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A British adventure cyclist who says he spent 835 days cycling around the world “through countries people repeatedly warned were too dangerous to visit” has had his adventure brought to an abrupt end… outside a Reading branch of Wetherspoons, where his bike was stolen. 

Josiah Skeats says he has covered over 40,000km by bike on his Instagram page, and was on only his second day of bike touring in England when he arrived in the city of Reading on Tuesday. 

According to the Reading Chronicle, Skeats was part way through cycling the new King Alfred’s Way route with his girlfriend, when the theft happened five metres away from where he was sitting outside the Hope Tap in Friar Street. 

The 29-year-old and his partner were inside the branch of Wetherspoons drinking coffee with their bikes outside propped outside the window, when the thief pounced. Skeats said that he gave chase for half a mile before giving up. 

“Unfortunately that was the end of the tour”, he told the Reading Chronicle. 

On his Instagram account, Skeats added: “I spent 835 days cycling around the world through countries people repeatedly warned were too dangerous to visit – and I was always welcomed with hospitality.

“Today in Reading, on my second day bike touring in England, I had a bike grabbed and stolen less than 5 metres from me. The bike and everything attached to it, gone in a second.

“I’m sorry not to be sharing my usual positive, restore-your-faith-in-humanity message, but I guess bad things happen everywhere and not just in countries with a bad reputation. I’m absolutely devastated.”

The stolen bike, which appears to be a custom-built tourer from Ghyllside Cycles in Cumbria (shown in the lead image), is reportedly worth £1,000, and was taken with up to £250 worth of camping gear. Anyone with potential information about the theft is asked to contact Thames Valley Police by calling 101, or by making a report online quoting the reference number 43220213517.

It’s certainly not the first time an adventure cyclist has been left with a bad impression of the UK compared to the hospitality they might have received in other countries. In 2017 another round-the-world cyclist Rob Lutter had his bike and all of his possessions stolen outside a Co-op in Kingston upon Thames, two years after he’d had his previous bike taken.

In 2019, Scottish mental health campaigner Josh Quigley’s run of bad luck continued after being fined for cycling in Bedford when his bike was stolen in London, just as he was about to embark on a round-the-world adventure (Quigley’s luck changed when he broke the 7 day cycling distance record in 2021). 

In 2012, Sam Swain returned back to the UK from a 10,000 mile trip when his Dawes Super Galaxy tourer was stolen in Bristol. 

At the time Swain said: “We were in places like Iran where people are really struggling and they were so much more united.

“I used that bike to go around the world and have had so many memories on it. You simply cannot get that back by buying another one.”



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