Expedition aims to drive to both poles, having 'learned a lot' from past mishaps
The Transglobal Car Expedition is back in the N.W.T. — with intentions to circle the entire globe by vehicle now — roughly two years after making headlines for violating airspace rules and sinking a truck.
![Expedition aims to drive to both poles, having 'learned a lot' from past mishaps](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7107072.1707330358!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/andrew-comrie-picard.jpg)
![Andrew Comrie-Picard, from Edmonton, is one of the core members of the Transglobal Car Expedition. The international team is using a fleet of 12 vehicles to travel around the world using wheeled vehicles, including this modified truck that'll take from from Yellowknife to Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. A man in a blue winter coat and a navy hat stands, with his hand resting on a big truck with a cab attached to the back.](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7107072.1707330358!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/andrew-comrie-picard.jpg)
The Transglobal Car Expedition is back in the N.W.T. — with intentions to circle the entire globe by vehicle now — roughly two years after making headlines for violating airspace rules and sinking a truck.