From Alaska to Argentina: St. George couple will embark on 2-year cycling trip for adventure, sustainability awareness

St. George couple Chris Haag and Sophie George bike in the desert of Southern Utah, date not specified | Photo courtesy of Chad Lewis, St. George News

ST. GEORGE — The love for cycling and sustainability is taking a St. George couple on a two-year cycling trip from Alaska to Argentina.

Chris Haag and his wife Sophie George bike through Southern Utah, date not specified | Photo courtesy of Chad Lewis, St. George News

The idea started with a pact Chris Haag and his wife Sophie George made in November to leave St. George and travel for a couple of years. Now they’re venturing 20,000 miles on bike while passing through more than 15 countries.

“I just think the world would be a better place if we all rode bikes,” Haag said. “It’s a really affordable way to travel. It’s relatively easy.”

For cycling tour enthusiasts, cycling from Alaska to Argentina is iconic, Haag said.

Both Haag and George have done cycling tours before but nothing like this. George said she cycled from coast to coast in Michigan, which lasted around five days. And Haag had gone about 1,200 miles during a cycling tour before.

Biking has increasingly become a really important part of who I am,” George said.

George began working at Dixie State University as an assistant professor in fall 2015 and joined the sustainability committee in January 2016 after learning the campus had very little recycling.

Both she and Haag quit their jobs to go on this cycling tour, while of course making sure they had money saved up beforehand, George said.

Alaska to Argentina

Google maps screenshot | St. George News | Click to enlarge

Haag and George will begin their trip in Homer, Alaska. They’ll arrive at June 29 and begin cycling July 2. Their first stop is a music festival in Girdwood, Alaska, which is over 180 miles from Homer.

They will then bike to Anchorage, Alaska, and ride along the Denali Highway that stretches 135 miles.

From there, they’ll see where the road takes them as long as they make it to Argentina within two years.

“I know we want to come through St. George because we are leaving our cat and our dog here, so that’s the hardest thing about leaving,” George said.

Although both have done cycling tours before, George said cycling with a fully-loaded bike is a “different beast.” Haag said his bike, with no food or water, will be about 85 pounds, while her bike will be about 80 pounds.

“It’s inevitable that as I get tired and cranky toward the end of the day, he’s going to have to carry some of my stuff,” George said. “As much as I rave about equality, equality in this situation means a little something different when we’re both pedaling the same amount of miles.”

When cycling through desert areas like Mexico, Haag said they’ll be hauling 30 pounds of water, making their bikes close to 125 pounds.

“The first few days we’re going to be sore,” George said. “There’s no way to train for it.”

While physical stamina is important, she said biking for her has become more logical. While doing all-day bike rides, like from St. George to LaVerkin and back, George was able to convince herself that she can do a full days worth of riding.

While in Argentina, George and Haag will be able to practice their Spanish, which they both learned by taking a course together at Dixie State.

Preparation

After finding someone in February to watch their pets while they’re gone, Haag and George began preparing for their trip by purchasing bikes and plane tickets. Then they began figuring out what items they would need to bring. Their list includes both necessities and “frivolous” items.

One of the bikes Chris Haag and Sophie George will be bringing on their cycling tour from Alaska to Argentina | Photo courtesy of Chris Haag, St. George News

Some of the necessities they’ll be bringing, Haag said, are clothing, water, a tent, tools for their bike and money for food. Some of the items they insisted on bringing, but said they didn’t necessarily need, include a drone, electric toothbrush and chair.

“I insisted that we bring a chair, which is a luxury because you can sit on the floor or a rock, but the idea that cycling 30 to 100 miles and then sitting on the floor is just dreadful,” George said.

Their bikes even have dynamo hubs, which are small electrical generators, attached to charge their phones and laptop while they pedal.

For George, the most difficult aspect while planning for the trip was dealing with immigration challenges since she’s from London. She has a green card and if she leaves the U.S. for more than six months, there’s no guarantee that she’ll be able to come back.

