Beautiful video as usual with no noise. So your Rohloffs have caught up to mine at 20,750. Just broken in now, like a teenager. I rode my 73 lb tour bike 100 miles yesterday, 11 hours. I just watched a video of a girl who just switched her Surly from defaileurs to a Rohloff14. She got it from an idiot who only rode it 200 miles and gave up, so stupid. Damn smoke season is fully underway now, got choked out Saturday and Sunday in Edmonton. It is raining enough to halt the fires some now. Last summer was the worst ever. In 2018 I rode a 3,900 mile loop to Oregon, that was damn smoky as well. Don't be afraid to ride almost anywhere thru Edmonton. The river valley MUPs are fantastic. But more likely is you do the Jasper/ Banff highway to Calgary. Western Ontario is a very difficult slog with few towns, narrow shoulders and busy traffic. I drove thru there in 2019.
You guys are amazing for doing this! Can't imagine how it feels to be cycling through such grand places without much civilization. What an amazing adventure, and thanks a lot for making the videos!
Thanks, that means a lot! We've really enjoyed watching your channel grow, you guys put in a ton of hard work and make consistently fascinating videos. Korea was one of our favorite places to ride so it's wonderful seeing all of the cool spots you guys feature. We will definitely be back at some point to check out some of the bike routes we missed in our time there!
Wow, what a ride. I don't know how you guys do it--you make it look so easy. And thank goodness your bikes have not had any major malfunctions. Can't wait for the next one.
Thank you so much for your great videos! Always a joy to watch! 2 questions: 1) you rarely say anything about technical issues or maintenance. Would be really interesting! 2) Are you like going back and forth to home and touring? Or more like on a world tour? Trying to understand.
1) We built our bicycles with the goal of having bombproof transportation that we could depend on. In 2.5 years and 25,000 miles on the road, the only maintenance we did was Rohloff oil changes every 3,000 miles, new chains every 6,000 miles, and new brake pads when needed. We had one technical issue when a rock broke two spokes on Jenny's rear wheel, but we fixed that ourselves on the road with spare spokes that we carried with us. 2) We were on a continuous bicycle tour, 2.5 years with our longest break being 40 days in Croatia while we waited for our Schengen visa to reset. We flew several times to get to new destinations. We are now done with the tour for the near future. We're slowly editing footage but we're quite behind, this video was filmed in June 2023.
Yes, we've decided that it's time to get back to work to rebuild our savings and stay stationary for the foreseeable future. We've still got quite a few videos coming though, our trip ended in October 2023 so we've got four months of footage to work through.
I admire Jennies capacity to keep smiling when she's filmed. Only when she says don't knock me off the road, yet never annoyed. I guess that's the character you need when you travel that long on a bike😊
We were on one long bicycle trip, we were on the road for 2.5 years straight. We just ate as much of whatever we could find! We're really bad about nutrition, we eat a lot of junk but it works for us!
First watch. Nice! Love Da Brim visor under the hood in the rain. Cool. Read your blog comment on Bedrock panniers not being waterproof and that's good to know (I will buy Ortlieb gravel panniers) but I found their handlebar roll to be fantastic in respect of the rain. My review photo from a torrential downpour day in Scotland is still on their homepage! 😊 I'm in Edinburgh.
We are pretty annoyed with the Bedrock Hermosa Panniers to be honest. On top of the fact that they pretty much become buckets in the rain, the attachment system is unreliable and they flopped off the bikes multiple times over the course of our trip, usually after hitting a big bump. We stabbed a bunch of holes in the bottom so they at least drained the water they collected. We eventually switched to the Microwave Panniers from Rockgeist and we recommend them heartily, bombproof attachment and completely waterproof. Ortlieb is the gold standard of course, you really can't go wrong with any of their products.
Always very nice to see some footage from you, it is very inspiring and takes you along for the ride. I was wondering: the rain gear you ride in, is is fully waterproof? You use it extensively in this video, also when it is dry, suggesting it is also breathable
We're both using Montbell Peak Dry shells, which are Montbell's version of the Goretex shake dry technology. The waterproof layer is on the outside meaning you aren't supposed to wear backpacks with the shells, but they absolutely never wet out and are quite breathable compared to other 2.5 and 3 layer rain gear. We highly recommend them for bicycle touring. They are discontinued sadly, but the new Super Dry version might be a similar material. The Montbell JP site ships all over the world and is much cheaper than the US site. We bought ours at a physical Montbell store in Fukuoka.
