Cycling in Turkmenistan.

Pelotome –
around Turkmenistan on a bicycle.

~ Around The World on a Bicycle, Thomas Stevens (1888).

My Life and Times

by Jerome K. Jerome

From £4,75

June 1886 – Published 1888.

Around the World on a Bicycle.

“From Teheran to Yokohama” was the second illustrated volume of Tom Steven’s pioneering ride around the globe and covers the second half of his journey on a fifty-inch Pope “Columbia” high-wheeler, from Persia to Japan.

Although he doesn’t actually get to cycle in Turkmenistan, the Englishman makes a brief stop at Türkmenbaşy, while sailing on a Russian steamer from Bandar Gaz, in Iran, destined for Baku, Azerbaijan, after he had been refused passage through Afghanistan.

With smaller vessels joining their ship in the Caspian Sea, from Ashūradeh Island and Chikishlyar, to transfer mail and “several Turcoman traders going to Baku and Tiflis with bales of the famous kibitka hangings and carpets,” he goes ashore “for a couple of hours” at Krasnovodsk (now Türkmenbaşy), “to look about”, visiting a vodka shop and observing the lower class Russians, before sailing on to Baku, for his much diverted onward journey towards India.

  • By Thomas Stevens.
  • Published by Sampson, Lowe, Marston, Searle and Rivington, London.

October 1891 – Published in 1894.

Across Asia on a Bicycle.

“The journey of two American students from Constantinople to Peking” is a beautifully illustrated book “made up of a series of sketches describing the most interesting part of a bicycle journey around the world,” in which the two young riders set off the day after graduating from Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, in June 1890 and, over the next three years, “covered 15,044 miles on the wheel, the longest continuous land journey ever made around the world.”

Cycling into “Transcaspia” (Turkmenistan), across the “Russian frontier” between Quchan (Iran) and Ashgabat, they continued on to Mary before crossing into modern day Uzbekistan and Bukhara.

  • by Thomas Gaskell Allen, Jr. and William Lewis Sachtleben.
  • Published by The Century Co., London.

TAKEN BACK TO PERSIA.

“Tchislikar [Chikishlyar] is the port whence a few years ago the Russian expedition set out on their campaign against the Tekke Turcomans.

Three hundred miles inland is the famous fortress of Geoke Tepe, where disaster overtook the Russians, and where, in a subsequent campaign, occurred that massacre of women and children which caused the Western world to wonder anew at the barbarism of the Russian soldiery.”

~ Around The World on a Bicycle, Thomas Stevens (1888).