There are very few people who have visited every country, which makes it even more unbelievable that one man was able to do so before he turned 40! World traveler Gunnar Garfors shares his favorite moments from his journey in this post originally featured on Business Insider.
In 2008, Gunnar Garfors had visited 85 countries.
It was then that he decided to make it his mission to travel to every single country in the world — 198, to be exact.
He accomplished his goal on May 8, 2013, earning him the title of the youngest person to travel to every country. He was 37 years old.
Crossing the border from Afghanistan back into Iran was anything but easy for Garfors. After waiting outside the Iranian embassy for a considerable amount of time, Garfors had to convince the Iranian ambassador that he was visiting Afghanistan as a tourist and not a spy. Eventually it worked, and the border police let him back into Iran.
While traveling through Antarctica by carrier, Garfors and his guide got stuck in the ice, prompting his guide to pull out an ancient Nokia phone to call for help. “Solidarity is very strong in Antarctica," the guide said. "This is like a UN in miniature; everybody helps everybody."
Garfors never travels without a suit jacket, even in Antarctica. He says the inner pockets help him keep his essentials — passport, phone, and wallet — safe and with him at all times, and a suit ensures he gets better service in most places.
While in Benin, a French-speaking country on Africa's west coast, Garfors tried several types of Obama beer — none of which he liked — and sampled some delicious street food.
It took a few tries for Garfors to be let in to Eritrea, a country in eastern Africa that is bordered by Sudan and Ethiopia. This was also the first time — and only time — that Garfors saw hello spelled with a w.
Garfors had one thing to say about the Faroe Islands, an archipelago that lies between Norway and Iceland: "What are you waiting for? Just visit Faroe Islands."
Here Garfors stands 1,335 meters up on the peak of Mount Klubbviktind, which is near the Skjomen fjord in Norway. Garfors built his own log cabin in the area that he now visits every summer. The cabin has no road access and can be reached only by boat.
Though Iran is probably the last place you'd think of to go skiing, Garfors says the skiing in the north of the country is a must — but don't be surprised at the number of fully covered women on the slopes.
It's not unusual for children in Yemen to start smoking hookah and chewing khat — a flowering plant native to the Horn of Africa and Arabian Peninsula — at a very early age.
Garfors received yet another marriage proposal while he was in Lesotho. A mother proposed on behalf of her daughter, and if Garfors had accepted, he would have lived in a hut like this with the possibility of becoming the chief of the village.
Garfors and his sister visited a town in New Zealand that has the second-longest name in the world. Garfors says the name translates to, "The summit where Tamatea, the man with the big knees, the slider, climber of mountains, the land-swallower who traveled about, played his nose flute to his loved one."
Garfors visited a small school when he was in Somalia. Most children attending the school hadn't seen foreigners before, so they all wanted to touch Garfors to make sure he was real.
Garfors was lucky enough to be able to see the blowholes in Tonga. He says the waves push water through small tunnels, creating geyser effects on land.
Garfors visited the Door To Hell in the middle of the dessert in Turkmenistan. It's a crater that is 30 meters deep and 70 meters across. Gas has been burning inside the crater since 1971, when a gas-drilling operation there went wrong.
These children in Tuvalu, a Polynesian island between Hawaii and Australia, invited Garfors to go swimming with them. Garfors says Tuvalu will be the first country to disappear if ocean levels continue to increase.
Garfors visited Chile with his girlfriend at the time, who is originally from the country. Here he is in Vina del Mar after receiving a royal welcome from his girlfriend's family.