As we lined up for photos and presentations, with the festivities just beginning, the incredible feeling of “We’ve made it” ran through us all as we grinned and congratulated one another, together our multinational group from America, Australia, Sweden, Switzerland and Britain had completed this incredible 13,000 mile ride across the planet’s largest landmass and despite accidents, earthquakes and government disapproval we’d even managed to arrive on time after 80 days on the road. It was definitely time to celebrate.
Sunday, 24 July 2011
Beijing – The End of an Epic Ride
Our ride through the industrialised east of China was a contrast to our earlier experience of the country’s rural areas. Lorries clogged the roads and our eyes smarted from the smog and pollution in the air. Today there was an air of expectation tinged with sadness; it was our last day of riding as we headed into Beijing itself. The Expressway was beckoning; this is a system of motorway toll roads which enable traffic to move speedily across China and on which motorbikes are strictly not allowed. For days we’d been gazing with envy at the lucky cars as they sped along while we were caught up in traffic snarls on the much slower roads. The no bikes rule had not stopped some of our group from trying though, with the fearless Waltzing Matildas being turned away on no less than four occasions…in just one day. Today was our chance though; we were to be allowed to use the “Forbidden Fruit” as the area manager of the Expressway into Beijing is a fan of BMW bikes and gave us special dispensation to ride in along it. We enjoyed the feel of once more using the higher gears on the bike, easily covering distances which would have taken us much longer on the other roads, but we also realised that actually we could be riding at home on roads like this and not on the other side of the world. On the super-fast road we missed seeing the trucks with their comedy loads, the sight of whole families crammed onto one scooter and the smiles and waves of the other drivers as we passed by. So maybe there is a trade-off and actually going the fastest route isn’t the best way to travel.
As the outskirts of Beijing loomed, a group of local BMW riders turned up to escort us into the city, they were delighted to see us, and we were to see them as we were just about lost at that point (mentioning no names). A brisk 20 minute ride ensued as we followed them weaving expertly through the chaotic traffic (they were decidedly more expert than us) and led us to the BMW dealership where a gala reception awaited us. Music, tables laden with food, a massive welcome banner, crates of chilled beers and crowds of people congratulating us and wanting to hear all about our ride and the adventures we’d had.
As we lined up for photos and presentations, with the festivities just beginning, the incredible feeling of “We’ve made it” ran through us all as we grinned and congratulated one another, together our multinational group from America, Australia, Sweden, Switzerland and Britain had completed this incredible 13,000 mile ride across the planet’s largest landmass and despite accidents, earthquakes and government disapproval we’d even managed to arrive on time after 80 days on the road. It was definitely time to celebrate.
As we lined up for photos and presentations, with the festivities just beginning, the incredible feeling of “We’ve made it” ran through us all as we grinned and congratulated one another, together our multinational group from America, Australia, Sweden, Switzerland and Britain had completed this incredible 13,000 mile ride across the planet’s largest landmass and despite accidents, earthquakes and government disapproval we’d even managed to arrive on time after 80 days on the road. It was definitely time to celebrate.
Saturday, 23 July 2011
Break for the Border
Our sojourn in Lhasa was brought to an abrupt halt when we received word that the Chinese authorities were revoking our permits to ride through Tibet. The system of permits allowing foreigners to travel in China using their own vehicles is a complicated and involves a long-winded, time-consuming application process. This is part of the reason so few motorcycle companies venture this way. Getting the permission to also ride the length of Tibet is even more fraught and this year, GlobeBusters were the only group to get this hard-sought permission.
We looked at our options, which included trucking the bikes east following our planned route and the riders flying, in the end we had to make a break for the northern border out of Tibet which lies just over a day’s ride from Lhasa. For many it was a relief to hear that we would only be facing tarmac on this final ride through the Himalayas. We passed nomads and their yak herds as we rode north seeing pilgrims prostrating themselves as they travelled hundreds of miles along the road to Lhasa. Convoy after convoy of Chinese military trucks went by us in the opposite direction; it looked like trouble was brewing so probably best to get out.
