Vancouver Sun

Lots of grunt work went into this green message

Man travels 7,000 km to promote eco- friendly cycle- rickshaw

- MANIK BANERJEE

KOLKATA, India — It took 68 days for Satyen Das to laboriousl­y pedal his rickety, self- remodelled bicycle rickshaw from the seaside Indian city of Kolkata to the roof of the world — a 5,369- metre ( 17,600- foot) Himalayan pass. His goal: to promote the vehicle as an environmen­tally sound travel option.

As he pedalled toward the top of Khardung La on the world’s highest driveable pass, he remembered the words of his wife and nine- year- old daughter: “You must complete this mission.”

The journey was arduous. To prepare, he trained by loading his rickshaw — a carriage- styled seat hooked to a bicycle — with heavy items and cycling long distances. He modified the rickshaw, adding a third brake pedal.

And when the time came to set off on his journey June 11, he packed lightly, carrying only a few items of clothing, medicine, food and a stove, a sleeping bag and plastic sheets for an emergency shelter if the weather turned rough.

“I crossed five high mountain passes on the way” during the journey in the region of Ladakh, Das, 40, said in an interview. At one point, he faced a group of bears, but was relieved when they showed little interest in him or his rickshaw.

Near his destinatio­n, he took shelter with Indian paramilita­ry forces after sighting an elusive snow leopard around midnight in the high reaches of Lakadh. And on his way home, a German woman cycling solo in the mountains offered him food after he’d run out of his own, and shelter in her tent on a particular­ly cold night.

In total, he covered nearly 7,000 kilometres to be the first to accomplish the feat, which he hopes to have endorsed by Guinness World Records.

The idea “was to popularize the cycle- rickshaw as eco- friendly transport that does not need any fuel,” he said.

It’s a mode of transport he and his family have relied on their entire lives, with Das earning about 200 rupees ($ 3.20) a day transporti­ng passengers in Kolkata, the capital of India’s West Bengal state. Under its former name, Calcutta, it was a home base for Britain when it ruled the South Asian subcontine­nt.

He always dreamed of setting an example for others, and wondered how to do it, being poor and with little education.

“So, I thought, why not do something which is within my reach? I decided to spread the message of peace using my cycle- rickshaw,” Das said.

 ?? BIKAS DAS/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? It took 68 days for Satyen Das to pedal his rickety, selfremode­lled bicycle rickshaw from Kolkata to the roof of the world — a 5,369- metre ( 17,600- foot) Himalayan pass.
BIKAS DAS/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It took 68 days for Satyen Das to pedal his rickety, selfremode­lled bicycle rickshaw from Kolkata to the roof of the world — a 5,369- metre ( 17,600- foot) Himalayan pass.

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