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Why not? After all, no-one had ever done it before. It would be one
of the longest of all overland journeys-half-way round the world,
from the English Channel to Singapore. They knew that several
expeditions had already tried it. Some had got as far as the
deserts of Persia; a few had even reached the plains of India. But
no-one had managed to go on from there: over the jungle-clad
mountains of Assam and across northern Burma to Thailand and
Malaya. Over the last 3,000 miles it seemed there were "just too
many rivers and too few roads". But no-one really knew...In fact,
their problems began much earlier than that. As mere
undergraduates, they had no money, no cars, no nothing. But with a
cool audacity, which was to become characteristic, they set to
work-wheedling and cajoling. First, they coaxed the BBC to come up
with some film for a possible TV series. Then they gently
"persuaded" Rover to lend them two factory-fresh Land Rovers. A
publisher was even sweet-talked into giving them an advance on a
book. By the time they were ready to go, their sponsors (more than
80 of them) ranged from whiskey distillers to the makers of
collapsible buckets. In late 1955, they set off.Seven months and
12,000 miles later, two very weary Land Rovers, escorted by police
outriders, rolled into Singapore-to flash-bulbs and champagne. Now,
fifty years on, their bestselling book, First Overland, is
republished-with a foreword by Sir David Attenborough. After all,
it was he who gave them that film.
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