(front), Andrew Towne (middle), and John Peterson (rear) during "The Impossible Row" in 2019. While studying abroad in Kenya in 2003, Towne climbed
Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest peak in
Africa. He would later scale each of the remaining
Seven Summits (the highest mountains on each continent) in the following 14 years. In 2011, he climbed
Aconcagua in
South America and the
Carstensz Pyramid in
Oceania. The following year, he reached the peaks of
Denali in
North America and
Mount Elbrus in
Europe. In 2015, he completed
Vinson Massif in Antarctica. That year, he also made his first attempt to climb
Mount Everest, but was forced to suspend the trip after surviving the
2015 Mount Everest avalanches caused by the 7.8-magnitude
Gorkha earthquake. He also assisted in the treatment of injured climbers after the avalanche. In 2017, Towne was introduced to Icelandic ocean rower
Fiann Paul, who discussed the idea of rowing the Drake Passage from the southern tip of South America (Cape Horn) to Antarctica. Paul recruited South African athlete
Cameron Bellamy and Scottish rower Jamie Douglas-Hamilton. The three had previously set world records for rowing across the
Indian Ocean in 2014. Towne recruited two fellow Yale alumni: swimmer and endurance athlete
Colin O'Brady and former Yale rowing captain John Petersen. Between December 13 and 25, 2019, the six men rowed across the Drake Passage in a 29-foot vessel, enduring freezing temperatures, rain, snow, and waves up to 30 feet in height. The rowers worked in 90-minute shifts for 24 hours a day, traveling 665 land miles. ==World records==