Copy of Road to Kathmandu 1977

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 434

  • @alaingirard678
    @alaingirard678 4 года назад +201

    I was there in 1983-85. The trip with Encounter Overland was a classic. I travel a lot in Nepal. Good people, good tim good Hasch !

    • @alaingirard678
      @alaingirard678 4 года назад +4

      @Yogesh Parajuli Hi Yogesh, I spent marvelous time in Pokhara. Quiet and friendly place. I hope you'll travel a lot ! If you come in Quebec, Canada, write me !

    • @magardai9756
      @magardai9756 4 года назад +1

      Its nt ktm.. its india

    • @alaingirard8836
      @alaingirard8836 4 года назад

      @@magardai9756 Hi ! Yes, I know, I graveleux in Népal and North India (Delhi, Agra, Varanasi, Calcutta...)

    • @void4509
      @void4509 4 года назад +6

      Hasch is still good !!!

    • @irie1tes
      @irie1tes 3 года назад +2

      @@void4509 Is it still easy to find there?

  • @arnewalderhaug322
    @arnewalderhaug322 3 года назад +66

    It reminds me of my first trip along "The Hippie Trail" in 1976,

  • @patrickmac2799
    @patrickmac2799 Год назад +16

    I completely understand the driver when he says "one rainy moring he couldn't face the underground" and he left that life. I did that 6 years ago. I left the sheer insanity that is the US and have never returned. The weight that has been lifted is indescribable. (written from a port on the Med Sea where I live now 🙂)

  • @mahatiba
    @mahatiba 3 года назад +125

    Such a beautiful video. --- I travelled to Kathmandu by road for the first time in 1979 and arrived there in December. I was in Asia for several years in total. --- I consider myself so blessed and lucky to have been able to experience and see all this.

    • @prashantghimire644
      @prashantghimire644 3 года назад +4

      Hlo mam i am from NEPAL and would be too glad to back in my childhood where i witnessed lot hippies tenting around my houses.Which which places had you travelled of NEPAL?

    • @apagala07
      @apagala07 Год назад +1

      you are a living legend

    • @shahankaranjia756
      @shahankaranjia756 Год назад +1

      @@apagala07 glad people are still watching this

    • @jfnat1891
      @jfnat1891 Год назад +1

      Lots of sex n drugs in those years too huh?!

    • @Guitarinthewoods
      @Guitarinthewoods Год назад +2

      I did this route in ‘79. Couldn’t travel through Afghanistan because the Russians had invaded. Had to take a huge detour via Baluchistan, Quetta. What an incredible experience it was. Wherever we went, people were warm and friendly, welcoming. Even in Iran, which was “global public enemy No1” at the time, due to the Revolution.

  • @bluesilhouette.7
    @bluesilhouette.7 5 лет назад +82

    Reminds me of he book "hippie" by paulo coelho,the route,magic bus,boys with long hair and girls with the tshirt flowerpower printed on it .
    70's was golden era.Those were the time when people from all over the world came to Nepal for the enlightment and to sort out the unanswered questions of thier life.
    I sometimes regret being from 90's,
    and now fucking technology destroyed all of our hospitality,bonding and still the worst is yet to come.

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 5 лет назад +23

      Man, don't believe that nonsense. There isn't anything that you could do in the 70s that you can't do today. Young people are doing hard core travel in Africa and South America right this moment. It's a state of mind, not an era.

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  5 лет назад +32

      I wasn't in Nepal for enlightenment, I was there for Kukhri rum and french toast at the Kathmandu Guest House :P

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 5 лет назад +1

      @@michaeldeman -- oh man, that made me laugh out loud. As if traveling were the path to nirvana. And why Nepal for the source of enlightenment when Columbus Ohio is equally likely? :-)
      Curious, did you ever make it up to Dharamsala, where the Dali Lama and his entourage ended up? They've set up a pretty impressive footprint there complete with "Buddha University" While open to anyone I'm pretty sure the thinking was why not make some money off these hapless western kids who have time and money and come here out of a desperate need for purpose in their lives. Everybody wins!
      There were quite a few of these westerners walking around all proud and full of themselves in their newly purchased brand new monk saffron robes. Their downward gaze said it all: they were superior chosen human beings here for a purpose as opposed to the rest of you aimless gawkers who are merely stumbling through life,
      Now that I think of it, I can see that working, that all they really needed was a valid reason to feel important. Who am I to judge? A rational thinker, that's who. Fuck them and their cartoon saffron robes. They were just immature and impatient. Nobody knows who they are at 20. But you get there soon enough.

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 4 года назад

      @wtnomad -- Hahahaha.... So many idiots, so little time...

    • @nazarking4243
      @nazarking4243 4 года назад

      very well said !!!

