i've stayed in my room and done drugs for the last 28 years due to depression and this man has inspired me to cycle to the park on my bike to pick up, thank you
Its tough, but that's apart of it. Figuring out how far you can actually go you might surprise yourself. You figure that out and that is some happy shit right there. Figuring out what you're worth is an evolving story.
About a year ago I watched this video in the dark days of winter, and it inspired me to do a big bike trip on my own. 2 weeks after I finished high school this year I found myself in Paris, heading down south towards Lisbon. It took me three weeks, about 2000 kms through western europe. It has been the time of my life so far, doing that all alone as a foreigner who whether speaks french nor spanish nor portuguese. Now I'm here back again waiting for warmer days to get back on my bicycle again, making plans for a good destination. Thanks for inspiring me to do what I did.
@@marymiron03 I had a huge accident on the first day, a car crashed me from behind on my way to Orleans. Somehow I made it without any major injuries, just some bruises. After that I was extremely lucky and nothing happened. France was extremely nice to cycle, especially the way from Orleans to Tours and the coastline from Bordeaux to the spanish border (even though there were wildfires at that time). Spain was kind of boring and exhausting to cycle between Vitoria Gasteiz and Salamanca, just plain desert more or less. Also no good cycling paths. San Sebastian and the pyrenees were thrilling tho. Portugal was a great end of the tour, I've never been to a country with this welcoming and friendly people before. I'd suggest a longer bit of france and probably another route through spain than the one right through it, probably the coastline is better. Also take your time whilst cycling, I was in a rush at some point... and also start the tour at the end of august, it's still warm enough then. Mid of july was a huge mistake, I was the only person cycling a trip like that at this time, met nobody else who was actually bikepacking. Elseways, absolutely do it, it's a life changing experience!
These are the kind of videos that I long for in TH-cam. Independently made, no stealth advertising and just simple editing. This may be a late comment but this is so awesome dude, good on you. This deserves wayyy more views. EDIT: Your adventure made the Tour de France and Dakar Rally seem like child's play. There should be a Tour de Josh from Shanghai to London
@@LoscoeLad totally agree, the hell those people go through just to finish. Absolute respect. Especially for the Dakar rally, its basically mad max but without the fighting part.
I can only imagine how difficult this must have been , especially those shots where you had to film yourself riding away and then come back for the camera . Great job man , great production quality for a single person.
@@trieupham3524 ok 150m a day walking, compared to 200km cycling through a sand cyclone in a bumpy road in Afghanistan seems pretty insignificant effort to me.
@@B--en4db I mean did you see his limited fotage from china... the forced police escort and how police stormed in to his hotel becouse he cant be there as an outsider. It all just goes to show how hard the chinese want to keep their dark secrets hidden.
What a great trip you are on. I travelled around Europe, North Africa and the Middle East in 1970 to 72. It was a very different world back then. I ended up staying in afghanistan for about 8 months. I didn't bike. I started with a motor cycle I purchased in England and after crashing it in Germany, bus and hitch hiking and short flights was the way I got around. My entire trip was 18 months. I slept in very cheap hotels, hostels and outside in my sleeping bag. My trip was more about getting somewhere and staying until I got to know locals. I regret now having not had a camera. What you are doing is a spectacular experience that very few do during their lives. You will never forget this trip.
Wonderful story! My Afghan parents told us there used to be a lot of hippies and foreigners that came to Afghanistan to visit and pass through when it was safe in the 60s and 70s. They showed me pictures of blonde people and Americans in front of the statues of Buddha in Bamiyan. They showed me images of white people sitting down and drinking chai with our family for breakfast. They told me how they let a couple stay in their house for weeks just for free. They told me about how they were trying to teach the couple Farsi and they managed to pickup a lot of phrases! When war struck the country one of the first places my parents chose to immigrate to was America because they had this image of friendly hippie people that had visited them during the 70s. I was born and raised in Arizona but hearing their stories about Afghanistan before the war is always fascinating. It makes me so sad that the country is in the state it is now.
If you'd managed a camera&cine 8mm and filmed your time traveling that would be off the scale TH-cam views...but cameras were a luxury and a 8mm cine camera was for the wealthy in the early 70s so a shame but what an experience fair play..
I don't care what anyone says. Staying at the side of the road in unfamilar countries is brave shit. Well done Josh. You're either mad, brave, or both.
@@metal87power It's actually standard for foreigners staying in China to be monitored by the police daily, with them having to report their location to them every night.
Can we just appreciate the 1000's worth of hour footage he went through to put this documentary together. Just wow. Bet Josh enjoyed every minute of it. Well done. Trip of a lifetime!!
on the contrary, I think he knew what to shoot, and used most of it. I`ve done similar vlogs, ofcourse with not so much footage, but if you know what youre going for, you wont end up with 90% unused footage.
I basically did that this summer. I took a train to Milano, Italy and rode home to Germany via Cannes, France. It was worth the experience. Just do it, if you need something new in your life.
same here, thought I'd watch for 3-4 minutes to see a bit of the beautiful scenery but stayed for the entire video! All these wonderful landscapes made me realize once more how beautiful our world really is and how much there is to explore and how much I personally have not seen yet / and want to see at one point
The feeling of approaching Europe, like an ancient traveller. Entering a city slowly must give a totally different sense of space. Also, seeing the countries, the culture change...
A hundred percent. It gives a completely different perspective from doing it with a car. Next level is that one guy Christoph Rehage, who walked from China to Germany. The world has to seem massive for him. Seen his documentary years ago
@@Skyl3t0n I traveled by hitchhiking/ trains across the USA/Canada, took me 1 month but damn was it an amazing journey. One day Ill go to the Old World
Bloody brilliant mate! As a Giant employee, I was so happy to see you ride a Giant and this is a fantastic showcase of the Giant Revolt. You seriously put mine to shame with the amount of miles you've put on it! I would love to see a "behind the scenes" style video with what you packed, spares, your mechanical issues during the trip etc. Well done once again...
@@gravey07 it seemed a bad choice of bike for this type of journey, seen a couple of people similar trips and they keep buying road bikes then spend about half their time on bumpy and bad roads. It looked good until he got to Afghanistan, the bumpy roads then started to break things, but thats not the bikes fault, the bike and parts and designed for smoother roads. I think using a mountain bike for this would have be a lot better, the parts and bikes are designed for roads and paths like that and you get some suspension up front at least to reduce the bumps, it also gives you more choice on routes and your not stuck looking for roads all the time.
@@shroomiestshroom3655 The Giant Revolt was the best bike choice for the varied terrain as its a gravel bike. An mtb would have been good for certain sections but a drag most of the time. Difficult to get a bike that is designed for that sort of trip but I think it faired pretty well...
@@SC-hk6ui doesn’t necessarily have to be a giant gravel bike. This pretty much goes for all gravel bikes, as they are probably the best choice for these kind of trips.
I did the opposite direction in 1986- Train Beijing- Mongolia-Soviet Union- Finland- ferry to Sweden- Norway- ferry Bergen to Newcastle. Not sure what it would be like now through Russia.
I’ve done the Silk Road trip in a vehicle and it was tough enough. To do it on a bike! Cyclists have my respect and admiration but I still think they’re all slightly mad! We’ll done, amazing effort and self discipline to continue when it gets tough.
