The Team
Michael Ladden
Growing up in the rural farm country of New England, you’re bound to see many Jeeps, trucks, and tractors. In fact, many people have them, not only for daily transportation but for working on and around their properties, and the Ladden family was no exception. Fascinated from a very early age while watching his dad with his Jeeps and Land Cruisers, it’s no wonder that Michael’s first word was not “mom” or “dad” but “Jeep.” And thus began his love of the outdoors and all things that “go.”
Throughout high school and college, Michael spent most of his free time camping, cycling, hiking, and exploring the United States. However, in the early 1990s, in a decision that would forever change his future, he and a coworker quit their well paid, comfortable office jobs and bought one-way tickets to Africa. They spent a year exploring north, east, and central Africa. Traveling by trains, buses, camels, hitchhiking, and a few other various means of transportation, it was here that Michael spotted and fell in love with his first Land Rover.
Upon returning home to the States, Michael searched until finally finding a 1965 Series IIA Land Rover to call his own. Until this point, the vehicle had only had one owner and had spent its life on a potato farm in Idaho. This Land Rover soon became the first of many overland trucks, particularly Land Rovers, that Michael would build, restore, and maintain over the years.
In 1996, Michael and longtime friend Paul Shumway co-founded Drive the Globe Overland Adventures. In the early years, they focused on organizing self-driven adventures for their customers but eventually began consulting for larger expeditions. Personally, Michael and Paul visited every province in Canada, completed several border-to-border expeditions in Northern Canada, and traveled to the Arctic Circle.
In early 2000, broadening their horizons, Michael and Paul created the “Vintage Rovers Across Africa” Expedition. This expedition would see eight men in four vintage Land Rovers travel more than Eight thousand miles across West Africa. Fraught with all of the challenges that come with driving 30+ year-old vehicles across the rugged and remote terrain of the Sahara, Timbuktu, and the Atlantic coastline, the group eventually visited ten countries on their way from Morocco to the Ivory Coast.
While planning his next big adventure, Michael wandered from the Land Rover marquee and bought a Mercedes Unimog with the goal of completing the Pan American highway. Ultimately, that trip never came to fruition. Spending most of the 2000s returning to a more structured life in business, Michael co-founded and became CEO of the Keller Williams Real Estate franchise in Connecticut, where today he still remains a partner. This company has successfully grown to one of the largest real estate firms in New England and produces more than a billion dollars of sales each year.
Never one to sit still, during this time, Michael also founded McLadden Restaurant Group opening four Irish pubs in Connecticut and Massachusetts. Established in 2009, he later sold the restaurant group in 2019.
Despite this return to a more conventional living, adventure was never far from Michael’s mind. After a dozen years of working long days in the corporate world, Michael sold his house and most of his possessions and moved into his 1979 Mercedes Unimog. He added an overland expedition trailer and set out on an around the world expedition, planning to travel to all seven continents. This ~220,000-mile adventure that Michael anticipated would take five years to complete was as perfect as a plan could be until the pandemic hit.
Like many overlanders whose journeys were “in progress” when COVID came about, Michael’s plan has been altered, but his journey did not come to a halt. In the spring of 2021, Michael sold his Unimog and travel trailer, and bought, built, and moved into a 1994 Stewart & Stevenson (former) army truck. Trapped by border closures and shipping difficulties, he is currently exploring North & Central America.
Most recently, Michael has added a KTM adventure motorcycle to the rear of his expedition truck and spent the winter exploring the back roads and tracks of Baja California Sur, Mexico, on two wheels as well as four.
In addition to his four- and two-wheel drive overland adventures, Michael is a private pilot and an avid cyclist, with the goal of pedaling more miles each year than he drives. He is currently writing a book about his African adventures.
Eric Archer
Eric lived in Hanson, Massachusetts that is best known as the birthplace of Ocean Spray Cranberries, and not much else. His family lived in a 200 year old farmhouse with creaky floors, questionable heat, five fireplaces and enough land to roam. Constantly outside, he fell into brooks and streams, broke windows in abandoned building, picked colorful berries….kid stuff. In his early teens he became fascinated with all things that had wheels: Bicycles, Unicycles and of course a woods car with no brakes. He quickly learned the value of brakes after the unintentional removal of a few saplings. Recognizing he had a knack for mechanical things he fixed the brakes and started repairing bicycles for the neighborhood kids and passerby’s who noticed his “Bicycles Repaired” sign.
Being a Boy Scout who achieved the rank of Eagle Scout he was exposed to camping, hiking, canoeing and survival weekends. He attended college at Plymouth State University and figured out how to cycle, camp, hike, ski while still leaving just barely enough time to graduate! After graduation he postponed getting a real job and cycled across the United States with two friends. The adventure brought them from Rockport MA to Washington State (against the prevailing winds) then down the coast to San Francisco was better than any post graduate degree!
He’s an avid traveler and adventurer who has been scuba diving throughout New England and the Caribbean, Bungee jumped over Victoria Falls, Hiked to Machu Piccho, Gravel cycled around Hekla volcano in Iceland, Sighted the Big 5 in Kruger National Park and participated in numerous Land Rover events (he’s the proud owner of five vintage Land Rovers).
A retired, former executive of national staffing and recruiting firms, he currently fills his days with Road, Gravel and Mountain bike cycling (clocking 10,000 miles a year) and Land Rover repairs and events.
A serious cycling hobbyist he has yet to find a croissant or muffin shop that is not worthy of a look see. Focused more on the journey, sights, people, and experience; speed, elevation gain, cadence, heart rate and watts come along for the ride!!