NITRA, SLOVAKIA
DECEMBER 2019 –
The Last Overland, a team reversing the famous 1955 Oxford & Cambridge Far
Eastern Expedition continues its journey from Singapore
to London with a visit to Jaguar Land Rover’s manufacturing facility in Nitra,
Slovakia.
There, the team were met by the
latest Land Rover, the New Defender, which came face-to-face with its early
ancestor“Oxford” a Series I Land Rover. To welcome the team at Nitra were
Slovakian Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini, alongside Jaguar Land Rover’s
Executive Director for Manufacturing, Grant McPherson.
The team were given the opportunity to tour the state-of-the-art facilities at Nitra, where they saw New Defenders rolling off the production line. Alex Bescoby, expedition lead commented, “We had always hoped to visit Nitra as part of our voyageand to explore the manufacturing heart of the New Defender. We received a fantastic welcome from the Jaguar Land Rover team at Nitra – marking a special start to our homeward leg to London”.
Land Rover will continue to support
The Last Overland on their journey through Western Europe, with the team
travelling through Austria, Germany, France and Belgium before their arrival
into the United Kingdom on 14 December.
A gathering of Land Rover owners
will assemble from across the UK and Europe to welcome The Last Overland team
at Folkestone, UK. After, the team will be joined by a specially commissioned
Oxford & Cambridge liveried New Defender on its final journey to the finish
line at The Hilton Park Lane in London - yards from the finish line of the
First Overland Expedition in 1956.
Alex recounts, “This journey has
definitely been an action packed one, filled with many ups and downs, and I
can’t believe how quickly the eighteen months that went into planning this
journey has brought us here, all in one piece so far! We’ve managed to drive
this incredible 64-year-old car once more, to so many remote and fascinating
parts of the world, through tropical monsoons, -20 degree and at more than
5000m above sea level. Oxford has taken it all in stride. From Nagaland to
Tibet, from Turkmenistan to Serbia, the welcome we’ve received has been
unbelievable.”
The Last Overland expedition a test of strength and grit
Like any major expedition,
especially one crossing so many international borders in such an old car, The
Last Overland was not one without problems. One particularly memorable incident
was a major mechanical mishap where Oxford’s back wheel fell off while Alex
& Nat were driving at 70kmph in Turkmenistan, severing their brakes entirely.
The humans on the journey were
also put to the test. The team of eight from the UK, France, USA, Belgium,
Indonesia and Singapore were presented with a different set of challenges,
including when altitudes, temperatures and various diets took a toll on their
bodies. These involved the occasional food poisoning episodes, frigid
temperatures and even needing to rely on supplementary oxygen while coping with
altitude sickness at certain points of the journey.