A Hiking Wheelchair Is Changing People’s Lives

Paratrek enables people with disabilities to enjoy hiking in nature and promotes empowerment, integration and understanding. (Yoav Alon)
Paratrek enables people with disabilities to enjoy hiking in nature and promotes empowerment, integration and understanding. (Yoav Alon)
Black Facts.com



By Naama Barak

Outdoors treks are no longer off limits to the disabled.


That’s thanks, in part, to Omer Zur.

Zur’s dad has been using a wheelchair ever since sustaining grave injuries during his Israeli military service. But his son felt they should not deprive him of a post-army hiking trip — even if it came decades later.

“Thirty-five years after his injury, I decided I’m going to fill in this gap of a post-army trip he never had,” Zur said.

“I did a few things ahead of it. First, I checked whether he’s interested, and he said yes. Second, I thought how we’re going to do it. After checking out all sorts of platforms and chairs that were on the market, we found that none of them suited our needs, so we decided to develop the Trekker,” he said.

In designing this wheelchair for off-road use, they considered the rough terrain and the user experience of both the rider and the escort who would be pushing or pulling the Trekker. The finished product is “very passable and creates the best hiking experience for everyone taking part,” said Zur.

Finally, the duo decided to make the trip a social event.

“We invited 34 friends to come hiking with us — my dad’s childhood friends, his current friends and also friends of mine. We traveled the Taurus Mountains in Turkey for a month,” Zur said.

The hike they chose was challenging. They agreed ahead of time to sleep in tents and sleeping bags and cook on fires.

“We weren’t going to go easy on ourselves. And during that trek, I saw and understood a few things that led me to found Paratrek,” says Zur.

Paratrek founder Omer Zur with his father, using a Trekker on a joint hike. (Yoav Alon)

Inclusive adventures

Paratrek was established in 2014 and operates under the slogan “Where there’s a wheel, there’s a way.”

Using the Trekker, Paratrek specializes in facilitating hiking trips for people with limited mobility and in creating inclusive, empowering outdoor activities for people with and without disabilities.

Paratrek has taken groups across the world, including Australia, Jordan, France and the United States — even to Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, in cooperation with Friends of Access Israel.

“Together, we conquered Kilimanjaro, and together, we also started this journey of spreading our methodology and Trekkers in the U.S. We’re hoping to continue with this great cooperation in the future,” Zur said.

This spring, the organization will hike to the ancient Camino de Santiago pilgrim route in Spain, and immediately after that to the Sinai.

The ‘wheels’ of Paratrek

“The first ‘wheel’ of what we do is research and development, manufacturing and marketing our Trekkers to any kind of organization that provides services to people with disabilities, to any park or nature authority. That’s in order for more people across the world to fulfill their basic right of going out to nature and traveling,” Zur said.

The Paratrek Trekker was created after Omer Zur failed to find a durable and reliable hiking wheelchair. (Yoav Alon)

“The second wheel is the wheel of integration. When people with disabilities are integrated in frameworks of people without disabilities in their day-to-day life, and that framework goes out on a trip — a school trip, a work fun day, a pre-military academy hike, a trade union trip — those people with disabilities usually stay home. We’re here to integrate them, and to allow them to fully take part in these activities, too.”

Paratrek aims to bring together people with and without disabilities in communal, outdoor activities. (Yoav Alon)

The third wheel is education, including lectures, outdoor activities and informal meetings.

“Here, we have two goals. One goal is to bring people with disabilities together with people without disabilities,” says Zur.

“Some 20 percent of the general population in Israel is made up of people with disabilities, and we don’t see them in the public space — the cinema, the supermarket, the restaurant — because we’re a non-accessible society. So we’re trying to get people to meet … and enable relationships to grow.

“The other goal is to help the population without disabilities define their own goals and dreams and identify what prevents them from accomplishing them, and whether these are objective or subjective factors.”

By using the Trekker, people with disabilities can fully join their friends and family in nature. (Yoav Alon)

Holistic approach

Paratrek, which employs some 25 staff members, organizes and facilitates trips and activities for schools, workplaces and programs such as Birthright.

“There are a few organizations that aid people with disabilities to go out to nature, but unlike us, they don’t emphasize the social dimension and the integration,” Zur said.

“There are also all sorts of organizations around the world that sell different platforms and outdoor chairs, but the emphasis is on very specific things that don’t create this holistic, optimal experience for participants.”

The reception to Paratrek has been overwhelming, he said.

“The responses are amazing and moving. They range from simply thrilled, excited and positive responses to people who really lay out to us how Paratrek’s activities and services changed their lives, fulfilled their dreams, or changed their outlook and awareness. It’s really very cool. We, too, are also very moved by the end of each activity.”

Zur hopes to provide such services to more people or organizations that work with people with disabilities. He also wants to spread the word broadly, by marketing the Trekkers and Paratrek’s educational and integrational programs, “and to duplicate our model here elsewhere in the world.”

Produced in association with ISRAEL21c.

Recommended from our partners



The post A Hiking Wheelchair Is Changing People’s Lives appeared first on Zenger News.

Black Facts.com