The Accidental Bicycle Tourist cover art

The Accidental Bicycle Tourist

The Accidental Bicycle Tourist

By: Gabriel Aldaz
Listen for free

Summary

Host Gabriel Aldaz sits down with other bicycle touring and bikepacking enthusiasts to have unexpected, revealing, and often humorous conversations about their most memorable bike touring adventures. You’ll hear individuals, friends, partners, and families from all walks of life share the joys (and sometimes challenges) of bicycle touring. A willingness to explore the unknown, overcoming self-doubt, resilience, and experiencing acts of kindness from complete strangers are recurring themes. Gabriel hopes that the episodes, dropping every other week, will inspire you to get out and see where the road leads you.

For links to podcast platforms, feedback via email, the podcast website, and Instagram:
https://linktr.ee/accidental_bicycle_tourist

© 2026 The Accidental Bicycle Tourist
Social Sciences Travel Writing & Commentary
Episodes
  • ABT057. Sweat and Smiles: Side by Side Across Europe and Africa
    May 1 2026

    Jacqui Webster and Joe McNamara are a middle-aged Australian couple who in 2023 paused their sensible careers for one year to hop on heavily laden bicycles and pedal from England to Singapore. Except things didn’t go as planned and they ended up riding across Europe and Africa instead. Prior to this episode, I got a chance to read Jacqui’s entertaining book about the journey, Two Bugs on Bikes. I laughed out loud at Joe’s genius packing strategy, which left them stranded in Rwanda with two right shoes and two right pedals, and his questionable camp-stove paella. I marveled at their accidental, highly discounted “unofficial” gorilla trek in the jungles of Uganda and their encounters with other wild animals. From spontaneously deciding to conquer Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to surviving swarms of protein-packed lake flies in Malawi to securing a glorious finish-line escort from wild ostriches, the stories that Jacqui and Joe tell contrast the gritty, exhausting physical reality of pedaling across two continents (the "sweat") with their relentlessly upbeat attitude, generosity, and genuine joy in each other's company (the "smiles").

    Two Bugs on Bikes can be ordered from most bookshops or online from Amazon Australia or Dymocks.

    The organization where you can sponsor a teacher or support a child through school in Uganda is called Sheka Africa, a registered Australian charity. Sponsorship fees are fully tax deductible in Australia.

    Another organization mentioned was Overflow Mission Zimba, Zambia.

    Jacqui and Joe's routes can be found in their Komoot collections.

    For links to podcast platforms, feedback via email, the podcast website, and Instagram:
    https://linktr.ee/accidental_bicycle_tourist

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 12 mins
  • ABT056. Instrument of Discovery: Unpacking the Legacy of Dervla Murphy with AI
    Apr 18 2026

    Dervla Murphy has long fascinated host Gabriel Aldaz, who years ago had picked up her first and most famous book, Full Tilt. The intrepid travel writer from Ireland died in 2022 at the age of 90, but Gabriel has remained curious to learn more about her. For this experimental episode, he goes into his laboratory and produces an AI-assisted retrospective on Dervla’s fascinating life. Dervla did not merely traverse the globe; she sought to understand humanity through a lens of radical vulnerability. Having stayed at home in Lismore to care for her invalid mother for nearly two decades, Dervla famously cycled full tilt from Dunkirk, France to India in 1963 on a single-speed bike, first during a brutal European winter and then over the Himalayas – while packing a .25 caliber pistol to fend off hungry wolves, highway thieves, and even a male assailant. Later, she trekked across remote landscapes with her young daughter Rachel, embracing their defenselessness as a necessary bridge to authentic human connection. Her later books reflected her deep immersion in conflict zones, from Northern Ireland at the height of the Troubles to Rwanda in the aftermath of the genocide. Dervla’s legacy includes a body of work – more than 20 books primarily about travels by bicycle, on foot, or atop beasts of burden – that serves as a testament to her resilience and her commitment to recording authentic, day-to-day interactions across diverse cultures.

    For links to podcast platforms, feedback via email, the podcast website, and Instagram:
    https://linktr.ee/accidental_bicycle_tourist

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • ABT055. Maps and Miles: Connections Beyond Borders
    Apr 3 2026

    Israel or Palestine? Damascus, Syria or Damascus, Virginia? West Virginia or Western Virginia? To David Landis, all are points on a map. David has made it his mission to find shared humanity across borders, even in conflict zones like the Middle East, through hiking and bikepacking trails. Having first visited the Middle East for a semester abroad during his university studies, David returned there to live for almost a decade. During his travels in the region, David experienced the incredible kindness of people he met, with several becoming lifelong friends. He’s also felt the sorrow of having some of those friends or their relatives killed in violent episodes that continue throughout the Middle East. As someone who has tried long-distance hiking, bicycle touring, and bikepacking racing (surviving waist-deep snow and concrete-like "death mud" on the grueling Tour Divide), David has come to the conclusion that, somehow, it’s all about the people and building trails that connect them.

    David has an account on Instagram. His Urfa-Urbil bikepacking trip is catalogued in this story map.

    David’s Camino de Santiago guidebooks are published by Village to Village Press and his trails are developed through V2V Trails.

    You can watch the movie about the Elk Rut Ramble on YouTube.

    For links to podcast platforms, feedback via email, the podcast website, and Instagram:
    https://linktr.ee/accidental_bicycle_tourist

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 7 mins
No reviews yet