  • @goku183
    @goku183 6 лет назад +90

    I wish I could travel back in time and do this

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 5 лет назад +10

      You don't need a time machine friend, you can do it right now. Sure, not the same trip, but how about Africa? Or South America? I will say that it's far more plausible the younger you are. This kind of adventure is a young person's game. While you could conceivably do it at any age, it will be hell on an older body who won't take much delight in the cheap accommodations and will likely just be a miserable old coot.

    • @ceilconstante7813
      @ceilconstante7813 5 лет назад +5

      Backpack by bus through S. America. Stay in Hostels. You'll meet interesting people and have memories and pictures for a lifetime.

    • @katipohl2431
      @katipohl2431 5 лет назад +2

      Well, first time I came to Nepal in 1979 and came back nine times again, having nepalese friends there who visited me here in Europe. Those were the days.

    • @katipohl2431
      @katipohl2431 5 лет назад +3

      Serious Karaoke Well, I have stayed alltogether 5 years in Africa, the Americas and Sout East Asia. NEPAL was and is my favourite place and it is unique. Germany is my first home and place of birth and Nepal the second, Chile the third. Sumatra was amazing too but Bangladesh was horrible.

    • @lenini056
      @lenini056 4 года назад +1

      Let's do it now. I'm a neo hippie and ready to take the trail. If one of us gets killed, we'll use that as a message on how evil the local people are if we do. It's peace or death journey but worth it!

  • @jiji1946
    @jiji1946 Год назад +8

    1974, a small holdall, not much money, solo from Istanbul to Kathmandu by local buses, staying in local inns. from there to Bangkok by plane (no passage through Burma in those days). then trains and hitching, to Singapore. didn't want to go back, so carried on... rustbucket ship to Perth, W.A. I arrived a matter of days before they shut down the free entry for Brits option (something I wasn't aware of at the time). astounded I did it, astounded I survived. the best bit for me, was Afghanistan, but certainly wouldn't want to be there now. lived in Oz for 18 years. now in Japan for 30.

    • @langermain
      @langermain 4 месяца назад +1

      I set off with the intention of that "free entry for Brits into Oz" only to find it had gone, so only got as far from England as India and nepal.

  • @greifinn24
    @greifinn24 Год назад +19

    had to smile when he said India was a crowded country, i traveled from London to Australia in 1977/78 and thought India crowded too. Just returned from a month in India ( January 2023) got a shock India is packed ! last visit was in 2000 , enjoyed Delhi and Calcutta but now it was just too much for me i fled to south India and spent my last ten days in peace. wonderful film conjured up many great memories , thanks.

    • @hellomoto2084
      @hellomoto2084 Год назад

      It's 1.40 billion people folks .
      Unless you sir spent your last 10 days in some hills of South India , you would see folks everywhere.

  • @blutey
    @blutey Год назад +4

    Loved the starting music and logo. Back in the day, when you heard that, you were usually in for a good programme.

  • @BostonsF1nest
    @BostonsF1nest 3 года назад +136

    It’s amazing to see westerners traveling so freely thru countries like Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan back then... that wouldn’t be possible today.

    • @jyamez9069
      @jyamez9069 Год назад +34

      Thanks America

    • @Valerie-gn1rr
      @Valerie-gn1rr Год назад

      @@jyamez9069 So the islamist "revolution" in Iran, is the US fault? Come on!

    • @Iz0pen
      @Iz0pen Год назад

      Globalist warmongers spreading divisions wherever they can.

    • @huwpatt3817
      @huwpatt3817 Год назад +11

      Due to callous AUKUS interference ... little to do with the struggling American working class

    • @olotbesalu2258
      @olotbesalu2258 Год назад +5

      It was a huge privilege, I remember it so vividly

  • @BostonsF1nest
    @BostonsF1nest 3 года назад +37

    I did this trail back in ‘74... we stopped one night and camped in the desert in Afghanistan. We all took acid and one of our passengers wandered off in the middle of the night. We waited and looked for him but couldn’t find him. I always wondered what happened to him.

    • @goku183
      @goku183 3 года назад +5

      Damn I hope he survived

    • @mcloathin3354
      @mcloathin3354 3 года назад +6

      Another murdered troubadour

    • @gman-vg8ly
      @gman-vg8ly 2 года назад +4

      I really hope he survived and is ok

    • @theknightking4379
      @theknightking4379 2 года назад +7

      You kidding right ?
      Who does that to a fellow traveler

    • @BostonsF1nest
      @BostonsF1nest 2 года назад +6

      @@theknightking4379 happened all the time back then believe it or not. Ppl wandered off or went missing all the time on that trail

  • @ceilconstante7813
    @ceilconstante7813 5 лет назад +33

    I loved this documentary so much I didn't want it to end and was wishing for a part 2!

