Day nine: G眉tersloh. Day 23: Ceske Budejovice. Day 53: Kostenets.
Katie Fitzmaurice鈥檚 summer is all mapped out.
Despite her ingrained fear of navigating using old-school maps and compasses, she鈥檒l be one of three leaders in a 19-member cycling team that will visit those respective towns in Germany, the Czech Republic and Bulgaria, among dozens of other cities in 10 European countries in just over 60 days.
Fitzmaurice and Nicole Law, both 22, are Cloverdale residents and former soccer rivals-turned-friends who have been training together for months.
They鈥檒l leave Amsterdam, Holland on June 21 and arrive in Istanbul, Turkey on Aug. 19, pedalling up to 4,000 kilometres.
The itinerary has been set with places to visit and sleep (much of it camping outdoors) and they鈥檙e packing light 鈥 necessities whittled down to what their bikes and backs can handle.
Fitzmaurice plans to bring one pair of socks with the maple leaf, just in case.
The team riders, who come from Canada and the U.S., are volunteers with Global Agents, a Vancouver-based group that either directly implements or supports innovative education and economic development programs in Third World countries.
Officially, Global Agents (formerly Agents of Change) seeks projects and individuals that have potential solutions to difficult economic problems 鈥 solutions that involve local leadership in designing and managing economic projects.
Fitzmaurice, who just finished her commerce studies at SFU and is a research analyst at the Business Council of B.C., admits the concept sounds all good in theory.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the most exciting thing about it, that it is theoretical. Poverty has been around for ages. So many ideas haven鈥檛 worked, and it鈥檚 a long-standing issue.鈥
She says Global Agents are 鈥渋nvesting in new ideas鈥 鈥 even if profits don鈥檛 appear in the short term.
This ride, one of several across the globe since the organization was formed in 2007, will raise $40,000 to help a technical school in Uganda through Global Agents鈥 Global Catalyst Initiative.
The riders 鈥 including one support vehicle driver, totalling 20 people 鈥 have raised $2,000 apiece, plus another $1,800 for trip costs.
Their target, Uganda鈥檚 Micro Technology Institute and Social Venture Incubator (MTI), offers training and access to information about community-based enterprises.
Global Agents will give financial support to graduates of MTI who show promise 鈥 some 12 alumni of out of the 380 who have so far graduated from the school, says Global Agents executive director Kathryn Graham.
Graham says the 12 alumni have been loaned solar energy items to sell in a micro-franchise pilot project.
Among the items are solar panels, LED lights, phone connectors, solar radio batteries and battery packs, all of which were produced in Africa.
The participants 鈥渨ill have to develop a business plan on how they intend to sell the product before they are approved to sell them,鈥 explains Graham. 鈥淭he MTI staff will closely monitor their progress and assist them as they go.鈥
鈥淓ssentially, (Global Agents) searches for the most innovative ways to solve poverty around the world,鈥 Fitzmaurice explains. 鈥淲e鈥檙e absorbing the risk to help kick-start a local economy.鈥
While Uganda is a world away from the summer cycling route, riders will absorb the culture and atmosphere of poorer areas of Eastern Europe.
鈥淚t鈥檚 for a good cause, but we want (our) people to be educated,鈥 says Fitzmaurice. 鈥淚t鈥檚 got a big social component to it.鈥
The riders will wind their way through side streets, occasionally getting lost on purpose.
鈥淵ou meet more people that way,鈥 she adds.
Due to family commitments, Law will wind her trip up half way through, in Budapest, Hungary.
鈥淭his will be my first time travelling to Europe, so I have no idea what to expect, but I鈥檓 very excited to meet new people and experience different cultures,鈥 says Law.
鈥淚 haven鈥檛 finalized my packing list but, I will be taking a homemade helmet-cam mount and I鈥檓 working on a mount for my handle bars so I can take videos and pictures while riding.鈥
Fitzmaurice, who plans a layover on a Greek or Italian beach after the ride, says she鈥檚 been looking forward to cycling Europe with Global Agents for five years.
She waited this long because she 鈥渨anted to have a job that I could come back to, and wanted to go on a trip without coming back broke.鈥
In spite of the physical strain coming her way, she looks forward to the adventure.
鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 been four years of school, which feels like you鈥檝e got a little bit of the world on your shoulders. Waking up each morning with nothing to do (but ride) will be a nice change of pace.鈥
Global Agents riders will blog throughout the trip at www.globalafc.blogspot.com. Katie Fitzmaurice and Nicole Law plan to send The Leader updates along the way.
bjoseph@surreyleader.com