Long Way Down: An Epic Journey by Motorcycle from Scotland to South Africa

$14.29
by Ewan McGregor

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Now in paperback, this second remarkable travel book from famed actor Ewan McGregor and his good friend Charley Boorman chronicles their epic adventure ride on motorbikes from Scotland to South Africa. After their fantastic trip around the world in 2004, recounted to acclaim in Long Way Round, Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman couldn’t shake the travel bug. Inspired by their UNICEF visits to Africa, they knew they had to go back and experience this extraordinary continent in more depth. In Long Way Down, they share their 15,000-mile journey, from the northernmost tip of Scotland to the southernmost tip of South Africa, to ride some of the toughest terrain in the world. Along the way, from the pyramids in Egypt to Luke Skywalker’s house in Tunisia, they meet people who have triumphed over terrifying experiences—former child soldiers in Uganda and children living amidst the minefields of Ethiopia. They have a close encounter with a family of gorillas in Rwanda and are nearly trampled by a herd of elephants in Botswana. Riding through spectacular scenery, often in extreme temperatures, they face their hardest challenges yet. With their trademark humor and honesty, they tell their story—the drama, the dangers, and the sheer exhilaration of riding together again through a continent filled with magic and wonder. Ewan McGregor is one of the most acclaimed and successful actors of his generation. The star of Star Wars and Moulin Rouge , he lives in London, England. Charley Boorman, son of famed director John Boorman, is an actor living in London. Long Way Down 1Where’s Charley? CHARLEY: I remember the moment it started. It was October 2004, very late one Friday night. We were in the old office in Bulwer Street with boxes all around us, bits of paper, all the office equipment gone. For a few minutes we just stood there reflecting. This is where Long Way Round had all begun, where we’d planned everything, checked and re-checked the maps: it’s where we’d first seen the bikes. It was over, finished: we’d ridden around the world, a mammoth journey; an epic adventure. But it was over now. The maps were still on the wall and we stood before them once more. Ewan glanced at me. ‘What do you reckon, Charley?’ ‘I don’t know.’ ‘South America, India maybe?’ I looked up at him. ‘What about riding through Africa?’ Ewan and I first met on a film set in County Clare more than a dozen years ago, our friendship born out of our passion for motorbikes. We’ve been best mates ever since. We’d always talked about riding together; France maybe, Spain. But then Ewan walked into a map shop, and over dinner that night we decided to forget France or Spain, we’d go the whole hog and ride around the world. The adventure of a lifetime, the two of us off on a couple of bikes. I wasn’t sure we could pull it off; I wasn’t sure it would even happen. But it did. A late-night conversation became a dream, the dream became an adventure and that adventure proved to be a pivotal point in my life. I grew up in the movie business, but I’m dyslexic…and I mean badly: if it hadn’t been for my dad taking a year out to teach me to read, life could’ve been very hard. Even so, reading for acting parts could be difficult sometimes. Historically I’d enjoyed success in movies like The Emerald Forest, but after Long Way Round the direction of my life altered completely. I found myself in places like the pit lane of Moto GP circuits with heroes like Kenny Roberts grabbing my arm and telling me how much he’d enjoyed watching our journey. I was no longer just John Boorman’s son – in fact my dad rang me up the other day to tell me he’d introduced himself to someone and they’d said, ‘Oh, Charley Boorman’s dad’. My career was now in motorcycling – albeit not in a conventional way – and the success of Long Way Round enabled me to live another dream. Ever since I can remember I’d always wanted to race bikes, so together with Russ Malkin, a very good friend and producer/director of Long Way Round, I entered the world’s most dangerous race: the 2006 Dakar rally – five days in January where I rode ridiculous distances at ridiculous speeds before an innocuous crash tipped me off and I broke both my hands. (I never made it to the sand dunes and I’ve unfinished business there.) That dream was over for now, but another was just beginning. Ewan flew in for the end of the Dakar to congratulate us all (my fellow teammate Simon Pavey had made it all the way to the finishing line). He was joined by film maker David Alexanian, the fourth member of the team that created Long Way Round. There we were in Dakar – all together again. And there in the scorching sun we confirmed what we had first mapped out over a year before in Bulwer Street. The adventure was on again – John O’Groats to Cape Town: we would ride the Long Way Down. Once my hands were healed, the first thing Ewan and I did was return to the Royal Geographical Society in London, the place where we’d ma

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