
A kilt, a cart and a husky: Scotsman learning lots about kindness, Canada on 'adventure of a lifetime'
CBC
With around 5,000 kilometres under his kilt, Michael Yellowlees is on his third pair of shoes.
His dog Luna trotting at his side, Yellowlees has been pushing his improvised cart along the shoulder of the Trans-Canada highway since March.
"We're walking 40 or 50 kilometres every day," Yellowlees said. "But we're living an adventure of a lifetime. Canada is such a beautiful country in so many ways."
Man and dog are walking west to east, from Tofino, B.C., to Cape Spear, N.L., which they hope to reach sometime in December.
Their journey is to raise money for Trees for Life, a charity based in Scotland dedicated to "rewilding" the Scottish Highlands. According to the charity, only 2 per cent of the original forests in the highlands of Scotland remain.
"If you ever go to Scotland, you walk in the Highlands and you'll see it's a very barren landscape," Yellowlees said. "I've always found it a very sad landscape, walking through it. And then you find out it should be forested from coast to coast and be bursting with life, and you start to go, 'OK, well, we need to fix this.'"
Yellowlees hopes to do exactly that, and so far he's collected more than $25,000 on his walk.