Nearly home
Yet how good it is to come
Home at last, home, home!
! Tired of wild, uncertain lands, strange faces, faint hands.
Has the wondrous world gone cold? Am I growing old, old?
Grey and weary . . . let me dream, glide on the tranquil stream.
Oh, what joyous days I’ve had, full, fervid, gay, glad!
Yet there comes a subtle change, let the stripling rove, range.
From sweet roving comes sweet rest, after all, home’s bestâ€?
- Robert Service, The Rover
Current Location: Brussels
Number of days since I flew to Siberia: 1136
Number of days ride from home: 2
It seems strange to write it, but I am almost home.
Later today I will set off from Brussels and cycle for the remaining few hours daylight, before camping in a Belgian field (behind a tree). It is getting dark early and getting chilly at night, but there is not much more wild living to endure.
Tomorrow I will ride to Dunkerque and catch a ferry to Dover and then camp in English field (behind a tree).
And on Sunday I will ride past Big Ben and Buckingham Palace, down the familiar backstreets of Notting Hill, and finally up to my parents front door. I imagine it like a dream.
The last 2 months riding through Europe have been fleeting. I chose to take quite a classical� route through my home continent Istanbul, Greece, Rome! then on through the Alps to Geneva and finally skirting the eastern side of France up to Belgium. I feel I know much less about my own continent than I do Asia, but the sense of history and development in Europe is mind blowing.
For much of this final leg I had company – 3 different visitors joined me on the road. Firstly, for 700 miles through Turkey to Istanbul, Olly the doctor : Olly taught me to cook risotto on a camping stove, and made me jealous with his sleek lycra outfits.
Then Nate from America joined me from Greece to Rome. I was grateful to spend time traveling with someone so enthusiastic Nate reminded me how to appreciate the epic landscapes we were seeing and the privilege of living wild.
And finally from Italy to Switzerland, my cousin Richard joined me for a wind beaten brawl of a ride over the Great St Bernards Pass in the Alps and who afterwards told me that if I ever chose to set up a travel company, I should name it non-stop agony tours�!
All three of my companions proved tough and impressively non-complaining. It is great to see old friends again.
Whilst in Italy I passed my 3rd year anniversary since setting off – I think the last year has been the hardest of the trip! a year ago I was just leaving Australia by boat to Singapore! and over the following 12 months and 10,000 miles I cycled through the humid hills of Vietnam, the icy passes of Tibet, the crowds of India, the security panics of Afghanistan, and the dry winds of Iran. I also made 2 emotional trips home.
By the time I got to Switzerland I was exhausted, and so pedaling on past Lake Lemon I headed for a Christian retreat centre in the French village of Taize. Taize is a great place to just stop being hectic, and to practice being still! no emailing, no cycling, and no writing just compulsory stillness. I was exhausted, and wanted to spend a little bit of time just reflecting before entering the busyness of British life again.
Last week I arrived in Brussels for a final stopoff with an old friend. Christine came over to visit for a few days from London so it was great to see her again and I am immensely grateful to her for putting up with a faraway, bearded wildman� boyfriend these past 2 years. It will be good to see her more often from now on!
It is quite hard to reflect on what the point of the past 1139 days have been about or for! and I think further reflection on the common questions of how have you changed?, why did you do it? and (dauntingly) what next? will have to wait until I have actually got back. I think I can say it has been harder and better than I ever imagined. And I think it was worth the time and effort and work that I had to put into it. I will send one more sum up email once I get home in any case.
One of the most important original and ongoing purposes was to try and raise money for the children’s charity Viva Network. I am happy to say that we are now getting very near to fundraising target of 20,000 pounds. The current total is 18,178 GBP and I really hope we can reach the full target by the time I am back.
If you have been thinking that you will give something to help their work on behalf of the poorest children around the world, but you have not yet got around to it! then maybe now is your chance!
It is easy to donate online online, and the website even makes your giving tax efficient.
Please go to:
In the next few weeks in London I will also have some kind of homecoming gathering, so will send more details about that once a plan has been made.
Many thanks again for all your encouragement and prayers over the past few years, hope to see many of you again soon!
God bless and take care,
Rob


{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }
Inspirational Rob. Thank you.
Well done Rob what a test of endurance and courage I believe you would be one of the most qualified geography teacher in the UK. Simon
Hey Rob,
Remember me from the Radio station you came on in Nagoya??
I was just thinking about you, and wondered how the progress was – last time I looked you were in Papua New Guinea… sorry!!
What an incredible story – you sure a hero to many – including me!! I’m going to take some time to back track your adventures now!!
By the way i love the way you express your feelings through poetry!!
Colin
Just brill!
Dear Rob,
I have followed you since your inspirational visit to our school in Nagoya (perhaps you will remember the coffee shop more than the school though-when you erected your tent in the middle of the coffee shop flooor and had numerous small kids climbing in and out of it during your talk…..
Thoroughly enjoyed keeping up with you o the road afterwards, worried at times when there was no update,especially in Papua/New Guinea and Afghanistan, sent your blog on to a variety of interested and enthralled people, also the son of a friend now on a similar exploit (you did not put him off at all) and am so glad you are now home safe. Let us know when you write your book.
Best wishes and all good fortune in the future.
Will Hardwick (teaching with Patrick Jackson-with whom you stayed while in Nagoya, I believe).