Road trips aren’t just about the destination. Their appeal, as is often noted, lies in the journey itself. So fasten your seatbelt and get ready for the ride of your life with our pick of the world’s best road trips.

Amalfi Coast Road | Italy


[photo: APP] 

Romantics the world over have long been captivated by Italy’s Amalfi Coast. Just south of Naples, this narrow coastal road has played a starring role in numerous Hollywood movies. Little wonder, noting matches the breathtaking views of the brilliant blue mediterranean from the cliff-hugging highway as it snakes its way between the picture postcard seaside towns of Amalfi, positano, Ravello and Sorrento.

Ring Road | Iceland

Considered to be one of the most desolate and scenic routes in the world, Iceland’s Ring Road takes in an array of fascinating geological oddities. Alongside black sandy beaches, volcanic mountains and lava outcrops are vast expanses of treeless tundra, giant glaciers, rugged fjords and thundering waterfalls. En route you can take a dip in the sulphurous pools before returning to Reykjavik, the world’s northernmost capital.

Route 62 | South Africa

Often overlooked by motorists who tear up South Africa’s N2, Route 62 is a stunning inland alternative to the much-hyped coastal Garden Route. Showcasing some of the country’s most magnificent scenery, the road, starting just outside Cape Town and running to Port Elizabeth, meanders through scenic spa towns, past vineyards and fruit farms and over breathtaking mountain passes. It’s also reputedly the longest wine route in the world with 69 wine farms dotting its path. We’ll drink to that!

 

Stelvio Pass | Italy

[photo : Tim Connors]

A road favoured by the Top Gear presenters, this Italian mountain pass was named the best road in the world by Jeremy Clarkson, who eloquently described it as “15 miles of asphalt spaghetti draped on the Alps”.

During World War I fierce battles between Italian and Austro-Hungarian forces used to take place near the pass – it’s a place worth fighting over. Today, the pass is far more peaceful and is sometimes traversed by Giro d’Italia cyclists who use their skills to tackle the hairpin bends.

Atlantic Road | Norway

The Atlantic Road zigzags across 12 low bridges that jut out over the sea, linking the islands between Molde (famous for its annual Jazz festival in July) and Kristiansund in the western Fjords. The Hustadvika is an infamous stretch of ocean and in storm it’s fantastically dramatic. In calmer weather you might spot whales and seals.

La Ruta Cuarenta | Argentina

The Motorcycle Diaries is a fairly good model for a free-spirited road trip, and the trip from north to south down Ruta 40 follows the example of Che Guevara, taking in over 5,000 kilometres of tarmac and dirt, and giving you a keen sense of the country’s bewildering scale. Head south from Salta, following the snowcapped spine of the Andes, and you’ll soon find yourself pretty much alone on the road in the vast steppes and pampas of Patagonia, the world’s third largest desert. Highlights of ‘La Ruta Cuarenta’ include the huge, monster-filled deep blue Lago Nahuel Hapi, ‘Argentina’s Grand Canyon’ in Talampaya National Park, and the dinosaur-fossil strewn wastes of Mendoza. The latter region is also the heart of Argentina’s thriving wine industry. Stop off at pretty much any roadside estanteria on your journey to enjoy a cheap meal of delicious Patagonian lamb or grass-fed beef.

Highway 89 | USA

[photo: Ann Torrence Phtography]

This geological field trip traverses the Sonoran Desert to the Rocky Mountains, passing a volcanic plateau with lava flows and the Great Salt Lake. Take a detour if you want to see the red rocks of Sedona. Open roads rarely come finer. 

 

Davos to Stelvio via Bormio | Switzerland, Italy


Etched precariously through the peaks of the eastern Alps, this dizzying zigzag road built in the early 19th century is a hard-core workout for the very best of drivers and automobiles. The 60 hairpin turns transport you 9,042 feet up the mountains in 90 miles. The heady views are mostly yours alone.

Great Ocean Road | Australia

[photo: dnptravel.com]

Here mountains meet oceans, rainforests meet dramatic cliffs, and lighthouses meet national parks (home to stacks of anteaters, kangaroos, penguins, koalas and multi-colored parrots). At the end of the route you’ll want to U-turn and ride it again.

Indochina Heritage Roads | Loas, Vietnam, Cambodia

There are few regions in the world that can claim as rich a cultural and historic past as Indochina; the countries of Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia are home to some of the oldest temples in existence, the site of great humanitarian tragedy, and also spectacularly beautiful. Starting your trip in Siem Reap to Phnom Penh, Ho Chi Minh through to Da Lat, Hanoi, Halong Bay and finally Luang Prabang.

H.O.P.E.

Anamorphic: “a distorted projection or drawing that appears normal when viewed from a particular point.” But we certainly don’t need to define this for photographer Christian Stoll—he understands the concept implicitly, as evidenced by his recent work for a PriceWaterhouseCoopers editorial spread. His canvas was a workshop, with all of its tools of the trade, separated by colour and arranged so that the collected items form a letter. Together, all four images spell out the word “HOPE.”

