Rediffmail Money rediffGURUS BusinessEmail

Why I Cycled From Kashmir To Kanyakumari

February 24, 2026
By BRIJESH K HALDIA
7 Minutes Read

'That journey across India has changed me forever.'

Photographs: Kind courtesy Brijesh K Haldia

Why I signed up for the K2K ride

 

The idea of cycling from Kashmir to Kanyakumari was born from a deep personal desire to test my limits -- physically, mentally and emotionally.

With a demanding professional life and personal responsibilities, this journey was less about adventure and more about answering one question: Can disciplined effort, sustained over time, lead to something extraordinary?

Under the aegis of the ministry of youth affairs and sports and the Fit India Movement, and in commemoration of the 150th birth anniversary of India's Iron Man, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, I embarked on a cycling expedition last year from Kashmir to Kanyakumari. The 16-day ride, organised by Dare2Gear, brought together 150 cyclists from across the country.

This was not a race. It was a journey of purpose -- celebrating unity, fitness and the belief that ordinary people can achieve extraordinary things with determination.

Key Points

Preparation: Mind over circumstance

 

Although I had completed several long-distance cycling expeditions earlier -- BRMs (long distance cycling events) of 200, 300, 400 and 600 km, the Delhi-Mumbai 1,525 km ride and routes like Pune-Goa and Pune-Pandharpur -- this expedition came with a unique challenge. I was informed just 15 days before it began.

With limited time, I focused on what mattered most -- consistency and mental readiness.

I trained daily, took a short recovery break and resumed long rides of 230-300 km to build endurance.

Preparation went beyond riding -- checking spares, tyres, chain, brakes, hydration strategy, night riding readiness and preparing for varied climatic conditions.

The journey: 3,561 km

 

From the snow-covered mountains of Srinagar to the warm coastal breeze of Kanyakumari, the journey covered 3,561 km over 16 days, passing through seven states and one Union territory.

Every day brought a new landscape, a new challenge, a new lesson.

Cold mornings in the north, intense heat in Rajasthan, rolling hills in Maharashtra and humid stretches in the south tested both body and mind.

Traffic, headwinds, climbs and fatigue were constant companions but so was the support of fellow cyclists and the belief that quitting was never an option.

Highs of the journey

 

The highs arrived quietly, often without warning:

Each high reinforced one belief -- consistency creates momentum.

Lows, pain, self-doubt

 

The lows were just as real:

The toughest battles were never physical -- they happened in one's mind.

Incredible sights

 

India unfolded gradually, layer by layer:

The journey offered a rare privilege -- to see India slowly, intimately and respectfully.

The kindness of strangers

 

The journey would have been incomplete without the people:

Their kindness often arrived when my energy was at its lowest.

The people who raised my morale

 

Morale came from many sources:

Encouragement does not always push you forward; sometimes it simply keeps you from stopping.

Finances: Planning the journey

 

A journey of this scale requires careful financial planning:

Financial discipline was as important as physical discipline.

Impact on the human body

 

Such a long ride affects the body in many ways:

Listening to the body and respecting its limits proved critical.

Impact on the bicycle

 

The bicycle became a living companion and needed care:

Mechanical awareness helped prevent major breakdowns.

Mandatory tool kit and essentials

 

Self-reliance is essential for long-distance cycling. My kit included:

Preparedness reduced uncertainty on the road.

The finish line: Kanyakumari

 

Reaching Kanyakumari made me feel a sense of achievement that very few things have before.

The finish line felt like a new beginning.

The journey had never been never about distance -- it was about continuing despite discomfort.

Final reflection

 

That journey across India has changed me forever.

BRIJESH K HALDIA

More News Coverage

IndiaKanyakumariministry of youth affairsVallabhbhai PatelIron Man

RELATED STORIES

WEB STORIES

9 Wonderful Indian Mango Varieties Going Extinct

10 Raw Mango Recipes You Need To Cook Soon

Adopt A Pet Day: 16 NGOs Helping Animals

VIDEOS

NEWS BUSINESS MOVIES CRICKET SPORTS GET AHEAD REDIFF-TV REDIFF ASTRO MOBILE RECHARGE BILL PAYMENTS