Bicycles are driven, and ARE vehicles btw. It's best to refer to you 'driving a motor vehicle' to make the distinction. Bicycles are one of if not the most efficient human made machines so they're ideal for a lot of transportation / touring needs. It is then up to the operator / driver of a bicycle to provide the mental will and physical capability to essentially tour half of the world by land using one.
Your stamina and fearlessness is breathtaking. I cannot even in my wildest dreams imagine doing this but then, I'm 75. Congratulations. That is so awesome and I really enjoyed looking at all of the countryside your video was wonderful.
Fantastic achievement, it was really interesting and inspiring to watch. Glad TH-cam recommended it. Many years ago I went from the UK to Singapore via train, bus, tuktuk, horse, bike, moped etc etc. Best adventure of my life, but cycling the entire thing is absolutely next level.
@@jackp492 I don't recall exactly, but I do remember it was almost the same cost as a flight for just the travel. Obviously not including hotels, food, tourists trips and plenty of beers.
Just received this Video on TH-cam 2 Years after it was posted!Josh I've got to say Thank you for this fantastic Video! I'm going through real tough times as my wife of 39 years has Stage 4 Cancer I've really got into E bikes as a distraction and use TH-cam to watch anything to do with bikes!This for me was so good! Mate I hope this Video has furthered any Career moves for you! It made me cry tears of joy for you! You are an awesome individual! You've brightened my day and made me realise this world isnt such a bad place and I really wish you all the best in your life! Once again Thankyou
What an absolute legend! The planning, resilience, resourcefulness and sheer grit that you have shown, especially at such a young age is beyond impressive and inspirational. The force is truly strong in this one! Your parents must be so so proud. Hats off!!!
A ride you'll remember when you are an old man. Love this film because it shouts about the simplicity of journeying without all the "stuff" we're told we need. Nice one :)
That was probably the most humble ending to a video like this, on youtube. "Feels good." No sun falling over the horizon, or overly drawn out teary monologue. Just a guy returning home, and just watching the video itself explained all there is that needed to be said.
You should really watch the video of a man being alone for 1 year on a vulcanic island. Its really interesting. I need to find the video first but when i find it i will send the name as a comment below this one ⬇️
risky is missing from your adjective list. He got closed to being detained in China for political questioning. With small local corrupted police it can degenerate into false accusations. As some westerners have documented china in remote provinces exposing the corruption of the locals, now when they see a foreigner off the beaten path, they already consider that a fault.
26/07/21 - UPDATE - I relapsed for 7 days, but I’m now two weeks clean again. If at first you don’t succeed, try again. Thank you for all your comments there is too many to reply to, I appreciate you all. Thank you. 05/01/21 I’m a recently recovering alcoholic and drug addict, my addictions made me fall out of love with cycling even though I’ve always loved it, I really needed to watch this video right now. Just thank you.
awsome! double thumbs up to you for doing so while in a pandemic! so much strength! i hope you plan an adventure with your bike and use that to keep you motivated and something to look forward to! all the best :)
Why do some people always have to complain? Can't you just say "this video is good" without dragging someone else down? And who even makes only videos about breakfast?
Congratulations on a stunning achievement. Most people that do long distance cycling would use a purpose built mountain/hybrid bike of some suit, but you did it on a standard Giant road bike. You must have some legs of steel, huge lungs and an extremely strong mental attitude. It was great to see how much genuine hospitality and human kindness you experienced along the way.
You absolutely would not use a mountain bike for just riding on roads like he's doing. The road bike is much much more efficient than a mountain or hybrid bike.
So everyone needs to do a journey like this once in their lives..out of their comfort zone just a little and makes them rely on the kindness of strangers. Think of how much better the world would be if we did?
Absolutely amazing journey, congrats!!! In 23:15 i was surprised when seen woman who pulled her cart. After short research i found out at that was Rosie Swale Pope - 73 years young lady on her journey from England to Nepal.... Sky is the limit.
At exactly this time last year in 2022, I watched this video and felt something start to boil inside (in a good way). I did my own maiden journey this summer of 2023, took me 3 months to ride from the capital of Wales to the capital of Bulgaria. I've got the bug and can't wait to do it again, so I'm here again. Thanks, Josh!
I went to Afghanistan in 2002 as a soldier fighting a war. The people (no combatants) were lovlely people they are like everyone else just trying to make it from day to day. And the country was beautiful. i had never seen a desert or mountains till i went to that country and i fell in love with the varity of landscapes. if the country could ever find peace it wold make a fortune from tourism as it has so many opportunities to be more than it is .
@@LoscoeLad I bet they were too. Sadly if you go back 2000 years it has always been a country stuck in the center of other people's fight , Russians Americans, british, india, Iran, the Mongol all the way back to alexander the great the Afghanistan people have been overlooked by people wanting to use their land more then work with the people of the land
Afghanistan looked peaceful from past pictures I have seen of it before various countries ruined the place.Anyway I would like to cycle through it someday myself.
This video resonated with such immense power that it evoked tears in my eyes. Its emotional impact is truly profound and deeply moving. The storytelling and visuals are exceptionally powerful, creating an experience that leaves a lasting impression. I am genuinely touched by the depth of emotion conveyed in this video. Outstanding work!
I vote this as the single best video on the internet. Well done man. Nearly 10,000 miles in 4 months, nearly 90 miles A DAY!!!! I KNOW PEOPLE WHO WOULDN'T DREAM OF DRIVING THAT FAR IN A DAY!!!! You sir should receive some kind of medal or something. That is a feat of mankind exceeding going to the moon in my opinion. I'm jealous, admiring.and honoring you for your accomplishment. I just don't have the words to tell you how much i look up to you. Well done man. Well done indeed.
yes, 120km/day with luggage, bad roads, filming, high mountains... cycling every single day, no break days, no injuries or broken parts... sounds almost too good to be true...
This is the real essence of TH-cam. No asmr, no food vlogging bullshit, no tiktok shorts. Just random people around the world, sharing their surreal experiences for the rest of us.
@@ConstantThrowing seriously doubt he saw them. If he did, he would still be in Chinese jail right now. Why do you think they escorted him off to a restaurant and a hotel?
Great video bro. I did a drive when I was 27 from Singapore to UK in 2015 in an old camper and travelled more or less the same route overland so it’s nice to see the Silk Road again! I haven’t done anything like it since because work, mortgage etc is in the way but that time in my life was probably the happiest Ive ever been. Seems so long ago now. I wish life offered more freedom to experience these journeys more often! Subbed 👍🏻
This was incredible to watch thank you for sharing this if anyone is interested here are the songs in the video⬇️⬇️⬇️ 1:23 - No longer slaves by Worship Lounge 5:55 - Hemispheres by Jo Blankenburg 7:15 - Every mile by Layup 9:28 - Falling by Asher 13:22 - Storybrook by Analog Heart 14:57 - Before dawn by on earth & Michael gungor & Tyler Chester 20:11 - silhouette by vesky 23:57 - the veldt by deadmau5 ft Chris James 27:00 - Miguel by Jacob Steele
He mentioned a few : local china police appeared in combat equipment to take him somewhere for questioning then at last minute let him go, broken fork bolts, scary wild dogs attacks or possible wolf packs at night in the remote cental asian landscapes, food poisoning, staying in an unoccupied half broken down house in afghanistan (still trespassing). It's almost like the fee for adventure is a certain level of dangers and odds. I guess you have to take those risk to get something in return.
