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  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_044.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_047.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_048.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_043.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_045.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_046.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_050.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_049.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: WEB EMBARGO UNTIL 1am PST ON Nov 3 Chris Hemsworth’s stunt double has given an exclusive behind the scenes look at his time on the set of Thor: Ragnarok to coincide with the release of the Marvel blockbuster. Opening up his personal photo diary taken while on location in Australia’s Gold Coast, British-born stunt master Bobby Holland Hanton talks long days on set with Hemsworth and how he’s become the Aussie star’s go-to stuntman and good friend having worked together for the past six years. Bobby, 33, also revealed one of his rigorous training sessions at his local London gym — where the former gymnast put on an impressive stunt routine including back flips and somersaults — before he headed out to Atlanta in September to start filming the fourth Avengers movie, where he will again double for Hemsworth as Thor. And judging by Bobby’s rippling six-pack and bulging biceps, the rigorous regime he has to endure to match up to the God Of Thunder has paid off. But by his own admission, keeping up with 34-year-old Chris is no easy feat. Bobby explained: “He’s in ridiculous shape - Chris is very athletic and naturally has a lot of lean muscle mass. He’s bigger than me and I have to work hard to keep up with him. “Before we start filming a movie together, we’re in touch regularly so I can see where he’s at and so I can maintain the same shape as him.” Bobby’s strict fitness plan includes working out twice a day, six days a week for between 45 minutes to 90 minutes, curling 27kg dumbbells to pump up his arms and eating eight monster-size meal every day. Of course, the types of foods he can eat are strictly regulated to those that are high in protein (lots of chicken, turkey, steaks and eggs) and only “good carbs” (brown rice, quinoa, sweet potatoes) and “good fats” (avocado, olive oil and natural nuts). And eating like Thor sure gives his wallet a bit of a hammering. “I spend around £250 a week on food, just for me” expla
    MEGA108813_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_043.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_045.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
    MEGA156396_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
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  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey in India A 50-year-old Indian man has singlehandedly scraped though hills for a period of two years to make an 8km stretch of road to ensure that he and wife can meet their school-going children more often. Jalandhar Nayak, a small-time farmer from Kandhamal district of east Indian state of Odisha, constructed the first stretch of the road all by himself with just a pick axe and crowbar by working from dawn to dusk since 2016. So how did he stumbled up on the idea? “At the time of birth of our first child, my wife was home. When she went into labour pain, I tried to take her to the nearby health centre. But we couldn't reach there in time and she had to deliver the baby on the way. It was then the idea of building a road struck me first. I thought to myself, if having no roads in the village is causing us so much of problem to us, it would cause the problem to our children, too,” said Nayak, explaining how he stumbled upon the idea of contracting road." According to the Nayaks, the government has been giving assurance of building a road for decades in the area, but they never moved anything on the ground. Jalandhar’s father father who is 80 now, tells about the same hollow assurances that he got from the administration in his youth.   “When my children grew up and started going to school, it would take them three hours one way to go the school trekking though the mountainous terrain. Since they cannot commute to and from the school everyday, we had to get them enrolled in a residential school, a 15km away from home.   Nayak’s children spend six days in the school and return home on seventh day. But trekking though five hills is not a child play, the journey used to make them tired and exhausted. “This made me more determined to tear though the mighty mountains to pave way for my children. I didn't want my children to meet the same fate as mine. Hence, I decided to go ahead with the plan of road construction -- with or withou
