
Dispatch 001 · Patagonia
Six days at the edge of the ice field.
A traverse from El Chaltén to the Viedma glacier — wind, granite, and the strange quiet that only exists where the weather decides the day. Notes from the field.
Continue reading →
I design and lead a limited number of small-group expeditions each year, in places I have personally explored, trained in, and vetted. Carefully planned. Intentionally small.
Vol. I · This Season
A small number of openings each year. Each one is personally scouted and personally led.

Indonesia
Twelve days aboard the Pindito liveaboard through one of Indonesia's most remote marine corridors — volcanic islands, untouched reefs, schooling pelagics, and the chance of blue, sperm and pilot whales passing through.

French Polynesia
Seven days on the South Pacific island of Mo'orea, snorkeling alongside humpback whales as they migrate from Antarctica to breed and give birth in the warm waters of French Polynesia.

Iceland
A condensed Iceland adventure: Golden Circle classics, South Coast waterfalls, glacier hiking, Silfra snorkeling, and the magical Snæfellsnes peninsula.

— About the Guide
I design and lead small-group expeditions to remote environments I have personally explored, trained in, and vetted. Every journey is intentionally limited in size and frequency to preserve quality, safety, and authenticity.
I meet travellers at the destination and lead the expedition myself. There is no anonymous handover, no rotating staff, no large operational layer between you and the place we have come to see.
Where local knowledge is essential, I work with a small number of trusted local guides — always under All Latitude standards. Never as a network.
— Expedition philosophy
All Latitude is not a tour operator. It is a personal expedition practice. A small number of trips, each shaped by hand.
4–8
Typical group
10
Hard cap
1
Lead guide
Small groups let me read the terrain, the weather and the people. The right call is easier to make when I know everyone by name.
Four to eight travellers move as one. We eat at one table, walk at one pace, and the trip stays shared instead of performed.
On glaciers, in cold water and around wildlife, the person guiding you should know you. That is not possible in groups of thirty.
Fewer people, smaller vehicles, quieter camps. The places we go deserve to be left the way we found them.
— Selected ground

South America
Granite spires, ice fields and the wind at the end of the continent.

Arctic
Calving glaciers, fjord crossings and Inuit hunting grounds.

Central Asia
Steppe horsemen, Altai ridgelines and an unbroken horizon.

Polar South
The seventh continent — ice shelves, leopard seals and silence.

Southern Africa
Skeleton coast, red dunes and one of Earth's oldest deserts.

North Atlantic
Highland traverse — black sand, geothermal valleys, raw weather.
— Field journal

Dispatch 001 · Patagonia
A traverse from El Chaltén to the Viedma glacier — wind, granite, and the strange quiet that only exists where the weather decides the day. Notes from the field.
Continue reading →— Speak directly
Every expedition begins with a conversation. Tell me where you'd like to go and when — I'll write back personally.
Personally led · Small groups only · All Latitude