The Rickshaw Run may be one of the craziest, most hilarious, maybe even among the most dangerous races on our planet. But it also can be great fun--and all for a good cause.
I can already hear you say "Rickshaw? Isn't that a little two wheel cart pulled by a man in Asian cities? Sort of a precursor to a taxi?" And the answer is "Yes". But these Rickshaws--now retired from city street duty--have had a motor and a third wheel in front added but they are still not much larger than a golf cart.
This 2000 mile race, sponsored by the British group, The Adventurists, happens three times a year in three parts of India. Potential entrants must raise a Thousand Pounds (about $1600.00) for charity to be considered -- and hundreds more people enter than are actually chosen to run the race.
So how does it work? Well, first there is a big party the night before the start, for example at Shillong in the tea growing hills of eastern India. Then two weeks later, another big party at the end of the race, in the desert region of Rajasthan in western India. They can take any road they choose to cover the 2000 miles in between those two parties.
Racers are completely on their own from beginning to end. If the Rickshaw breaks down, they have to fix it. If they get lost, they have to find their way on their own.
Some entrants really aim to win the event and map out the fastest route--which can be primarily on major highways. Being shoulder to shoulder with huge cargo-ladened trucks is only for the brave or the utterly fool-hardy!
Other racers, including the couple who told about their Rickshaw Run adventure at the Distant Lands book store in Pasadena, make the race simply a two week backroads trip across India.
On their circuitous route they took videos and still photos of people and places in rural India. They showed us the gorgeous scenery. They showed us "motels" in tiny villages with holes in the floor for toilets. They showed photos of a tiny Rickshaw surrounded by heavy-loaded trucks rolling by just inches away. They showed engine breakdowns repaired by so-called mechanics in remote towns. It was a picture of India as I have never seen it.
And the prize at the end? Being able to go to the party and then go home--in this case to Pasadena--to talk about the Rickshaw Run for the rest of their lives.
For all the details about the Rickshaw Run and the other real life amazing and crazy fun races The Adventurists sponsor, go to
http://www.theadventurists.com/ (Photos courtesy The Adventurists.)
And thanks to Distant Lands (
http://www.distantlands.com/) for their Monday evening travel programs. Distant Lands is located north of the Del Mar Gold Line station on Raymond Ave. in Pasadena.