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  5 лет назад +17

      There is a part 2, 3, and 4! But I haven't written them yet ;-)

    • @shailenlshrestha
      @shailenlshrestha 4 года назад +2

      @@michaeldeman upload rest of parts

    • @awesomebishek2530
      @awesomebishek2530 2 года назад +7

      @@michaeldeman hello Sir, please could you tell me when would you release part 2, 3 & 4?? Can't wait to see your video about the last Destination Nepal 🇳🇵

  • @kimhansen8615
    @kimhansen8615 Год назад +2

    Only 1977 and already a distant past - heck, most of these guys could still be around!

  • @awesomemanu2601
    @awesomemanu2601 4 года назад +10

    I miss my old Nepal and love all tourists who are being enlightened since long back. Peace and care

  • @TheMidoriDreams
    @TheMidoriDreams 2 года назад +8

    Man, I wish I could travel back in time and visit all the beautiful places in Marocco, Afghanistan, India, Nepal when they were like they were back then...😌

  • @bikashchamlingrai9073
    @bikashchamlingrai9073 6 лет назад +30

    All of you folks lots of love from Kathmandu,Nepal❤✌hope you folks all is well..

  • @AhmedRizvanNashin
    @AhmedRizvanNashin 6 лет назад +18

    From this video, I can only say, you people have a life of exploring. thanks for the documentation.

  • @Messi46359
    @Messi46359 4 года назад +5

    Watching this high ,hits on a totally different level

  • @sugarfree1894
    @sugarfree1894 Год назад +2

    The World About Us was regular Sunday evening viewing. Thanks for the upload.

  • @paulschnyder938
    @paulschnyder938 Год назад +4

    How things have changed. Great video. And what an adventurer the organiser is. Tremendous.

  • @mahimashree7314
    @mahimashree7314 3 года назад +15

    🙏 thank you so much for this wonderful video as well as all lovers of Nepal . It makes me feel so thrilled, it touches my heart and got on opportunity to watch the back Kathmandu. I’m out of country so missing a lot of things of hometown.

  • @paulusaurelius5353
    @paulusaurelius5353 2 года назад +5

    Great journey well documented, bravo! Took me back to my similar travels 10 years later, best thing I ever did.

  • @andymacgregor16
    @andymacgregor16 Год назад +1

    3 months in the back of that truck, that takes some perseverance. Must have been an amazing experience back then though. I have a 3 hour flight from where I’m living to Kathmandu and have popped over for a long weekend !

  • @CambodiaNomadTips
    @CambodiaNomadTips 6 лет назад +7

    Interesting video. I started travelling 40 years ago....what an adventure it has been.

  • @sinoj27moonjely
    @sinoj27moonjely 6 лет назад +18

    Anyone in this trip still alive!!! Such a great journy!!! I wish i were with them!!! Love it

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  6 лет назад +66

      yup, it is I, Mike Deman, and very much still alive! The driver and star of this movie ;) And I am still in contact with at least three of the passengers on that trip. Two of them are grannies and still with adventure in their hearts!

    • @sinoj27moonjely
      @sinoj27moonjely 6 лет назад +2

      mtdd1948 @ thanks.. pls convay my love.. love them all..

    • @kichaachitrakar443
      @kichaachitrakar443 5 лет назад +3

      @@michaeldeman I can only imagine how pristine and amazing the whole trip would have been. I hope all the hardship of the travel was worth the hospitality and welcoming nature of my old City of Kathmandu. Do you still visit Nepal? If you do, I would be delighted to perhaps have opportunity to meet you in person and listen more of you travel stories. Love and light from The mouttains. :)

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  5 лет назад +9

      @@kichaachitrakar443 I have nothing but the very fondest memories of my times in Nepal. When I stopped overland driving, I managed the Everest View Hotel in Solu Khumbu for some time - and living up there among the world's most beautiful peaks was a truly spiritual experience. I keep meaning to go back for a visit, but simply have not yet found the time! I would love to meet you if one of these days I actually get to do it!

    • @kichaachitrakar443
      @kichaachitrakar443 5 лет назад +3

      Thank you for the reply, I can only imagine how amazing experience it would have been. I shall send you a message so that perhaps we can stay in touch till you are here!@@michaeldeman

  • @GEDUNN
    @GEDUNN 4 года назад +18

    fantastic, loved it. COVID-19 had just forced me to return 6 months early from a 1-year overland trip from UK to Aus (well, Indonesia, as far as you can get by land/sea these days). Made it to southern Thailand via trans-Mongolian railway, China, Laos and Myanmar. Due to the virus, I'm now back home and spending all day watching retro travel stories such as yours to maintain my beleif that we shall all be able to travel again some day.
    Thanks for posting.

    • @mrjohn.whereyoufrom
      @mrjohn.whereyoufrom 4 года назад

      Gareth Dunn I was set to do the same but never even made it to Heathrow.

    • @NLIMBU31
      @NLIMBU31 4 года назад +1

      Gareth Dunn , I am thinking of driving to Kathmandu and back, any suggestion?

    • @Imperfectnomad
      @Imperfectnomad 4 года назад +2

      same here... just came back from laos because of this covid shit. Hoping to get back on the road soon. Hope to see on the crossroads some day... till then stay safe stay alive.

