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Life.Culture.Discovery.

The global adventurer, Arctic explorer and boat builder moored in Hong Kong looking for his next expedition

  • Pierre Sauvadet talks about discovering a passion for adventure as a child, what draws him to the Arctic and why he feels at home in his Hong Kong ‘village’

Reading Time:6 minutes
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Pierre Sauvadet on his boat moored at Causeway Bay Typhoon Shelter. 
31JUL23 SCMP / Jonathan Wong



My father was an engineer and after World War II he helped at a regional level with the modernisation of telecommunications in France. My mother was a medical doctor. I was born in Thiers, Puy-de-Dome, in central France, in 1960, and have a sister who is a couple of years older.

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Although my parents worked in the city, I grew up in the countryside and went to a local school. As a child, I had a passion for geography. I was also quite naughty and from the age of about 12 or 13, I started travelling by myself.

I’d jump on a train – I had to evade the ticket inspector because I didn’t have the money for a ticket – and see how far I could get. Often, I got caught at the border and the police would send me back home. I went all over Europe like this.

My other passion was drawing, and I went to l’ecole des Beaux Arts de Clermont-Ferrand. As soon as I turned 18, I got my own passport. My passion for travelling was stronger than my passion for drawing and I quit school and went to Canada. Of course, my parents weren’t too happy about that.

Sauvadet in Resolute Bay, in the Canadian Artic, in 2012. Photo: Pierre Sauvadet
Sauvadet in Resolute Bay, in the Canadian Artic, in 2012. Photo: Pierre Sauvadet

Pole to pole

I got a job in the north of Canada assisting a vet on a dogsled farm. I was responsible for feeding and looking after the dogs. That was my first taste of life in the north and I’ve loved it ever since.

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