We are doing PanAm Trip because the Pan-American route is one of the clearest ways to experience two continents slowly by road. The goal is not a speed run or a packaged tour; it is a long, documented van expedition that others can follow, meet, support, or join in their own rigs.
One road runs almost the entire length of two continents — from the Arctic Ocean at the top of Alaska to the bottom of Patagonia. Most people never stop to think that you can, in theory, just… drive it. We couldn’t stop thinking about it.
So we built a van that could live anywhere, spent a couple of years shaking it down across the coldest, most remote corners of the northeast, and pointed it at a date: April 2028.
We want to drive all of it — Arctic tundra, the Pacific coast, Central American jungle, the high Andes, and the wind-scoured roads of Patagonia. Not as a race to the bottom, but slowly: staying an extra week, taking the long way, learning a few words, sharing a fire.
And we don’t want to do it alone. That’s the whole idea of the convoy — the people who follow along, intercept us at a waypoint, caravan a leg in their own rig, or just root for the van from their inbox.
If any of that stirs something in you, you’re already one of us. Join the list, and come along.
Why drive from Alaska to Patagonia?
Because the route is both simple and enormous: start near the Arctic Ocean, keep pointing south, and watch the continent change one road day at a time. That clarity is what made the idea impossible to shake.
How can other people come along?
The convoy is broad by design. Some people will follow the dispatches, some will meet us at a waypoint, some will caravan a stretch in their own vehicle, and some will help keep the road funded from home.