- May 6, 2009
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Just got a book called: A journey round the world: A cycling memior. It is written by by a English guy by the name of David Sore (who was in his early 20's at the time), who set from his town in England in 1966 and spent the next 3 and a half years cycling around the world. He sailed to New York and then rode along the US and Canadian border to Vancouver, down through to California, through Arizona and New Meixo, and back up to Vancouver. He then flew to Japan, and when he arrived in Tokyo, cycled down to Osaka, onto the Southern Islands, and back to Tokyo after taking a detour or two. He then went by boat to Australia, arriving in Brisbane, Queensland, cycling all the way up to North Queensland (which is a good 2,000km). Then he went left and rode to the Northern Territory (which is no mean feat, you could drive through several European countries in the same distance). Then he went south east through New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory (where national capital is located), then to Sydney.
Once he achieved that, he flew to New Zealand and rode around the North and South Island. He then flew back to Sydney, and then went to Perth (more then 5,000km away!), but he did not ride. He went by boat to Singapore, and cycled from there through Malaysia, Thailand, and into Cambodia (this is before Pol Pot did what he did). He flew to India, and cycled across India into ****stan (includes a short detour into Nepal), and then onto Afganistan, via the Khyber Pass. From Afganistan, he rode into Iran, and flew from the capital Tehran into Turkey. He rode back to England via Bulgaria, the former Yugoslav Republic, Austria, Germany, and France.
All up he covered 35,000 miles (56,000km!) in his trip. A lot of significant events happened when he got back in 1969. In 1975, the Khmer Rogue (led by Pol Pot) came into power in Cambodia, 10 years later, in Iran, the Ayatollah Khomeini would lead the Iranian Revolution and overthrow the Shah. A year later, Iran and Iraq were at war, and from late 1979, Russia invaded Afganistan, and this lasted until 1989.
A lot of this trip would be impossible to do nowadays. ****stan is desending into Cival War, Afganistan is a warzone, and you would be quite the idiot to try and go through the Khyber Pass (this on the border of ****stan and Afganistan), and Iran probably isn't the place to be right at the moment.
Edit: how is P-akistan in the filter, yes I know the word P-aki is a racial insult in England, but P-akistan is a country!
Once he achieved that, he flew to New Zealand and rode around the North and South Island. He then flew back to Sydney, and then went to Perth (more then 5,000km away!), but he did not ride. He went by boat to Singapore, and cycled from there through Malaysia, Thailand, and into Cambodia (this is before Pol Pot did what he did). He flew to India, and cycled across India into ****stan (includes a short detour into Nepal), and then onto Afganistan, via the Khyber Pass. From Afganistan, he rode into Iran, and flew from the capital Tehran into Turkey. He rode back to England via Bulgaria, the former Yugoslav Republic, Austria, Germany, and France.
All up he covered 35,000 miles (56,000km!) in his trip. A lot of significant events happened when he got back in 1969. In 1975, the Khmer Rogue (led by Pol Pot) came into power in Cambodia, 10 years later, in Iran, the Ayatollah Khomeini would lead the Iranian Revolution and overthrow the Shah. A year later, Iran and Iraq were at war, and from late 1979, Russia invaded Afganistan, and this lasted until 1989.
A lot of this trip would be impossible to do nowadays. ****stan is desending into Cival War, Afganistan is a warzone, and you would be quite the idiot to try and go through the Khyber Pass (this on the border of ****stan and Afganistan), and Iran probably isn't the place to be right at the moment.
Edit: how is P-akistan in the filter, yes I know the word P-aki is a racial insult in England, but P-akistan is a country!