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Trip Statistics

Item Count Notes
Total kilometers: 64,517 (Approx. 40000 mi.)
Number of days: 667
Kilometers per day: 97 (Approx. 60 mi. / day)
Number of countries 17 *I didn’t drive the Jeep to Uruguay
Number of ferries: 10 Estimated
Number of attempted bribes: More than 40 Estimated
Number of bribes paid 1 I paid $5 USD in Nicaragua
Number of bandits encountered 0
Number of robberies 2 My guitar was stolen in Mexico, and the Jeep was broken into in Argentina (which I have not written about yet…)

Jeep Statistics

Item Count Notes
Gas Used 8000 Liters (2100 Gal.) Estimated from calculated usage of 12.32 L/100km
Kilometers on tires 77,700km (49000 mi.) Dunlop Radial Rover Rv XT’s bought months before leaving
Number of flat tires 14 Estimated because I lost count somewhere in Peru.They were all nails/steel/something stuck in the tires
Number of breakdowns 0 (yep! ZERO)
Highest Elevation 4900 meters (Approx. 16000 ft.) Rob had a GPS that day in Bolivia

Dan Statistics

Item Count Notes
Weight loss: about 12kg (Approx. 27lbs.)
Nights slept in tent: about 75% of the time or 500 nights

Feel free to ask for clarifications or more stuff.

(Costs are coming in another post)

-Dan

Comments 30 Comments »

I’ve started a Question and Answer session over at Reddit.com.

If you have any questions you would like answered in real time, please head over to the discussion!

-Dan

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It’s a surreal moment in Customs in downtown Buenos Aires when all the papers are finally signed, and the Jeep is officially transferred out of my name. Less than 15 minutes later I book plane tickets, and have just over 24 hours remaining in Latin America.
Not for the first time in my life, I give away stuff and condense my worldly possessions until they fit inside my faithful backpack.

I jump in the driver’s seat for the final time and make the journey to the airport, trying to soak in every last minute of time I have with my much-loved Jeep. For a year and a half I’ve been saying “Ella está mi novia” (She is my girlfriend), and we all know breakups are difficult.

dan jeep final goodbye 320x240

Saying goodbye

Just before midnight on April 12, 2011 the wheels come to a stop for the final time after 64,517km.
That’s a touch over 40,000 miles in 667 days, or 1 year nine months and 28 days.

For the next twenty-nine hours I wait, read, write, think and sleep while moving through different airports, never feeling present in any of them. I’m greeted by my always-grinning brother & his girlfriend, holding a huge banner they made for my welcome, complete with Jeep pic and map.

welcome home dan 320x240

Welcome Home Dan

Together, we cross the final border of the adventure.

The familiar words uttered by the friendly customs officer make me realize how much I’ve missed this place.
I think I’ll stay for a while.

“Welcome to Canada”.

-Dan

I’m currently writing up posts about trip stats, total costs, gear reviews and more.
They’ll show up over the next couple of weeks.
If you have any questions you want me to cover, just ask.

Comments 41 Comments »

With all the madness involved in my attempts to sell the Jeep I’ve been very remiss in my photo taking duties, so I don’t have a lot to show for the weeks I’ve put in.
Over the last while I…

  • Spend almost two weeks in and around El Bolson & Bariloche. Many Argentineans want to buy the Jeep, though the paperwork is never going to happen. There are also a lot of foreigners here, so I wait expectantly for something to turn up.
los alerces 320x240

Los Alerces National Park

  • Hike to the top of Cathedral Alta, the ski resort in Bariloche. There is no snow yet, but that doesn’t top me from imagining snowboarding all the different features.
cerro cathedral 320x240

Cathedral Alta

  • Drive across to Buenos Aires, where there is a solid buyer on the line. I make around 800km three days in a row, which is too much.
  • Hang around BA again, moving from Customs offices to attorneys and back to customs.
  • Take a ferry to Uruguay because the buyer doesn’t exactly have a “legal” status in his passport, so we head over and back just to get a new stamp in his passport. From the little I see it feels like a really beautiful, friendly place. Country number 17 for the journey, although without the Jeep, I’m not sure it counts.
jeep final campsite 320x240

Beautiful sunset at the final campsite

Things are very close now.

-Dan

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