Fastest woman to cycle around the world, Jenny Graham's record journey
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Oct 14, 2024
Dive into Jenny Graham's record-breaking adventure as she becomes the fastest woman to cycle around the world, completing the journey in 124 days and 11 hours.
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I'm Jenny Graham and I hold the Guinness
World Records title for being the fastest
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women to circumnavigate the World Buy Bike.
The journey took 124 days and 11 hours
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I learned to cycle when I was a kid so
four or five and then it was only five
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years ago that I entered my first race and it was
an endurance race and from there I just started
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sort of building up these miles and finding out that
actually I've got quite a good sort of diesel engine
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and I can keep going so I'm never going to win in
a sprint race but I can I can keep riding all night
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and I enjoy that sort of like big miles of things
so I started my trip in Berlin at the Brandenburg
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gates in Berlin and then I
headed east so went across euro
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into Russia, Mongolia and China.
And then I flew down to Australia
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across Australia, New Zealand, south to north,
and then flew up to Anchorage before coming
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down the Rocky Mountains and right the way
across Canada to Halifax and Nova Scotia
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and then back into Europe where I come up
through Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, Holland
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and then into Germany to get back to the Brandenburg
gates. The trickiest part was going across Russia
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East of Moscow there was the Trans Highway and the traffic was just crazy Like
crazy so many tracks I never ever seen so many trucks there in my whole life
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And they were just coming flying past you and there
was no room for cyclists and it was just so dangerous
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So I decided to cycle at night at that point. It was
like the safest thing to do is turn my night in today
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So I'd ride until like 8 in the morning, find
somewhere to sleep through the day and then get back
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on the road about three in the afternoon and I did that probably
for about 1200 miles just to get out of the really busy section
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So I chose to take on this record unsupported. So when I
set off from the start line that was it, I was on my own
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So I carried everything that I needed to fix myself,
to fix my bike, to feed myself, to sleep at night
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I had no other like no one out there supporting me. I
had no van or yeah no bed at night and things like that
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So I just carried a really basic toolkit
that I felt that would get me on the road
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and I can ride a broken bike for a really long
time until I find a bike shop and that was my
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sort of theory that would work for me but it
meant that when I was in between bike shops and
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things went wrong like you know I'd ran out of
oil or I think I might have left my oil somewhere
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and I went through sun cream on my chain and I went
through oil from sardines like the sardine oil just to
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just to keep me going, just to keep me going until the
end. That's just crossing between Mongolia and China
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So there a space of no man land that you not allowed to cycle over So these
lovely people up to Maryland fights up there I a little bit worried about it
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So the first wildlife encounter that
I came across that really shook me
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was when I landed in Australia and I faced the
kangaroos. It's like these fellas are massive
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They're like huge big kangaroos. And they were jumping along
beside me and I was like, I've not really thought this through
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Like, kangaroos didn't even come into the equation. You know, I was
worried about snakes and I was a bit worried about bears, but kangaroos
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So when I told my son that I was going to do this,
he was like, well, of course you're going to do this
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You know, he'd seen what I'd been putting into my riding and what
I'd been putting into my endurance cycling for such a long time
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Like, he saw the Saturday nights where you're going off to your bed at 8 o'clock, you've just
done a 12-hour ride and you're completely exhausted and he'd seen the all the behind-the-scenes
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stuff so for him this wasn't out of the blue he was
like yeah you got it yeah that was really nice to have
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so this is my round the world bike it's uh
called little pig it's a steel frame shand's
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bike so it's hand built in scotland he's got a few
special features on it um like for instance the
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front wheel. So on this wheel it's got a dynamo
hub in the front for I would need like a
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good sort of 10 hours of riding to be able to charge a battery pack so that was like my main source of charging I have a try bars
and drop bars so it meant I could go down on the drop bars or I could be up on the hoods or I could be up on the armrests or I
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could be on the tri so that was that was
lots of lots of different positions for me
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Up here was my cockpit and this is where
it was all happening. I'd have my phone
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mounted here, my GPS here, two bags here. two bike computers here
like clocking my miles all the time and I'd have my spot tracker so
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that was like hooked up to a web page so anybody
could log on and see if I was there and I'd also
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have water bottles under here and the all-important bear
bells would stay up there too so I was jangling away
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and I'd fill food these full of food both of them full
of food so the final push-in to the Brandenburg gates
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was pretty special. It was like 36 hours I was
riding for. I'd gathered some friends by that
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point. You know, I had folk riding with me
and recording it and it was a really fun
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sociable kind of time. Sometimes I'm just like
washing the dishes at home and then it comes
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into my head and I'm like, oh my goodness, I
can't believe I actually hold the record for
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riding around the world. Get like
proper chuffed about it. Thank you
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