Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
18,000 Miles Later, an American Woman Has Cycled the World
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 3 months ago on
September 14, 2024

Lael Wilcox set a new women’s record for cycling around the world by completing 18,000 miles in 108 days, traveling from Chicago to New York, across Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and back, overcoming challenges from extreme weather to logistical hurdles along the way. (X/BikeRumor)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Lael Wilcox hopped on her bicycle in Chicago in May. Three and a half months later, she was back, having ridden 18,000 miles around the world and set what is being hailed as a women’s record.

Wilcox, 38, of Tucson, Arizona, rode east to New York, flew to Portugal and crossed Europe to Georgia, traversed Australia and New Zealand, and finished with a haul from Anchorage, Alaska, back to Chicago on Wednesday.

“I’ve done a race that goes from Canada to Mexico through the Rockies five times,” Wilcox said. “I raced across the U.S. and won overall, even beating the men. So I’ve had experience in races that take two weeks or so.” But she said she had never competed in a race that took as long as this ride.

“For those shorter races, I try to limit sleep,” she said. “For this, I took more care of myself and had lots more fun. It was probably the most fun ride of my life.”

What Counts as Biking the World?

With oceans inconveniently filling much of the Earth’s surface, a true circumnavigation by bicycle is impossible. So rules were laid down by Guinness to determine what counts. Wilcox had to complete at least 18,000 miles, travel in the same direction and finish where she started.

She also had to pass two points that are antipodal, or located on opposite sides of the Earth. For her, those were Madrid and Wellington, New Zealand. Planning it all was a tricky matter of logistics.

The cycling press reported that Wilcox’s 108-day ride was expected to be ratified as breaking the record of 124 days set by Jenny Graham of Scotland in 2018. And it was often a long day in the saddle. “In the end it was 12 hours riding, sleeping seven hours a night,” Wilcox said.

Some Routes Were Easier Than Others.

“I had some limitation riding across Asia,” she said. “It’s not really safe to ride across Russia now. Some people in the past have done Mongolia-Russia-China. But there are a lot of places you just can’t go to.

“I had considered riding Bangkok to Singapore, but that didn’t add much distance. So I decided to extend in Europe — in Turkey and Georgia.”

Her Water Froze in Australia and New Zealand Winters.

Wilcox said the hardest part was “probably Australia and New Zealand in the middle of winter. My water bottles were freezing, there was rain and wind, and it would get dark about 5 p.m.”

The bane of cyclists is car traffic. “I tried to take secondary or quieter roads,” Wilcox said. Unfortunately, “that sent me over quite a few mountains.”

“Across Turkey, I was on a pretty major route,” she added. “I had a bad road through Syria as well. I had to ride a couple sections on I-40 in California and Arizona because there wasn’t another option.

“Sometimes I would ride through poverty-stricken areas. You see more dogs, more debris on the street. But I never felt in any physical danger.”

Thousands of Bicyclists Joined in for Different Stretches.

Wilcox was accompanied by her wife, Rue Kaladyte, a photojournalist who traveled by car — initially a Subaru Outback, then a string of different cars. But for the most part, Kaladyte did not follow closely, as a support car would, and Wilcox often only saw her in the evening. “Basically I was out there by myself,” Wilcox said.

But not all of the time. Wilcox extended an invitation on social media for anyone who wanted to join her. A few thousand did. “I had an open invite: If you’re around, come ride with me,” she said. “People would just pop up all over the place. Sometimes they’d stay for five minutes, but a few people rode with me for an entire day.”

Enthusiasts could follow along on her website, where she posted an itinerary and mapped out her routes.

Under the rules, Wilcox could not draft behind any of these guests. Not that many of them were going faster than her. “Sometimes, I was keeping a pretty good pace, and they were just sitting on my wheel,” she said.

A Mix of Camping and Hotels, and Bakery Sandwiches in Europe.

Wilcox mostly stayed in hotels. But she slept outside for about two weeks in total. “I did a few pretty remote stretches in Australia and British Columbia,” she said.

As for sustenance: “I tried to have a real breakfast and a real dinner.” In Europe, she said, “I just went to a bakery and bought a sandwich.”

When she started her career as a long-distance cyclist, Wilcox supported herself by working odd jobs at bike shops. But after 10 years of racking up accolades, she picked up enough sponsors to finance a round-the-world journey.

She put a girdle around the Earth in 108 days. One day afterward, Wilcox was asked whether she had ridden since.

“Not yet,” she said. “But I’ll go for a little bike ride this afternoon or tomorrow morning.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Victor Mather
c. 2024 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

DON'T MISS

New California Voter ID Ban Puts Conservative Cities at Odds With State

DON'T MISS

Big Lots Holds Going-Out-of-Business Sales After Deal to Save Company Fails

DON'T MISS

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

DON'T MISS

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

DON'T MISS

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

DON'T MISS

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

DON'T MISS

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

DON'T MISS

Meet Amy Allen, the Songwriter Behind the Music Stuck in Your Head

DON'T MISS

Netflix Signs US Broadcast Deal With FIFA for the Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031

UP NEXT

New California Voter ID Ban Puts Conservative Cities at Odds With State

UP NEXT

Big Lots Holds Going-Out-of-Business Sales After Deal to Save Company Fails

UP NEXT

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

UP NEXT

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

UP NEXT

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

UP NEXT

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

UP NEXT

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

UP NEXT

Meet Amy Allen, the Songwriter Behind the Music Stuck in Your Head

UP NEXT

Netflix Signs US Broadcast Deal With FIFA for the Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031

UP NEXT

Clovis Residents Can Draw the City’s Next Election Map

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

13 hours ago

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

14 hours ago

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

15 hours ago

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

15 hours ago

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

15 hours ago

Meet Amy Allen, the Songwriter Behind the Music Stuck in Your Head

15 hours ago

Netflix Signs US Broadcast Deal With FIFA for the Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031

15 hours ago

Clovis Residents Can Draw the City’s Next Election Map

15 hours ago

All Netflix Wants for Christmas Is No Streaming Problems for Its First NFL Games

16 hours ago

Tax Loopholes Cost California and Its Cities $107 Billion but Get Little Scrutiny

17 hours ago

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

NEW YORK — The Federal Reserve’s third interest rate cut of the year will likely have consequences for debt, savings, auto loans, mort...

20 minutes ago

20 minutes ago

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

1 hour ago

New California Voter ID Ban Puts Conservative Cities at Odds With State

13 hours ago

Big Lots Holds Going-Out-of-Business Sales After Deal to Save Company Fails

13 hours ago

University of California Campuses Resolve Discrimination Complaints Stemming From Gaza Protests

14 hours ago

The Latest: House Approves New Government Funding Bill

Rams
15 hours ago

Rams’ Matthew Stafford and Jets’ Aaron Rodgers Collide in Matchup of Familiar Foes

15 hours ago

‘Embarrassing’ Night for Stephen Curry in 51-Point Loss at Memphis

15 hours ago

Another Record for LeBron James in Lakers’ Win Over Kings

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend