Archive for May, 2009

Journey So Far!

Thursday, May 28th, 2009


Uk to Uk around the world Expedition 1.

This is one section of a five year plan to travel the whole world to promote awareness of streetKids international also we set up sustainable youth projects and promote individual freedom. This is the RamblingRat Project

Some facts so far

Complete world circumnavigation: Started June 2008 Dalbeattie Scotland, Ending June 2009,  12 Months on the road, 12 Countries visited, 29,980 road miles covered, 6 Ships totaling 9,360 miles at sea, 7,935 liters of diesel used and 70 liters of oil.

Total Distance Travelled 39,340 miles

The vehicle is to be stored in New York and i will cross the Atlantic by ship without the vehicle.

2009 October RamblingRat Americas Arctic to Antarctic adventure

I am returning to New York to collect the Ratmobile in October to continue the journey south to Ushuaia where i will take a ship to Antarctica, this connects my previous visit to the Arctic sea making a connection from the most Northernly point you can drive to the most southernly point in South America.

I am to launch MAD RamblingRat on this section of my trip where i will show video footage from previous RamblingRat adventures and random musicians and kids that want to put thier message across via YouTube and MySpace.

The vehicle will be showcased at various locations during the journey as local Street Parties to benefit Street Kids where these videos and music will be played and encourage local people to join in to share a unified message to help marginalized youth in thier local community and around the world.

Street Kids International has some of the very best effective solutions with thier youth empowerment programs, so please take a look at the work that they are doing.

Whilst in the Uk i will be updating the website with video footage that i have obtained on the trip of live acoustic bands that have been showing thier support for streetKids international. Also i will be speaking in schools and running a fundraising event in Scotland.

“Individual freedom”

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

 

Tim Dennis "Individual freedom sets us free"

Tim Dennis "Individual freedom is quay to my life"

 

My Life and Dreams

I thought I should write a little about who I am as a person, many people see my expedition vehicle and website and don’t really know a lot about the person behind the concept.

 

I was brought up into a farming and road haulage family and from an early age I understood the meaning of nature and community, struggling with dyslexia at school and not fitting into the mainstream system provoked questions in myself about what school was about and what benefits it brought to me, I was very hungry for information visual information like magazines on real life, farming and logistics, later being sent to a boarding school in Shropshire where many of the pupils lived internationally I was able to see the diversity in the world and was offered the opportunity to visit Germany, China, and Hong Kong all before the age of 15.

 

Continuing my early career working in the logistics of racecourses in South Africa I travelled to Mauritius and other African destinations in aircraft and ships,  this gave me very valuable information into international logistics and veterinary care of traveling animals.

 Achieving things has been very important to me more than financial gain, like attaining my driving licence, motorcycle licence,  heavy goods vehicle licence, and when my granny died investing the money in getting my pilot’s licence was a real major goal of achievement as leaving school with virtually no school qualifications I realised that these didn’t matter, everything that I wanted to learn was not what the school teaches you.

Money should not be a barrier to a young person’s learning for if somebody wants to be an airline pilot a ship’s captain or an engineer they should not be told that they cannot do this because they do not have the money to do it. they should not  be encouraged into debt at an early age to pay back this kind of education, For me I had learning difficulties and I needed to achieve these goals in my own way, we are all very powerful individuals and learning and achieving comes at very different points in their lives, to say that a young person should achieve everything and know what they should do for their whole life by 16 or 18 years of age is ridiculous, I really hope that the education system changes in the future and more people have the time to home School their children or we have schools with very different curricula activities similar to some of the British public schools where you can learn to sail rear animals and more arts.

 

My brother died at a young age and my father when I was 23, having overcome this it gave me an even stronger sense of the purpose of life to live, and having been successful with my own transport business and making a home I was still not content with the life model that  I had made based on current society ideals.

