James Bishton

James Bishton
Of Jungle Bungle
On the The Mongol Rally 2011

Khovd, Mongolia

after a long night of towing if it wasn't broken before, I'm almost certain it is now. The rescue vehicle appeared in no better state than ours - it had four levers at the front which the driver seemed not to know which was the gear stick, wires dangled down from everywhere and it had a crow bar as a ignition key. However this only adds to the impressive feat of the locals navigating their way through rock fields that lifted our car off all fours - so massive shout out to them! Getting some food and waiting on a diagnosis.

James Bishton
Of Jungle Bungle
On the The Mongol Rally 2011

Arkhangai, Mongolia

the punto has finally packed it in; called it a day; thrown in the towel. The rumours are true - Mongolia takes no prisoners - the roads are brutal, littered with rocks, ridges and road kill. The past few days have been expensive in terms of vehicles, t'was only yesterday we woke in a convoy of 5, which now we regret has depleted to a single ambulance. We've called in the cavalry and awaiting rescue. Keep your hopes high for a genius mechanic.

James Bishton
Of Jungle Bungle
On the The Mongol Rally 2011

Semey, Kazakhstan

apparently the tiger team are back in the game after they stumbled upon a fiat clutch, somehow. In other news, the expats had a little accident involving a poor calf. The baby cow bolted over the road and must have flown about 20ft, luckily no-one was hurt, the cow even got up - though I think his future will be short lived. The expats bonnet took the brunt but their radiator also is written off. So, we towed them the best part of 120 miles all the way to semey where we found a taxi driver who finished off the journey to a toyota dealership. We've got high hopes it will be fixed for tomorrow, but we'll have to power on to the border to make up some miles and get to mongolia asap.