ISLAMABAD: In the biting cold of the Scandinavian Arctic, Pakistani adventure athlete Samar Khan found herself repeatedly unseated from her sled as she navigated the Fjällräven Polar 2026 expedition across frozen terrain.
By the third fall in a single day, the sled had overturned once more. She had struck trees along the route, and earlier injuries continued to flare in the subzero temperatures. Yet each setback seemed only to sharpen her resolve.
For Samar, such moments are familiar. A self-taught athlete who learned snowboarding largely through YouTube tutorials and Instagram videos, she has built a reputation in international adventure sports on persistence as much as on technical skill.
She is known for high-altitude descents and Arctic expeditions, accomplishments made all the more striking given the obstacles she has overcome to reach them.
Originally from Dir in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Samar forged her path into global competition through scholarships, sponsorships, and the kind of rigorous selection processes that few from Pakistan ever navigate.
Pakistan, however, possesses something many countries do not: a rare concentration of extreme terrain. Vast glaciers, high-altitude deserts, and the world's second-highest cluster of peaks above 8,000 meters create conditions that naturally attract adventurers. For Samar, it was precisely this landscape (the mountains of her childhood) that instilled both the hunger and the capability to compete globally.
By the third day of the Arctic expedition, she had adapted to the harsh environment, managed her team effectively, and begun to believe in her own potential. The realization struck quietly but forcefully: she could accomplish things she had only imagined.
Now, Samar has turned that insight outward. She has launched initiatives introducing young Pakistani women to mountaineering, skiing, and snowboarding through hands-on training programs and outdoor camps. Her goal is not to create another Samar Khan, but to build the infrastructure that might allow others to pursue these disciplines without shouldering the burden of self-teaching.
She has climbed three of the Seven Summits as part of her quest to become the first Pakistani adventurer to complete all seven using a combination of mountain biking and snowboarding.
"One athlete cannot fix the system," she said. "We need public-private partnerships and investment to grow this industry together."
From the mountains of Dir to the frozen landscapes of the Arctic, Samar Khan has carved a path that others can now follow.