    • @loontil
      @loontil 2 года назад +1

      ....except that travel in Asia is now 1000 times more lame and uptight than it used to be....I first went to India and Thailand (&Viet Nam, LAo, Burma ..) in '93 and have gone back over the years but it just became more and more tame and touristy....worst example: Thai islands - lawless and sweet in 93-94, now pale simulacras of what was...teeming with tryhards....cops, concrete,,.....

  • @vrabcheee
    @vrabcheee 6 лет назад +13

    Thank you very much on behalf of all Afghans

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  6 лет назад +15

      I would reply with great thanks to the very many Afghans who received all of us with such hospitality and generosity of spirit, back in those days when all seemed right with the world. I am now 70 years old, but I will never forget those wondrous days and nights, sipping chai and eating kebabs with flat bread, and having warm conversations with our hosts in the roadside chaikhanehs....

    • @tapendarpariyar8508
      @tapendarpariyar8508 4 года назад

      But you Afghanistani people fail to protect your history bamiyan bhudha 😥😥 because of islam
      Ples lelf Islam and save Afghanistan

  • @dromrai
    @dromrai 6 дней назад

    A very impressive video both informative and sensitive with an excellent narration. I went the solo hitching route 10 years before this and tended to discount the later ‘tour trips’ but there are obvious advantages in travelling this way too. What is upsetting is to see how different it is today. The mountains of Afghanistan never leave you….

  • @vishisthapyakurel900
    @vishisthapyakurel900 3 года назад +5

    Today's generation should look about such golden history

  • @marclabrecque266
    @marclabrecque266 2 года назад +2

    Man what an experience. I wonder what kind of trip one could no nowadays that gives such a vibe

  • @gurungktama6640
    @gurungktama6640 3 года назад +2

    I wish i could go back in time and visit nepal again. Such a wonderful people and serving.

  • @sanzayaoverdoze9508
    @sanzayaoverdoze9508 2 года назад +7

    Love from Nepal♥️
    Hippie era was very beneficial for Nepal♥️🇳🇵

  • @raazstha7063
    @raazstha7063 3 года назад +3

    Nepal welcomes all of you..visit nepal for once in a lifetime.experience

  • @malenedietl3369
    @malenedietl3369 Год назад +1

    The preparations for this trip and the skills needed, imagine... The trip is an education surpassing what you are taught in schools. Amazing. Things were less complicated and more complicated in those days.

  • @birgitlitegaard2912
    @birgitlitegaard2912 3 года назад +5

    I went on this trip in autumn of 78 with an Exodus truck. Excactly like this! Anybody here knows Kevin Phillips? From London? Co driver on the trip.

  • @mickenglish4629
    @mickenglish4629 Год назад +4

    1971
    Magic bus to dehli from wood green £135.

  • @ShakirShakir-yf7ge
    @ShakirShakir-yf7ge 4 месяца назад

    Amazing...so captivating, fascinating and mesmerizing documentary. Everything is so perfect, if only the print would hv been better, but I understand,it's from long back in the time.
    You took us through the time around half of the world.
    I could recognise places in Turkey and India. Kashmir has a long history of hospitality and tourism, I find the same even now.
    I'm proud that only Asia has such wide array of geographical, colorful, cultural, religious and demographic diversity to offer to the world.
    Thanks for uploading.
    If someone has more such treasure please upload or give link

  • @keithm9999
    @keithm9999 Год назад +1

    I was there near that time. I think we left Istanbul in early September and arrived in Nepal about Dec of 78 and we were there in Nepal for 3 months and a week or so. We had to get our visa extended multiple times. At first in Kathmandu and then much longer in Pokhara where we had a house (more like a hut) near the lake.

  • @aakarkakshya2627
    @aakarkakshya2627 Год назад +3

    Namaste from Nepal

  • @G529-l3v
    @G529-l3v 3 года назад +4

    The days when a Westerner could cross these countries in relative safety.
    Kashmir 🥰

  • @lizpaulden5466
    @lizpaulden5466 4 месяца назад

    Amazing brought back happy memories travelling to Afghanistan and back

  • @steviemac9055
    @steviemac9055 Год назад +3

    I had forgotten all about The World About Us. I wonder when TV executives made the decision not to enlighten, educate or inform anymore.

  • @bluemarblestories3418
    @bluemarblestories3418 3 года назад +2

    Must have been a an amazing trip. Great documentary. Love the shots made in the sand storm.

  • @silverace08
    @silverace08 3 года назад

    @mtdd1948 mesmerizing beyond measure, thankyou for taking us on such a wonderous journey, wish it were still possible today

  • @seriouskaraoke879
    @seriouskaraoke879 5 лет назад +25

    I made this trip 1979 - 1980, but not with these guys. That would have sucked for a couple reasons. First, that truck would totally suck to travel in for months and months. I traveled using local transportation, old beat up buses (at times riding on top where you could stretch out on the luggage) and third class train tickets. The ride itself probably wasn't any better but the view sure as hell had to be better than a canvas topped cargo truck, good lord. Second, traveling with the same people, all westerners, going to the same places and doing the same things as a group? For three solid months? That would be maddening within two weeks tops.. And cooking your own food? Wth? Eating the local food (usually street food) is a big part of the traveling experience.
    Where is the adventure? This is an insulated guided tour. To hell with that. The adventure is in not knowing what lies ahead and immersing yourself in whatever comes. Eyes wide open, everything is new and different. It was like being on another planet, several other planets. It's the details and little things that make it an adventure like dealing with bus schedules and train schedules and finding that certain hostel and that cool as shit local cafe and dealing with local bureaucracy in getting visas for the next country...all that administrative all that finding out stuff, that's the journey, that's what traveling is all about, well the destinations too, but still you aren't really traveling unless you have both. Here's why: you're not just getting a train ticket, you are interacting with people in their culture and in so doing you get to directly experience that culture in the only way one can directly experience it. (The video still merits a thumbs up because they at least had the foresight to video document their trip and there are damn few of those. I'm just now struck with the thought of how cool it would have been to have had an iPhone back then.)
    I traveled by myself, meaning I didn't start the trip with anyone else but I never ended up traveling alone. It was easy to meet fellow travelers since budget travelers all stay in the same cheap hovel hostels, eat in the same cheap places, drink beers in the same divey bars, and so forth. Mind you that doesn't; mean one hostel, it means dozens of hostels, and hundreds of cafes, and bars (in Europe that is). There were always a couple cool travelers heading the same way and you just sorta grouped up. After a couple weeks we'd split up to take off in some other direction with another traveler heading that way. There was a current of travelers going west to east and the other way, from Australia/New Zealand heading to Europe, and the information and tips was real time current.
    I traveled like that for a year starting in London and overland to Kathmandu. We zipped through Iran as quickly as we could since this was just after the Shah had been deposed and the Ayatollahs were running the show and it was not a good place for Americans to be. A few months later the U.S. Embassy Hostage Crisis ensued. We also bypassed Afghanistan since the Russian induced civil war had just begun and took the southern route to Pakistan instead and spent a couple months each in Pakistan, India, and Nepal. It would have been great to have been able to travel overland through Burma, Cambodia, Vietnam to get to Thailand, but all those countries were closed to travelers at the time. So I took a cheap plane ride to Thailand some months there and in Indonesia.
    It was safe, it was fun, it was mind expanding, it was maturing, it was enlightening, it was a helluva lot of partying, and it was DIRT CHEAP. A dollar a day in some places. But the best part of it all was no matter where you went there were cool people who were happy to have you and show and tell how important/ancient/interesting/ and wonderful their piece of the world was. It was an incredible experience that has never left me, indeed I carry it with me still for it profoundly changed my worldview. I've been an eager adventurer ever since. It's a big ass wonderful world out there just waiting on you to take the first step and leave your familiar little ol' piece of ground where nothing changes and nothing is interesting.
    "Kicking around on a piece of ground in your home town
    Waiting for someone or something to show you the way."
    .

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  5 лет назад +26

      Hi Karaoke, thanks for the comment, and one can only commend you for your spirit of adventure. But you know we have an expression "horses for courses". We were operating as a commercial venture, and fortunately for us there were a lot of takers. Plenty of people may have an appetite for a venturesome experience, without doing what you did. I had an incredibly diverse set of passengers on these trips, and one in particular sticks in my mind: an ex-Indian Army colonel in his 70s with an artificial hip who not only travelled all the way from London in the back of our truck, but also trekked with me to Everest Base Camp - with a couple of additional sherpas to carry his vodka rations!
      I also recall on one occasion driving deep into the Great Sand Desert in Iran, coming across a couple of travellers who were cast more in your mould. Their beat-up psychedelic kombi van which they barely knew how to maintain, had given up the ghost a good 2 days drive in any direction from any form of sustenance mechanical or dietary. We happily loaded their belongings - including two hand gliders - onto the rood of the cab, and took them all the way to Kathmandu. Very good company they were too; and they paid for their passage by teaching us all how to hang glide once we got there.
      I think there is another point you are missing: probably the major point of our trips was to spend the maximum amount of time off-road, and to go to places where perhaps the individual traveller on his own resources would not be able to reach. Yes of course we went to Shit Street in Kabul where anyone can go to partake of hash brownies, and to the Bamiyan Buddhas, where travellers like yourself could also visit in the local buses. But were you able to cross the Dasht-i-Margo aka Desert of Death in a series of sandstorms? Visit the Minaret of Jam by the tumbling Hari Rud river in the middle of the Hindu Kush? The Old City deep in the desert south west of Kandahar? I can assure you that you cannot visit those places in a tuk-tuk!
      What I am trying to say is that there is no right way or wrong way to do this: and I think you might reconsider and rein in a little bit your veiled contempt for people who at the end of the day just might have been able to see things and go to places that you were unable (or maybe not interested) in seeing. I am certain that you had an amazing set of experiences that will stay with you for the rest of your life, and bravo for that. But I am also certain that the people that travelled with me have the same set of memories. I have remained in touch with a number of them, now in their sixties and seventies like myself, and they never stopped travelling whenever they could, and remain adventurous in their desire to see all the places on their bucket list. They are still at it. And bravo to them too!
      As I said....horses for courses.
      And I of course was the really lucky one - I actually got paid to drive 4-wheel drive trucks in deserts and mountains, and to get to see far more places over a number of years than I could ever have expected to see as an independent traveller!

