The World of Extreme Overlanding
Self Drive Expeditions with WBB
We are expedition people! We love what we do and pushing boundaries is intrinsic to our travel – both within & outside! We believe in life-changing experiences and offer expeditionary journeys to remote lands and waters across the globe with an overt intent to recalibrate our lens for life. We are a coming together of many years spent exploring small and big trails, mud tracks and roads, seas and oceans, taking the less-trodden paths, coping with surprises and hiccups – all along in an attempt to make travel an experience and learning of a lifetime.
We are not a tour company
We aren’t a tour company, because our expeditions are not merely entertainment. They are designed to challenge and push individuals into areas that reveal their true self, while appreciating nature and culture that few people have access to. And extreme overlanding is the perfect medium to do so. The goal at WBB is to do more than return a better driver (which you most certainly will be). The aim is to return a more introspective, humble and internally enlightened person. Only then do we consider a journey complete.
Founded by Nidhi Salgame Tiwari (the 1st woman to drive a trans-continental distance from Delhi to London and the 1st Indian to drive to the Pole of Cold in North-Eastern Siberia) and Col. Satender Malik, SM, Retd. (24 years of service in the army, with many years of extreme terrain driving in Kashmir, Sikkim, Congo and beyond), WBB is a coming together of many years of outdoors, adventure, driving and expeditionary experiences.
What is an XOL (Extreme Overland)?
Extreme Overland drives are self-drive expeditions that head out to remote lands. Inherently expeditionary in nature it needs attributes such as self-reliance, adaptability, resilience, resolve etc. Historically this domain has evolved from the few forgotten wanderers who risked it all to travel the globe on terrain they did not know of and mingling with cultures they had no idea about while taking uncertainty and ambiguity in their stride.