Brit becomes first to visit all countries without flying

28 November,2012 08:02 AM IST |   |  Agencies

Graham Hughes, a 33-yr-old adventurer, used buses, taxis, trains, boats and his two feet to travel 2,57,495 km in exactly 1,426 days ufffd all on a budget of just Rs 5,500 a week


If anything can be said about record-breaking globetrotter Graham Hughes, it's that - throughout his travels - he's always kept his feet firmly on the ground.

The 33-year-old adventurer, from Liverpool, has become the first person to visit all 201 countries in the world without using a plane.

Hughes used buses, taxis, trains and his own two feet to travel 2,57,495 km in exactly 1,426 days - all on a shoestring budget of just $100 (Rs 5,500) a week.


Finish line: Graham Hughes trudged into Juba, the capital of South Sudan, to end the epic four-year journey that began in his hometown of Liverpool on New Year's Day in 2009. Pic/AFP

Course of travel
He spent four days ‘crossing open ocean in a leaky boat' to reach Cape Verde, was jailed for a week in the Congo for being a ‘spy', was arrested trying to ‘sneak into' Russia and had to be ‘rescued from Muslim fundamentalists by a Filipino ladyboy called Jenn'.

And yesterday ended the epic four-year journey by crossing into Juba, the capital of South Sudan, which did not even exist when he set off from his hometown of Liverpool on New Year's Day 2009.

"I love travel, and I guess my reason for doing it was I wanted to see if this could be done, by one person travelling," he said. "I think I also wanted to show that the world is not some big, scary place, but in fact is full of people who want to help you even if you are a stranger."

He has traversed the borders of all 193 members of the United Nations plus Taiwan, Vatican City, Palestine, Kosovo, Western Sahara and the four home nations of The United Kingdom - all without flying.

Guinness confirmed that Hughes, who filmed the expedition for a documentary and raised money for charity WaterAid, has achieved the world record.

"The main feeling today is just one of intense gratitude to every person around the world who helped me get here, by giving me a lift, letting me stay on their couch, or pointing me in the right direction," Hughes added.

While all land transport had to have either wheels, hooves or sturdy rubber soles, he made the longer-haul voyages mostly by hitching lifts on cargo ships.

Other highlights include dancing with the Highlanders of Papua New Guinea, befriending orangutans in Borneo, riding through the badlands of Kenya on an 18-wheel truck, meeting the Prime Minister of Tuvalu - and ‘warning schoolchildren in Afghanistan about the dangers of men with beards'.

He says there were low points on the trip such as ‘sitting in a bus station in Cambodia at one in the morning or riding some awful truck over bad roads' when he thought: ‘Why am I doing this?'

The lowest point came when his sister, Nicole, died of cancer two years ago aged just 39. He broke the trip to hurry home to see her.

"I'd done 184 countries and had only 17 to go and I thought why not leave it there? (...but) she told me not to stop," he added.

But having finished his journey, he has no intention of buying a plane ticket any time soon and says he now plans to ‘keep in the spirit of the adventure' and travel through Africa some more before getting the ferry home from Ireland just in time for Christmas. u00a0

Man travels the world for free using only Twitter
In 2009, a brave traveller made it all the way to New Zealand without buying a single ticket along the way. Paul Smith - dubbed the Twitchhiker - made the 10,999-km trip using only donations from people who use the social networking site Twitter. He gave himself 30 days to complete the trek, and was forbidden to spend a penny. On completing his trek, he wrote: "The Twitchhiker project showed that kindness is universal, that the whole can be infinitely greater than the sum of its parts, and that social media may begin online but it will converge with the real world whenever and wherever you let it."u00a0

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Graham Hughes buses taxis trains boats