 

I find that in life you have to go back to the very basics in life and that is why I chose to sell up everything to get back to the core things that matter like food, shelter and water, I have never fitted in to the current monetary system,  the pettiness and nonsensical things like filing tax returns and government red tape always seemed pointless. I always seem to be flowing in the opposite way in the river and I know I’m not the only one, and what really matters to me is to be true to myself and to start with I thought this was selfish but now I have developed my RamblingRat project and have had the opportunity to share my values and life story to everyone I meet, and importantly kids in education. I know that I am making a difference to everyone I meet.

 

Freedom is at the very core of my being like a dove that flies freely, if I maintain this freedom I am able to be productive and this inspires others in a very powerful way, I cannot tell you enough about the way I felt once I had shared all the things I once owned, it was a huge weight off my back, throughout life we put down all these chains and connections to worthless things and it’s these things that hold us back from our real life course, having travelled around the world and meeting communities from very different sections of society I am seeing the same themes of basic needs, on travelling above Mongolia many people live with resources and when I mean resources they do not live with money, in the West we share the stories by saying they have nothing but we are completely missing the point. They are very rich with the land, animals, and the way their communities interact, this is very inspiring to see having come from a very different system in the West. This provokes more questions about society and how we can change in the future.

 I am very keen to continue my expedition for a long time to come, I am aware of how this should be self-sustaining I am aware of the costs of such an expedition and its environmental impact having used several thousands of liters of diesel and expensive shipping has led me to consider other ways to travel, I feel that the most sustainable way to live and travel would be on a ship or yacht, using the natural resource of the wind and desalinating the sea water for drinking, developing electricity from wind, solar and Hydro so this is something I’m looking into, an idea may be a traveling community at sea where people could come and go on their free will bringing to the expedition in their own knowledge and ideas.

 Something else I am working on is to promote the use of electric cars in the future, is to circumnavigate the world in a production electric car, this would be a world’s first and would guide people into a new era of positive thinking.

 I will continue to promote individuality in the media through my travel experiences, promoting the work of StreetKids International and other organizations that I would like to partner with, I am very keen to hear from other people about their stories and ideas for a better future.

From Tim Dennis

Tilley Endurables

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

 

Tim's hat meets its maker

Tim's Tilley hemp hat meet its maker Alex Tilley

 Travel the World because of a Hat?

Some of you will already know that the key factor for working with StreetKids International was the fact that I found a Tilley hemp hat in a clothing shop called footprints in Glasgow www.footprintsglasgow.com inside this Hat Alex Tilley states his support for StreetKids, I was so impressed with the work of StreetKids International that I decided to drive around in support of them.

 

I first met Alex Tilley at the ultimate travel show in Toronto, it was evident on meeting him at what an individual person he is and very down to earth, we chatted a lot about my adventure as he loves to hear unusual travel stories especially when they involve Tilley hats, he has been very supportive with providing me clothing for my expedition and has expressed an interest in meeting me in South America whilst I visit StreetKids projects in Bolivia, Alex and his wife Hillary made a similar visit to Peru last year.

 

I have now visited several of the Tilley stores around Canada and I am very impressed in the way they do business especially in the fact that 99% of their products are Canadian and all their products are made in Canada this is quite incredible, the new store in Montréal is a great example of clearly reaching into the future for the company.

 

There is no doubt that Tilley clothing is really good, the basis of this is the quality I now am the proud owner of three hats underwear, socks, trousers, and even a blazer and smart trousers which will be used on the duration of my sea passage to Southampton in May, I have to admit I was very surprised at the full range of clothes they carry.

 

Alex and Hilary allowed me to visit them at their home in Lake Muskoka and what a great place this is all so earthy with emphasis on living, Alex taught me how to tie knots and also offered me the chance to learn to sail which I am very keen to do at some point, I would like to thank Alex Tilley and all the staff at Tilley and durables for supporting my expedition I have included below some words from them.

What Tilley Say!