Great job! I rode Atlantic to Pacific along the US Canada border in '82. I didn't even have a camera! Your photography, narration, and editing serve your story rather well. Thank you.
One day, before I die, I hope I get to travel through the silk road. How those western and eastern people must have felt the farther they are from home and the closer they are to the other side of the world, I want to to experience it too. Thank you for this.
This is genuinely the best video I’ve ever watched in my life. Felt like I was with you on the entire journey. Completely captivating and so unbelievably impressive
30 years ago I tried to ride from Midland, Texas to Houston, about 500 miles. My ear got so sunburned, I had to have a friend come pick me up in Austin. I feel little less like an adventurist after watching this.
Don't give yourself too hard of a time. There's a lot of things to think about for a trip. An adventurer is someone who goes out to a place they don't know, it need not be 500 miles
@@searaph I was just admiring how brave he was. On my trip I even mailed my luggage at a Greyhound Bus Station to the next town 100+ miles away to get a motel. I am an air conditioned adventurer.
now that is an adventure, travelling through all those distances and places on a bicycle. For someone like me with a Pakistani passport, getting travel visa is a crazy experience. (50 years ago it was so easy to travel, many countries didn't require visas, other it was visa on arrival with no hassles. Hard to believe now.) So its great to enjoy travel with vlogs like yours. Many thanks for sharing. Best of luck on your future trips.
This is something us europeans never think about but we should. It's unfair that with an european/american/canadian passport you can go anywhere, while most people from other countries can't get visas to go anywhere. We should do something about it instead most aren't even aware
This is a remarkable combination of tenacity and self-belief that can only expand this young man's view of life. Anyone wishing for a similar adventure should start planning without delay.
Congratulations on an incredible trip. My father biked the Silk Road back in the 1980's. A very different world back then but to this day, he describes that adventure with much the same language you use here.
The world is an amazing place. I hope one day soon we all realize how much of an absolute present we've been given. And try to explore it with childlike vigor.
This was equal parts inspiring, entertaining, and even emotional for me. The soundtrack was amazing too. I felt moved and inspired - cheering you on and enjoying the views along with you. No negativity; just positive vibes. This is what TH-cam was made for. Thank you for making this. On a side note, I'm living in eastern Turkey and you just inspired me to buy a bicycle :)
The amount of sheer bravery, ambition, logistics and strength needed to do this remains an inspiration to all. I hope one day too to see the world on a bike like you.
What an incredible achievement. I am in awe of your tenacity, dedication and ability to portray a journey so effortlessly through film. Everyone needs to see this video.
I felt like a kid again watching this video. The world looks so different when seeing it from a Bicycle. Thank you for sharing, and thank you for dreaming. This will inspire many people!
This is one of the best cycling videos I’ve seen. Brilliantly edited with music, informative, but most importantly a compelling story and a true adventure. Thanks for all your effort in telling this story.
You need a job to earn money to live. This is showing a meaningless trip. It's ok for a short time but would be boring empty life in the long run. If you want to grow your own food and build your own shelter and carry water from a stream you can do that. But youd soon realise a simple life is a painfully boring life with no meaning beyond an animal level existence.
@@kenfryer2090 The experience of going through all those countries and doing something only a few people ever will is not entirely meaningless. Most people have boring, simple lives, at least he did something noteworthy with his.
@@icebox1954 he did a meaningless trip full of unnecessary danger probably because his Day to day life has no purpose. I'd rather do something useful and meaningless in my day to day life than do reckless and dangerous acts . Going through such dangerous countries is a form of suicide and they are not even that beautiful or inspiring countries. Barren wastelands. Europe is safer and more beautiful.
@@kenfryer2090 Your life is itself meaningless and your purpose is fake. Everything is objectively meaningless, but he did something that you staying inside your bubble will probably never achieve. Also, Europe really isn't that beautiful.
@@kenfryer2090 And what is a meaningful life to you? we spend our days working endlessly just to live with a few days off and yet you're here trying to diminish the guy's achievement. Just because you want to live as a drone doesn't mean everything else is meaningless. What he did does have meaning, same way whatever life you live does as well but next time keep your negative opinion to yourself
Hey Josh... well done! I loved watching your adventure ... it brought back so many memories of my world bicycle tour. In the 1980's I cycled first across the USA from the Pacific Ocean in Oregon to the Atlantic Ocean in Boston. Then flew to Belgium and cycled to Nordkapp, taking the E6 through Norway, then a ferry to Newcastle, then all of Scotland and England, then to France, Andorra, and Spain. I then spent 6 months learning Spanish in Madrid, then flew to Alaska and rode to Tierra del Fuego via the east coast of S. America through Brazil, where i learned Portuguese as well. I have slides of the whole trip that are now 35 to 40 years old, but dang, If we had had iphones and drones back then! What I remember most is the amazing kindness of the people I met, in every country, along the way! Some of the poorest people on earth would take food from their own plates to feed me, and refuse payment of any kind. I was hardly ever refused when I asked to sleep in someone's barn, or to pitch my tent on their land. And that was always the first sentence I learned as I crossed a new border with a new language, "May I sleep in your barn please?" Anyway, I could go on and on ... but when is your next long tour?
Amazing! I did a big part of your route in the other direction in 2019 but in China i went south to Pakistan, India and Nepal. Very cool to see very similar experiences like the crazy serbian drivers, the super friendly balkan, epic food in turkey and georgia, lottery with the caspian sea ferry and then the challenging central asia with not the best food...
What a big vid full of heart and character. This week I'm going to brush the dust off my old bike and get some miles under the belt. My wife and I were spellbound by your trip - big thanks from Sydney, Australia - Dave
exactly! Some world travlers just hop on planes, first class, pop in a country, and think they are great. This guy is a TRUE world traveler, the best in my book!!!
That takes guts, all of those unfamiliar countries must’ve been beautiful yet somewhat mentally intimidating. To be able to make it from the Giant factory all the way back to England is amazing. Congratulations on the achievement and you did amazing filming. I love the part where your dad and the guy from Giant Europe joined in too!🎊
Why doesn't this have 10mil views? The best video I've ever watched, well done, 99% of the whole world wouldn't have had the bravery and willpower to do this.
I had wondered for years if people did this, a European/Asia foot or cycle journey but I could never find evidence I’m glad to know that some do. Thanks for sharing !
Oh my goodness this young man is so inspiring. I am a 38 years old woman, and I don’t even own a bike but you just make me want to get one and go on a long journey!
Do it, I started cycling at 48 and now I’m planning cycling from Dublin to Portugal. My dad started at 72 years old just this Christmas and now he does 200km a week.
I'm not even a cyclist and I was gripped by this video. To cover this distance in 4 months is unbelievable. Honestly what you have achieved is amazing and I take my hat off to you. Respect.
Mr. Josh Reid, you are a bloody inspiration to all young people out there, sitting in front of their TV's and screens imagining the world or even worse watching reality TV. Takes some balls to do what you did so utmost respect. A great legacy to pass onto your children.