[christian-stoll.com]

Reaching out: GS Sareen, Omni President and CEO, handed over a cheque for US$250,000 to officials of The Breast Cancer Research Foundation

The “Mobilizing Hope” campaign on breast cancer awareness launched in 2011 has by now caught international attention. The corporate partnership with The Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) is a landmark initiative in Omni’s history, which was born out of Sareen’s deep conviction that corporate success becomes most meaningful only when businesses earnestly reach out to the needs of the society. Money is not everything, he says.

Omni has been supporting the BCRF’s global efforts to prevent and eradicate breast cancer worldwide though cutting edge research since 2011. For each and every four Radar tyres sold globally, the company donates US$1 to BCRF,

with a minimum annual donation of US$250,000. Radar’s “Pink Ribbon” special edition tyre, which the company has christened “Ring of Hope”, will hit the market in 2012.

The alliance with the BCRF has brought one of the most important women’s causes worldwide into the mostly male-driven environment of the tyre industry. The company proudly notes that the Pink Ribbon drive has had an incredible resonance with both male and female customers of Radar.

POLYMERS & TYRE ASIA JUNE/JULY 2012

MESSAGE IN PINK

“Mobilizing Hope,” Omni’s ground-breaking partnership

with The Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) is born out of the vision that corporate success becomes

most meaningful when a company pursues higher purposes. Breast cancer is among the most widely spread diseases that affect women. Despite its prevalence, there is still a severe lack of knowledge and awareness about the disease.

Founded by the late Evelyn Lauder, BCRF is a world leading non-for profit foundation with the mission of funding the most innovative research in the fight

against breast cancer. Omni joined its noble efforts in early 2011, an excellent example of corporate social responsibility, which resulted in an innovative marketing campaign, that captured the spotlight and even made it into the billboards of Times Square in New York City.

Through the initiative Omni made a commitment that for each set of four Radar tyres sold globally, the company donates US$1 to BCRF, with a minimum annual donation of US$250,000. The goal is to raise US$1 million to benefit BCRF. In October 2011, BCRF awarded $36.5 million to fund the research work of 186 doctors

and scientists across the globe. Omni’s contribution so far funds the work of one of those research teams.

“The Breast Cancer Research Foundation is truly grateful to Omni United for this very generous donation,” said Myra Biblowit, BCRF President. “The funds raised by the amazing Radar Mobilizing Hope program will fully fund one of BCRF research projects in the coming year and brings us all closer to living in a world without breast cancer. This is an amazing partnership and we are thrilled that Omni United will continue to support BCRF.”

In addition to the year-round fundraising and awareness collaboration, Radar, Omni’s flagship brand, developed a pink ribbon tyre, the “Ring of Hope”, a very distinct product especially designed, produced and marketed to benefit BCRF. This Limited Edition tyre is currently the only pink sidewall tyre available in the market.

First produced in two popular sizes: (195/60R15 and 205/55R16) the tyre fit an array of popular vehicles such as the Mini, Ford Focus, Honda Civic, VW Beetle, BMW320, Chrysler PT Cruiser, among other.

POLYMERS & TYRE ASIA JUNE/JULY 2012

Radar Tire’s Green Goals

Image

Environmental sustainability has become an integral part of today’s tyre industry. New mandates and regulations are being put in place, like the European tyre labelling or anti-dumping duty, Omni’s technical team has been working very closely with its manufacturers to ensure facilities and product designs are upgraded to keep up-to-date with the latest European labelling requirements.

“Anti-dumping duty is just part of this industry becoming increasingly environmentally friendly, and should be considered as an opportunity in the 

long term,” said Sareen.

Omni is committed to sustainability. The company aims to be first tyre manufacturer to enable its products full recyclability. Omni is embarking in a sustainability study with Ernst and Young to assess the environmental impact of its products and to eventually implement carbon-footprint offsetting initiatives.

Sareen said: “One of the most important and strategic corporate goals we have set for Omni at the start of this year is to become the first tyre company to have all of our products recycled at the end of their lifespan. We believe that consumers across the board will be demanding this in the future, not only of tyres, but of many other products, and we have already started to work on the logistics of the process, which is complex.

“As a first step, we have started to work with Ernst and Young to conduct a sustainability assessment which will help us in deriving the carbon footprint for our products, with the aim to both implement emission reduction activities and fine-tune our production processes in order to minimise our carbon footprint.”

POLYMERS & TYRE ASIA JUNE/JULY 2012

1971 Flat Cat Stealth Black Jaguar XK-E

ImageImageImageImageImage

 

Ditching the standard V12 from the 1971 E-Type, Ken “Posies” Fenical threw a more favorable small block Chevy V8 in this car, a ZZ383 crate engine by GM Performance parts to be exact. The vehicle was built for autocross, and competes regularly putting down 311 horsepower and 370 lb-ft of torque to the rear wheels through a Tremec five speed gearbox. The vehicle was given the nickname ‘Flat Cat’ due to the DP50 flat black epoxy PPG paint job. The 18 inch gloss black Dayton wire wheels provide the perfect finishing touch.

[hiconsumption.com]