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 5 лет назад +6

      @@michaeldeman -- And there you have it, reasonable discourse represented by differing points of view. In the end, I think you will agree that it's splitting hairs when considered in the greater context of having had the experience in the first place. To all you young people out there, it's not so much how you do it as it is that you do it. And I hope you do it.

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 5 лет назад +4

      @@michaeldeman -"'vodka rations"...I love that.

    • @fusiongautam1699
      @fusiongautam1699 5 лет назад +1

      You've lived a great life

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 4 года назад

      @wtnomad -- KISS!

  • @sicks6six
    @sicks6six Год назад +2

    did anyone take the "Magic Bus" from London to Kathmandu in the 1970s, I'm sure it was £25 for an open return ticket, I used to see the advert in NME for it and always wanted to take that trip, a few people who I knew who went there never recovered, or should I say readjusted to UK life, became full-on hippies or vanished, times were far simpler back then, buy an old bus, fix it up, advertise in the NME, when it was sold out set off, no special insurance, no nothing, just go and do it. . .what a great attitude these travellers had back then, little or no organisation and only a few reference books to read prior to going,

    • @saujansiwakoti8569
      @saujansiwakoti8569 23 дня назад

      I have been trying to find documentaries on it, you know of any?

  • @StanfordFan-jn1dp
    @StanfordFan-jn1dp Год назад +2

    I did the trip by myself from KTM to Istanbul in '76.

  • @ramdas8842
    @ramdas8842 Год назад

    This is a beautiful, very informative and detailed documentary made with advanced camera and sound in late late 70s

  • @sarmilabaniya94
    @sarmilabaniya94 Год назад

    thank you for amazing video...omg how prisicious 😊😊😊love from nepal

  • @fredalovin2059
    @fredalovin2059 4 месяца назад

    Fascinating. Thank you for sharing !

  • @surensuri1519
    @surensuri1519 4 года назад +6

    Thank you so much to see my home land Pokhara,,it reminds me a lot ..at that time we had a king and good road from pokhara to Kathmandu,happy people and culture,,that we are going to losing soon,,,,

  • @kmgrvlogs
    @kmgrvlogs 4 года назад +3

    these traveller completed mission of their life ♥️

  • @Talibzhat
    @Talibzhat 5 лет назад +5

    Thanks for the memorable documentary.
    I took the same land trip in 1972 by ship from Penang to Madras and further by land to Europe.
    Unfortunately I was travelling at a very low budget....USD2 per day.
    I could not afford a camera and therefore no pictures available....

    • @michaeldeman4850
      @michaeldeman4850 5 лет назад

      Glad you enjoyed the documentary. Your own trip sounds amazing, it is a shame you weren't able to take photos

    • @Talibzhat
      @Talibzhat 5 лет назад

      @@michaeldeman4850 Have you any plan travelling to Malaysia? Pls get in touch

    • @dilipsharma3878
      @dilipsharma3878 4 года назад

      Talib Hamid 👍

    • @dilipsharma3878
      @dilipsharma3878 4 года назад +3

      Talib Hamid not having photographs is also a blessing in disguise. Now u can explain and elaborate ur trip based on your memory to ur children or friends. Remember Marco Polo too didn’t took photographs

  • @blackwater644
    @blackwater644 4 года назад +8

    This video makes me jealous i wish i have been with them

  • @Humvee369
    @Humvee369 Год назад +2

    Landscapes and waterways free of rubbish. And tolerance by default. I miss the past.

  • @Rick-t8y
    @Rick-t8y Год назад +1

    hashish saved my life the hippie trail was magic

  • @alfiedocherty3038
    @alfiedocherty3038 Год назад

    I love that guy with the glasses he seems to get everywhere

  • @kingjsolomon
    @kingjsolomon Год назад +2

    I wish more than anything I could’ve been 18-21 in 1979 😭😭😭

    • @gingerfellah5665
      @gingerfellah5665 4 месяца назад

      I was 13 at the time and travelled aged 20 around the Greek islands for 5 weeks on my own. I’m not sure anyone would allow their daughter to do that now. Travelling in those days was very scary and difficult. No internet, not even many credit cards. In the end you kinda changed

  • @MichaelWard-hu8ss
    @MichaelWard-hu8ss Год назад

    Cultures are so beautiful when you see them back in the day how did we lose it and end up with so much hate but back then seemed so chill

  • @asinelliplatamona8348
    @asinelliplatamona8348 Год назад +1

    Amazing , I want to go on this journey

  • @tashmeem
    @tashmeem 3 года назад +2

    Life goes but Tajmahal remains the same. What a beauty!

