IPSWICH adventurer Alan Davison has been named Australian Geographic Society’s 2026 Adventurer of the Year after completing an extraordinary 13,381-kilometre solo kayaking expedition through the Murray-Darling Basin
One of the longest and most demanding inland paddling journeys undertaken in recent Australian history earned him the annual Australian Geographic Society Award.
It is Australia’s longest-running and most prestigious honours celebrating exploration and adventure, recognising Australians whose resilience, passion and determination continue to redefine what is possible.
Davison spent 276 days traversing Australia’s largest river system, paddling an astonishing 6356 kilometres upstream while navigating weirs, floodplains, dried river channels, portages and constantly changing conditions across the Condamine, Balonne, Bokhara, Barwon, Darling, Murrumbidgee, Murray, Macintyre and Coorong waterways.
Even more remarkably, the entire expedition was completed without sponsorship, support crews or external funding.
“I certainly didn’t expect any of this,” Davison said.
“Even being nominated was unexpected and I definitely didn’t think I’d win.
“It’s extremely humbling, especially when you look at the calibre of previous recipients.”
Davison originally intended to paddle just 4000 kilometres from Warwick to South Australia, but as the journey grew he never became overwhelmed by the enormity of the challenge.
“I just focused on one day at a time,” he said.
“It probably didn’t really sink in how big it was until afterwards when I started analysing the trip. Then I realised just how massive it actually was.”
The Darling River presented another obstacle altogether, rather than fast-moving water, exceptionally low river levels forced Davison to repeatedly drag his kayak over submerged trees, rocky reefs and shallow sections.
The weather also dictated much of the expedition with a fierce storm forcing him to shelter near the Lower Lakes in South Australia, while another severe weather system narrowly missed him on the Upper Darling.
“There was almost a tornado near Mungindi,” Davison said. “I think I missed it by about 50 to 100 kilometres. It stripped the leaves off trees and brought down trunks. It would have been really dangerous.”
Although the award now recognises one of Australia’s greatest modern paddling expeditions, Davison said the greatest reward was something far less tangible.
“It’s almost like becoming one with nature,” he said.
“The river has a way of stripping everything back,” he said.
“It was the hardest thing I’ve done, and the most meaningful.”
Notable past winners of the award are Lisa Blair (2023), for her record-breaking solo, unassisted circumnavigation of Antarctica and Tim Jarvis (2013), for recreating Ernest Shackleton’s epic 1916 Antarctic survival journey.