We were on a continuous trip so we weren't packing our bicycle very often. This Ryan Van Duzer video describes it pretty well, we do the same thing: ruclips.net/video/KnS895Asryk/видео.htmlsi=_Ye-KlwSeQHbcX_j
We were quite surprised! Crossing the big mountains in Malaysia is still the hardest single day we've ever done, even after riding through many countries. The heat and the elevation gain were next level!
As @goodbashop said, it was definitely the bugs! Once we got south of Fairbanks they were much more tolerable though, the Dalton Highway was exponentially more miserable bug-wise than the rest of Alaska.
@@RollingExistence sounds like summer in Sweden where I live. been fighting them through my adventures on my channel. Been following you from the start. Keep up the good work and nice videos. Thank you for the inspiration😀
Yes, we carried an Ursack - basically a Kevlar bear bag that you tie around a tree trunk. We would hang it 100 yards from our tent and also cook 100 yards from our tent and food storage location.
Each chapter in your spectacular journey has been inspiring, and your videos have a wonderful vibe. Thanks for documenting and sharing!
Agree 💯
Do what we love like what we do is the most happiness in our life. Your journey inspiring to me so much.
Thanks for taking us viewers along on your amazing adventure! 🙏🏼 So cool you do this!❤ Every episode I enjoyed watching. And I’ve seen them all!!!😅
Thanks so much!! We're glad you're enjoying them 😊
Thank you. It’s been over 10 years since I toured through Alaska. The Denali Highway was some of my favorite riding. Happy and safe miles y’all!
Beautiful video as usual with no noise.
So your Rohloffs have caught up to mine at 20,750. Just broken in now, like a teenager. I rode my 73 lb tour bike 100 miles yesterday, 11 hours.
I just watched a video of a girl who just switched her Surly from defaileurs to a Rohloff14. She got it from an idiot who only rode it 200 miles and gave up, so stupid.
Damn smoke season is fully underway now, got choked out Saturday and Sunday in Edmonton. It is raining enough to halt the fires some now.
Last summer was the worst ever. In 2018 I rode a 3,900 mile loop to Oregon, that was damn smoky as well.
Don't be afraid to ride almost anywhere thru Edmonton. The river valley MUPs are fantastic.
But more likely is you do the Jasper/ Banff highway to Calgary. Western Ontario is a very difficult slog with few towns, narrow shoulders and busy traffic. I drove thru there in 2019.
You guys are amazing for doing this! Can't imagine how it feels to be cycling through such grand places without much civilization. What an amazing adventure, and thanks a lot for making the videos!
Thanks, that means a lot! We've really enjoyed watching your channel grow, you guys put in a ton of hard work and make consistently fascinating videos. Korea was one of our favorite places to ride so it's wonderful seeing all of the cool spots you guys feature. We will definitely be back at some point to check out some of the bike routes we missed in our time there!
Very well crafted video once again. Thanks for sharing your wonderful adventure, Jenny and Andrew. 🚲 🚲
Thanks so much, I always love to see where you guys hang out. Welcome to Canada, have a great trip ! Cheers.
Nice adventure cycling sir...beautiful world😊
Wow, what a ride. I don't know how you guys do it--you make it look so easy. And thank goodness your bikes have not had any major malfunctions. Can't wait for the next one.
Beautiful and Brave 🤩
Another fantastic video guys, hard to beat those incredible landscapes👌
Wow! If I am not mistaken, I think we saw you last week, going to Fukuyama Japan from Onomichi.
where are you both? what's the latest cycling and where, or are you off your bikes?
Thanks for the video!
Really Beautiful Place , Thank You 2 🚼🪃🏡 🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱🌏🌎🌍🌞
Thank you so much for your great videos! Always a joy to watch!
2 questions:
1) you rarely say anything about technical issues or maintenance. Would be really interesting!
2) Are you like going back and forth to home and touring? Or more like on a world tour? Trying to understand.
1) We built our bicycles with the goal of having bombproof transportation that we could depend on. In 2.5 years and 25,000 miles on the road, the only maintenance we did was Rohloff oil changes every 3,000 miles, new chains every 6,000 miles, and new brake pads when needed. We had one technical issue when a rock broke two spokes on Jenny's rear wheel, but we fixed that ourselves on the road with spare spokes that we carried with us.
2) We were on a continuous bicycle tour, 2.5 years with our longest break being 40 days in Croatia while we waited for our Schengen visa to reset. We flew several times to get to new destinations. We are now done with the tour for the near future. We're slowly editing footage but we're quite behind, this video was filmed in June 2023.
