Bismillah Insha allah

Travel around the world by foot, cycle or electric solar bike,
electric vehicle or bullock, horse.
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travel around the world on horse, camel.

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earth trekkers

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https://www.wikihow.com/Travel-Around-the-World
http://www.thetravelcamel.com/
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A British woman named Megan Lewis has been riding horseback around the world for more than seven years. The 66-year-old always dreamed of having a big adventure.
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A Journey to Rival the Odyssey. Karl Bushby is attempting to be the first person to completely walk an unbroken path around the world.Feb 23, 2018
6 Inspiring Travel Stories - Amazing People Who Traveled Around the ...
https://www.eaglecreek.com/blog/inspiring-traveler-tales-around-world.html
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Who cycled around the world?
In December 1993, Andrew Slodkowski completed a record riding 'Around the World in 80 days on a bicycle'.
Around the world cycling record - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Around_the_world_cycling_record
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How long would it take to travel the world by car?
The earth at its largest is about 25,000 miles. If there were a straight highway around the earth - there isn't - and you could drive non-stop at 50mph - you can't - you would drive around the world in 500 hours or about 21 days.
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https://www.internationaltraveller.com/one-family-one-car-one-year-of-travelling-around-the-world/
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https://www.odditycentral.com/travel/man-completes-epic-26-year-550000-mile-road-trip-around-the-world-in-one-unbreakable-car.html

Otto is a celebrity in its own right, and its final resting place will now be at the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart. Apart from reinforced suspension, the car is completely standard and still has the original gearbox, engine and axles. Its three-liter diesel engine develops a modest 88bhp. “I promise there will be a G-Class in the future,” said Dr Dieter Zetsche, head of Mercedes-Benz Cars. “Will there be more characters of Mr. Holtorf’s ilk in the future? I hope so.”

“It’s not about me being remembered
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“The more you have traveled, the more you realise how little you have seen,” he said upon his return.

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https://www.internationaltraveller.com/one-family-one-car-one-year-of-travelling-around-the-world/

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Travelling with a family can be expensive. Do you mind telling us how much it cost?

A: It probably ended up being about $120,000 all up, including the car. We camped where we could and when we couldn’t camp our preference was to stay somewhere that we could cook for ourselves because it provided a little bit more control over what we were eating.

We also wanted to eat locally but eating out a lot of the time was expensive, and with the kids it was hard work, they just wanted home cooked meals.
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How did you keep the kids from going crazy in the car?

A: By planning the driving times. We would do an activity in the morning, then we’d drive, have morning tea and we’d drive a bit more, stop for a picnic lunch, then drive a bit more… so we’d try not to be in the car for more than a few hours at a time.

Then we’d set up camp and there’d be time to play. They were pretty good in the car. There were times where they’d get sick of the space and sitting next to each other but most of the time they were fantastic.
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Q: What about the most beautiful place?

A: I’d say Laos again. And driving down the coast of Eastern Europe through Montenegro, Albania and Croatia – it was probably the most beautiful coastal drive we’d done in a really long time.
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: What car were you driving?

A: A 2002 Nissan Patrol. We’re still driving it even though we’re back in the city because it’s a fifth member of the family now and we could never get rid of it.
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On average it was probably two or three nights, some places it was just an overnight stop and other places it was longer – maybe up to a week.

There were a couple of places where we just ended up staying longer than we planned because one of us or all of us got sick and we just thought, let’s just not go until everyone’s on the mend.

We tried to spend at least a few nights in each place just so that we weren’t just in the car. And so we could explore where we were and meet the local people.
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laos
south east asia

The countries of Southeast Asia include Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar (or Burma), the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, East Timor (or Timor-Leste), and Vietnam.
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Giddy up! A British woman named Megan Lewis has been riding horseback around the world for more than seven years. The 66-year-old always dreamed of having a big adventure. So in 2008, she began a journey on horseback in China. Her plan was to spend four years travelling from the tip of the Great Wall of China to London, England. But when she reached London, she kept going.

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Lewis decided to explore the coast of Ireland. And then she figured, why stop there? In May 2014, she crossed the Atlantic and landed in Newfoundland where she saddled up and began travelling across Canada. Lewis returned home to the United Kingdom for the wintertime and then came back to Canada this past April to continue her journey.

She recently crossed the border and is currently trekking across the United States on a horse named Lady. Since Lewis likes to ride local horses wherever she travels, she purchased Lady from a farmer in Newfoundland. The pair are heading along the Trans Canada Trail, and they plan to reach their final destination somewhere along the west coast of the United States by the end of 2016.

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o make her adventurous trip even more meaningful, Lewis is also raising money along the way for a charity that helps support kids around the world who are living in poverty.
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She has slept inches from scorpions, ridden along the Great Wall of China and relaxed by drinking a local spirit she described as “gut rot”.

And today, a former geography teacher ended an astonishing four-year, 5,000-mile horse ride from China to Wales.


Mother of three Megan Lewis’ marathon trek took her through China, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine, Hungary, Austria, Germany and France on various horses, including one rescued from a meat market.

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https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/epic-5000-mile-four-year-journey-horseback-2024388

She started out from China in 2008 at a point on the eastern end of the Great Wall called Dragon’s Head after the closing ceremony of the 2008 Olympics.
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And the 63, from Pumpsaint, near Lampeter, finally finished at Worm’s Head on Gower where she believes her family originated many generations ago.
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She took the daunting decision to start the ride in 2008 to raise money for the charity ChallengeAid (formerly Schoolchildren for Children) run by her husband Iestyn, a former London Welsh and Harlequins rugby player, currently coach of Welsh Premiership club Llandovery.
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Hungarian customs would not let her horses into the country, but Ukrainians would not let them return so she had to live on a thin strip of land between the two countries.
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She said: “That, and falling off my horse and breaking six ribs just 10 days into the ride in 2008 were some of the lows.
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Welcome to ChallengeAid
ChallengeAid promotes health and fitness throughout the UK by motivating schools, universities, corporate groups and individuals to raise money through sponsored exercise. With the money raised, we create Schools of Hope in East Africa, which offer both an alternative and complementary form of education for aspirational young slum dwellers. Our pledge is that none of the money raised from sponsored physical activity is used for administrative purposes.

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kibera
nairobi,kenya

largest slum there are 1 million  people livign
most house are single room shacks
made of mud
corrugated iron
atleast 6 people living in them
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organized services for sewage, electricity, clearn running water
education, medical services
unemployment, HIV AIDS
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school of hope
rent free space
donated by the community
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desks, chairs, lightining, library
kenyan syllabus text book
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affordability work
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look after young sibling
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shcool unique, innovative concept

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