Brother, this is amazing. I can’t imagine the amount of time invested into the filming and editing, so thank you. You’ve given us a gift of inspiration and adventure which ignites the soul 🙏
Josh I take my hat of to you I'm 76 and I cycled from 10 till I was 58 and up to 200 miles a week only in the hills of central Scotland loved every minute on a freddie grub bike I receive from my big brother in the years I went through 30 bikes Josh you to me are a true hero to do this 👍
I had to double look when I saw how lacking in views this is... This is premium content deserves more. Could you make a video showing the route and how you planned your journey for those who don't know about it. Can you show how you planned to sleep, eat and drink? I think it would be cool to see all that. Nice video Joe!
It's crazy what some people do to avoid delivery charges...
Wonder how this works with import taxes 😂
This dude is the real life Norman Reedus from Death Stranding.
😆 lol
Underrated comment 😂
And it's broken when it arrives - chinese quality xD
This is exactly how my parents got to school
Can't be, I distinctly saw him going downhill at several points. 🙂
@@dodsg True! My parents did say it was uphill both ways!
they lived in china but went to school in Newcastle and had to cycle !?!?!?!?!
@@garybrown5769 both ways!
@@floofyboi3112 quality HAHAHA proper made me chuckle
i've stayed in my room and done drugs for the last 28 years due to depression and this man has inspired me to cycle to the park on my bike to pick up, thank you
To pick up your drugs? Lol
@@rjai4890 haha
maybe you can bike the trek to Afghanistan or Columbia, get primo gear where its made
Its tough, but that's apart of it. Figuring out how far you can actually go you might surprise yourself. You figure that out and that is some happy shit right there. Figuring out what you're worth is an evolving story.
So how are things working out? Never too late to change.
About a year ago I watched this video in the dark days of winter, and it inspired me to do a big bike trip on my own. 2 weeks after I finished high school this year I found myself in Paris, heading down south towards Lisbon. It took me three weeks, about 2000 kms through western europe. It has been the time of my life so far, doing that all alone as a foreigner who whether speaks french nor spanish nor portuguese. Now I'm here back again waiting for warmer days to get back on my bicycle again, making plans for a good destination. Thanks for inspiring me to do what I did.
I’m glad it provided some inspiration and sounds like a good trip. Thanks for watching the video.
pin this !
How did the trip go? I´m finishing high school in fall and planning to do a similar journey
@@marymiron03 I had a huge accident on the first day, a car crashed me from behind on my way to Orleans. Somehow I made it without any major injuries, just some bruises. After that I was extremely lucky and nothing happened. France was extremely nice to cycle, especially the way from Orleans to Tours and the coastline from Bordeaux to the spanish border (even though there were wildfires at that time). Spain was kind of boring and exhausting to cycle between Vitoria Gasteiz and Salamanca, just plain desert more or less. Also no good cycling paths. San Sebastian and the pyrenees were thrilling tho. Portugal was a great end of the tour, I've never been to a country with this welcoming and friendly people before. I'd suggest a longer bit of france and probably another route through spain than the one right through it, probably the coastline is better. Also take your time whilst cycling, I was in a rush at some point... and also start the tour at the end of august, it's still warm enough then. Mid of july was a huge mistake, I was the only person cycling a trip like that at this time, met nobody else who was actually bikepacking. Elseways, absolutely do it, it's a life changing experience!
@@pauldechering7236 what bike did you do it on? thinking of doing something similar after I finish school in a few months.
These are the kind of videos that I long for in TH-cam. Independently made, no stealth advertising and just simple editing. This may be a late comment but this is so awesome dude, good on you. This deserves wayyy more views.
EDIT: Your adventure made the Tour de France and Dakar Rally seem like child's play. There should be a Tour de Josh from Shanghai to London
Plot-twist...it was a 30 minute ad for Giant Bicycles. The stealthiest of all.
@@MakeCriminalsIllegalAgain never thought about that, sneaky indeed!
don't underestimate what they do in the Tour. Paris-Dakar, though, no drama!
@@LoscoeLad totally agree, the hell those people go through just to finish. Absolute respect. Especially for the Dakar rally, its basically mad max but without the fighting part.
@@AnthonyStJames-yn8nr yeah but they are still sitting down in their cars.. Maybe pretty hardcore, but not the most
I can only imagine how difficult this must have been , especially those shots where you had to film yourself riding away and then come back for the camera . Great job man , great production quality for a single person.
yea sounds like a pain to walk double the distance lol
dude fuck walking back 50m once or twice a day, what about the 200km he cycled DAILY in the worst conditions possible through whole fuckin Asia.....
No it’s tripple the distance, camera point A, you go to point B for the shot (1) come back to A to get the camera (2) then back to B and beyond (3)
@@trieupham3524 ok 150m a day walking, compared to 200km cycling through a sand cyclone in a bumpy road in Afghanistan seems pretty insignificant effort to me.
I love that he show's footage of him walking back for the cam
This is probably the longest and best advertisement for a bicycle I've ever seen. Good job!
Can you make a video of the map you used to make this trip?
it is also a great advertisement of how the chinese are suppressing minorities
@@Erik3E Where in the video they do that?
@@B--en4db I mean did you see his limited fotage from china... the forced police escort and how police stormed in to his hotel becouse he cant be there as an outsider.
It all just goes to show how hard the chinese want to keep their dark secrets hidden.
@@Erik3E what where
What a great trip you are on. I travelled around Europe, North Africa and the Middle East in 1970 to 72. It was a very different world back then. I ended up staying in afghanistan for about 8 months. I didn't bike. I started with a motor cycle I purchased in England and after crashing it in Germany, bus and hitch hiking and short flights was the way I got around. My entire trip was 18 months. I slept in very cheap hotels, hostels and outside in my sleeping bag. My trip was more about getting somewhere and staying until I got to know locals. I regret now having not had a camera. What you are doing is a spectacular experience that very few do during their lives. You will never forget this trip.
Nice sir.. what a wonderful experience..
Wonderful story! My Afghan parents told us there used to be a lot of hippies and foreigners that came to Afghanistan to visit and pass through when it was safe in the 60s and 70s. They showed me pictures of blonde people and Americans in front of the statues of Buddha in Bamiyan. They showed me images of white people sitting down and drinking chai with our family for breakfast. They told me how they let a couple stay in their house for weeks just for free. They told me about how they were trying to teach the couple Farsi and they managed to pickup a lot of phrases! When war struck the country one of the first places my parents chose to immigrate to was America because they had this image of friendly hippie people that had visited them during the 70s. I was born and raised in Arizona but hearing their stories about Afghanistan before the war is always fascinating. It makes me so sad that the country is in the state it is now.
I'm going to do it too & create lasting memory of my world tour & sleeping on road side .
I am envious of your journeys in simpler, better times.
If you'd managed a camera&cine 8mm and filmed your time traveling that would be off the scale TH-cam views...but cameras were a luxury and a 8mm cine camera was for the wealthy in the early 70s so a shame but what an experience fair play..
I don't care what anyone says. Staying at the side of the road in unfamilar countries is brave shit. Well done Josh. You're either mad, brave, or both.
He was under a constant supervision, my ass. He was sheltered.
@@metal87power did he say that?
@@jackyl1209 in china
@@metal87power It's actually standard for foreigners staying in China to be monitored by the police daily, with them having to report their location to them every night.
@@RicksonGM No its not. Source: foreigner in china.