@@RollingExistence Wow! Thanks!
What do you mean, you are done? No more touring?
I always look forward to seeing the next video ☺️
Yes, we've decided that it's time to get back to work to rebuild our savings and stay stationary for the foreseeable future. We've still got quite a few videos coming though, our trip ended in October 2023 so we've got four months of footage to work through.
I admire Jennies capacity to keep smiling when she's filmed. Only when she says don't knock me off the road, yet never annoyed. I guess that's the character you need when you travel that long on a bike😊
Love the views. Don't know if I would love the hills though. What do you eat before a trip, some kind of super foods I guess lol
We were on one long bicycle trip, we were on the road for 2.5 years straight. We just ate as much of whatever we could find! We're really bad about nutrition, we eat a lot of junk but it works for us!
First watch. Nice!
Love Da Brim visor under the hood in the rain. Cool.
Read your blog comment on Bedrock panniers not being waterproof and that's good to know (I will buy Ortlieb gravel panniers) but I found their handlebar roll to be fantastic in respect of the rain.
My review photo from a torrential downpour day in Scotland is still on their homepage! 😊
I'm in Edinburgh.
We are pretty annoyed with the Bedrock Hermosa Panniers to be honest. On top of the fact that they pretty much become buckets in the rain, the attachment system is unreliable and they flopped off the bikes multiple times over the course of our trip, usually after hitting a big bump. We stabbed a bunch of holes in the bottom so they at least drained the water they collected. We eventually switched to the Microwave Panniers from Rockgeist and we recommend them heartily, bombproof attachment and completely waterproof. Ortlieb is the gold standard of course, you really can't go wrong with any of their products.
@@RollingExistence Thanks for your view, it's great feedback.
Keep on rollin'!
Always very nice to see some footage from you, it is very inspiring and takes you along for the ride.
I was wondering: the rain gear you ride in, is is fully waterproof? You use it extensively in this video, also when it is dry, suggesting it is also breathable
We're both using Montbell Peak Dry shells, which are Montbell's version of the Goretex shake dry technology. The waterproof layer is on the outside meaning you aren't supposed to wear backpacks with the shells, but they absolutely never wet out and are quite breathable compared to other 2.5 and 3 layer rain gear. We highly recommend them for bicycle touring. They are discontinued sadly, but the new Super Dry version might be a similar material. The Montbell JP site ships all over the world and is much cheaper than the US site. We bought ours at a physical Montbell store in Fukuoka.
@@RollingExistence Thanks so much for your answer, very much appreciated!
멋지십니다..조심해서 여행하시길..I am a S.korean.❤❤❤
👍
Could you do a video on how you pack and ship your bicycles to your destinations?
We were on a continuous trip so we weren't packing our bicycle very often. This Ryan Van Duzer video describes it pretty well, we do the same thing: ruclips.net/video/KnS895Asryk/видео.htmlsi=_Ye-KlwSeQHbcX_j
A cliffhanger of an ending
Don't get verge vertigo
Cheers
We were quite surprised! Crossing the big mountains in Malaysia is still the hardest single day we've ever done, even after riding through many countries. The heat and the elevation gain were next level!
❤❤❤
What have been the avr. pace that you guys have on the bike / or focus one? Keep up the good work :D
On flat ground we cruise at about 12mph. Not fast, but our bikes usually weigh 90-100 pounds with food and water.
@@RollingExistence that’s faster then I imagined with so many gear
That stove cabin was weird lol. Someone could lock you in and cook you 😅
We thought the same thing! Someone could have put a lock on the outside and trapped us haha, it was a little bit unnerving.
@@RollingExistence fun experience when all goes well 😀
Wow. What a place! What was the best and hardest in Alaska?
Weather and insects obv :)
As @goodbashop said, it was definitely the bugs! Once we got south of Fairbanks they were much more tolerable though, the Dalton Highway was exponentially more miserable bug-wise than the rest of Alaska.
@@RollingExistence sounds like summer in Sweden where I live. been fighting them through my adventures on my channel. Been following you from the start. Keep up the good work and nice videos. Thank you for the inspiration😀
What are you guys doing with your food at nights? Are you carrying a bear storage?
Yes, we carried an Ursack - basically a Kevlar bear bag that you tie around a tree trunk. We would hang it 100 yards from our tent and also cook 100 yards from our tent and food storage location.
That stove cabinet is think i rather camp lol
It was definitely an odd place to sleep!
Come to India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
That was a Russian fighter jet
Haha hopefully not!