12/01/2025
🥾 In 2013, alongside walking partners, Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Paul Salopek set out from the Rift Valley of Ethiopia—one of cradles of humankind—to retrace, on foot, the dawn voyage of the earliest Homo sapiens who first walked out of Africa during the Stone Age.
For 13 years, Paul has paced off 17,000 miles of those ancestral trails, calipering Arabian deserts, empty Central Asian steppes, icy Himalayan peaks, Burmese war zones, and the vastness of mainland China.
✍️ Out of Eden Walk is a continuous storytelling journey: Paul has never left his walking trail to return to the United States.
Hence, Paul’s recent landfall in Alaska, after crossing the Pacific Ocean from Japan on a container ship, marks a threshold in this voyage of slow journalism: The beginning of the final phase of a 38,000-kilometer odyssey in the wake of our roving ancestors.
In 2026, Paul will need your help in documenting a changing Americas on his ramble south to reach our species’ original “land’s end” in Tierra del Fuego.
The Walk is not just a feat of physical endurance. Its core mission is more meaningful: To chronicle the insights of people met en route, from Djiboutian camel shepherds to Kazakh geophysicists, from Chinese poets to Iñupiat artisans, building a nuanced record of human life in the early 21st century and touching on pressing dilemmas of our day—war, mass migration, spiritual isolation, sustainability, cultural adaptation, and more—as seen from boot level, with a creative output that so far approaches a million words and tens of thousands of images.
Independent journalism requires public support.
🌱 Join our annual crowdfunder today. 100% of funds raised go toward our mission to connect people across borders through the power of slow storytelling.
Out of Eden Walk is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
🔗 To learn more and donate, please visit outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign
Thank you! 🙏
Pictured: Photos by Paul Salopek from Out of Eden Walk Chapter 1: Out of Africa, which includes Ethiopia, Djibouti, and a crossing of the Red Sea.
Learn the stories behind these images: Visit www.outofedenwalk.org to read Chapter 1’s dispatches from the trail ✍️