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Four-year trip around the world passes through the North Fork

Jason Tang, left, with David Markel of Southold the morning after they met during a nor'easter last week. (Credit: Joe Werkmeister)
Jason Tang, left, with David Markel of Southold the morning after they met during a nor’easter last week. (Credit: Joe Werkmeister)

Oftentimes, he relies on the hospitality of strangers he meets along the way, such as David Markel of Southold.

Mr. Markel, a longtime North Fork resident, was playing basketball when he received a strange call Oct. 22. A friend had just come across a man bicycling amid a downpour. He could use a place to stay the night, she said to him. Mr. Markel lives in a barn on Youngs Avenue and there was plenty of room. He told her to let the man into his barn and he would see him when he got back.

“I figured he wasn’t going to be any danger,” Mr. Markel said.

Soon after, Mr. Markel and Mr. Tang met for the first time, and another unforeseen friendship formed. They went out for breakfast the next morning and stopped by the local newspaper for an interview.

“It’s my dream,” Mr. Tang said of circling the globe.

He typically bikes around five to six hours a day. In the first two months of the trip, he lost 33 pounds, he said. When he arrives at a destination like New York City, he immerses himself as a tourist. To help pay for the expenses that pop up, he plays the erhu — a two-stringed bowed instrument known to some as a “Chinese violin” — and solicits donations. He pops open the case for the erhu and props up a sign titled “Cycling Around the World,” which briefly describes his journey. His friends back home have raised money for him to purchase his plane tickets.

Mr. Tang travels with an iPhone, one of the few pieces of technology he keeps on him. He maps his route using the iPhone map, but relies mostly on the guidance of local people he meets. He documents his trip on Facebook by posting to his personal page and a public page he created. It’s often the best way for his friends back home to know he’s still alive.

It’s a journey he spent three years preparing for, though he only informed his family of his plans three months before departing. He’s single and has no children.

“If I’m lucky, I could find my princess along the way,” he said.

Mr. Tang speaks English, Mandarin and Taiwanese. Soon enough, he’ll be learning Spanish.

The rest of his trip will take him down the coast of the United States. He plans to hop over to Mexico and continue through Central America and down South America. He’ll eventually fly to South Africa, then make his way up that massive continent to Europe. From there, he’ll head east across Asia on his way back to Taiwan.

He estimates it could take another three years for him to complete his journey.

Mr. Tang seeks neither fame nor fortune from his trip. He rides for no particular cause or fight.

He simply wants to see the world.

As Mr. Tang finished loading his bike Thursday morning in Mattituck, he listened as Mr. Markel explained which roads to take across the North Fork.

He hopped on his bicycle, an American flag waving on the back, said goodbye to Mr. Markel and began peddling west, slowly fading into the horizon.

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