âIt feels like a lifetime Iâve been out here,â says Lachlan Morton, his body fatigued to the extreme from hour upon hour of pedalling on Australian tarmac, following roads that stretch as far as the eye can see.
In reality, it took 30 days, nine hours and 59 minutes for Morton to complete a full lap â just over 8,800 miles or 14,200 kilometres â of his vast country in record time, arriving back in his hometown of Port Macquarie on Saturday. But you can forgive him for thinking that itâs been longer.
During his travels, the professional cyclist braved brutal headwinds, extreme temperatures, dangerous traffic and even dusted himself off after a run-in with a kangaroo. Thatâs all while cycling an average of 450km a day, spending up to 17 or 18 hours on a bike daily, stopping only to sleep, eat and mentally reset before doing it all again.
âYou might finish a day and you have a huge sense of accomplishment, of relief, and then youâre asleep within 20 minutes,â Morton told CNN Sport earlier this week as he neared the end of his adventure. âAnd then before you know it, youâve woken up and youâre back to zero. Itâs tough.â
Come Saturday, it all seemed worth it. Morton easily broke the record for the fastest lap of Australia â beating David Alleyâs time of 37 days, 20 hours and 45 minutes set in 2011 â when he rolled back into Port Macquarie, which is a four-hour, 15-minute drive north of Sydney.
It signalled the end of an immense feat of endurance and perseverance, one that has involved mastering â or enduring â the full spectrum of Australiaâs unforgiving weather.
âRainy days, big, long headwind days â I think mentally theyâre probably the most challenging,â says Morton. âYouâre going to spend 17 or 18 hours just pedalling in one direction straight into the wind, which is quite maddening, to be honest.
âItâs very loud. You can very quickly convince yourself that itâs someone working against you, like itâs like some sort of plot against you. Reminding yourself that youâre just on a bike ride becomes very important.â
This, however, was far from any normal bike ride. At times, Morton would begin his day in the saddle at midnight having gone to bed at 5 p.m the night before. The early starts were intended to beat the intense heat in northern Australia, while also avoiding the heavy trucks roaring past his two small wheels. He found that his lights cut through better at night, making him more visible to the traffic.
âTrying to complete the route and also not get run over, itâs been a challenge in itself, for sure,â Morton says with only a hint of a joke.
Even with the early starts, sleep â at least six hours of it a night â has been a priority, and the 32-year-oldâs crew, which includes his childhood coach, a masseuse, a bike mechanic, and his wife Rachel, have been a source of constant support.
According to the Road Record Association of Australia, a successful lap of the country must be 14,200 kilometres or longer and pass through at least six of the following towns and cities: Adelaide, Brisbane, Broome, Darwin, Esperance, Melbourne, Perth, and Sydney.
Pain and discomfort is inescapable with a challenge like this. Morton admits that walking is a struggle first thing in the morning, so too the initial couple of hours on the bike. But after that, he says that his body has generally felt âpretty goodâ; itâs the mental toll of being alone on a bike all day that has tested his resolve more than anything.
âIt can be very monotonous,â says Morton. âThe mind games and tricks you kind of have to play on yourself become a lot more intense, and itâs a challenge in that you could be peddling essentially straight in one direction for 16 hours, just thinking of different ways to make it go by quicker or to make it more enjoyable, which is tough.â
Morton is a unique breed of cyclist, a rider who has competed in some of the sportâs biggest road races â the Giro dâItalia and the Vuelta a España â while also forging his own path in endurance cycling.
In 2021, he rode what is known as the Alt Tour, completing every stage of the Tour de France under his own steam and arriving in Paris five days before the main peloton.
A year later, he rode from Munich to the Polish-Ukrainian border in a single, 42-hour push to raise more than US$250,000 for Ukrainian refugees.
But the cycle around Australia has been a different beast altogether, purely based on the sheer size of the country, much of which is remote and uninhabited.
âJust getting a feel for how huge it all is, itâs pretty mind-blowing,â says Morton.
On top of colliding with a kangaroo â âI nearly went over the handlebars â it was a very close callâ â Morton has encountered snakes on the Nullabor Plain and experienced the beauty of birdsong at sunrise and sunset â âprobably the most special time to be at the bike.â
All the while, he has wrestled with the same issues as any endurance athlete. When it comes to fueling, Morton says that there is no strategy or science behind his approach beyond what heâs craving at any given time. That might be sandwiches, meat, eggs, rice, muffins and cookies â âbasically regular foodâ â all washed down with around six cups of coffee a day.
âCertain days, I would eat up to half as much as other days, just based on the way Iâm feeling,â he says. âWhen Iâm hungry, itâs wild how much food I can put away.â
Throughout the challenge, Morton has been supported by his EF EducationâEasyPost team, which has been chronicling all the twists of turns of his two-wheeled odyssey on social media. As of Sunday, he had raised more than 130,000 Australian dollars (around US$90,000) for the Indigenous Literacy Foundation, providing books and resources for Indigenous children in remote Australian communities.
Riding several hundred miles every day for a month feels like just the latest chapter for a cyclist eager to push the boundaries of his sport and explore life beyond a tightly-packed peloton. For Morton, cycling is adventure â a way to strike out on his own and see the world in a new light.
âThe different experiences you can have just using bikes are pretty remarkable,â he says. âI donât value any more above the other. Itâs just been a journey, you know?"