Victory Motorcycles is proud to announce that the Swiss endurance rider Urs "Grizzly" Pedraita has
achieved a new world record by circumnavigating five continents in 119 days and 21 hours aboard his
Victory Cross Country Tour.
The 119 day and 21-hour time INCLUDES the time that his Victory Cross Country was flown or shipped between
continents – unlike other records that don't include the transfer time.
Grizzly actually rode a total of 76,277 km in a "riding time" of 72 days and 13 hours. The total time (including all
of the flight times for shipping his bike by air/sea between continents) was 119 days and 21 hours.
He ended his adventure on Sunday 10th July at a celebration held in his honor at Volusia Motorsports in
New Smyrna Beach, Florida.
At the end of the trip Grizzly exclaimed: "With this journey the spirit of the pioneers of the past has
been re-established."
"There is no place for time-stops in this kind of adventure," he said referring to not stopping the clock
for the transfer flights. "This victory belongs to the team and is dedicated to my brother and my
guardian angel, Emelie from Peru."
The previous 'riding time' record was 120 days and 2 hours so Grizzly has beaten this time by a
staggering 47 days and 13 hours.
However, Grizzly wants his "all-continents via their longest axis" record to be listed as 119 days and 21
hours including all transfer times.
Grizzly began his adventure at the Daytona International Speedway on 11th March 2016 flanked by
hundreds of owners of Victory motorcycles who joined him to ride one lap of the Daytona 200 road
course and escort him out of town for the first part of his journey.
From Daytona Beach he traveled 6,391km in six days and 14 hours to complete the first stage of the
ride to Panama City, Panama. He then continued traveling south 10,089kms for nine days and 23 hours
to reach Ushuaia, Argentina at the tip of South America. From there, he returned 3,360km to Santiago,
Chile, loaded his bike onto a plane and flew to Australia, where he spent six days and five hours riding
7,410km west across the continent from Sydney to Perth.
From Perth, Grizzly and his Victory flew to Cape Town, South Africa and awaited clearance through
customs. Thereafter, he took 13 days and 23 hours for a 12,085km journey north from Cape Town to
Cairo, Egypt completing the South African continent.
A ferry then took him across the Mediterranean to Tarragona, Spain. From there, he rode 8,766km in
six days and 23 hours from northern Spain to Gibraltar to North Cape (Nordkapp) Norway.
Grizzly then turned east, riding through St. Petersburg, Moscow, Irkutsk and Vladivostok during an 11-
day-7-hour, 11,716km journey across Russia, a 4-hour and 400km tour through South Korea, and a 5-
day-11-hour and 4,810km ride through Thailand and Malaysia.
From Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Grizzly loaded his bike onto a plane and traveled to Anchorage, AK,
before resuming his 11,095km tour across North America through Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto,
Chicago and Santa Monica, Calif. to his finish in Daytona Beach.
Motostyling Zurich modified the Victory Cross Country Tour used for this attempt. While the engine,
frame and running gear remained untouched, other parts of the bike were redesigned to suit Grizzly's
needs as he covered long distances in remote parts of the world.
"This record is a testament to the durability, capability and dependability of our Cross Country Touring
platform," says Nate Secor, Marketing Manager for Victory Motorcycles. "Victory Touring owners love
to roll back the miles. If you asked them, they'd likely say there's a little bit of Grizzly in each of them
when they're covering ground during their own journeys."
Time and position measurement for Grizzly's record-setting ride were done via GPS and satellite
tracking. The timing was not stopped when waiting to pass a country border or when the rider was
sleeping.
Visit GrizzlyRaceTeam.ch for additional information about Grizzly's travels. Learn more about Victory
Motorcycles at Victorymotorcycles.com.au or follow on Twitter and Facebook.
MORE INFORMATION
The record set by Grizzly is different to the ones set by Nick Sanders and Kevin/Julia Sanders. Theirs
were world circumnavigation records while Grizzly's was a world circumnavigation through each
continent's longest axis.
By comparison, Grizzly rode about double the mileage of those record breakers covering around
76,000km compared to 32,000km.
- 1997 - Nick Sanders set a "riding time" of 31 days on a Triumph Daytona 900 covering 32,070km)
- 2002 - Kevin & Julia Sanders (no relation to Nick just the same surname) did it in 19 days and 8 hours
on a BMW R1150GS covering 31,319km.
- 2005 - Nick Sanders then had another go on a Yamaha R1 and did it in 19 days and 4 hours.
Grizzly's "riding time" was 72 days and 13 hours – covering 76,277km
The time that the bike spent in transit between continents was 47 days and 8 hours.