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Motorhome Facts :: View topic - Ian Hibbell

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 Ian Hibbell
483426 Post Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2008 3:13 pm Thank this member for this postReply with quote Back To Top

grouch Subscriber 01/05/2013 


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I know many members of MHF knew about Ian Hibbell and his travels.

Regretfully I read in the local paper this morning that he had been killed on the Athens/Solonika Highway. He was 74.
 
483432 Post Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2008 3:19 pm Thank this member for this postReply with quote Back To Top

mangothemadmonk Subscriber 10/07/2012 


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250,000 miles on a bike is some achievement. All the wonders and sites he must have seen

Sad it had to end like it did for him.

RIP

Johnny F
 
483452 Post Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2008 3:57 pm Thank this member for this postReply with quote Back To Top

Zoe  


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Wow I'd not heard of this fantastic chap Embarassed so I thought I'd put this on for anyone else who didn't.
Record-setting cyclist who toured exotic and perilous locations on his bike
Ian Hibell, regarded as the world's most accomplished long-distance touring cyclist, died after a road accident in Greece on 23 August, 2008.
The remarkable 74-year-old, from Brixham, who had covered almost every mile of the earth's surface, was in collision with a car while cycling on the Athens-Salonika highway and died shortly afterwards at the scene.
The Torbay sportsman was famous for travelling the world on his bike nearly non-stop for the past 40 years. He took countless expeditions, among them his famous Cape Horn to Alaska trip, and an epic Europe to Cape of Good Hope expedition. He epitomised what it means to be a trailblazer and many of his expeditions were 'firsts'.
Tributes poured in from cycle fans world-wide on the internet for the daredevil tourer who had been to the most remote spots on earth from Antarctica and the Amazon to Alaska and Indonesia.
There were also calls for his book, Into the Remote Places, to be re-printed as a posthumous tribute, and plans for his enormous collection of photos and slides to be preserved and exhibited were made.
Mr Hibell, who lived in Higher Brixham in Devon and cared for his mother until she passed away five years ago, died still modestly claiming a whole slew of long-distance and 'first to go across' records.
But the sinewy sportsman with endless reserves of stamina will be best remembered for his casual asides to fans and interviewers. They revealed he had been almost eaten alive by tropical ants, got lost in mangrove swamps, was chased by rogue elephants and once faced down a hungry lion.
The adventurer, photographer and lecturer had been jailed, shot at and, having left on a two-year sabbatical trip from his work at a communications firm in Paignton, returned 10 years later murmuring apologies. He never did summon up the nerve to ask for his old job back.
A regular guest on Blue Peter and the BBC Globetrotter series, Mr Hibell was honoured by the League of American Wheelmen and by the UK's Cycle Touring Club for his pioneering spirit and accomplishments.
He developed his taste for travelling during his RAF service in the 1950s
Wikipedia records the "first true overland Trans-Americas Expedition was that of British cyclist Ian Hibell who rode from Cape Horn to Alaska between 1971 and 1973". Mr Hibell took the 'direct' overland south-to-north route including an overland crossing of the Atrato Swamp in Colombia.
He completed his crossing accompanied by two other cycling companions who had ridden with him from Cape Horn, but neither of these continued with him on to Alaska. Hibell's Cape Horn to Alaska expedition forms part of his 1984 book Into the Remote Places.
In later years, he lectured at Yale University in the USA and was a popular public speaker.
But he was no fan of South Devon's traffic, despite living in Torbay for more than 45 years. After yet another close brush with death, he once complained the stretch between Windy Corner and the old Nortel site was the most dangerous road in the world.
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