It has been a a full 365 days since we’ve left State College, PA, and we have come a long way. To help celebrate, let’s look back at how far we’ve come…
Distance cycled: 13,614 mi (21,910 km)
Countries entered: 6
Degrees N/S traveled: 94
Time zones crossed: 6
Nights camping: 209
Showers taken: 150 (each)
Family visits: 8
Touring cyclists ridden with: 10
The blog: 73 posts from the road, 22,719 pageviews
Flat tires: 11
Chains replaced: 4 each
Mexican states visited: 20 of 30
Chilean regions visited: 13 of 15
Rides taken in car: 2 through construction areas (less than 50 mi)
Big fights: Just 1!
Money spent: $12,480 on the road (not including flights)
Coldest night in the tent: -6 deg F (-21 deg C), at 15,600 ft (4,755 m)
Highest altitude: 16,220 ft (4,944 m), Paso Sol de Manana in Bolivia
Hardest climb: Hito Cajon in Chile, a pure 7,000 ft (2,000 m) of climbing at high altitude
Largest earthquake: 5.8 near La Serena, Chile
Keychains for Jason’s trip collection: 15? We’re not really sure…
Feliz cumpleaños de travesía
Un abrazo desde Calama-Chile
Eduardo
Congratulations! I’m so proud of both of you! Love, AC
Wow — that is so incredible! Congratulations! I love your lists.
Awesome!!
I was thinking a year was the 10th of May, since that’s when you flew from Maryland to Alaska. You really started from State College, Pennsylvania. Congratulations on an epic accomplishment! With many more miles to come. Love you both. XOXO
YAYYYY! Congratulations! You two are awesome! Love the stats! Wondering if there is a correlation between number of showers and number of fights. :) HAHA! Hugs, Millie
I think it is a correlation driven by a third variable: difficulty of terrain. In hard terrain we shower less (fewer services) and we fight more (more tired / hungry / grumpy). So if we just plotted ‘fights’ and ‘showers’ there would be a negative correlation, but it’s explained in large part by the third variable. You should see all the crazy stats we’ve compiled on this trip. My future students are going to be so sick of this data set!