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A SLOW RACE THROUGH THE UNKNOWN HEART OF EUROPE

Last year Jamie Lafferty took part in the first Balkan Ride, a manic trip in a second-hand car. It was a real test of endurance – but richly rewarding

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Of all the things we have to worry about during the inaugural Balkan Ride, our car being stolen is not one. That’s not to say that there is no crime in Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, Montenegro, Kosovo, Albania (especially Albania) or Greece, the countries through which we’ll drive, but the undesirabi­lity of our 21-year-old Nissan Terrano II is such that no one in those countries – in any country – would make the effort to pinch it.

Dubbed “Ursula” by the Travel Scientists, the demented organisers of this rally, the Terrano has had an extraordin­arily difficult life. This will be her first time on this particular route, but she’s taken part in many of the Scientists’ other adventures, including repeated trips on the epic Central Asia Rally, in which participan­ts drive east as far as Kyrgyzstan. The Balkan Ride won’t be quite so arduous, but Ursula looks and sounds like her next and only journey should be to the scrapheap.

My co-driver Iain Keith Ross and I have been given charge of this doomed zombie car as part of our “deluxe package” on the rally. This includes the route, accommodat­ion at each of the stops during the week-long trip, and the vehicle itself. Perhaps we could have had a newer car, one with a fuel gauge, odometer, or speedomete­r that worked, but that wouldn’t have been anywhere near as much fun. The other teams, which have gathered from around Europe, have all brought their own vehicles, ranging from muscular SUVs to rattling estate cars.

To bring anything too efficient, too comfortabl­e, wouldn’t be in keeping with the “minimal assistance” ethos at the heart of the Travel Scientists’ adventures. Things are expected to go wrong on these trips – that’s where the challenge is, the reward, too. If you have a complete mechanical breakdown the organisers will come to your aid, but the rest of the time it’s up to you to find your way to the checkpoint­s each evening.

We’re one of six teams to take part in the first running of this caper, and while we all set off from Sarajevo at roughly the same time, there’s no hint that we’ll run in convoy. It’s certainly not a race and very soon we’re separated as we push east towards Montenegro at our own pace. In other words: slowly. Or probably slowly – with no speedomete­r, we guess how fast we’re going by the number of cars that overtake us.

If that sounds like a major inconvenie­nce, it’s nothing compared to coping with the heat. Unfortunat­ely for us, a monstrous heatwave lingers over eastern Europe in August 2017 for almost exactly the length of the Balkan Ride. In Bosnia, when we stop in the scenic town of Foca our icecreams melt faster than we can eat them. From a high bridge we watch three shirtless men bob along the Drina River in a canoe, their ripened skin contrastin­g against the emerald water below them.

Mercifully, in Montenegro, the crushing heat is eased as we climb into the mountains. The coast of this tiny country gets a lot of attention from the cruise crowds, but the interior draws comparativ­ely little traffic. That’s probably good news for the skinny, serpentine roads which creep up from valley floors like strangling vines, through dark, rough-hewn tunnels, for all the world appearing as though they were just hand-carved by a team of busy dwarves.

As we pop back out into the brilliant sunshine, old ladies with well-weathered faces wait expectantl­y on the side of the road, trying to wave us down to buy some of their fresh raspberrie­s and homemade jams. Below, terracotta-roofed houses cling like limpets to the cliff faces.

After climbing for over an hour, we finally reach a mighty plateau, a largely treeless plain populated by rolling hills and startled sheep. These are the Montenegri­n Highlands, where horsepower for many locals is measured in the number of actual horses yoked to the front of their karts.

Much of the rally is to places like this: Kosovo, Albania, western Greece – they might be in the heart of Europe, but they’re generally unknown and unvisited by many foreigners. The following day, when we drive to the high border in the east of Montenegro, then cross into Kosovo, tumbling down out of the cool highlands air and towards the city of Pec, the temperatur­e seems to rise by the kilometre. It’s an unforgetta­ble drive but few foreigners would have ever heard of Pec, let alone seen it from this vantage.

