TRAVERSE Issue 14 - October 2019 | Seite 89

RECORD TIME L ife I s A D aring A d v enture M y rear tyre had just blown, and the back of my bike was wagging like the tail of a dog. I hadn’t shaved or changed my dusty clothes in over a month. My feet were blistered and my eyes blood- shot. The girl on the security gate had a look on her face, one I’d seen before, one I’d become accustomed to. I met her gaze with a big cheesy grin. She looked confused … “What the hell are you doing out here mate?” she questioned. “Where the hell have you been?” “I just came out of the desert,” I re- plied, a grin on my face like a crazed man. “Jesus, you’re bloody game. Why are you so happy?” more questions from her. “I just set a new world record,” I boasted, I couldn’t help it. “Fastest man to cross all ten Australian des- erts, solo on a motorbike.” I had a 2008 Yamaha WR250R TRAVERSE 89 dirt bike with a home-made set of panniers holding my postie bags on. The panniers empty weighed nearly 9kg. I had only been riding bikes for 18 months, and in the lead up to my departure date, I had taken the bike out three times in training for the journey. The bike was underpowered and overweight. I was overweight and out of shape for the trip. The odds were stacked firmly against me, and every- one knew it. And secretly, I revelled in that fact. I loved being the under- dog, I wanted it to be hard, I wanted to be challenged. In fact, I would have been more likely to quit and give up if I did get bored and it was easy, that’s just me. Fear and uncertainty crept into my preparation for the ride. How could it not when society conditions you to put limitations on yourself? I am not some cowboy who want- ed to hit the dunes wide open on the back wheel. No! Everything about