“That was my biggest scare, like, ‘Oh no, what if I can’t come back,” she said.

George soon realized, however, she is eligible to apply for a U.S. passport.

Other preparations for their trip included figuring out how to ship their bikes to Alaska, receiving immunizations and calculating the cost for all of the gear.

The Places I Pee

The name of Haag and George’s blog they created for this trip, The Places I Pee, comes from a long-running joke George had with herself since she moved from Detroit to Utah three years ago.

Chris Haag and Sophie George created a blog called The Places I Pee for their trip from Alaska to Argentina | Image courtesy of Chris Haag, St. George News

She realized one day that she went from peeing in a normal bathroom to peeing in “amazing places,” like Zion National Park and Grand Canyon National Park.

“We say we’re going on a really long peeing tour to pee in some amazing places,” she said. “Probably some terrible places too. We promise not to photograph them all.”

They hope to post to their blog once a week, Haag said, since that’s as long as they can probably go without finding Wi-Fi. He also said they want to use their blog as a way to provide useful information for other cycling enthusiasts and to let family and friends know where they are.

“Everyone’s bound to have a question that actually hasn’t been answered on the internet yet,” Haag said. “If you wanna know all the things you need to know about cycling from Alaska to Argentina, it’s not necessarily there.”

Some of the topics they’ve already written about on their blog include a list of gear items and prices, how to protect your laptop case, filing paperwork for visas and finding the right footwear for cycling.

George also acknowledged she wants to inspire people to go on cycling tours.

“I hope someone who didn’t think they were going to do it would do it,” she said.

To follow along with Haag and George as they travel from Alaska to Argentina or to learn more about what it takes to prepare for a cycling tour, go to their website.

Click on photo to enlarge it, then use your left-right arrow keys to cycle through the gallery.

Email: [email protected]

Twitter: @STGnews | @markeekaenews

Copyright St. George News, SaintGeorgeUtah.com LLC, 2018, all rights reserved.

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10 Comments

  • Real Life June 1, 2018 at 6:16 pm

    While I think what they are doing is awesome, it is also very dangerous. Most of the countries below us, can be very seedy places.

    • Thecadean June 1, 2018 at 9:16 pm

      you must be referring to Las Vegas and Arizona… We have traveled Latin America for 40 years and never had a single problem. USA indeed has some of the worlds scariest cities. Good for our adventures. Americans really do need to get out and see the rest of the world- its really a beautiful place with many wonderful people.

      • Real Life June 2, 2018 at 7:40 pm

        Been there. They are not all Costa Rica and Cancun. Rat holes.

    • Striker4 June 2, 2018 at 9:23 am

      Just another one of your stupid moments Need a Life …its nice of you to take the time to show what kind of total moron you truly are

      • Real Life June 2, 2018 at 7:41 pm

        Hey look who’s back from their medical episode! Welcome back!

  • asianspa June 1, 2018 at 8:38 pm

    Very corny project… Is this what you do when driving your Prius is not edgy enough anymore?

  • uprightandmovingforward June 1, 2018 at 8:49 pm

    Hope there is not a civil war in Nicaragua when they get there. Good Luck in Columbia too.

  • mmsandie June 2, 2018 at 8:32 am

    The cadean comment was misleading, they were lucky, friends of mine weren’t jacked, robbed and left in c nyral american co7ntries while on a m8ni bus tour, gorillas armed j7mp out of the bushes and stopped them.. other people said they were on another day tour, the driver stopped to let them take pics, the. Asked if he could take a pic of themtook the camera clicked the pic, then jumped in the tour car and left them hi and dri.. wouldn,t travel to either central or South America, problems are all over the world

  • ladybugavenger June 2, 2018 at 1:35 pm

    I love mmsandie comments. It’s like playing a cryptogram.

    • comments June 2, 2018 at 5:27 pm

      some of them are easier to read than others. sometimes trying to decipher them is like being wacked in the head by a 2×4. I can almost understand the misspellings, but how in the world do the numbers work themselves in there? hmm

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