Tilley is proud to support Street Kids International (SKI) through the sale of our Hemp Hats and we are thrilled at the opportunity to work with Tim Dennis in his worldwide journey. Tim serendipitously became aware of SKI after buying a Tilley Hat in Glasgow and has been a true supporter of SKI and Tilley ever since. It is his spirit of adventure and quest to raise awareness of and for others that encourages us in our sponsorship/partnership. Tim has taken Tilley Hats and travel clothing to the extreme and is a very valuable gear test resource. We are happy to provide clothing that keeps him looking sharp and Hats that keep him protected from the elements of Mother Nature, while in turn garnering exposure on his website, in the media and around the world through word-of-mouth. We look forward to the ongoing updates from Tim and wish him the best for the next leg of his journey… whichever route and transportation mode he decides to take, we are happy to be a part of it!

 

 Alex Tilley    www.tilley.com

“Toronto”

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

 

 RamblingRat Bridge's the gap between UK and Toronto

RamblingRat bridges the gap between the UK and Canadian StreetKids

 

My time in the city of Toronto

It’s been a long time since I have written a blog, in fact my plan has been to create video blogs and I think this will be a better medium in the future,  I am on a huge learning curve to do with media and given time I will have this sorted, the truth is I keep having problems using my laptop and travelling meeting so many interesting people I have to do a juggling act with the information I collect, and Toronto has given me many new ideas for the website.

 

So I have bridged the gap between the United Kingdom StreetKids offices and the Canadian offices this has been a milestone achievement from me way back from when I was in the middle of Russia, it has lived up to every expectation StreetKids International is a fantastic organisation with a great staff well run and innovative, I am very proud to be working with them, Kristy Vanderplas has been coordinating me to speak in schools and this has been to great success I have really enjoyed talking to school kids and this has shown its worth in Toronto, I’m hoping this will be expanded in the future as I travel through America later in the year to Mexico, I can now see the benefits of talking to kids in mainstream education, about the importance of food, shelter and water especially when using the interactive campsite and showing them pictures of my expedition in the classroom which gives them a great idea of cultural diversity and the world as a whole.

 

I have made really good connections whilst being in Toronto, first off I have been using the website www.coachsurfing.com it has been an essential tool for finding accommodation in Toronto also you meet up with the right kind of people, like John Board who used to be an assistant film director for many Hollywood feature films just Google his name and many Cronenberg films will come up under his name, but it is his passion for homoeopathic medicine that I admire the most for the last 10 years he has been making homoeopathic medicine more accessible for people, he has a really funny video on his website that you should watch where he is rapping like a teenager, and given the fact he is in his 70s is great, please check out his website www.hollywoodsurvivalkit.com I have to thank John for letting me stay for a whole month in his home.

 

  Toronto is where I met Gregory Green, he is a documentary maker and environmentalist and has become a friend, these documentaries which focus on the depletion of oil and the end of suburbia.

He is really interesting and I would also encourage you to look at his website he has an up-and-coming documentary next year where he interviews thin new environmental Minister to the American government.

www.endofsuburbia.com

 Toronto is an incredibly diverse city,  this is evident when driving into Toronto I felt comforted by seeing Portuguese communities and the whole city is intertwined with different cultural areas it’s just wonderful, cities are not my favorite places and I think this comes from a fear I think, they are usually places which are more risky to take the vehicle into and the other reason is I am more at one with the countryside, but once I’m in the city’s and I need to be there to hook up with the people that can help me to promote my cause.

 

 

Meeting Jay Mandarino from the CJ skate park in school has also been a highlight, you can read more about this skateboarding project on the blog below this, I am very impressed and happy of his support for the idea on setting up more skateboarding projects in Third World countries and we will have to see how this develops in South America.  Jay Mandarino also suffered with dyslexia and now  From this is just a gift, I think this has been a common bond between us and I really hope we can continue to work with each other.

www.jaymandarino.com