  • @johnmcgrath2022
    @johnmcgrath2022 Год назад +1

    Would be lovely to hear the thoughts and reflections of any of the travelling group?

  • @uhoh007
    @uhoh007 Год назад +2

    This was the easy way…a group, a guide…a filmmaker. Thousands of young people had gone before, single, couples, friends for a decade. Those were the true adventures. But it’s very nice to see some film that suggests that time. In the 80’s during several trips I reached 44 countries. Afghanistan was closed, but China and Tibet were open. I was never robbed, and never heard a complaint about violence from other travelers. It was bad publicity to attack western kids in all the police states, I guess. The Dollar was crazy high. Now I’m old and must pee far too often 😢

  • @yanzeebro
    @yanzeebro Год назад +1

    i loved it..🥰.dammm all the way on truck to nepal,amazing.

  • @dipenr8122
    @dipenr8122 4 месяца назад

    thanks for showing the time when hippie travelled. i felt like i was there :D

  • @afro_2583
    @afro_2583 4 года назад +3

    Heard about this route in the book written by paulo coelho hippie ...

  • @sabihatanveer8494
    @sabihatanveer8494 Год назад

    Thanks to David &Annie's efforts, captured the subcontinent after independence 🎉in 48

  • @petergeoghan7241
    @petergeoghan7241 Год назад +1

    😅i made the overland trip from Corfu to Kathmandu in 71 on Mercedes streetcar bus driven by a couple of Irishmen. I was 19 years old when i started the trip twenty when I arrived in Kathmandu. The 15 to 20 others on the bus were mostly young europeans

  • @francescaa8331
    @francescaa8331 Год назад +1

    Great upload. Thanks.

  • @soultrap8554
    @soultrap8554 Год назад

    Great doco. It would have been an amazing time to pass through all of those countries conflict-free and untouched by tourism.

  • @unknownperson8541
    @unknownperson8541 Год назад +1

    Beautiful documentary

  • @Starry_Night_Sky7455
    @Starry_Night_Sky7455 6 лет назад +13

    Crazy! Travel with printed maps and no GPS or phones.

    • @JerryRiceBall
      @JerryRiceBall 3 года назад +2

      Lolll. People were still traveling by map into the 2000’s.

  • @langermain
    @langermain 4 месяца назад

    Great to get a reminder of my solo overland trip to the Himalayas and India in 1975. Don't want to nit-pick but I can't imagine doing the trip any way other than how i did it which was very arduous but character-building. Most did it this way, by hitching half the way and then catching local buses. You were free to stop off and spend time, or go wherever you wanted to. I can't imagine paying the money to this as a group, and with no freedom. ("Cooking duties", "shopping duties", and putting out and packing tents again?) Of course, it wasn't reasonably possible to make a documentary about what most people did, which was to do the trip solo! A lot of this "tour" seems to cover many things I never saw and seem vaguely interesting - but frankly after 15 minutes of any kind of "guided tour" I get very bored and need to go off alone again. In short, this is definitely not how most people did the overland route to India.

    • @michaeldeman4850
      @michaeldeman4850 2 месяца назад +1

      It's horses for courses, my friend. There is no one approved way of doing anything in life....

  • @raiboy3195
    @raiboy3195 4 года назад +2

    They must be led zeppelin fan😄 love from nepal

  • @pratikshyalamichhane4326
    @pratikshyalamichhane4326 4 года назад +2

    Really loved . From nepal

  • @christopherbarnett5554
    @christopherbarnett5554 Год назад +2

    A truck? We used to dream of travelling in't truck. Went overland alone in 1976 by train, bus, hitching etc. I arrived in India the very week that Charles Sobragh was finally caught by the police in Agra. Whew!

  • @angelinathedrifter
    @angelinathedrifter Год назад +3

    Good old days ❤...

  • @dylantierney6407
    @dylantierney6407 Год назад +2

    Where can I find more documentaries like this

  • @mrjohn.whereyoufrom
    @mrjohn.whereyoufrom 3 года назад +4

    I would love to see a video of the travellers in the film getting together and reminiscing about the journey and their thoughts on countries today like Afghanistan and Iran.
    Could anyone make this possible?

