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Date: April 5, 2006

Sunset in Sudan
"It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You
step out onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's
no knowing where you might be swept off to." - Bilbo Baggins
“Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin
it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Begin it now."
- Goethe
I would never have learned backgammon at a pavement café
in Amman. I would never have drunk ‘tej’, Ethiopian
mead, from a vase flask in a dim drinking den. I would never have
heaved the helm of a yacht to run down the face of an Atlantic wave
along the silver path of a full moon. I would never have camped
beside the Straits of Magellan or on the banks of the Yukon. I would
never have had my beard entombed in Siberian ice, eaten octopus
in Tokyo or sat humbled in Samarkand’s Registan. I would never
have ridden around the planet if I had not taken the hardest journey
of all: stepping out of my front door and beginning the ride. Over
the last four years I have pedaled, mostly alone, 45000 miles across
5 continents. It has been the best of times and the worst of times.
The thrill of new experiences was tempered by numbing boredom and
loneliness. The challenge of solo travel fought my lazy streak dreaming
of sofas and cappuccinos. Third World slums terrified me then surprised
me with gestures of welcome; I learned that everyone on earth laughs
at something funny. Being totally fit, riding hard but comfortably
over 4500m Andean passes with all your worldly possessions in a
few small bags, no deadline to make and no persistent phone demanding
your attention: the vast freedom of a long adventure and the privilege
of time and space to evaluate what is and what is not really important
in life are the things I appreciate most from my adventure. I never
thought when I began my ride that I would actually succeed. The
essence for me was not whether I succeeded in the end. It was that
I turned a dusty daydream into a reality and reaped the rewards
from taking time out from our hectic 21st Century whirlwind to smell
the roses, smell the coffee, smell the stinking industrial wastelands,
smell our amazing world. In our era of email and Chinese takeaways
we glibly say that the world is a small place. That is nonsense:
the world is enormous; certainly too big for a single lifetime.
I am fortunate that I took the chance to see a small part of it.
With the journey done and only the memories remaining, I can also
appreciate that ‘the end of all our exploring is to arrive
where we started, and to know the place for the first time.’
Alastair
http://www.roundtheworldbybike.com
http://www.justgiving.com/roundtheworld
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