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Home Is Elsewhere – Heinz Stucke: 50 Years Around The World By Bike

8
£15.00

VERDICT:

8
10
A great record of the extraordinary travels of a unique individual
Weight: 
300g

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Fifty years is a large proportion of your life to spend doing anything, but that is how long Heinz Stucke has spent travelling on his bike. As was originally reported here, he cycled 648,000km and visited 196 countries (plus 86 territories). He has seen a lot in that time – and photographed much of it. And this book, Home is Elsewhere – Heinz Stucke: 50 Years Around the World by Bike, is a great record of those travels.

He never intended to be away for that long: when he left his home village in Germany in 1962 he 'said he'd be back before the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich' – not as extreme, but still not the ambition of any normal person. One thing led to another, and he just kept going: 'there was always another country around the corner that he wanted to see.'

This is not a book that will tell a potential world explorer what to do; you are not going to find routes and maps, nor lists of kit and bike specifications. It does, however, help to explain why somebody might want to spend a long time travelling, and it would help to prepare you psychologically for the trip ahead.

The book is broken up into various topics, such as the weather, food, accommodation, road conditions, sickness, dangers, relationships and, of course, the bike. The writing from Dutch author Eric van den Berg combines interviews with Stucke and extracts from his daily journal, and also from booklets that Stucke produced during his trip to provide some income. The book is a series of snippets from each source, grouped together under the relevant heading. It sounds disjointed, but it actually flows very well.

Home-Is-Elsewhere-Heinz-Stuke-4.jpg

About half of the book is given over to a small selection of photos that Stucke took; it really is a very small selection, when you discover that he had over 100,000 to choose from – and most of them pre-date digital cameras. Each image has a simple caption (just a year and a country), and at times I wished there was more explanation of the moment that was captured so effectively.

Meticulous record keeping certainly helps when putting together a book like this. Stucke was obsessive, and can cross-reference dates and locations for his whole trip – except where diaries or cameras got stolen.

Bikes appear in many of the pictures, but rarely his own. At times he would not have been able to photograph his bike anyway, as it was stolen six times on the trip. Amazingly, he always got it back.

There is one equipment experience that is worth repeating: 'Good tyres are important, preferably the Schwalbe Marathon Plus, which he got approximately eight to ten thousand kilometres out of.' Our own test did not run for quite that long, but reached a similar conclusion!

Brompton supplied the bike for the last five years of his travelling, replacing a Bike Friday. While it would not normally be the first choice of steed for the high-mileage traveller, it did make using public transport easier and cheaper, and allowed Stucke to visit some less accessible countries.

Home-Is-Elsewhere-Heinz-Stuke-2.jpg

It was a great combination: Brompton gained the PR benefit from such an association, and Stucke gained a versatile tool that helped him finish the job – and he is still riding the Brompton for his everyday transport. I suspect that Brompton-related stories and pictures feature disproportionately, not that it's noticeable – and since the company also paid for the book to be published it would be entirely justified.

> Check out the books every cyclist should have in their library

Amazingly, Stucke may not have finished yet: there are reported to be 324 countries and 'territories' (which are not officially recognised internationally), so further travels are possible. However, he also recognises the need to be involved in cataloguing and selling his archive of images; he used to get good money for selling pictures ('at least 90 pounds'), and although they are now worth a lot less, he is relying on the photos to be his pension.

No other traveller will ever be able to have the same experiences as Stucke; from the way that technology changed during his travels to the creation (and destruction) of countries, this is a great record of his extraordinary travels.

Verdict

A great record of the extraordinary travels of a unique individual

road.cc test report

Make and model: Home Is Elsewhere – Heinz Stücke: 50 Years Around The World By Bike

Size tested: n/a

Tell us what the product is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?

Heinz Stücke is back where he started: in Hövelhof, the German village he happily cycled away from half a century ago. He visited 196 countries, got through 21 passports, and ended up with a tidy number of 100,000 photos to sort out. He came across Pelé, got pocket money from Haile Selassie, and even slept under the arms of Christ the Redeemer. He cycled more than 648,000 kilometres, most of them on an ordinary gents' bike, and several thousands on a Brompton folding bike.

Heinz 'wanted to see it all'. Dutch travel writer Eric van den Berg, who dug into his vast collection of journals, photos, postcards and notes, visited the now 75 year old cyclist to get an answer to that most pressing question: why? His philosophy of 'home is elsewhere' comes through in the daily routines, unexpected encounters and inevitable mishaps of a lifelong adventurist and Einzelgänger, and not least through the pictures Heinz took himself.

Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?

Hardcover: 176 pages

Publisher: Brompton Bicycle Ltd (October 31, 2015)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 099345240X

ISBN-13: 978-0993452406

Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 0.8 x 10.2 inches

Overall rating: 8/10

About the tester

Age: 55  Height:   Weight:

I usually ride:   My best bike is:

I've been riding for: Over 20 years  I ride: Every day  I would class myself as: Expert

I regularly do the following types of riding: commuting, touring, club rides, sportives, general fitness riding

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1 comments

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mike the bike | 8 years ago
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I was given this for Christmas and, at the risk of seeming ungrateful, I was disappointed. We live in the age of the professional travel writer and I suppose I was expecting something along the lines of a Bill Bryson or a Paul Theroux. It was far from that and, strangely, it completely missed its chance to encourage me to ride off into the sunset.

Unlike the reviewer I thought the story failed to flow although I agree that the photo's were distinctly amateur. A good editor would have sharpened up the presentation of what is a fascinating story and Herr Stucke should have spent that money.

But you have to hand it to Heinz, it's the way he wanted to live his life and nothing was allowed to stand in his way. For that alone you might want to read it but don't expect a polished tale of derring-do.

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