Land Rover G4 Challenge starts today

in the thriving metropolis of Bangkok, 18 competitors will today eagerly await the signal announcing the start of the 2006 Land Rover G4 Challenge. The challenge, which lasts 28 days, will see the 16 men and two women climb, kayak, abseil, bike, drive...

in the thriving metropolis of Bangkok, 18 competitors will today eagerly await the signal announcing the start of the 2006 Land Rover G4 Challenge. The challenge, which lasts 28 days, will see the 16 men and two women climb, kayak, abseil, bike, drive off-road and navigate their way over 4,000 km of varied terrain in four countries, across two continents.

The urban competition kicks off the Land Rover G4 Challenge in Bangkok. Then, the competition ventures north into Laos for two weeks of remote activity within the steamy mountains and valleys around the Mekong River, where the jungle, mud, water and river crossings will provide an exciting array of 4x4 driving and multi-sport challenges.

On May 5, the challenge crosses the world to Brazil for the start of stage 3 and a spectacular activity on the crowded beaches of Rio de Janeiro. Then they move on to Bolivia, where it gets tougher. Climbing the Andes mountain range to altitudes of over 4,000 m and taking in such natural wonders as the vast salt plains of Salar de Uyuni, the event reaches its climax with the challenge final in a stunning, remote natural amphitheatre near the city of Tarija.

It is in this setting that the 18 competitors will complete the adventure and the ultimate victor of the 2006 Land Rover G4 Challenge will claim a brand new Range Rover.

"The terrain of Laos and Bolivia will ensure some really challenging driving," Niki Davies, event director for the Land Rover G4 Challenge said. "With very few tarmac roads, competitors will encounter deep rutted tracks, slippery mud crawls, slow winch sections and deep river crossings."

In total there will be 134 Land Rovers working in a variety of roles to support the 2006 Challenge. The competitors will use the all-new Range Rover Sport 4.4-litre V8 HSE in Southeast Asia, the three-door 2.5-litre V6 SE Freelander during the Urban Challenge in Rio de Janeiro and then the wilds of Bolivia will be tackled in the 4.4-litre V8 Discovery 3 HSE.

Training has been intense for the 18 competitors, as they prepared to push themselves to the limit in temperatures ranging from 40ºC to -20ºC and extreme altitude. Their physical fitness, sporting and driving skills will need to be complemented with an ability to apply initiative and strategy to every situation.

The field of 18 competitors includes a fire-fighter, a paramedic, a lifeguard, an army instructor and a graphic designer.

Throughout the challenge, progress of each of the competitors will be available on a daily basis from www.landroverG4challenge.com

The competitors

Argentina: Pablo Burattini
Australia: Tom Landon-Smith
Belgium: Kris Janssens
Brazil: Eleonora Audra
Chile/Costa Rica: Claribett Vega
France: Jean-Baptiste Calais
Germany: Robert Josef Schweiger
Greece: Lambros Argyris
Ireland: Gary Robertson
Italy: Marco Martinuzzi
Japan: Takashi Sugiyama
Netherlands: Thijs Maartense
Russia: Dmitry Timokhin
South Africa: Martin Dreyer
Spain: Gabriel Maldonado
Taiwan: Victor Huang
Turkey: Tolga Senefe
United Kingdom: Brian Reynolds

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.