måndag, februari 20, 2006
Chamonix and Mount Blanc
Glad to have made another goal I cycled in to Chamonix. At the tourist office I found Diddi, Sandra's aunt. The weeks before Chamonix I thought was going around in my head, I was thinking about climbing Mt Blanc. I told Diddi and Pierre about it. They said that if I do it, I have to do it with a guide, otherwise it's to dangerous without experience. One day I saw a Haglofs backpack (a swedish brand). The guy having it was from Finland and his name was Jaakko. We trekked toghether in the Mt Blanc Massif and had fun. Both of us had wanted to climd the big mountain. But it never happened. It was something I decided, not to climb it, and it was a hard decision. I knew that Diddi and Pierre didn't want me to climb it, and I can understand that. But the possibility was with the guide, but a guide? I don't want to be guided up when I can do it myself. So I left Mt Blanc unclimbed, but one day we will meet again, and then I will be prepared.
The night after this decision I couldn's sleep. I layed thinking for a long while about what I should do instead. Cycle to Africa, that is big, Sweden - Africa by bicycle. No, it's not enough, I have to see some of Africa also. Cycle from Sweden to where the sand of Sahara begins, that will be my new goal, I will do it! That's also the words I told Diddi, Pierre, Elodie and Amanda, before I went back on the road again. Elodie said that Sahara is far away, something I new. That was why I wanted to do it.
A long journey begins
The night before going to the embassy we were on a campingsite. There I met a english hippie touringcyclist who changed my way of cycling to the better. During my journey I had always been cycling about 100km, I woke up early, and cycled to the evening. I asked this english man, who were cycling with the same kind of bicycle as mine, when he was going up tomorrow. He answered me "I don't know, when I wake up I guess". The second question I asked was how long distance he was going to cycle, "Well that depends how long I feel like cycling". He did not cycle with a cyclecomputer, he was a relaxed guy who had been young in the 60s, he told me that he lived the hippie life. This mans relaxed way of life made me change my cycling routine more relaxed.
After these three weeks, when I sat up on the bike once again, my knee was good! It was a warm summer day I left. The fields were green and all nature alive. I went trough Germany, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, and finally in to France. This was the country I had been cycling so long to enter. My first meeting with the french language was in Belgium. They spoke fast and it was not easy to understand. But I learned as I continued. Entering France was a little bit weird. "Is this it, I'm already here?" I asked myself.
That first day in my final country, I met a guy loaded like me with his bike. His name was Adam, and he was from South Africa. He started in Holland and was going to Italy. He was tall, almost two meter, and very friendly. We decided to cycle toghether to Strasbourg where my girlfriend was going to meet me. Adam stayed two days with me and Sandra at the campingsite in Strasbourg. We had been searching maps the day before he left. Adam looked for a good map over Switzerland. When I bought maps over France, a map over Morocco passed in my eyes. "Morocco, maybe I will go so far this journey" I thought for myself. When we left the mapsshop I had bought those maps over France, and also Rough Guides map over Morocco! Cycle Sweden to Africa, that's a long way, but I had been thinking about it before. But just thoughts. Now was reality. "If I want to do it I can do it" I said to Sandra.
Working and Studying
My first bicycle journey
A dream that failed
I was so sad that moment. I have dreamed so much to make it as a hunter, my father talked with me and my brother when I was younger about this. He told us that we would be strong parashout hunters one day when we are in the military. Well, my brother refused to do his service, and I was discarded. That's the story. I went home with the bus and I walked alone in the forest. It's life, I will do something bigger, I will maybe climb MountEverest, put up the flag of the army and piss on it, as a protest. Next day I went to a doctor to check my hearing, he said it was only this very high tone on my left ear, and that I hear like a normal person. Because this tone is very high. He said he could write a paper to the army that my hearing is good and then I don't have to do the test, but I was so dissappointed at the army so I said nevermind that.
This was not the only bad news. In the same times as I was discarded I received a mail from an archeologichal group I went with on a river in Sweden with their viking-boat. It was interesting to row with this ship, and I wanted to participate in the big project. To sail and row from Sweden to Azerbajdzjan. But with all my studies I couldn't care so much for this journey. So when the list of people going with was sent, I never found my name. At this moment I knew that if I wan't to be sure of doing something, and to succeed, I have to do it myself. In that way I have all the power, and I can accomplish anything that doesn't involve other people.
The viking project, http://www.vittfarne.se
Some History
Some links :
Mikael Strandberg http://www.strandberg.se
Göran Kropp http://www.nepal-dia.de/Aktuelle_Lage_/ Goran_Kropp/goran_kropp.html
Ola Skinnarmo http://www.skinnarmo.com
First posting
Hello friends I've met during this bicycle journey so far in the world!
Finally I start this blog in english so more people can follow me. I know there will be some faults in the text but nevermind that=)
// Martin
onsdag, februari 15, 2006
Me and Joshua
After many days of cycling we found a hotel not far from the Mauretanian border. Nice to clean up and wash of the sand that was everywhere. Check out Joushuas blog at http://joshtracker.blogspot.com
Blistering sun
Joshua walking with his bicycle. We had just met Emma before, a cool Irish girl who Joshua met earlier in Morocco. It was a nice moment, she gave us some Red Bull and her driver gave us a soda and a big peace of camel meat. We ate good that night!
Sunset
Joshua Perina took this photo on me after I cleaned four fresh fishes we ate afterwards. A Moroccan soldier had been out fishing, and when he saw us, he shared some fishes. Friendly guy, and nice meal, a bit salty though, hehe.
Footsteps
Footsteps at the beach in the Sahara. Me and Tony was doing some photographing. It's his shoes, hehe.
Derallieur
I took a photo on the derallieur of my bike. Tony Eveling is in the background, a english bloke I was cycling with between Tan-Tan and Laayoune in Morocco. Tony really knows how to ride a bike! He cycled from England up to North Cape in Norway, and from there he made his way down to South Cape in South Africa. Check out his homepage, http://www.tonyeveling.com, there are beautiful photos to see.