The temperature rose as we headed out of the mountains and the roadside yaks were replaced by camels, the bleak yet beautiful tree-less landscapes were supplanted first by desert then by lush greenery. The return of normal levels of oxygen in the air was welcomed by us all as we re-discovered acceleration on the bikes and we were no longer breathless. We started to encounter traffic-filled streets, dominated by lorries, and in the towns small scooters nipping around with their silent electric engines. The driving was the worst we had encountered (yes, even worse than the Iranians), we’d listened to the stories and dire warnings from veterans of last year’s trip, but no matter how much you heard about how bad the driving is in China, nothing prepares you for the reality of cars, bikes, scooters and even trucks suddenly swerving out in front of you from a side road, doing U-Turns without warning or just driving in the wrong direction on the dual carriageway, we all had many close calls and one rider actually came off their bike, after a particularly foolhardy stunt by a moped. A quick hospital visit to check no breaks and they were back on their bike within a day.
Our route through China took us past such awe-inspiring sights as the Giant Buddha statue and the Giant Panda Reserve with its unique opportunities to see the pandas up close in the wild. The highlight was probably the Terracotta Army in Xian, the immense multitude of clay warriors buried underground for hundreds of years, a whole day was spent wandering around the marvels that have been uncovered. Some also took to the city walls surrounding Xian, exploring using a very different form of two-wheeled transport, on tandem bicycles, with some hilarious results.
Monday, 11 July 2011
Everest
Another early start, though barely suppressed excitement as we put on our bike gear and got the bikes ready. We were heading out on the ultimate of day trips, a ride up the slopes of Mount Everest. A couple of the riders had talked about how this was going to be the culmination of an ambition they’d had for years. As we were coming back to the same hotel in the evening, we only needed minimal luggage, if any on the bikes, which was good as we knew it was not to be an easy ride.
In the Himalayas there’s often a lack of signposts, let alone ones in English, however, there along the Friendship Highway which connects Tibet and its neighbour Nepal, is a marker pointing east clearly marked for Everest Base Camp – a classic photo opportunity.
Clearing the first of several checkpoints, we were allowed along the route, the dirt road hairpin bends started almost immediately and we all groaned to ourselves. However, when you’re heading up towards the world’s highest mountain, you’ve got to expect switchbacks and hairpins.
We crossed the lower range and there for the first time, we got a sight of the planet’s most famous peak, Mount Everest in all its glory. We lined up the bikes for a photo and a breather, then the hairpins continued, through small Tibetan villages, past tiny cultivated fields and via tunnels cut through the rock. Locals turned to watch us pass by on our bikes.
Dodging yaks and potholes we arrived at Rongphu Monastery, the highest in the world. Mark’s shock absorber had gone on the way up, so he set to work replacing it, with the famous view in the background behind him. As Expedition Leader, he’s been here twice before so we didn’t feel too bad about leaving him behind with the toolbox as the rest of us continued to Base Camp.
We reached Base Camp itself, a fairly quiet place at this time of year as the climbing season has ended, the window of opportunity for ascending Everest is just six weeks or so and over by late May. There were security guards, souvenir sellers and ourselves, we were the ones gasping in the thin air as we toiled up to the small hill next to camp for the best vantage point of the mountain.The camp is the closest point to the peak that it’s possible to get (short of climbing it), though to our eyes, it still looked a hell of a long way to travel on foot to the summit from where we were.
Having taken our fill of photos, absorbed the atmosphere, explored the monastery, twirled the prayer wheels and retrieved Mark, we turned our bikes round and headed back down.
We’d had the most fantastic views of the mountain and it was only through talking to one of the guides that we discovered how lucky we were, this had been the first clear day for five days and that amongst the few tourists there, some of them had been waiting the whole five days for just such a day as this. We really were fortunate.
Now we just had another 94 hairpins on gravel to negotiate back down again. Time for beers in the bar where we compared our photos of the big landmark.
Sunday, 10 July 2011
The Roof of the World
Tibet is in one of the most isolated regions in the world, bound to the south by the 2500km long Himalayas and to the west by the immense Karakoram mountain range and for most of our long journey out here, this had been flagged up as the section that separates the men from the boys and wow, was it a tough one.
