The 33-year-old Briton, who hails from Liverpool, has been on the road
for almost four years. Remarkably, he made the journey strictly by land
transportation and by sea.
“Today is the 1,426th day of the Odyssey expedition,
which is my world-record-breaking attempt, which is to be the first
person to visit every country in the world without flying," he said.
On a shoestring budget funded by donations from family and friends, he
says he hitchhiked, stayed on people’s couches, and only ate local food
on his journey.
Wearing a cowboy hat and saddled with three small bags in tatters,
Hughes said when he first announced his plans, no one was convinced he
would make it this far.
“Most people thought that I was a bit mad, a lot of people thought it
was impossible, a lot of people thought it could not be done. Most of
the questions involved how are you going to get to Iraq, how are you
going to get to Afghanistan and Somalia, to be honest those were the
easy countries to get to," he said.
He said officials on the Turkish border waived a visa requirement and let him in to Iraq for 10 days.
It was getting to Pacific islands like Sao Tome and Nauru that were
often served by only one monthly cargo ship that proved the most
difficult. But Hughes had imposed rules on himself that he had to set
foot on dry land in each country to complete his task.
Highlights included watching the last space shuttle launch in the
United States and traveling around Africa. The lowlights included his
detention for six days in the Democratic Republic of Congo on suspicion
of being a spy. He was also detained in Cape Verde.
But Hughes says it was the people, not places that topped the list.
“The main highlight I have to say in this trip, has just been for me,
has been the reaffirmation of my faith in humanity and the fact that
people I have met on the road have been so friendly and hospitable," he
said.
His low points were flying home last year after finding out his sister
had a terminal illness and carrying on after she died, then breaking up
with his girlfriend of 10 years in the final months.
Hughes broke a world record the first year of his trip by visiting 133
countries. He then knocked off all 193 U.N. member states, as well as
places like Palestine, Kosovo and Taiwan that are widely considered if
not officially recognized as sovereign.
Hughes said his early inspiration came from British comic Michael Palin of Monty Python fame, who presented an '80 Days Around the World' TV show in the 1980s.
But Hughes says he always wanted Palin to live up to the show’s title.
“I wanted him to go everywhere, and as I grew up the more I traveled
myself independently the more I realized that it was a feasible thing to
do. I thought with the right determination you could do it, and I have
proved it right. I have managed to do it," he said.
One day, Hughes would like to settle in Liverpool. But for now, he is
not ready to hang up his travel hat in what he says has become the best
job in the world.
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