documents the journey.[5]

In June 2019, she became the first person to cycle the entire Namibian coastline, 1,621 km largely on sand, crossing extensive dune fields as well as beaches. She began at the mouth of the Kunene River on the Angolan border, and traversed the Skeleton Coast heading south and the Namib Desert to the Orange River mouth on the South African border. She used an all-wheel drive bike with a pinion drive and clutch to the front wheel and oversized tyres. The first of several of these Christini bikes was built in Philadelphia in 2013.[6] The expedition was captured in a documentary series, Diamonds In the Sand, shown on Outside TV, National Geographic Asia and CNBC.[7][8]

Recent expeditions have included "The Andes, the Altiplano & the Atacama" (2020 and 2022, from Cusco, Peru across the Bolivian Altiplano and the Argentinian Puna de Atacama), "The Lights of Ladakh" which brought solar power to the most remote community in the Zanskar Range, the Indian Himalaya (film, 2018[9]), along the course of the Finke River in central Australia, down the Baja Divide in Mexico and training in Svalbard, Northeast Greenland, Arctic Canada and Iceland for a proposed expedition across Antarctica.[1] In February 2023 she completed her first brief Antarctic venture—a 201 km cycling trip from Wolf's Fang Runway to Whichaway Camp, with vehicle support.[10][11] On 19 September 2023 she completed a trip from mainland Australia's most easterly point, Cape Byron, to its most westerly, Steep Point, covering 8,617km.[12]

Sport

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Leeming was ranked number 2 in the world for Real Tennis, reaching the finals in women's doubles four times between 1997 and 2019.[13][1] She is a former Australian women's singles champion, winning 5 titles between 1996 and 2013, and coaches the sport.

Awards

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  • Njinga - Action on Film International Film Festival in Los Angeles, best documentary (cinematography) and best documentary (sport), 2014
  • Honorary Doctor of Education (2016, The University of Western Australia)[4][14]
  • Spirit of Adventure, Australian Geographic Society Award winner (Australian Geographic Society, 2023)
  • World Explorer, 2023[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Adventurer gears up to tackle cycling's final icy frontier". Australian Financial Review. 27 July 2020.
  2. ^ a b Band, Bex (11 July 2016). "Interview with Kate Leeming; Trans-Siberian Cycle Expedition".
  3. ^ "RMTC Pro Shop". Royal Melbourne Tennis Club. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
  4. ^ a b "Kate Leeming". Breaking the Cycle - Education.
  5. ^ "Njinga: Breaking the Cycle in Africa by Kate Leeming". www.vividpublishing.com.au.
  6. ^ "Kate Leeming's All-Wheel Drive Christini Fat Bike -- International Mountain Bike Magazine". Christini All Wheel Drive Bicycles. 7 July 2016.
  7. ^ "Adventurer Kate Leeming Takes on Namibia's Skeleton Coast by Bike". Outside Online. 7 April 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  8. ^ "Explorer Kate Leeming Cycles Namibia's Skeleton Coast in World First". insta360.com. 29 April 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Dr. Kate Leeming's (EC M'13) new film, The Lights of Ladakh". Australian and New Zealand Explorers Club.
  10. ^ "Blog". Breaking the Cycle - Education. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  11. ^ "Icetrek Map PDF Files" (PDF). Dropbox. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  12. ^ @leeming_kate (22 September 2023). "19th September 2023...Made it!" (Tweet) – via Twitter. [user-generated source]
  13. ^ see List of real tennis world champions
  14. ^ "From refugee kid to Young Australian of the Year. Vol. 32 No. 2, Winter PDF Free Download". docplayer.net.
  15. ^ "Kate Leeming OAM – World Explorers Collective". Retrieved 2 January 2024.