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Ride Earth Year One
Jul 31, 2008
Positive News Issue |
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Ride Earth is the mission of Tom Allen and Andrew Welch to circumnavigate the world by bicycle. As we both prepare for onward travel, we've taken a retrospective look at the year that's passed since we left the UK. Yes, it's been one year already! Here's hoping the next year brings more exciting and challenging adventuring in unknown parts of the world...
== Tom ==
"One year ago, I pedalled away from my front door on a bicycle, with the vague intention of cycling round the world.
"As it happened, the bicycle itself proved quickly to be the least important part of my new way of living. It was simply a vehicle which connected me in an incredibly intimate way with the people and places I encountered. It was these encounters that have defined my life ever since the day I left, not the physical act of pedalling.
"If somebody had told me that I'd spend seven months in motion and the following five stationary, living in a post-Soviet capital city, because I'd met someone worth waiting for, I'd have laughed. I was hell-bent on having my pre-conceived mountain-bike adventure. I couldn't have envisaged that it would become anything more than a tough, physical journey through the landscapes of the world, friendships never more than fleeting, nothing stopping the inertia of the expedition that I thought I understood so well before I'd even begun it. How wrong I was...
"I'm sure that the seven months of group travel taught me the necessary patience, tolerance and open-mindedness to treat the initial delays here in Yerevan not as an agonising waste of riding time, but as an inevitability that no amount of complaining would change.
"I'm sure that if I hadn't given myself the rare opportunity to take a massive time-out from the daily grind and reflect on the important things in life, as I pedalled gently through Europe, I would still have been too stubborn to turn round at the top of that mountain near the border and cycle back here.
"I don't regret that decision. I knew that city life was not for me, but I was also sure I'd developed the patience to deal with a few months of incumbency for Tenny, because I thought our relationship deserved it.
"It's ironic that the riding changed me in a way that led to me putting that same ride on hold, but nothing is permanent, and I'm looking forward with renewed relish to the prospect of moving onwards through the world again. I've just celebrated my second birthday away from home, and with a third Iranian visa application in the pipeline, I've got my fingers crossed to be visiting this cultural and historical goldmine in the next few weeks, not least for the purpose of visiting Tenny's family in Iran.
"With the bonus of having a travelling companion who is fluent in Farsi (Persian) and has spent 24 years living in Tehran, I am hoping to scratch a little deeper beneath the surface of this misunderstood land. I also look forward to sharing my experiences with those watching in the Western world, to try and cut through the bureaucratic curtain that has defined recent media coverage of this country, and bring out something more positive.
"Our onward travel plans take us south through the Middle East - Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt. From there, it's difficult to speculate, but Cape Town is the furthest logical landmark if we're headed in that direction. Having experienced such a universal outpouring of goodness everywhere I went, from retired farmers in England and high-flyers in the Swiss Alps to Gypsies in Romania and homeless tramps in Turkey, I just can't wait to throw myself into the friendly unknown once again, this time with a nervous but determined newcomer to the world of travel, whose experiences will be all the more intense.
"I'm somewhat irked about the idea of starting again with my fitness dwindling, but 99% of bicycle travel is psychological. I know that anyone can do it if they believe in themselves enough. To those who say "I'm not a cyclist", I reply that it's a bit like saying you're not a walker. Get on a bike, and your legs will do the rest.
"I hope my next newsletter comes to you from on the road, or at least from the beginning of it.
== Andy ==
"It's been one year since we left our homes in England on this adventure. It doesn't feel like a year, but rather one long moment frozen in time. There are so many memories, experiences and challenges from the last year. Perhaps it's step closer to how life should be lived- closer to what we humans are designed for. I don't think I've changed much. I'd like to think I'm a little more refined in approaching new situations with the experiences of the last year to reflect on.
"Travelling alone is a very exciting prospect which holds the promise of a purer and more daunting sense of freedom. I don't know how I will react but I'm sure it will be in the spirit of a true English. I've
discovered my identity as an English person more than ever since I left the country. It's got little to do with how the government chooses to define us in the world or the packaged tourist version but more how we
talk, our approach to dancing, humour, creativity, music and an inate need to philosophise. There's a lot to be proud of.
"My time in Tbilisi has been incredibly useful and fruitful in many ways. I've conquered demons, let the dust and experiences settles, and performed in Georgian singing concerts with my French friends here. My bike has needed some fixing. Luckily it happened in a city where I've been able to get spares, than in a blistering desert somewhere (although probably not as life-affirming). The opportunity to work has been necessary to fund the continuing journey as I had ran out of money. This is mostly due to funding the film project which is very important to me.
"I've been in contact with my old university lecturers in the Environment Department at York University about how we can improve our mission to observe and document climate change. When I leave I will be
concentrating on implementing a new structure for this which we are developing at the moment.
"I've got an Iranian visa in the pipeline (no pun intended). It's been a difficult decision making process on where to go next with visa issues with China. The variables are always changing and sometimes it boils
down to taking action based on the information available at the time so that's what I'm doing.
"A fundamental part of the trip is following a passion for bicycles, meeting people, and being creative. I hope that it conveys a full lifestyle which might inspire others to approach things with a new perspective whatever that might be. Through unearthing my faults and weaknesses and learning more about myself hopefully I can learn to exist in a more satisfying and better way with the environment and other people.
"It's getting close to the time to move again. It feels like starting again, and things have gone full circle. Before too long I will have that feeling of movement on my loaded bike and I have an entirely new frame of mind from when I arrived in Tbilisi to approach the new adventures that await me. When I go forward I know that I've got to find more from myself and from this trip. I will have to dig into my ingenuity and creativity and develop my own motivation. It's going to be deep. Definitely totally life changing again and the biggest challenge of my life so far. Bon, allez!..." |
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