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Ilmar Island, a man from Florida, hitched some 8,500 km to Alaska in June of 1979, taking just 5 days to do it. Collecting signatures of drivers on the way, he convinced the Guinness Book that it was a world record. Thus in 1980 the Guinness Book of Records published its first Hitching record.
Well I thought, if it was only 8,500 km, that's a nice long way, but no record, I could break that on a single trip with little doubt. Ilmar no doubt agrees, he'd hitched that same stretch before. But his goal was speed, and a record (not just a long trip!). If you have to hitch fast to be a record breaker though, it's not my thing at all. In fact, it reflects little more than blind luck in my mind to begin with. But it wouldn't be the first record to be based on just that, blind luck that is. Anyhow that first record was filed under Human Achievements and read as follows: THUMBED FROM FLORIDA TO ALASKA: A young man named Ilmar Island of Pompano Beach, Florida, Hitchhiked from Key West, Florida, to Fairbanks, Alaska, a distance of about 5200 miles, setting out on June 2, 1979, and arriving at his destination on June 7, just 5 days 20 hours and 52 minutes later. Kudos to Ilmar, but all the same curious to see how things had changed since then, I opened the '97 edition of the Guinness Book to find that the record had moved from Human Achievments to Travel and Tourism and now reads: Most travelled hitchhiker Stephan Schlei of Ratingen, Germany, can lay caim to the title of world-champion hitchhiker having obtained free rides over a distance of 776,955 km since 1960. Wow! Let's think about this. I've lived in Europe, and I've hitched tens of thousands of kilometers to be sure. Living in Bern, Switzerland, I hitched to Berlin and Back to see my girl, a leg of 1,000 km each way. Let me suppose that Stephan has been doing something similar since 1960. To reach the quoted figure he'd need to be travelling 1,000km and back once every month since 1960! Let's be generous and assume his girlfriend is in Lisbon. Germany (Stephan is German) to Lisbon is only about 3,000 km, so he'd still need to do the trip four times a year every year since 1960 to make that record. Go To Page: 1 2
The copyright of the article World Records: Musings on what makes a record breaking hitch. in Hitchhiking is owned by . Permission to republish World Records: Musings on what makes a record breaking hitch. in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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