Asia on a tandem

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  • This thread is always something that I get excited about seeing updated. Really good pictures and writing in, excuse the expression, tandem. Makes me want to go back SOE Asia myself (and get a coupled tandem)!

  • Incredible, incredible pictures. Envy levels are too damn high!

  • Amazing pictures bringing back great memories. I almost forgot how beautiful northern Vietnam is. Glad you’ve found my little write up useful.

    Stay strong on the high altitude part of your trip. ;)

  • Amazing journey. Please keep us updated. Your photography is properly good.

  • I almost forgot how beautiful northern Vietnam is.

    It really is. More than makes up for the shock of us realising we were in dog-eating country.

  • We were lucky to have a second crack at China, we loved it this time. I can say I miss it, even. Once again we did very little riding but what we did was incredible.

    This time we had a friend coming over to ride a couple of weeks with us, so we planned a small, closed loop from Chengdu so he could fly in and out easily. Sichuan is an incredible place, the people are more chilled, you can see a bit of counter-culture here and there, and the food is so, so, so spicy and delicious. To the West of Chengdu there is a mountain range leading to the Tibetan plateau, and that’s where we headed with our bikes.

    Once you pass Kangding you are in Kham Tibet, one of the three main Tibetan territories (two of them are outside the ‘autonomous region’). If we had all the time and the money, perhaps we would consider visiting Tibet proper but it’s difficult to overlook the fact we’d be lining the pockets of the oppressor to visit the oppressed. Visiting the Tibetan area in Sichuan was an amazing experience because we could see different cultures at odds with each other without having to financially support one over the other.

    The other reason why we wanted to ride in this area is to see how we’d feel at altitude, some sort of training for Central Asia. It was definitely testing, I couldn’t believe how weak we were in the first days above 3,000m. Any bump on the road required granny gear, I felt like a particularly unfit grandpa. After a few days we were coping ok, good enough to ride the 4,500m Balang Shan pass. This was definitely my most incredible day on a bicycle, ever. The beauty of the pass, the altitude, having my girlfriend and my best friend with me, the sketchy descent in the rain and fog, the group of Chinese cyclists that mobbed us on the road when we rejoined the highway. It was so beautiful it surpassed my previous best-bike-day-ever which was just three days earlier descending from Bamei to Danba, a 50km descent from almost 4,000m to 1,800m on the narrowest of gorges. I wish I had a good picture of that day, but we were just so blissfully happy coasting down that we didn’t really stop until we noticed a nasty gash on our rear tire (a rudimentary fix with zip ties got us safely to Danba where we bought a new one).

    Because it was our friend’s first time in China we wanted to spend a bit of time in the big city, so we headed back to Chengdu to hang out and drink beer for a few days. It’s a brilliant place, we were all a bit heartbroken to leave it (and Sichuan too).

    My journey out of China was a sequence of trains via Xijiang. Another part of the world where the Chinese are obliterating local culture, I saw some really sad things in Turfan, whole Uighur neighbourhoods being bulldozed, an unpleasant vibe. I’d have liked to go to Kashgar, even if just to see it before it’s transformed beyond recognition. It’s a complicated thing to digest, now I have true affection for the Chinese at the very same time I kind of hate China. I had an amazing time, perhaps the best time, in a country I profoundly disagree with. I find this complexity stimulating, it’s a fascinating country to visit once we learned the ropes of it, and both me and my girlfriend agree that from all countries we visited up to now China is one of the two we’d come back to over and over (the other one is Japan, but that’s just pure love).

    Anyway, for anyone interested in the logistics of crossing from China to Kazakhstan without riding your bike through the desert, I’m afraid I can’t help. My girlfriend had a work commitment in Europe so she flew via Almaty and dropped the bike at a hostel, where I picked it up a few days later having come from Urumqi on the overnight train. I don’t think that train would have taken a bicycle but you might try your luck if it’s boxed, I guess.


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  • Awesome.

  • After hanging out a few days in Almaty, we did a short 3-day ride to Bishkek, in Kyrgyzstan, where we are now stocking up for the next few weeks. We'll have to carry a lot more water and food from now on, so we're sorting out how we'll do that before our departure on Tuesday. Plan is to ride to Song Kul, then onwards to Osh and Tajikistan. It'll be quite something, whatever it'll be.

  • This thread is amazing! Keep it up, your adventure is amazing.

  • I've just read through the whole thread, and the bike, the adventure, the photos... it's all magnificent.

    Please keep going for another decade or so, with updates.

  • I'll be there in August, look forward to following.

  • Yeah, saw that. You're crazy :)

  • An update! sighs contentedly

  • I can’t even begin to express my respect for how you and your girlfriend endure all the new places, situations and people day by day. So many days have passed! It’s great, challanging and developing and I’m sure you’re not the same people as you were back in London.

    Dreaming and reminiscing is what each of your updates brings for me. Even though you’re far gone from where our roads almost crossed this still lights up the fire in my soul. Thank you.

  • These are some amazing photos.

    This one is great:

  • Also it looks like this guy has wings. Incredible timing:

  • Maaaan. Awesome pics and glad you're having a ruckus of a time again.

    I fucking love Vietnam something fierce. It's such an astounding place. Changing so so rapidly though. Need to go again for sure.

    Thanks for the updates. Keep 'em coming. You have many fans of your travels here

  • What are you using to take the photos? Very nice man

  • Photos are almost always by Carol. She's telling me there's a mix of google pixel, sony A7RIII and contax G2 (the China ones are some bad scans we managed to get on the road, there's loads more film shots to come one day)

  • Thank you!
    She’s awesome. Very talented

  • Uh-oh


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Asia on a tandem

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