Well today was a hectic. Started off from the beautiful hotel ready for an easy (yeah my ass) 400 km with 6 time trails throughout the day. The first section was meant to be about 9km up the hill on dirt roads up and over the small mountain range. We were the 39th car to start off and half way up hill we were stopped and just saw chaos in front of us, total chaos. Cars that were meant to be started at 1 minute intervals so you dont come across anyone and there was at least 15 cars either bogged, stopped because they couldnt get up the hill any further, or slid into or off the sides. After the lead cars had ripped trough at a million mile an hour and churned the road into 70mm of total slop on top of hard polished rock road base, that stage was cancelled and results were the same for everyone. Not like that really means alot to us fella’s at the back.
Which brings me to my next point, the tortoise and the hare story. 2 more cars arnt going to make the boat tonight and miss out on driving the african continent completly. Alex in his 240z that was overtaking us all yesterday and then taking the rong turn and overtaking us (happened 5 times yesterday) again, unfortunately is one of them. This morning we had a joke about how many times he would do it today, and he replied “mate, probably another few hundred by the time is out, but most importantly we make it on the boat tonight!” Well, he ate his words pretty hardcore tonight, early in the morning he flew past us, and an hour later were were coming down a huge hill (hairpin after hairpin after hairpin) and he must have come into the first one a bit too fast and understeered taking him directly into the path of an oncoming car, totallying his front end. It has been raining and miserable weather for days, and the roads (as we have seen) are like ice. The v8 Morgan also went of the end of a road very early in the day with a broken chassis rail, and is out. It’s a bit sad actualy, real nice french guys that helped me with my french a bit.
We just got on the ferry to go from Pireaus to Alexandria, Egypt. The entire boat is just for us, a boat that fits probably 4 hundred people and 200 cars AT LEAST and its alllllll just for us, 44 cars. It’s fairly surreal, we have a cabin each for a bit of space. Word on the street is that the weather across the mediterrean sea is going to be rough! which sucks massively, i get sick on a tiny little tinny and i have 38 hours ahead of me in a giant boat that is going rock rock rock in gale force winds. We are the ONLY boat in the entire port of Greece that is settle sail tonight, eveyr other cargo boat has deemed it too rough to go out. Shit, not a good sign 🙁
Hello to all my friends back home! I’m having a fantastic time and penny is trooping along brilliantly. I’ll get some photo’s up as soon as i can of the mud bath from this morning. Back later my amigo’s!!!
James 🙂
Jenee Molyneux
Thanks for all the updates, just love to hear what is happening from your perspective.
julie
Hi James.. we don’t get a chance to speak much on the phone but its just great to read your updates! What a fabulous way to record the days journeys…and heaps of people are commenting to me on your adventures because of what you have posted. I know it must be the last thing you feel like doing when you get to somewhere to put your head down….. so thanks so much for making the effort. Yeh!!!….forget the washing…. i’m sure by now everyone is stinky anyway!!! Probably your last wash on the boat tonight until Cape Town hey ! Hope you didn’t get sea-sick. Dad said you were asleep before you had a chance to get sick – so lets hope you slept most of the way! Love mum. xxx
Lee Price
Oh god James know all about sea sickness all too well. And that’s just going to Moreton Island!. Hope you stocked up on Kwells xx
RuthP
A great read again thanks James. Stay in bed on the boat! from one who stayed in bed on a rough crossing of the Drake Passage!
RuthP
Continued – I had wondered how some of the roads would stand up to all that traffic.