Afghanistan’s extreme geography attracts extreme sports
PANJSHIR, Afghanistan — On a recent sunny morning in northern Afghanistan, excited children and bemused policemen lined the banks of a fast-flowing river to watch a group of Europeans in multicolored kayaks navigate the white water. A drone-mounted camera also followed the kayakers’ progress, buzzing and hovering above them like a mosquito.
The boys, who were on their way to school, squealed and raced along the rocks as they watched the unusual spectacle — no kayakers had ever come to the peaceful Panjshir Valley, some 140 kilometres (95 miles) north of the Afghan capital, Kabul.
But according to Callum Strong, a Scot who recently graduated with a geology degree from Edinburgh University, Panjshir River offers some of the best kayaking in the world.
Together with three friends, he spends all his spare time and money travelling the globe in search of the best white water. Panjshir looked promising on the map — that Afghanistan is grappling with a 15-year insurgency was not going to deter them.