Francis Tapon (born March 10, 1970) is an author, global nomad, and public speaker. He has walked across the United States four times via its three major mountain ranges. He also walked across Spain twice. He was the first person to do a round-trip backpacking the Continental Divide Trail. In addition, he thru-hiked the Pacific Crest Trail and Appalachian Trail southbound. He has traveled to over 100 countries of the world.[1] Lastly, he is the author of the self-help travelogue Hike Your Own Hike and the travel narrativeThe Hidden Europe: What Eastern Europeans Can Teach Us.[citation needed] He traveled to all 54 African countries from 2013 to 2018 and climbed to the highest point of 50 of those countries.[2][3] In 2019, he was inducted into the California Outdoors Hall of Fame.[4]
In 2007, he became the first person to walk from Mexico to Canada and back to Mexico along the Continental Divide Trail.[16][17][18][19][20]
This seven-month journey spanned over 5,600 miles.[21] Francis took the most circuitous, scenic, high, difficult route north and while returning south took the more expedient route on the way down.[22] He hiked ultralight since his pack, without food and water, weighed under 6 lbs (less than 3 kg).[23][24]National Geographic listed Francis Tapon's round trip on the Continental Divide Trail among the most notable feats of 2007.[25][26]
In 2008–2011, he visited over 40 European countries, including all the Eastern European ones.[28][29][30] He focused on finding Eastern European innovations.[31][32][33]
In 2012, he summed up his travels to date and shared his lessons in his TEDx talk entitled, "How and Why Travel Transforms You." It has over 100,000 views.[34]
In March 2013, he entered Morocco and began a five-year trip to all 54 African countries. He never left the African continent. Half way through his trip, he met and married a Cameroonian, Rejoice Tapon, who traveled 31 of African countries with him.[35][36]
In October 2018, Tapon returned to a TEDx stage. He had just returned from 5.5 years of nonstop overland travel through all 54 African countries. Tapon shared a story about an African girl who was a "black sheep" in her society and what we can learn from it.[37]
He returned to the United States in 2018. He plans to write his third book based on the experience. He filmed extensively and has raised over $24,000 to produce a pilot TV episode by November 2014.[38][39]Amazon.com and Lincoln Mercury selected him as the best example of someone who is fulfilling the dream of traveling the world.[40]
In January 2019, he was inducted in the California Outdoors Hall of Fame, which includes John Muir and Ansel Adams.[41]
Books
Tapon is the author of the WanderLearn Series, which is a series of books about his adventures.[42] He has written two books so far:
Tapon, Francis (2006), Hike Your Own Hike: 7 Life Lessons from Backpacking Across America, 351 pages, ISBN978-0-9765812-0-8.
Tapon, Francis (2012), The Hidden Europe: What Eastern Europeans Can Teach Us, 736 pages, ISBN978-0976581222.
He also wrote two chapters in Hikers' Stories From the Appalachian Trail, edited by Kathryn Fulton, ISBN978-0811712835 (2012) Stackpole Books. The chapters are entitled "The Final Stretch" and "A Thru-hiker's Motivation: Not Enlightenment, Just Ice Cream."
References
^Krasny, Michael. (December 28, 2011). "National radio interview". KQED, San Francisco Public Radio, NPR affiliate. Retrieved November 1, 2013.
^M. Biggers, Ashley. (March 2008) "There & Back Again", New Mexico Magazine
^Bastone, Kelly (August 2008) "Taking the High Way: Thru-hiking the Continental Divide Trail," 5280, pp. 70–73. Denver magazine reports on Francis Tapon's first-ever yo-yo of the CDT.
^Amazon.com & Lincoln Mercury did a video profile of people who doing were doing 25 classic dreams Video excerpt of the 'My Dream' campaign Vimeo.com. Retrieved November 2, 2013.