Can we just appreciate the 1000's worth of hour footage he went through to put this documentary together. Just wow. Bet Josh enjoyed every minute of it. Well done. Trip of a lifetime!!
on the contrary, I think he knew what to shoot, and used most of it. I`ve done similar vlogs, ofcourse with not so much footage, but if you know what youre going for, you wont end up with 90% unused footage.
You think he filmed every minute of it lul
I bet there's another cut of this that is just his encouners with aggressive dogs that would make it look like one four month long chase scene
This is hugely inspiring. Anyone else feel an urge to book a one way flight somewhere just to cycle back home?
No. LOL.
awesome, yes absolutely. Once in a lifetime experience
I basically did that this summer. I took a train to Milano, Italy and rode home to Germany via Cannes, France.
It was worth the experience. Just do it, if you need something new in your life.
Yes but weirdly I don't even particularly enjoy cycling!
Amazing job Josh , great documentary as well. It made me start looking out for a bike straight away .. :)
I was like “ have a look…” - couldn’t stop watching, what a awesome Dokumentation and unique experience!
same here, thought I'd watch for 3-4 minutes to see a bit of the beautiful scenery but stayed for the entire video! All these wonderful landscapes made me realize once more how beautiful our world really is and how much there is to explore and how much I personally have not seen yet / and want to see at one point
Me too. 😄
Same, clicked to check it out. Ended up watching the whole thing lol
The feeling of approaching Europe, like an ancient traveller. Entering a city slowly must give a totally different sense of space. Also, seeing the countries, the culture change...
A hundred percent. It gives a completely different perspective from doing it with a car.
Next level is that one guy Christoph Rehage, who walked from China to Germany.
The world has to seem massive for him.
Seen his documentary years ago
@@Skyl3t0n thanks for pointing me in his direction
@@Skyl3t0n I traveled by hitchhiking/ trains across the USA/Canada, took me 1 month but damn was it an amazing journey. One day Ill go to the Old World
@@caleb2507 what is old world?
@@hithergirlsomeone2775 I think Old World refers to Europe
Man, we need to help out the algorithm with this one. It needs to have tens of millions of views at the minimum.
He talked “bad” about China, TH-cam won’t allow it.
I just got it in my suggestions
@@kx65andyx85rider china doesn't even allow google platforms in their country
@@march11stoneytony IKR what an idiot
Bloody brilliant mate! As a Giant employee, I was so happy to see you ride a Giant and this is a fantastic showcase of the Giant Revolt. You seriously put mine to shame with the amount of miles you've put on it! I would love to see a "behind the scenes" style video with what you packed, spares, your mechanical issues during the trip etc. Well done once again...
These are the questions i wanted to ask too! Im intrigued as to how it faired 👍🏼
@@gravey07 it seemed a bad choice of bike for this type of journey, seen a couple of people similar trips and they keep buying road bikes then spend about half their time on bumpy and bad roads. It looked good until he got to Afghanistan, the bumpy roads then started to break things, but thats not the bikes fault, the bike and parts and designed for smoother roads. I think using a mountain bike for this would have be a lot better, the parts and bikes are designed for roads and paths like that and you get some suspension up front at least to reduce the bumps, it also gives you more choice on routes and your not stuck looking for roads all the time.
@@shroomiestshroom3655 The Giant Revolt was the best bike choice for the varied terrain as its a gravel bike. An mtb would have been good for certain sections but a drag most of the time. Difficult to get a bike that is designed for that sort of trip but I think it faired pretty well...
@@SC-hk6ui doesn’t necessarily have to be a giant gravel bike. This pretty much goes for all gravel bikes, as they are probably the best choice for these kind of trips.
@@tima6585 Are you trying to reply to me? You tagged me in your post !
I have been thinking about traveling by trains from UK to China and people said I'm crazy. You bring "travel" to another level.
That's actually a nice journey. Just do it man
永远不要来成都,这里是盆地;冬天的雾比伦敦都大,很难看到太阳。
I did the opposite direction in 1986- Train Beijing- Mongolia-Soviet Union- Finland- ferry to Sweden- Norway- ferry Bergen to Newcastle. Not sure what it would be like now through Russia.
I’ve done the Silk Road trip in a vehicle and it was tough enough. To do it on a bike! Cyclists have my respect and admiration but I still think they’re all slightly mad!
We’ll done, amazing effort and self discipline to continue when it gets tough.
Bicycles are driven, and ARE vehicles btw. It's best to refer to you 'driving a motor vehicle' to make the distinction. Bicycles are one of if not the most efficient human made machines so they're ideal for a lot of transportation / touring needs. It is then up to the operator / driver of a bicycle to provide the mental will and physical capability to essentially tour half of the world by land using one.
@@worlwr2 what type of bike makes riding more comfortable? also how can i start training for long distance?
That's not how the word "slightly" is used. We bonkers.
@@Menga213 aluminium gravel bike all the way
If you think cycling is mad, check up;
Christoph Rehage
Literally walking from China to Germany.
Your stamina and fearlessness is breathtaking. I cannot even in my wildest dreams imagine doing this but then, I'm 75. Congratulations. That is so awesome and I really enjoyed looking at all of the countryside your video was wonderful.
Im 26 and neither can I haha
75 is the best time to do it sir, maybe not on a bike but get out there and see this Earth it is amazing!
@@JimNichols I agree
The lady at 23:17 is 73 years old and she ran from the uk to nepal it took her 5 years to complete all while carrying that trolley behind
@@garminbozia foreal? 5 years? is there a documentary on her or like is she have her own channel ?
Fantastic achievement, it was really interesting and inspiring to watch. Glad TH-cam recommended it. Many years ago I went from the UK to Singapore via train, bus, tuktuk, horse, bike, moped etc etc. Best adventure of my life, but cycling the entire thing is absolutely next level.
You think so?
that sounds awesome bro how long did it take, respect to you !
That sounds pretty fun as well! and much more doable than this cycling trip haha
how much did the round trip cost in sterling?
@@jackp492 I don't recall exactly, but I do remember it was almost the same cost as a flight for just the travel. Obviously not including hotels, food, tourists trips and plenty of beers.
Just received this Video on TH-cam 2 Years after it was posted!Josh I've got to say Thank you for this fantastic Video! I'm going through real tough times as my wife of 39 years has Stage 4 Cancer I've really got into E bikes as a distraction and use TH-cam to watch anything to do with bikes!This for me was so good! Mate I hope this Video has furthered any Career moves for you! It made me cry tears of joy for you! You are an awesome individual! You've brightened my day and made me realise this world isnt such a bad place and I really wish you all the best in your life! Once again Thankyou
Sorry your wife is going through a very tough time. Glad my video could help in a small way.
What an absolute legend! The planning, resilience, resourcefulness and sheer grit that you have shown, especially at such a young age is beyond impressive and inspirational. The force is truly strong in this one! Your parents must be so so proud. Hats off!!!
Speaking of hats, that one out back ruined Josh's aerodynamic tuck
@@andrewvickery2912 I was thinking the same 😂
Indeed and getting Visa's and knowing where you will be at the start of them could not have been easy.
@@andrewvickery2912 Great mudguard though.
