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This page is dedicated to our Friends Tim and Cindie Travis
We are Tim and Cindie Travis.
We left our home in Arizona, USA back in March ( 2002), and have been traveling by bicycle throughout the world ever since. We have peddled through Arizona, Mexico, Central and South America, Asia, Australia. Our future plans include Africa, Europe, Russia, Canada, and the USA. Our plans will take us the next several years to complete.
Now more than 5 and a half years "Down The Road" since we began our nomadic lifestyle - finds us just arriving in New Zealand
Visit our popular web site that is updated frequently as we travel. You will enjoy thousands of pictures, our daily journal, and the online discussion.
The initial year of our journey is described in our first book: “The Road That Has No End”. Although these books are sequential it is not necessary to read the first one to understand and enjoy this, our second book. Information for obtaining all of our books can be found on our web site www.downtheroad.org

During the initial months of the trip we defined our journey in terms of stamps in our passports, miles ridden, and drawing a line on a map. It didn’t take long to learn the deeper rewards of travel; spending time with locals and observing how they live. For example, being invited into a family’s home because we looked wet, cold, and lost was a journey deep into the religions, traditions, and food customs of the region. What they cooked and how they ate told volumes more about their lives than taking pictures out of a bus window. Traveling on a bicycle placed us on the ground floor of society but that was not enough. In order to absorb the culture around us, it was just as important to have time off the bikes as time in the saddle. Riding bicycles became a means of meeting people rather than a goal in itself. Interacting with locals reduced our daily mileage but we gladly made the trade
 
Below their latest newsletter is kindly reproduced, and it is quite fascinating to read. After 5 years on the road you may find it very interesting to see how perceptions of this world can alter, once you do something completely different with your lives
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The Road That Has No End:
How We Traded Our Ordinary Lives For a Global Bicycle Touring Adventure

Tim and Cindie Travis
See Us in China
  Downtheroad.org  Road News
Five Years DownTheRoad: a different kind of endurance.

April 11, 2007
(Sent From Port Macquarie, NSW, Australia)

AN EXTRA SPECIAL
MP3 Audio Interview with the Bike Tourist PodCast
can be found below

 

Hello and welcome to this special 5 year anniversary edition to our RoadNews Newsletter.

On March 30, 2007 Cindie and I celebrated the completion of five years of living and traveling on bicycles including four continents, nineteen countries, and countless amazing and often bazaar experiences. We knew things would get wild be we never could have predicted the endless adventures that were waiting for us or the unexpected hardships and obstacles in our path. The experience of visiting different continents and meeting locals from diverse cultures, religions, and political orientations has had a profound affect on us. We have and continue to learn and grow every day. How could we not?

The long summer days of cycling on quiet roads in Australia gave us the opportunity to ride side by side and talk. These conversations have focused on our 5 year anniversary of this trip and defining what this experience, good and bad, has meant to us and why we continue.

As a byproduct of this discussion we unexpectedly discovered that, for us, time and place have fused into the same concept. I can say, "Do you remember in Bolivia when I injured my back in a remote village in the middle of the Altiplano?" and Cindie automatically knows what month and year I am talking about. This concept went on to create a list of fun facts that demonstrates how time has fused into geographical location. For example, below is a list of everyplace we have spent our travel anniversary and New Years Eve:

 

First Day March 30, 2002 left home from Prescott, Arizona, USA
New Years Eve 2003 Antigua, Guatemala

1st Anniversary March 30, 2003 Santa Elena, Costa Rica
New Years Eve 2004 Belen, Argentina

2nd Anniversary March 30, 2004 Bariloche, Argentina
New Years Eve 2005 Phnom Penn, Cambodia

3rd Anniversary March 30, 2005 Bac Giang, Vietnam
New Years Eve 2006 Long Phrabang, Laos

4th Anniversary March 30, 2006 Phang Nga, Thailand
New Years Eve 2007 Launceston, Tasmania, Australia

5th year anniversary March 30, 2006 Seal Rocks, Australia

 

After quizzing each other on this fun time and place trivia our conversations turned to the deeper impact and meaning of our travels.

  A DIFFERENT KIND OF ENDURANCE
 

This extended nomadic lifestyle has been both good and bad on our health. Obviously, all the exercise and fresh air has been great for our fitness but, of course, fitness is only one component of health. The wear and tear that months on end of exposure to the elements and foreign cultures breaks down our bodies and speeds up the aging process. To last this long on the road takes a different kind of endurance.