Our final mountain pass out of China had opened up a vista of peaks stretching off into the distance. No wonder Tibet is dubbed the Roof of the World and we were about to try and ride across it. Our first night had been spent at 4000 metres, an unsettled night for all as the lack of oxygen affects sleep patterns and causes restless dreams. As we got up yawning and breathless, the sobering thought was that we’d just had what would be our lowest altitude night for some time.We rode off not knowing what to expect, except that it would not be easy… river crossings, precipitous slopes, snow, sand, gravel, bull dust and mud, there was one thing we knew for certain and that was not to expect tarmac. On the plus side there isn’t much in the way of other traffic up here, though where there is, it’s often big lorries creating huge dust clouds. Various roadworks added to our problems, the loose surfaces they were laying combined with the bulldozers and JCBs were extra obstacles. The workers themselves, both Chinese and Tibetan were living in tents huddled together on the wind-swept slopes, we realised some of these tents were housing their families, an incredibly hard existence at these altitudes in such flimsy abodes.
It was an arduous ride, though we were rewarded by views that were breath-taking, Tibet is the land of massive vistas and big sky, wherever we pointed our cameras we were getting great pictures. The lakes are turquoise and the mountains are suitably jagged and snow-clad. Narrow twisty tracks took us around the edges of the lakes, at times we were just inches from the water’s edge.
With gritted teeth and a feeling of achieving something that very few other people in the world will do, we rode past stunning panoramas which if the oxygen deprivation hadn’t done it for us already would have taken our breath away. Yaks and the occasional herd of graceful antelope were our only companions.
With no towns, accommodation at night was basic to say the least. No running water, shared rooms and the toilet just a couple of planks to balance on over a pit with an insubstantial shelter around it.
After several days riding, Mount Kailash loomed into sight, a 6714 m peak with religious significance for over a billion people. Some of whom had travelled up here to do a kora (pilgrimage circuit) around it, we were now starting to meet other travellers, many of them Hindu pilgrims from India. These residents from cities as far afield as Bombay and Calcutta were delighted to chat as they shivered from within their layers of Arctic-style clothing. They asked if we were also pilgrims, we answered truthfully that it was a different kind of pilgrimage we were on, one in search of the ultimate riding experience.
Lake Manasarovar also had its pilgrims and a very picturesque monastery overlooking the village. Nearby thermal springs were so hot that yelps were heard from unwary riders as they soothed their aching muscles. We had reached Central Tibet and tarmac was now appearing, speeding up our journey and allowing us to claw back a precious day that we’d lost due to the earthquake near Kashgar. Although we were tired, our spirits picked up as we were nearing the Himalayas’ star attraction, Mount Everest.
Friday, 8 July 2011
The Start of China!
Our twelfth country and what an assault on the senses. For most of the group, this was our first taste of the world’s most populous country, and it left us reeling. The cacophony of noise, the masses of people, the smells of cooking wafting through the air, and the jostling as crowds pushed past us in the street. We were in Kashgar, probably the most legendary of the Silk Road cities and it didn’t disappoint. Having left our bikes at the border, we’d managed to reach the city by taking a bus from the border to the bridge, struggling across the remaining splintered girders and then getting on another bus on the other side, altogether a five hour journey.
While awaiting daily reports on the status of the repairs to the damaged bridge we explored the city. This province of China is dominated by the Uighur people who are Muslims and have more in common with the people of the countries we’d just passed through and even Turkey than with the Han Chinese. Our vocabulary of words we’d gleaned through the ‘Stans stood us in good stead as Salaam Aleikum was still the greeting here.
The bazaars and mosques were fascinating, the highlight being the famous Sunday Market and the livestock market, where hundreds of animals were gathered, tethered and then examined closely before being purchased and led away. Not a place for the squeamish but still great to see.
Finally word came through, the bridge was repaired, and we could collect our bikes. We wasted no time in picking them up, completing some much-needed maintenance and then early the next morning setting off once more.
At our first stop heading south fuel bizarrely was being served out of a kettle –a five litre kettle that had to be filled at the pump then carried over to the bike and poured into the tank, for some of us, this meant three trips with the kettle. For safety reasons, it’s considered too risky to fill motorbikes at the petrol pumps themselves, the bikes are not allowed any closer than 10 feet to the pumps, and in some cases, bikes weren’t even allowed within the compound.