*I would have 2 big fears along the road:*
1 - survive the trip and get back home safe
2 - no data corruption on all my SD cards
A ride you'll remember when you are an old man. Love this film because it shouts about the simplicity of journeying without all the "stuff" we're told we need. Nice one :)
You made the trip I dreamed of as a young soldier stationed in Germany 30 years ago. That’s a ride that takes guts. Thanks for sharing.
👍🏻
That was probably the most humble ending to a video like this, on youtube. "Feels good."
No sun falling over the horizon, or overly drawn out teary monologue. Just a guy returning home, and just watching the video itself explained all there is that needed to be said.
nice comment.
I like how their wasn't even a recap because the entire video was basically a recap.
I fully agree. Some people get stuck into philosophical monologues. This guy just knocks off with a "feels good". Very genuine and refreshing ending
@@ryanhernandez8388 Yeah, thats kind of what I was getting at.
His optimistic and friendly personality carried him thru. You can see it in his narration...despite his struggles he's laughing and smiling it off
One of my favourite videos of all-time Josh, well done man
Same Matt
Same
You should really watch the video of a man being alone for 1 year on a vulcanic island. Its really interesting. I need to find the video first but when i find it i will send the name as a comment below this one ⬇️
Its named: “300 days alone… - The Movie”
By: Olivier Vettel
No actually you just ate a horse BALLS HAHAHAHA LOL 🤣🤣🤣🤣👍👍👍🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳!!!
That is one completly insane journey, mentally, physically, financially, socially. Absolute respect, I enjoyed every second of this journey.
risky is missing from your adjective list. He got closed to being detained in China for political questioning. With small local corrupted police it can degenerate into false accusations. As some westerners have documented china in remote provinces exposing the corruption of the locals, now when they see a foreigner off the beaten path, they already consider that a fault.
26/07/21 - UPDATE - I relapsed for 7 days, but I’m now two weeks clean again. If at first you don’t succeed, try again. Thank you for all your comments there is too many to reply to, I appreciate you all. Thank you.
05/01/21 I’m a recently recovering alcoholic and drug addict, my addictions made me fall out of love with cycling even though I’ve always loved it, I really needed to watch this video right now. Just thank you.
Hope you're doing well buddy!
@@nima65 I’m staying sober so far, hope you’re well too!
congratulations on realising the issue and doing something about it, i'm sure you'll be back your bike in no time. keep it up!
@@miche2694 Thank you bro, feeling healthier + happier, looking forward to cycling!
awsome! double thumbs up to you for doing so while in a pandemic! so much strength! i hope you plan an adventure with your bike and use that to keep you motivated and something to look forward to! all the best :)
love how he made a solid documentary under 30mins rather than having to watch 1524 bloody clips of how he makes breakfast. impressive !
Why do some people always have to complain? Can't you just say "this video is good" without dragging someone else down? And who even makes only videos about breakfast?
@@xgon7645 I expressed my thoughts how I found best. My hats off to the author, to the trip, and to the video. EXCELSIOR !!!
Well, I would have also enjoyed a daily vlog to watch how he managed all the difficulties on the way.
@@xgon7645 Americans :)
@@MegaMagicbeans We don't really use 'bloody' to describe interactions 'across the pond'
Congratulations on a stunning achievement. Most people that do long distance cycling would use a purpose built mountain/hybrid bike of some suit, but you did it on a standard Giant road bike. You must have some legs of steel, huge lungs and an extremely strong mental attitude.
It was great to see how much genuine hospitality and human kindness you experienced along the way.
You absolutely would not use a mountain bike for just riding on roads like he's doing. The road bike is much much more efficient than a mountain or hybrid bike.
@@Anon.G yeah, I suppose I was referring to the sections of rough terrain and not the tarmac roads
@@markdonovan1540 the "rough terrain" was gravel bike(a road bike with more aggressive tires essentially) terrain at most
So everyone needs to do a journey like this once in their lives..out of their comfort zone just a little and makes them rely on the kindness of strangers. Think of how much better the world would be if we did?
Like Pippa Bacca...
I wish but I can't ride a bike
Not all of us
Huh just don't rely on stranger's kindness, most of them are not give an f.
@@sebasbandera wheelchair travel around the world it is then
Other YTbers hype their adventures. This guy humbly cycles home from China.
YouTubbers?
YTbers is the same as TH-cambers
@@TYsdrawkcaB umm yeah?
Reminds me of the guy who walked 350 days across china
when you don't have to worry about a job,kids,bills,... yeah i guess "humble" may come to mind.
Just you wait till the algorithm picks this up!!
It has
Can confirm
i kept seeing this in my recommended for 3 days and just watched it now....SO glad I did!!!
Absolutely amazing journey, congrats!!!
In 23:15 i was surprised when seen woman who pulled her cart. After short research i found out at that was Rosie Swale Pope - 73 years young lady on her journey from England to Nepal.... Sky is the limit.
Wow, that's crazy!
At exactly this time last year in 2022, I watched this video and felt something start to boil inside (in a good way). I did my own maiden journey this summer of 2023, took me 3 months to ride from the capital of Wales to the capital of Bulgaria. I've got the bug and can't wait to do it again, so I'm here again. Thanks, Josh!
This is how I imagine myself when I ride 20 minutes to school
@@nigelgibson4777 Why is living in Istanbul a problem? I don't mean to be aggresive, i'm just curious why.
@@genericpseudoname160 dude thats so offensive
@@dapperfob6194 lol, but really, why?
A tremendous film, made with just domestic equipment! This is what TH-cam is for.
I went to Afghanistan in 2002 as a soldier fighting a war. The people (no combatants) were lovlely people they are like everyone else just trying to make it from day to day. And the country was beautiful. i had never seen a desert or mountains till i went to that country and i fell in love with the varity of landscapes. if the country could ever find peace it wold make a fortune from tourism as it has so many opportunities to be more than it is .
i bet the combatants were lovely people too, before the foreign invasion.
@@LoscoeLad I bet they were too. Sadly if you go back 2000 years it has always been a country stuck in the center of other people's fight , Russians Americans, british, india, Iran, the Mongol all the way back to alexander the great the Afghanistan people have been overlooked by people wanting to use their land more then work with the people of the land
@@lostinpark4782 yes indeed. Never really conquered though
I was there in 2007 and I concur
Afghanistan looked peaceful from past pictures I have seen of it before various countries ruined the place.Anyway I would like to cycle through it someday myself.
This video resonated with such immense power that it evoked tears in my eyes. Its emotional impact is truly profound and deeply moving. The storytelling and visuals are exceptionally powerful, creating an experience that leaves a lasting impression. I am genuinely touched by the depth of emotion conveyed in this video. Outstanding work!
I’m glad you enjoyed the video and thanks for the lovely comment.
I vote this as the single best video on the internet. Well done man. Nearly 10,000 miles in 4 months, nearly 90 miles A DAY!!!! I KNOW PEOPLE WHO WOULDN'T DREAM OF DRIVING THAT FAR IN A DAY!!!!
You sir should receive some kind of medal or something. That is a feat of mankind exceeding going to the moon in my opinion. I'm jealous, admiring.and honoring you for your accomplishment. I just don't have the words to tell you how much i look up to you. Well done man. Well done indeed.
yes, 120km/day with luggage, bad roads, filming, high mountains... cycling every single day, no break days, no injuries or broken parts...
sounds almost too good to be true...
@@jzimmer11 ......yep ! ? ? ?