International bike touring is less about cycling several hours a day and more about being durable, adaptable, open minded, and just plain old tough, Oh yes, do not forget a sense of humor and the ability to not take it all (including yourself) too seriously.

Most people, including beginning cyclists, could easily ride along with us. We are by no means super athletes. What would send most companions home would be the hard living, months of sleeping on the ground in a tent or dealing with the confusion and unsanitary conditions of developing countries. Cyclists do not abandon international tours because the riding is too hard but rather the time off the bike is uncomfortable.

I jokingly suggest to touring cyclists who are contemplating long term travel, in addition to time on a bike, prepare by clogging up your toilet and removing the seat (Latin America) or just digging a hole in the ground to squat over (Asia), purifying every drop of water you consume including water used to brush your teeth, and trading your bed for a camping mattress and sleeping bag.

  WHAT HAS CHANGED OVER THE LAST 5 YEARS
 

Another concept Cindie and I talked about was that we are past the point of no return. During the first couple of years we drew confidence to continue on this trip by thinking that we could always stop, go home, and find new jobs. We pictured this scenario in our minds occasionally when road life became difficult. As the years have passed under our wheels, this mental picture of us going home has faded to the point that we can not see it at all. It is impossible to picture any other life except the one we have now. We have arrived at the point where traveling is not a temporary episode of our lives but has become our life and the only lifestyle we know. Too much freedom is intoxicating and addictive. Play around with it for too long and you can never go back but also never know where forward will take you. Today "home" can be found by flipping through my passport and finding the most recent countries' entry stamp and valid tourist visa. By this definition we are always going home but can never really arrive there.

Cindie and I have also changed the way we discuss out trip with people we meet. During the first few years, when we met people and they asked, "Where did you start?" or "How long have you be traveling?" We would explain the entire trip starting in Arizona. Now, after 5 years, we prefer to talk about only the past few months. For example when we are asked these questions here in Australia we answer, "We landed in Adelaide (Australia) in mid September." This draws much less attention to ourselves and makes it easier for us to fit in. Of course, if people probe enough the whole story can be pulled out of us but we generally prefer not to discuss our travels beyond the country we are in. This way our story is much more digestible and believable.

During our conversations we agreed that what is important to us on our bicycle tour around the world has nothing to do with riding a bike. We are not consumed with kilometers ridden, speed through regions, number of flat tires or obtaining bragging rights. These kind of superficial goals could not sustain us this many years on the road. This is an educational voyage.

When we listed what we had achieved over the last 5 years and what we wanted to accomplish in the future cycling related accomplishments were not included. We can generally estimate the total kilometers we have ridden, about 45,000 (28,000 miles), but we have no set goal to complete a certain distance. Our journey is not about anything tangible or something that can be organized into rows and columns of a spreadsheet. We do like to ride but it is not a goal of our travels. Riding a bicycle is just a tool to bring us deeper into the authentic sections of each country and closer to the people who live there. We seek the opportunity to meet the people of the world and learn their outlook on life from their unique perspective. This actually requires a lot of time off the bike.

So you may wonder what is important to us. In a single word "culture" is what we seek on our bicycles. Of course, culture covers a broad spectrum of components which I partially discuss below.

We try to learn languages which helps us to interact with locals, this gives us a deeper understanding of how everyday people think and see the world. We have concentrated on retraining our knowledge of Spanish and Mandarin Chinese but also have learned basic words and phrases of many other languages. We have been exposed to several religions such as Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam. This has given us a better understanding of what is important to people and how these often mysterious beliefs and cultural traditions shape everyday life. Economics and politics are topics I have always found interesting. They directly influence each other. In our travels we have witnessed a variety of political situations and experienced different economic systems. The same political view and economic system does not work for everyone. Finally in my partial list, we have been delighted to learn about and witness a wide variety of climates, ecosystems and wildlife. This also influences local cultures in the way people eat and adapt to the elements.

  HEAR OUR INTERVIEW!!
  Below is an in depth interview Cindie and I had with Gabrielle of the Bike Tourist Podcast. Gabrielle first played chapter one of our MP3 Audio Book on his show and then released the interview. If you are not familiar with our background information, particularly how and why we started our five year journey, you should first listen to chapter one (below) then play the interview.
 

MP3 Audio: Bike Tourist PodCast Interview (54 minutes)

MP3 Audio: Hear Chapter 1 of our 7.5 hour Audio Book!
"The Road That Has No End" (35 minutes) (Purchase full version HERE )

 

I am left wondering where we will be 5 years from now. Until next time.

Tim Travis

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  Reproduced here with many thanks and full permission from Tim and Cindie Travis
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