BBC
Blind man uses bat-like echolocation
Daniel Kish, blind from infancy, uses tongue clicks to bike, hike and travel solo to 40 countries.
Walk in someone's shoes
A white cane sweeps the ground ahead and catches curbs, steps, and poles. But it doesn't reach above the waist - a low branch, a sign sticking out from a wall, or a scooter handlebar at chest height won't be detected until contact. Some blind walkers use various techniques to build a mental picture of the space around them. Others memorize routes and rely on a good cane tip to read the ground.
Watch
People living with blindness share how it shapes outdoor walks.
BBC
Daniel Kish, blind from infancy, uses tongue clicks to bike, hike and travel solo to 40 countries.
Lucy Edwards
Blind creator Lucy Edwards puts a £30 Pathfinder cane tip head-to-head with her usual £10 one.