@Treetop Flyer - I suggest you watch the Bald and Bankrupt Channel for an insight into the various regions of The Former USSR.
@@jzimmer11 120km a day isn't actually that much, It took me 3 hours to ride 60km. According to this he stayed 18 hours of the day stationary.
@jzimmer11 he had a broken crank arm from memory I think
They should show this in schools to show the kids that you can do whatever you want to do. Utterly inspiring...
I mean u do gotta have the money tho
@@luke_222 actually a pretty cheap hobby compared to other ways of world tour
@@GEEZYEA777 just the cost of gettin all the Equipment is not so low but after u get it its quite cheap
This is the real essence of TH-cam. No asmr, no food vlogging bullshit, no tiktok shorts. Just random people around the world, sharing their surreal experiences for the rest of us.
True true true..
Yeah well the world is cracking down on anything authentic. NO CONFORMITY!!
Agreed! This is such a great video and story.
True👍 (but not that bad word)
The essence of TH-cam is learning Python
I cannot even begin to fathom all the life-changing experiences you've had during htis ride that didn't make it into the video... truly amazing
Saw the camps. Ignored the camps. Truly amazing.
@@ConstantThrowing seriously doubt he saw them. If he did, he would still be in Chinese jail right now. Why do you think they escorted him off to a restaurant and a hotel?
@@tijmen131?
“Being vulnerable makes you appreciate the kindness of others” word!
Great video bro. I did a drive when I was 27 from Singapore to UK in 2015 in an old camper and travelled more or less the same route overland so it’s nice to see the Silk Road again! I haven’t done anything like it since because work, mortgage etc is in the way but that time in my life was probably the happiest Ive ever been. Seems so long ago now. I wish life offered more freedom to experience these journeys more often! Subbed 👍🏻
enjoy the slavery and the "freedom" it comes with ;D Life offers everything you can imagine as long as you allow it yourself.
This was incredible to watch thank you for sharing this if anyone is interested here are the songs in the video⬇️⬇️⬇️
1:23 - No longer slaves by Worship Lounge
5:55 - Hemispheres by Jo Blankenburg
7:15 - Every mile by Layup
9:28 - Falling by Asher
13:22 - Storybrook by Analog Heart
14:57 - Before dawn by on earth & Michael gungor & Tyler Chester
20:11 - silhouette by vesky
23:57 - the veldt by deadmau5 ft Chris James
27:00 - Miguel by Jacob Steele
thank you bro!
Hero. He did a great job on music selection!
Thank you so much!
23:57 is not the veldt by deadmau5 ft Chris James
how do you know?))
I can't imagine how many things could have gone wrong during this production, well done for pulling through
He mentioned a few : local china police appeared in combat equipment to take him somewhere for questioning then at last minute let him go, broken fork bolts, scary wild dogs attacks or possible wolf packs at night in the remote cental asian landscapes, food poisoning, staying in an unoccupied half broken down house in afghanistan (still trespassing). It's almost like the fee for adventure is a certain level of dangers and odds.
I guess you have to take those risk to get something in return.
you put a lot of faith in the world. I'm glad that it doesn't seem to have been misplaced. Mad respect for doing this.
Great job! I rode Atlantic to Pacific along the US Canada border in '82. I didn't even have a camera! Your photography, narration, and editing serve your story rather well. Thank you.
The bit where he met up with his dad was so cool. His dad must have been so happy and relieved to see him safe.
the first place--肃南is my hometown ,very happy to saw that
One day, before I die, I hope I get to travel through the silk road. How those western and eastern people must have felt the farther they are from home and the closer they are to the other side of the world, I want to to experience it too. Thank you for this.
nice way of putting it 😀
This is genuinely the best video I’ve ever watched in my life. Felt like I was with you on the entire journey. Completely captivating and so unbelievably impressive
👍
I biked 127 miles few weeks ago. I cannot even fathom how this guy managed this. Absolutely unbelievable strength of will and determination.
What an epic adventure! Amazing video and storytelling man, thank you for sharing this with the world 🤙🏽
Even the title _"Cycling home from China"_ was epic.
@@TonyEnglandUK agreed
30 years ago I tried to ride from Midland, Texas to Houston, about 500 miles. My ear got so sunburned, I had to have a friend come pick me up in Austin. I feel little less like an adventurist after watching this.
Don't give yourself too hard of a time. There's a lot of things to think about for a trip. An adventurer is someone who goes out to a place they don't know, it need not be 500 miles
@@searaph I was just admiring how brave he was. On my trip I even mailed my luggage at a Greyhound Bus Station to the next town 100+ miles away to get a motel. I am an air conditioned adventurer.
@@DataJuggler you are a very coordinated adventurer. And air conditioning is amazing to have
Blimey, I used to read about Carlton's adventures many, many years ago, and now I'm watching his son adventuring as well. Time flies!
I myself always select the delivery option when ordering from China, but I truely believe this is way more satisfying. Well done!
what a cliffhanger, i wonder if he made it back home
Lol yes! 😂
until we see him park his bike, we will never know for sure....
why did you do that to me
US Fake New Media: British cyclist imprisoned in Xianjiang camp and forced to build Giant bicycles. 🤣😂😅
@@johnh8186 like the brand Giant?
You are an inspiration. Im a backpacker and motorbiker, but you trump me. Awesome!
now that is an adventure, travelling through all those distances and places on a bicycle. For someone like me with a Pakistani passport, getting travel visa is a crazy experience. (50 years ago it was so easy to travel, many countries didn't require visas, other it was visa on arrival with no hassles. Hard to believe now.) So its great to enjoy travel with vlogs like yours. Many thanks for sharing. Best of luck on your future trips.
This is something us europeans never think about but we should. It's unfair that with an european/american/canadian passport you can go anywhere, while most people from other countries can't get visas to go anywhere. We should do something about it instead most aren't even aware
@@luisa146 ..one day, i hope, it becomes like it was 50 years ago. Will be if more have the caring you show. Thanks
I love how in videos like these everyone always says how nice and caring strangers are, it always reminds me that there is still good in this world
This is a remarkable combination of tenacity and self-belief that can only expand this young man's view of life. Anyone wishing for a similar adventure should start planning without delay.
ADVENTURE MODE turned up to 11/10! Respect Josh ✌
Ok
love your content as well man!
Nuts! Huge respect for doing this. Memories for a lifetime.
I opened a google map while watching this, just follow along his journey, it was amazing!
Congratulations on an incredible trip. My father biked the Silk Road back in the 1980's. A very different world back then but to this day, he describes that adventure with much the same language you use here.
The world is an amazing place. I hope one day soon we all realize how much of an absolute present we've been given. And try to explore it with childlike vigor.
I won’t comment! I read the comments and all is said. However, I got tears from my heart of joy 🥲 🇩🇰👍❤️
I feel exactly the same... ;-)
What a wonderfull video. Send the link to my son of 20 who has similar plans
Clicked on a whim. Couldn't stop watching. You killed it with the music too, fucking amazing.
Totally agree. Fab watch. I made it last and watched it in little parts. Phenominal.
What an incredible journey.. A route which many people afraid to take by car... You are a real Man...