Our journey into the remote and mountainous region of south west China was not without incident. Racer Boy Richardson and his other half Shotgun Shirley once more found themselves on the wrong side of the law and were actually taken into police custody along with another rider and a guide after they had inadvertently taken the wrong road. Meanwhile the rest of the group were halfway up a mountain, where one poor rider was repairing his third puncture of the day – a perished inner tube was to blame. One bike ended up on the back of a pick-up truck getting back to the town after an unfortunate fall on a sandy stretch. Our final stretch of tarmac also had some surprises in store for us with a couple of vicious sandstorms hitting all the riders.
Sometimes we come across the most unlikely scenarios, and we had one where the road was suddenly dug up between two groups of riders – a trench that was three feet wide and four feet deep was dug by a JCB. The second group of riders came to a halt and looked around. They spotted a steep bank at the side, borrowed some shovels and got to work to create a ramp to get the bikes around the obstacle. Fifteen minutes later and the final four bikes had progressed through. Naturally the first group of riders didn’t believe them until they saw the pictures to prove it.
We re-grouped at the town of Yecheng, staying in the strangely named Electricity Company Hotel for our last night before hitting the mountains. Inevitably discussions arose about altitude sickness and how to spot it- several coughs were smothered as we found out that a cough can be a key symptom, nobody wanted to miss out on the riding due to altitude sickness. Having conquered the mountains of Central Asia we felt confident our bikes would stand up to the Himalayas (but that was before we saw them).
While awaiting daily reports on the status of the repairs to the damaged bridge we explored the city. This province of China is dominated by the Uighur people who are Muslims and have more in common with the people of the countries we’d just passed through and even Turkey than with the Han Chinese. Our vocabulary of words we’d gleaned through the ‘Stans stood us in good stead as Salaam Aleikum was still the greeting here.
The bazaars and mosques were fascinating, the highlight being the famous Sunday Market and the livestock market, where hundreds of animals were gathered, tethered and then examined closely before being purchased and led away. Not a place for the squeamish but still great to see.
Finally word came through, the bridge was repaired, and we could collect our bikes. We wasted no time in picking them up, completing some much-needed maintenance and then early the next morning setting off once more.
At our first stop heading south fuel bizarrely was being served out of a kettle –a five litre kettle that had to be filled at the pump then carried over to the bike and poured into the tank, for some of us, this meant three trips with the kettle. For safety reasons, it’s considered too risky to fill motorbikes at the petrol pumps themselves, the bikes are not allowed any closer than 10 feet to the pumps, and in some cases, bikes weren’t even allowed within the compound.

Our journey into the remote and mountainous region of south west China was not without incident. Racer Boy Richardson and his other half Shotgun Shirley once more found themselves on the wrong side of the law and were actually taken into police custody along with another rider and a guide after they had inadvertently taken the wrong road. Meanwhile the rest of the group were halfway up a mountain, where one poor rider was repairing his third puncture of the day – a perished inner tube was to blame. One bike ended up on the back of a pick-up truck getting back to the town after an unfortunate fall on a sandy stretch. Our final stretch of tarmac also had some surprises in store for us with a couple of vicious sandstorms hitting all the riders.
Sometimes we come across the most unlikely scenarios, and we had one where the road was suddenly dug up between two groups of riders – a trench that was three feet wide and four feet deep was dug by a JCB. The second group of riders came to a halt and looked around. They spotted a steep bank at the side, borrowed some shovels and got to work to create a ramp to get the bikes around the obstacle. Fifteen minutes later and the final four bikes had progressed through. Naturally the first group of riders didn’t believe them until they saw the pictures to prove it.
We re-grouped at the town of Yecheng, staying in the strangely named Electricity Company Hotel for our last night before hitting the mountains. Inevitably discussions arose about altitude sickness and how to spot it- several coughs were smothered as we found out that a cough can be a key symptom, nobody wanted to miss out on the riding due to altitude sickness. Having conquered the mountains of Central Asia we felt confident our bikes would stand up to the Himalayas (but that was before we saw them).
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