Monday 29 January 2018

The Vietnam to Myanmar and back road books

This is a good article taken from the official Global rally website. It gives a small insight into our road books and the route Molly Porsche is going to follow on the Vietnam to Myanmar and back 2018.




As everybody knows there is a lot of planning that goes on behind the scenes before we all arrive at the start point.  From booking the hotels to cancelling the milk, we have all been planning this trip for months, if not years.   And in 48 hours many of us will be setting off, some have already done so.
Tucked away safely in everybody’s hand luggage is our road book.   Loving collated by Robin and Charlotte, with contributions from other members of the team, it is the trip bible and no car is ever without one.   We have done one for every rally so far and so the Vietnam trip is no different.
If you haven’t seen one yet it here is a little bit about them and why we do them
Safety is paramount on our trips, and they are not races.   Whilst we all spend the night in the same hotel, and often have lunch or dinner together, much of the time is unstructured to enable everybody to stop and see sights they might know about, or happen to stumble upon without thinking they have to miss something to keep up with the main party.
Unless necessary we don’t travel in procession but at our own pace.   It is always fun to find out at the end of the day what friends have been up to each day, or pass a familiar car parked outside a coffee shop and offer a jaunty wave.

We like to ensure, therefore, that everybody has as much information as possible about the route for each day so we can all plan where we might stop for lunch and also not have to rely on street signs that might be in a language we don’t recognise, or be non existent!  The road books are painstaking put together with distances and directions from on the ground route planners, and the help of Google Earth to ensure they are accurate as humanly possible.   It is also crucial that we know where the next fuel stop is so these are also listed.
With safety in mind the road books also list what to do in case of breakdown or emergency in each country and how we ensure that everybody is “checked in” each night with a system in place to keep everybody in constant touch if needed.
We also cram them full of useful phrases and information and at the end of the day there is no phrase more important that “another beer please!”:

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