This was equal parts inspiring, entertaining, and even emotional for me. The soundtrack was amazing too. I felt moved and inspired - cheering you on and enjoying the views along with you. No negativity; just positive vibes. This is what TH-cam was made for. Thank you for making this. On a side note, I'm living in eastern Turkey and you just inspired me to buy a bicycle :)
cycling rocks
It made me emotional too ngl. Absolutely incredible video
wow. this was great
Better than van life?
The amount of sheer bravery, ambition, logistics and strength needed to do this remains an inspiration to all. I hope one day too to see the world on a bike like you.
Watching it on TH-cam on couch is completely different from doing it actually.;)
Nice video, thanks for sharing. I cycled from UK to Oz via Africa back in 1992 so this brought lots of great memories back for me.
"Back in Newcastle. One km from home. Feels good"
The most humble last words for the most epic journey 💪🏻
Insanely cool! Thanks for sharing
Incredible work, was sad at the abrupt ending but loved every second of this, well done
So beautifully done. Loved the entire ride! All 29:24 minutes captivating, but I didnt even know it ended! Kudos on an AMAZING achievement and trip!
Yes, i expected some reflecting on his trip at the end but realized he is still a teenager and that's not something he felt doing.
What an incredible achievement. I am in awe of your tenacity, dedication and ability to portray a journey so effortlessly through film. Everyone needs to see this video.
I felt like a kid again watching this video. The world looks so different when seeing it from a Bicycle. Thank you for sharing, and thank you for dreaming. This will inspire many people!
This is one of the best cycling videos I’ve seen. Brilliantly edited with music, informative, but most importantly a compelling story and a true adventure. Thanks for all your effort in telling this story.
strongly seconded! solid production skills.
There is beauty in the simplicity of your adventure. It goes to show how little we needs in our lives to be happy and feel fulfilled.
You need a job to earn money to live. This is showing a meaningless trip. It's ok for a short time but would be boring empty life in the long run.
If you want to grow your own food and build your own shelter and carry water from a stream you can do that. But youd soon realise a simple life is a painfully boring life with no meaning beyond an animal level existence.
@@kenfryer2090 The experience of going through all those countries and doing something only a few people ever will is not entirely meaningless. Most people have boring, simple lives, at least he did something noteworthy with his.
@@icebox1954 he did a meaningless trip full of unnecessary danger probably because his Day to day life has no purpose. I'd rather do something useful and meaningless in my day to day life than do reckless and dangerous acts .
Going through such dangerous countries is a form of suicide and they are not even that beautiful or inspiring countries. Barren wastelands. Europe is safer and more beautiful.
@@kenfryer2090 Your life is itself meaningless and your purpose is fake.
Everything is objectively meaningless, but he did something that you staying inside your bubble will probably never achieve.
Also, Europe really isn't that beautiful.
@@kenfryer2090 And what is a meaningful life to you? we spend our days working endlessly just to live with a few days off and yet you're here trying to diminish the guy's achievement. Just because you want to live as a drone doesn't mean everything else is meaningless. What he did does have meaning, same way whatever life you live does as well but next time keep your negative opinion to yourself
Hey Josh... well done! I loved watching your adventure ... it brought back so many memories of my world bicycle tour. In the 1980's I cycled first across the USA from the Pacific Ocean in Oregon to the Atlantic Ocean in Boston. Then flew to Belgium and cycled to Nordkapp, taking the E6 through Norway, then a ferry to Newcastle, then all of Scotland and England, then to France, Andorra, and Spain. I then spent 6 months learning Spanish in Madrid, then flew to Alaska and rode to Tierra del Fuego via the east coast of S. America through Brazil, where i learned Portuguese as well. I have slides of the whole trip that are now 35 to 40 years old, but dang, If we had had iphones and drones back then! What I remember most is the amazing kindness of the people I met, in every country, along the way! Some of the poorest people on earth would take food from their own plates to feed me, and refuse payment of any kind. I was hardly ever refused when I asked to sleep in someone's barn, or to pitch my tent on their land. And that was always the first sentence I learned as I crossed a new border with a new language, "May I sleep in your barn please?" Anyway, I could go on and on ... but when is your next long tour?
Amazing! I did a big part of your route in the other direction in 2019 but in China i went south to Pakistan, India and Nepal.
Very cool to see very similar experiences like the crazy serbian drivers, the super friendly balkan, epic food in turkey and georgia, lottery with the caspian sea ferry and then the challenging central asia with not the best food...
How do you feel in my country Nepal Bro..
Did you enjoy 😊
@@A_shock5 Nepal was amazing! Beautiul nature, culture and people!!
Did you record videos you can upload we will watch
What a big vid full of heart and character. This week I'm going to brush the dust off my old bike and get some miles under the belt. My wife and I were spellbound by your trip - big thanks from Sydney, Australia - Dave
Wow...wow...wow. I am from Uzbekistan and I love what you have done. Great job done!!!
This is what TH-cam was made for. Loved watching every minute, well done. What a beautiful world it is away from the TV and news 👏👍
This video deserves a billion views. Everyone, this is exactly what the word "Living" truly means. Thank you for sharing your adventure to us!
exactly! Some world travlers just hop on planes, first class, pop in a country, and think they are great. This guy is a TRUE world traveler, the best in my book!!!
That takes guts, all of those unfamiliar countries must’ve been beautiful yet somewhat mentally intimidating. To be able to make it from the Giant factory all the way back to England is amazing. Congratulations on the achievement and you did amazing filming. I love the part where your dad and the guy from Giant Europe joined in too!🎊
Why doesn't this have 10mil views? The best video I've ever watched, well done, 99% of the whole world wouldn't have had the bravery and willpower to do this.
Probably cos of the annoying music at way too high level.
Most of the world couldn't afford it or break from their individual daily lives
I had wondered for years if people did this, a European/Asia foot or cycle journey but I could never find evidence I’m glad to know that some do. Thanks for sharing !
Oh my goodness this young man is so inspiring. I am a 38 years old woman, and I don’t even own a bike but you just make me want to get one and go on a long journey!
Do it, I started cycling at 48 and now I’m planning cycling from Dublin to Portugal. My dad started at 72 years old just this Christmas and now he does 200km a week.
I'm not even a cyclist and I was gripped by this video. To cover this distance in 4 months is unbelievable. Honestly what you have achieved is amazing and I take my hat off to you. Respect.
To do this on your own, a trip of a life time, nothing but respect 👍🏻
Brilliantly put together. Wonderful music I’ll enjoy shazaming
Mr. Josh Reid, you are a bloody inspiration to all young people out there, sitting in front of their TV's and screens imagining the world or even worse watching reality TV. Takes some balls to do what you did so utmost respect. A great legacy to pass onto your children.
You’re an amazing person bro. Thank you for allowing us to vicariously live this moment with you.
Brother, this is amazing. I can’t imagine the amount of time invested into the filming and editing, so thank you. You’ve given us a gift of inspiration and adventure which ignites the soul 🙏
Josh I take my hat of to you I'm 76 and I cycled from 10 till I was 58 and up to 200 miles a week only in the hills of central Scotland loved every minute on a freddie grub bike I receive from my big brother in the years I went through 30 bikes Josh you to me are a true hero to do this 👍
I had to double look when I saw how lacking in views this is...
This is premium content deserves more.
Could you make a video showing the route and how you planned your journey for those who don't know about it. Can you show how you planned to sleep, eat and drink?
I think it would be cool to see all that.
Nice video Joe!