    • @michaeldeman
      @michaeldeman  3 года назад

      I am in touch with only two or three of the members of this trip, and sadly one passed away recently. I would love to have a reunion but doubt I can make it happen...,

    • @mrjohn.whereyoufrom
      @mrjohn.whereyoufrom 3 года назад +1

      @@michaeldeman That’s a shame. It would have made a great video. Thank you for this video though. It’s fabulous. The young lady at 11.40. Is she surprised at how cheap or expensive the fruit is? Also at the end of the trip did you drive the lorry back to England solo or sell it? Apologies if they come across as silly questions. I’m just fascinated about journeys like this.

    • @hannesstuber222
      @hannesstuber222 2 года назад

      @@mrjohn.whereyoufrom there is a Goa Reunion of 2009 here on you tube ... check it out

  • @ThePollozero
    @ThePollozero 4 года назад

    thanks so much for precious sharing

  • @poudelamrit3191
    @poudelamrit3191 Год назад +1

    This is mesmerizing.

  • @chumlungpoosays
    @chumlungpoosays 4 года назад +2

    watching this during quarantine being bored as fuck, great documentary to kill the time :)

  • @andreanicolas9363
    @andreanicolas9363 4 года назад +4

    Pure adventure no smartphone

  • @devonhughes3805
    @devonhughes3805 Год назад +1

    Wonderful adventure. Thank you for posting. Maybe in the future don't use those weird "stabilizing" plug-ins when converting. It gave several scenes a bizarre look.

  • @joepritchard1393
    @joepritchard1393 8 месяцев назад

    man, makes me dream. when self-growth and discovery clearly fucking meant something. full on immersion in nature and culture so foreign that every day can change you, every new place and people leave a vivid impression and the potential to alter how you look at the world, must have been so inspiring. now we're just told to read sodding Twelve rules for life and suck it up. to hustle soullessly and endlessly in the face of capitalist excess, environmental disaster and social and economic decline. must have been glorious to feel so free from it all for a few months, thanks for this awesome documentary x

  • @abhayabinduhewa9095
    @abhayabinduhewa9095 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed the video from Sri Lanka . What I was wondering was, how did you do te return journey and what happened to the lorry .?

  • @alexabood2516
    @alexabood2516 3 года назад +3

    jealous of all the hippies reminiscing in these comments

  • @w1lf1ewoo
    @w1lf1ewoo 9 месяцев назад

    "and every school boy knows a camel carries water in its humps" ..indeed! what a journey, I wouldn't have believed people would chooose to spend 3 months on a truck ...wow

  • @randyrosy
    @randyrosy Год назад +1

    Remember: Despite the Cold War this was a very peaceful era when these countries could be travelled with comparably few manmade hazards

  • @pleidiolwyfimwlad2104
    @pleidiolwyfimwlad2104 Год назад

    I will stick to my yearly 2 weeks in benidorm thank you

  • @anjanmellow2688
    @anjanmellow2688 3 года назад +1

    RUclips Recommended After 3 years

  • @mikeFolco
    @mikeFolco 5 лет назад +27

    32:30 So sad that this wonder was destroyed by the Talibans. The world has changed indeed.

  • @suryasapkota4043
    @suryasapkota4043 Год назад +2

    upload another part please

  • @robertjsmith
    @robertjsmith Год назад

    Mike is master of the understatement

  • @DVIOUSD1
    @DVIOUSD1 Год назад

    Awesome gpod to see the 70s again

  • @Valerie-gn1rr
    @Valerie-gn1rr Год назад +2

    What a trip! There were lucky. I wouldn't want to travel through Iran this days..

    • @benwalton1039
      @benwalton1039 Год назад +1

      I just met a crew last week in Ladakh who drove a big old 80's bus (I think converted ambulance) through Iran and Pakistan. They only had good things to say about Iran, particularly the curiosity and hospitality of the people, so still possible :-)

    • @Valerie-gn1rr
      @Valerie-gn1rr Год назад +1

      @@benwalton1039 Heard about the travellers currently jailed in Iran? One of them, a french young guy taking pictures and being accused of being a spie! Has been jailed for quite a while now, and is not the only one. So, no thank you, I wouldn't take the risk or either want to travel to a country who can do that.

  • @sineadconran4964
    @sineadconran4964 Год назад +1

    The Kurdish people are amazing❤

  • @anshunegi1700
    @anshunegi1700 2 года назад

    Iam anshu from India nainital i went to kathmandu when I was two

  • @sangamtamang01
    @sangamtamang01 Год назад +1

    Beautiful ❤

  • @bobjary9382
    @bobjary9382 Год назад

    Bedford MK , what a classic . If the cab tipped like the Ford D series it would be perfect.
    Ive bounced around in the back of one them so massive respect to all those youngsters .
    Never fancied it myself but I was in the hospital for tropical diseases in st pancras after a tough time in india and almost every other bed was taken up by a similar expedition crossing Africa whod left behind all their soap and disinfectant one night and were all horribly ill.

    • @michaeldeman4850
      @michaeldeman4850 Год назад

      Actually it was a TK, we couldn't afford the 4x4 M types