Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Round-the-world cyclist arrives in UK... and has bike stolen outside a Reading Wetherspoons two days later

Josiah Skeats says he cycled through many countries on his travels and was "always welcomed with hospitality", which unfortunately wasn't the case during his time back in the UK...

A British adventure cyclist who says he spent 835 days cycling around the world "through countries people repeatedly warned were too dangerous to visit" has had his latest adventure brought to an abrupt end... outside a Reading branch of Wetherspoons, where his girlfriend's bike was stolen. 

Josiah Skeats says he has covered over 40,000km by bike on his Instagram page, and was on only his second day of bike touring in England when he arrived in Reading on Tuesday. 

Skeats was part way through cycling the new King Alfred’s Way route with his girlfriend, when the theft happened five metres away from where they were sitting outside the Hope Tap in Friar Street. 

The 29-year-old and his partner were inside the branch of Wetherspoons drinking coffee with their bikes outside propped against the window, when the thief pounced. Skeats said that he gave chase for half a mile before giving up. 

He told road.cc: "I was actually taking my girlfriend on her first bike tour around the UK ahead of a planned trip across South America this winter.

"I was excited because it was one of my first tours in the UK too. She had her bike stolen which has kind of dampened our confidence for that trip!"

On his Instagram account, Skeats added: "I spent 835 days cycling around the world through countries people repeatedly warned were too dangerous to visit - and I was always welcomed with hospitality.

"Today in Reading, on my second day bike touring in England, I had a bike grabbed and stolen less than 5 metres from me. The bike and everything attached to it, gone in a second.

"I’m sorry not to be sharing my usual positive, restore-your-faith-in-humanity message, but I guess bad things happen everywhere and not just in countries with a bad reputation. I’m absolutely devastated."

The stolen bike, a Scott Aspect in a size XS, is worth £1,000 and was taken with up to £250 worth of camping gear. Anyone with potential information about the theft is asked to contact Thames Valley Police by calling 101, or by making a report online quoting the reference number 43220213517.

It's certainly not the first time an adventure cyclist has been left with a bad impression of the UK compared to the hospitality they might have received in other countries. In 2017 another round-the-world cyclist Rob Lutter had his bike and all of his possessions stolen outside a Co-op in Kingston upon Thames, two years after he'd had his previous bike taken.

In 2019, Scottish mental health campaigner Josh Quigley's run of bad luck continued after being fined for cycling in Bedford when his bike was stolen in London, just as he was about to embark on a round-the-world adventure (Quigley's luck changed when he broke the 7 day cycling distance record in 2021). 

In 2012, Sam Swain returned back to the UK from a 10,000 mile trip when his Dawes Super Galaxy tourer was stolen in Bristol. 

At the time Swain said: "We were in places like Iran where people are really struggling and they were so much more united.

"I used that bike to go around the world and have had so many memories on it. You simply cannot get that back by buying another one."

Arriving at road.cc in 2017 via 220 Triathlon Magazine, Jack dipped his toe in most jobs on the site and over at eBikeTips before being named the new editor of road.cc in 2020, much to his surprise. His cycling life began during his students days, when he cobbled together a few hundred quid off the back of a hard winter selling hats (long story) and bought his first road bike - a Trek 1.1 that was quickly relegated to winter steed, before it was sadly pinched a few years later. Creatively replacing it with a Trek 1.2, Jack mostly rides this bike around local cycle paths nowadays, but when he wants to get the racer out and be competitive his preferred events are time trials, sportives, triathlons and pogo sticking - the latter being another long story.  

Add new comment

45 comments

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism replied to Gimpl | 1 year ago
0 likes

Well it appears you accidently replied to Awaveys apology with a wrong post and at least apologised for that so nothing more for me to add. 

Avatar
leewalton replied to Gimpl | 1 year ago
1 like
Gimpl wrote:

Do you work in IT by chance? 

I was a bit concerned by this post as well after the combative nature of Gimpl's posts?

What are you trying to say about people that work in IT Gimpl?

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism replied to leewalton | 1 year ago
1 like

They realise Milton Keynes is a shithole..... 

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 1 year ago
0 likes

Pity - in a very slightly different history from reality it could have been pretty livable even if you didn't want / have a car...

Old MarxistMaoist on a bike here too trying it for size.

Avatar
NOtotheEU replied to Awavey | 1 year ago
9 likes
Awavey wrote:

Submissions for the Jubilee City nominations were supposed to highlight their royal associations and cultural heritage, Milton Keynes didnt even exist in 1952 when the Queen's coronation took place that this platinum jubilee celebrates. Any of the other 30 "not cities" that engaged in this competition, should feel royally left out...that a town which is only 55 years old was selected ahead of them.

It's a little known fact that the Queen is a roundabout enthusiast. 

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to NOtotheEU | 1 year ago
3 likes
NOtotheEU wrote:

It's a little known fact that the Queen is a roundabout enthusiast. 

 

Who's her favourite, Dougal, Zebedee, Brian, Ermintrude...?

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to Rendel Harris | 1 year ago
2 likes

Magic!

Avatar
NOtotheEU replied to Rendel Harris | 1 year ago
4 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:
NOtotheEU wrote:

It's a little known fact that the Queen is a roundabout enthusiast. 

 

Who's her favourite, Dougal, Zebedee, Brian, Ermintrude...?

How dare you make a joke out of my totally serious and thoroughly researched comment!

And it would be Ermintrude obviously.

Avatar
Miller replied to Tom_77 | 1 year ago
6 likes
Tom_77 wrote:

Apparently they were looking for "places that make Britain great", and must have felt that Reading doesn't.

Well, I live here and, frankly... it doesn't.

Avatar
Secret_squirrel replied to Miller | 1 year ago
2 likes

Ditto and ditto.
City class bike thieves tho....

My Reading theft experience is anything to go by it will turn up 4 years later if you put it on the stolen bike sites. 

Avatar
Eton Rifle replied to Tom_77 | 1 year ago
3 likes
Tom_77 wrote:

Reading snubbed as town fails to win Platinum Jubilee city status - https://www.getreading.co.uk/news/reading-berkshire-news/reading-snubbed...

Apparently they were looking for "places that make Britain great", and must have felt that Reading doesn't.

"Jubilee city status" - another meaningless bauble from Rees-Mogg and the rest of the #ToryScum, to distract from their complete lack of actual policy. Don't fall for it.

Avatar
HoarseMann | 1 year ago
0 likes

 I really hope the thief did themselves an injury on that saddle.

Avatar
Secret_squirrel replied to HoarseMann | 1 year ago
3 likes

why?  Is it like sitting on a razor blade?

Avatar
andystow replied to Secret_squirrel | 1 year ago
1 like
Secret_squirrel wrote:

why?  Is it like sitting on a razor blade?

It looks like a broken Brooks, but the photo is originally from December 2018 so I doubt it's still in that state.

Avatar
HoarseMann replied to andystow | 1 year ago
1 like
andystow wrote:

so I doubt it's still in that state.

hopefully it had deteriorated further!

Pages

Latest Comments