PRESS REPORT



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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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May 13, 2002
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| Peddling His
Wheres |
By JOHN M. GLIONNA
TlMES STAFF WRITER
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| Briton who is bicycling
around the world is acting on the wanderlust in all of us.
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SAN FRANCISCO--How many of you
working stiffs, like me, stay freeze-dried to your office seats
each day while dreaming of the Great Escape? You know, handing
back the 9-to-5 job, thank you, selling the house, cashing in
the 401(k) and risking that grand global adventure? If you're
weak-willed like me (my wife would say--aaaack--responsible),
you submerge your wanderlust by reading travelogues and adventure
novels while slouching off each summer on a three-week, over-in-a-heartbeat
international vacation.
I've never had the chutzpah to utter those famous Johnny Paycheck
lyrics, "Take this job and," well, you know.
Then, the other day, I met someone who did just that.
I was wolfing down lunch at my desk when a colleague roused me
from my workaday routine. "A man at the door wants to talk
to a reporter," she whispered. "He says he's riding
his bicycle around the world."
I shook hands with Richard Gregg. Within minutes I realized I
was standing face to face with the man who personified my longings
for emotional and physical flight. In 1990, this soft-spoken adventurer
walked away from a dreary engineering job in his native England
to begin a (so far) 12-year odyssey, pedaling 25,000 miles across
Europe, Africa, Asia, Aus- tralia, Oceania and, now, the Americas.
Taking his own pictures, often lingering to capture the spirit
and pace of a city, village or crossroads before cycling on, Gregg
chronicles his travels on his Web site, www.worldcycle.org. As
he describes his journey in one of his reports, he has "dealt
with Tibetan wolfhounds, British Telecom, Egyptian camels, Chinese
shopkeepers, Indian paperwork, Sudanese spies, Tanzanian baboons,
Vietnamese money-changers, salmonella typhoid, Italian drivers,
Pakistani amoebae, drunk Ugandan gun-waving check-post-guards
and Kenyan mosquitoes, and survived, albeit with varying levels
of success."
Now here he was in San Francisco, talking of youth hostel accommodations,
biking this city's killer hills, and his recent arrival in the
Port of Oakland by way of container ship from Fiji. And a thought
occurred: If I can't join him, perhaps I can at least host him.
After a call to my wife ("Honey, can I bring home a perfect
stranger to skulk our flat each night as we sleep?"), I invited
Gregg and his fully panniered, 125-pound packhorse of a touring
bike to stay with us for a week or so.
Captivated by his easygoing style and quirky Inspector Qouseau
mannerisms"and the way he feigned an American accent in response
to hokey TV ads, I gave Gregg the keys to our place and set about
trying to learn what I could from this wanderer about life on
the other side of the cubicle. What I wanted to know was this:
Why do some people choose to live out their lives within a few
miles of their birthplace while others clamor to escape their
roots in an evolving effort to reinvent themselves? And do those
like Gregg, who have refined the art of travel into something
of a slacker lifestyle, envy anything about those of us who remain
rooted?
Gregg, who refers to himself as ICBM, or Inter-Continental Bicycle
Man, cycles for no cause other than simple adventure. He prefers
to steer clear of politics except where necessary, instead weaving
tales of adventure and friendships made along the way. He dreamed
of travel even as a kid. "When I was 8 years old I had to
copy an encyclopedia picture of the Taj Mahal at school,"
he writes. "I made up my mind to go to see it for myself.
My 7-year-old sister, at about the same time, showed me a Japanese
pen pal's picture postcard of Mt. Fuji. I asked her about it,
and she said it was an exploding mountain. I would definitely
go and see that, I decided." Japan continues to corner his
imagination.
"When
I was 8 years old I had to copy an encyclopedia picture of
the Taj Mahal at school. I made up my mind to go to see it
for myself " |
RICHARD GREGG Traveler
ROBERT DURELL / L.A. Times
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In the course of his bicycle journey, Gregg met his Japanese
wife, Haruyo, in a bus station cafe in Laos.
At her request, he's trying to wrap up his global circumnavigation
within the next year and plans to ride across Canada, the U.S.
and South America. Then it's back to Japan where he has already
spent more than two years teaching English to settle down with
his new wife and, perhaps, raise a family.
He plans to one day write a book describing the unfettered freedom
of a make-it-up-as-you-go itinerary that includes tracking the
Nile upstream to Aswan, where two British cycling mates used tennis
rackets to deflect the rocks hurled by mischievous Egyptian boys.
He has pedaled through the Sudan and Uganda and into Kenya, down
the Great Rift Valley, to Nairobi and Mombasa. According to Gregg's
online bio, he's cycled through India and Pakistan and ridden
across China from Tibet to Beijing, cranking over the Himalayan
range by the Nepal-Tibet route, where, on downhill jaunts, bees
struck his bike helmet like bullets. He also had an extended yearlong
break because of a torn ligament in his knee sustained when he
stepped into an opening in the deck of a houseboat in Kashmir,
India.
He was in Hong Kong for the British hand over of power to China.
He spun his cranks through Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Malaysia,
clear to Singapore, across the bleak heartland of Australia, where
wise guys in a passing truck threw a beer bottle under his tires.
In Fiji, he said, when he told a policeman his name, the officer
observed: "Oh, like Richard the Lionhearted." Gregg
didn't relish the comparison with the ancient marauder. "Hey,
it's part of history," the officer said. "We used to
eat people around these parts. And nobody here wants to talk much
about that either."
Gregg frequently gives slide shows at nursing homes. I accompanied
him to a local home where he offered a dozen "rogue grannies"
a glimpse into his travel-crazed psyche.
Travel means compromise, and even Gregg occasionally rues the
path not taken, the one that would have provided him with a home,
a career and a sense of place in society. Instead he remains an
outsider, never knowing what to expect except that few things
worth having come easily.
When residents cooed over his slide of a brilliant orange Kashmir
sunset, he described how the scene was followed by sporadic automatic
gunfire that lasted all night.
And so my friend has made his choice, for now, to leave his new
wife at home and continue his adventures. Rooted to my routine,
I took Gregg along on one of my own escapades: to San Quentin
for a story I was reporting. As I interviewed inmates in the prison
yard, Gregg struck up a conversatiori with a gaggle of L.A. gang
members.
Charmed by his insights, they asked about English slang and British
prisons. In the end, they paid him the highest in street compliments.
"Yo, man," one told him, "if we were on the outside,
we'd put you in our car." After we went our separate ways,
I tried to derive some meaning from our encounter: Did Gregg appear
as some cosmic sign that I should follow my instincts and hit
the road? Would I be happier that way?
But as I enter my mid-40s, for good or bad, I've already carved
out a rock-solid self-definition.
And truth be told, I don't think I'll ever know whether those
who strike out far, far from home are any happier than those who
don't. But I do know this: I didn't envy Gregg as he trundled
off toward San Jose, unsure where he would sleep that night.
As I drove to work, anticipating a new project, deciding whether
I would travel to Spain or Thailand on vacation this year, I knew
what was in store for me that day, and that stability suddenly
felt good.
My time with Gregg has also made me appreciate the simpler accommodations
of a stationary life: Unlike my guest, I can always count on relatively
clean water right from the tap, paved roads on which to ride my
bike and a warm, bug-free bed to climb into each night.
And my work, I've decided, provides me with as many varied experiences
as anyone could hope to have in one place. I guess that cliche
could work as a title for Gregg's upcoming book and for my life
as well: "Wherever you go, well, there you are."
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