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In December 2007, I embarked on a 3000+ mile cycling trip through SE Asia; starting in the Philippines and finishing in Hong Kong via Malaysian Borneo, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. The trip served as a medium for my desire to raise awareness of manic depressive illness (which I have) and £10,000 in aid of the mental health charity, Rethink... as well as have an awesome time too! The trip was an idea of a friend and former team-mate, Lloyd Banwart, who had been volunteering out in the Philippines with the Peace Corps for 3 years. Two friends on two wheels with all they needed in two panniers enjoying life unrestrained.

Cycling through SE Asia every bit the adventure I had hoped it would be, despite being unable to cycle through China and into Hong Kong after being refused a visa. The Chinese Government were not best pleased with the widespread Western Anti-Chinese sentiment and subsequently tightened their visa regulations. Despite my very best efforts, letters of support and daily pleadings with the Chinese Officials; I was being told that I did not meet the visa requirements and that they'd never heard of people traveling by bicycle... nonsense of course. Anyways, I decided that Chinese bureaucracy was too formidable a foe to do battle with and to return home to do the "End to End" ride.

In those 6 months I cycled the highest point in the Philippine national highway system, witnessed a staged coup-d'etat, battled with barbaric barking beasts, made it to the summit of Mt. Kinabalu (4100m above sea-level) using only manpower, twice biked 100 miles in one day, passed forests teeming with monkeys, was featured in a documentary for the BBC, swam in a natural pool 150ft below the surface, had my bike held to ransom, survived a motorbike crash, was hit by a van, contracted haemorrhaging gastritis that required me to fly from Laos to Thailand for hospital treatment and met an array of wonderful characters.

Cycling, in many ways, resembles my life -there are days when the roads are so rocky it takes all my focus just to hold on and then there are days when the roads are so smooth I can easily absorb my surroundings. There are days when I wake up and look at my bike with disdain, and there are days when I wake up brimming with excitement. There are days when there is no traffic and I am at peace, then there are days when traffic zooms past at such a frenetic pace that it distresses me. There are days where every pedal stroke feels laborious and there are days when everything is effortless and I seem to fly. It takes patience, perseverance and sheer grit to get to the top of a steep hill. But then the journey wouldn't be such an adventure, nor would it be very fulfilling if it were all easy, and there is something truly liberating about coasting downhill.

Now the journey continues in the UK from End to End UK starting on the 12th of July. I will be joined by Kev, Chris and Anthony with the possibility of more to follow. This blog will keep those of you interested posted on the whole adventure - from the fundraising, training and ride itself.

To help support Rethink, a charity that helps people with severe mental illness recover a better quality of life, please donate at this user friendly site - justgiving.com/cycleadventureuk
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Itemless auction?

As a pre-launch event, we've organised an auction on the day before I set off. An auction is not an auction without items to auction and we are very short of what we had hoped to have by now.

Armed with letters of support, the recent newspaper feature and a pretty girl to sweet talk male proprietors, we set off into the town-centre in hope to persuade business to donate items to auction. It started off very well with a couple of restaurants giving meal vouchers and the local museum donating to family tickets.

It went all downhill after that. We visited over 30 business's from trinket and toy shops, beauty salons, art galleries and everything else that wasn't part of a chain (they don't have the authority to donate). We only came away with a jewelery box and a painting with lots of people saying "I'll get back to you" failing to say when or "we already supporting another charity", but not which one.

We are now relying on friends to contact friends who might know someone that may be able to offer something... so am relying on blind faith that there will be enough to make the evening worthwhile. The auction is being hosted in a pub so hope that everyone will be well and truly soused before it starts and rely on clouded generosity!

In other news :

We are now up to 7 in our group. Carl is a housemate of a friend that has been on board for a while and decided that it was an adventure he couldn't miss out on. Carl's dad, Frank, died last year aged 60, 12 months after his Mesothelioma diagnosis. Mesothelioma is a relatively rare form of cancer which affects the membraneous lining of the chest (the pleura) and, less commonly, the lining of the abdomen (the peritoneum). It is caused by exposure to asbestos; which in his case came from his work as a joiner. Carl will be raising money for a charity related to this illness and what a way to honour his memory.

Our flights are all booked, accommodation for the first night in John O' Groats is all sorted so we're all set!

 

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