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Concordia

Merchant Taylors’ School

Cycling around the world

Johan du Plessis

(1999-2004) decided to take an early

career break and went on an extraordinary adventure in aid

of charity. He writes here of cycling over 14,500 miles across

Europe, Central Asia, China, Japan and the US

The Turpan Depression in Western China (elevation -154m)

Working in South Korea as an

engineering project manager for BP, I

was on a great career trajectory which

I could easily have followed for the

next 30 years.

I’d been given great opportunities

by a company that enabled me to

work around the world. I wasn’t lost,

so didn’t need to find myself, but I did

want a change of direction. Would a

new career be enough of a challenge?

Before I launched myself into

something new, the opportunity for

an adventure beckoned. I’d read about

these “big journeys” and realised it

didn’t have to be about someone else

– it could be about me. It was a mad

risk, but if I didn’t try it I’d never know

whether or not I could have succeeded.

So what’s the biggest trip I could

think of? Something bike-related made

sense. Years of rugby and hockey at

MTS had taken their toll on my knees,

and shortly after arriving at university,

the surgeons told me I was no longer

allowed to do running, so I took up

rowing. I was then introduced to

cycling as a means of getting to the

River Avon for 6am rowing sessions.

But I’d become increasingly hooked

– cycling enables you to experience

the world in slow motion as opposed

to shooting past in a car. You also feel