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  • The second of the formerly conjoined twin girls who was separated in a seven-hour surgery earlier this year has been discharged after spending 482 days in hospital. Hope Elizabeth Richards was allowed home last week [April 25, 2018], eight weeks after her sister Anna Grace was discharged from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston on March 2. Her mother Jill Richards said: “This is the moment it all feels real. “We are so excited for Hope to join Anna and her brothers at home. Our family is eternally thankful for the doctors, nurses, child life specialists, physical therapists and many others at Texas Children’s who took incredible care of our precious girls.” The twins, who are now aged 16 months, were successfully separated during a mammoth surgery that involved a multidisciplinary 75-strong team of surgeons on January 13. The sisters were previously conjoined at their chest and abdomen, through the length of their torso and shared the chest wall, pericardial sac (lining of the heart), diaphragm and liver. The girls were delivered via C-section on 29 December, 2016, at 35 weeks gestation. The Richards family, from North Texas, learned Jill was carrying conjoined twins during a routine ultrasound. The family was then referred to Texas Children's Fetal Center, where they underwent extensive prenatal testing, consultation and development of plans to achieve a safe delivery and postnatal care.  They temporarily relocated to Houston in order to deliver at Texas Children’s and be close to the girls during their hospital stay. 25 Apr 2018 Pictured: CAPTION: Formerly conjoined twin girl Hope Elizabeth Richards is released from Texas Children’s Hospital on April 25, 2018, and her sister Anna Grace, who was discharged six weeks prior, was there to meet her sibling. LOCAL CAPTION: Hope rides down the hallway as she prepares to leave Texas Children’s after 482 days. Photo credit: Paul Vincent Kuntz/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • The second of the formerly conjoined twin girls who was separated in a seven-hour surgery earlier this year has been discharged after spending 482 days in hospital. Hope Elizabeth Richards was allowed home last week [April 25, 2018], eight weeks after her sister Anna Grace was discharged from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston on March 2. Her mother Jill Richards said: “This is the moment it all feels real. “We are so excited for Hope to join Anna and her brothers at home. Our family is eternally thankful for the doctors, nurses, child life specialists, physical therapists and many others at Texas Children’s who took incredible care of our precious girls.” The twins, who are now aged 16 months, were successfully separated during a mammoth surgery that involved a multidisciplinary 75-strong team of surgeons on January 13. The sisters were previously conjoined at their chest and abdomen, through the length of their torso and shared the chest wall, pericardial sac (lining of the heart), diaphragm and liver. The girls were delivered via C-section on 29 December, 2016, at 35 weeks gestation. The Richards family, from North Texas, learned Jill was carrying conjoined twins during a routine ultrasound. The family was then referred to Texas Children's Fetal Center, where they underwent extensive prenatal testing, consultation and development of plans to achieve a safe delivery and postnatal care.  They temporarily relocated to Houston in order to deliver at Texas Children’s and be close to the girls during their hospital stay. 25 Apr 2018 Pictured: CAPTION: Formerly conjoined twin girl Hope Elizabeth Richards is released from Texas Children’s Hospital on April 25, 2018, and her sister Anna Grace, who was discharged six weeks prior, was there to meet her sibling. LOCAL CAPTION: Texas Children’s NICU nurses, Nidia Estrada and Melissa Ramos, say goodbye to Hope. Photo credit: Paul Vincent Kuntz/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • The second of the formerly conjoined twin girls who was separated in a seven-hour surgery earlier this year has been discharged after spending 482 days in hospital. Hope Elizabeth Richards was allowed home last week [April 25, 2018], eight weeks after her sister Anna Grace was discharged from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston on March 2. Her mother Jill Richards said: “This is the moment it all feels real. “We are so excited for Hope to join Anna and her brothers at home. Our family is eternally thankful for the doctors, nurses, child life specialists, physical therapists and many others at Texas Children’s who took incredible care of our precious girls.” The twins, who are now aged 16 months, were successfully separated during a mammoth surgery that involved a multidisciplinary 75-strong team of surgeons on January 13. The sisters were previously conjoined at their chest and abdomen, through the length of their torso and shared the chest wall, pericardial sac (lining of the heart), diaphragm and liver. The girls were delivered via C-section on 29 December, 2016, at 35 weeks gestation. The Richards family, from North Texas, learned Jill was carrying conjoined twins during a routine ultrasound. The family was then referred to Texas Children's Fetal Center, where they underwent extensive prenatal testing, consultation and development of plans to achieve a safe delivery and postnatal care.  