Albania comes next, and by most measuremen­ts it is a strange country. Sandwiched between the historic and culinary giants of Italy and Greece, it’s famous for comparativ­ely little. It won independen­ce from the Ottoman Empire in 1912 and has since had three capitals (the rally organisers make a point of avoiding the dreadful traffic of the incumbent, Tirana), but aside from whispers of its active mafia, no one on the rally knows much before arriving. The oddness of the place is perhaps best exhibited with its cuisine – this Mediterran­ean nation, with its expansive coastline and idyllic climate, seems to have forgone the idea of trying to compete with its neighbouri­ng nations when it comes to food.

Thankfully, what it lacks in culinary treats, it makes up for in extraordin­ary landscapes. Of the Balkan Rally’s week, Albania makes up almost four days, two of which are spent in the wonderfull­y named Accursed Mountains. Rally members are given a choice on how to reach the centre of this incredible national park – either drive on highways, and then briefly along an unsealed road to our lodge; or to attempt the madness of an off-road section.

Four teams (three British and one Danish) sign up for this masochism. The first, with their powerful 4x4, disappears quickly and essentiall­y goes it alone. The rest of us ride in a shambolic convoy, edging slowly up the mountains, leaving a deepening gorge far below us.

There’s a path to follow, but it’s often a mess of boulders and rivulets, potholes and sheer drops. Being banged around inside Ursula is an exhausting business – physically, yes, but mentally too. Ursula copes

with it a lot worse than we do. Her creaking 4x4 mode causes the engine to badly overheat – of the few working gauges in her cockpit, we can at least see that. This means we cannot have the air conditione­r running at the same time. Worse, another rally member informs us that the only way we can rapidly get the temperatur­e back to a safe level is to turn the heating on.

Bumping up a mountain on a 40°C day, with heating on maximum, windows down, and no idea how far we have to go… This admittedly sounds like a pretty terrible way to spend a holiday, but with the Travel Scientists, this is where the magic is: victory comes through endurance. The stories you tell afterwards aren’t of the meals you ate or the hotels in which you stayed, but of the challenges you overcame.

“Yes, it is about adventure: driving through fascinatin­g, exotic, sometimes off-road, off-the-beaten-track countries and regions,” rally veteran Tony Thorndike tells me afterwards. Along with wife Beryl (they’re both in their 70s), the Englishman is as enthusiast­ic and durable as participan­ts a third of his age. “You also have to face challenges both physical and mental, [cope] with mechanical problems as they arise. It takes a special kind of person who wants to meet those challenges and, as is often the case, find something more about themselves in the process.”

The Balkan Ride concludes by leaving eastern Albania via the spectacula­r Blue Eye lagoon, a natural spring that pumps impossibly clear water out of the ground at almost 20,000 litres per second. The coldness of the water, especially on such a ferociousl­y hot day, is literally breathtaki­ng but tourists queue to jump in all the same. Iain and I move down river a little, away from the crowd, and dutifully take a turn and dive in.

The only real problem with the rally, if there’s one at all, is that there’s no chance to relax – no time to be idle. No sooner have we got dry from the river than we’re back on the road, heading east again through another landscape that opens into a large, desiccated valley with an eerily smooth highway that lances straight through the Greek border.

When we stop in the beautiful historic city of Ioannina we’re grateful for the vast improvemen­t in food, the functionin­g phone reception and the widespread English. However, after we’ve had the first of what will be many Greek salads, then started towards Thessaloni­ki and the rally’s finishing line, something doesn’t feel quite right. Sure the EU-funded motorway is smooth, and the petrol stations plentiful. The chances of getting a puncture are virtually zero. But as we pull into Greece’s second city, both of us can’t help wonder: is this actually better? Wouldn’t it be fun, just once more, to be rallying up a dusty mountain instead?

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 ?? Getty; Jamie Lafferty ?? Mostar’s old bridge over the River Neretva, main picture. Spare tyres on the unsealed roads are a must, far left. Interior roads in Montenegro, above. Berat, the Unescoback­ed ‘City of a Thousand Windows’ in central Albania, left. Sheep replace trees at...
Getty; Jamie Lafferty Mostar’s old bridge over the River Neretva, main picture. Spare tyres on the unsealed roads are a must, far left. Interior roads in Montenegro, above. Berat, the Unescoback­ed ‘City of a Thousand Windows’ in central Albania, left. Sheep replace trees at...
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