- Josie Dew
Josie Dew is an English
cyclist ,author and cook. Her 'day job' is in catering, but she frequently indulges in long cycle trips (such as circumnavigating Britain orJapan - or crossing theSahara on her bicycle whilst suffering kidney problems!) and then writes a humorous biographical book detailing her experiences. She lives nearPortsmouth ,England .In Cycling Plus in 1998, she said: "I work as hard as I can when I'm in England. I do nothing but work sometimes. And I'm lucky, too, because I've also managed to earn my passage by cooking on a ship going to the Azores. I've been cooking for as long as I remember. Other girls wanted girlie presents when they were young but I just wanted cooking books and spanners, and useful things like that. I've never ever had a job where I've had to be sophisticated or a businesswoman or anything like that. Now I live on my cooking, and the books help and I give lectures and so on."Verify source|date=June 2008 Cooking started subsidising cycling when she was 15 and by 17 it paid for her first big trip, around the coast of Britain, inspired by a tour of the Isle of Wight when she was 10. By September 2005, she'd biked through 48 countries.Cite web|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-14321671.html|title=Brief Encounter with Josie Dew|accessdate=2008-06-04|year=2005-09-22|author=Maureen Ellis|work=Evening Times]
She crossed Europe with her boyfriend, which led to her first writing success, Wind in my Wheels. After her boyfriend was injured in a crash she began travelling alone, which she prefers,Cite web|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-4980941.html|title=Passport Josie Dew|accessdate=2008-06-04|year=1999-04-11|author=Andrew Purcell|work=The Independent] despite those who find it strange.Cite web|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/718808/Japan-Eastern-challenge-on-two-wheels.html|title=Japan: Eastern Challenge on Two Wheels|accessdate=2008-06-04|year=2001-06-14|author=Derek Davies|work=The Telegraph]
"It's got huge advantages," she says, "because people can't do enough for you. They offer to take me in for the night and they come and talk to me and I get to know people all over the place. There was a dangerous time in eastern Europe when I was locked in a man's flat and he tried to rape me and I had to escape," she says, "but that could have happened at any time. Otherwise everyone has been exceptionally kind, except that I've lost count of the
flashers . I had three in a day in Switzerland once."Verify source|date=June 2008In March 2007, "Long Cloud Ride", her book about
New Zealand was selected among the top 10 writer's reads by "Geographical ".Cite web|url=http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-29987493_ITM|title=Top 10 Writer's Reads|accessdate=2008-06-04|year=2007-03-01|work=Geographical] In 2008, Dew was invited to open theSustrans Cycle Route 88 , abike path that runs fromPagham Harbour Nature Reserve toChichester Canal and was more than twenty years in the making.Cite web|url=http://www.midhurstandpetworth.co.uk/448/20year-cycleway-dream-comes-true.4127749.jp|title=20-year Cycleway Dream Comes True in Selsey|accessdate=2008-06-04|year=2008-06-04|work=Midhurst and Petworth Observer]Books
*"The Wind in My Wheels: Travel Tales from the Saddle" (1992)
*"Travels in a Strange State: Cycling Across the U.S.A." (1994)
*"A Ride in the Neon Sun: A Gaijin in Japan" (1999)
*"The Sun in My Eyes: Two-Wheeling East" (2001)
*"Slow Coast Home: 5,000 Miles Around the Shores of England and Wales" (2003)
*"Saddled at Sea: A 15,000-mile journey to New Zealand by Russian freighter" (2006)
*"A Long Cloud Ride: A Cycling Adventure Across New Zealand" (2007)References
External links
* [http://www.josiedew.co.uk http://www.josiedew.co.uk/]
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