They temporarily relocated to Houston in order to deliver at Texas Children’s and be close to the girls during their hospital stay. 25 Apr 2018 Pictured: CAPTION: Formerly conjoined twin girl Hope Elizabeth Richards is released from Texas Children’s Hospital on April 25, 2018, and her sister Anna Grace, who was discharged six weeks prior, was there to meet her sibling. LOCAL CAPTION: Ambulance personnel arrive to take Hope home. Photo credit: Paul Vincent Kuntz/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • The second of the formerly conjoined twin girls who was separated in a seven-hour surgery earlier this year has been discharged after spending 482 days in hospital. Hope Elizabeth Richards was allowed home last week [April 25, 2018], eight weeks after her sister Anna Grace was discharged from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston on March 2. Her mother Jill Richards said: “This is the moment it all feels real. “We are so excited for Hope to join Anna and her brothers at home. Our family is eternally thankful for the doctors, nurses, child life specialists, physical therapists and many others at Texas Children’s who took incredible care of our precious girls.” The twins, who are now aged 16 months, were successfully separated during a mammoth surgery that involved a multidisciplinary 75-strong team of surgeons on January 13. The sisters were previously conjoined at their chest and abdomen, through the length of their torso and shared the chest wall, pericardial sac (lining of the heart), diaphragm and liver. The girls were delivered via C-section on 29 December, 2016, at 35 weeks gestation. The Richards family, from North Texas, learned Jill was carrying conjoined twins during a routine ultrasound. The family was then referred to Texas Children's Fetal Center, where they underwent extensive prenatal testing, consultation and development of plans to achieve a safe delivery and postnatal care.  They temporarily relocated to Houston in order to deliver at Texas Children’s and be close to the girls during their hospital stay. 25 Apr 2018 Pictured: CAPTION: Formerly conjoined twin girl Hope Elizabeth Richards is released from Texas Children’s Hospital on April 25, 2018, and her sister Anna Grace, who was discharged six weeks prior, was there to meet her sibling. LOCAL CAPTION: Dr. Ed Buchanan, pediatric plastic surgeon at Texas Children’s, stops by to see the girls. Photo credit: Paul Vincent Kuntz/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • The second of the formerly conjoined twin girls who was separated in a seven-hour surgery earlier this year has been discharged after spending 482 days in hospital. Hope Elizabeth Richards was allowed home last week [April 25, 2018], eight weeks after her sister Anna Grace was discharged from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston on March 2. Her mother Jill Richards said: “This is the moment it all feels real. “We are so excited for Hope to join Anna and her brothers at home. Our family is eternally thankful for the doctors, nurses, child life specialists, physical therapists and many others at Texas Children’s who took incredible care of our precious girls.” The twins, who are now aged 16 months, were successfully separated during a mammoth surgery that involved a multidisciplinary 75-strong team of surgeons on January 13. The sisters were previously conjoined at their chest and abdomen, through the length of their torso and shared the chest wall, pericardial sac (lining of the heart), diaphragm and liver. The girls were delivered via C-section on 29 December, 2016, at 35 weeks gestation. The Richards family, from North Texas, learned Jill was carrying conjoined twins during a routine ultrasound. The family was then referred to Texas Children's Fetal Center, where they underwent extensive prenatal testing, consultation and development of plans to achieve a safe delivery and postnatal care.  They temporarily relocated to Houston in order to deliver at Texas Children’s and be close to the girls during their hospital stay. 25 Apr 2018 Pictured: CAPTION: Formerly conjoined twin girl Hope Elizabeth Richards is released from Texas Children’s Hospital on April 25, 2018, and her sister Anna Grace, who was discharged six weeks prior, was there to meet her sibling. LOCAL CAPTION: Hope Elizabeth Richards smiles with Dr. Rebecca Cavazos before she is discharged from Texas Children's Hospital. Photo credit: Paul Vincent Kuntz/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 634
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