There's a philosophy among the best adventure riders in the world: do hard things with easy people. Pick your crew carefully, pick the hardest route you can find, and then figure it out together. That's exactly what Andy Cochrane, Josh Wray, Sean Galaway, and Brandon "Marlin" Scherzberg did when they set out to ride the length of the Silk Road — off-road.
The kind of roads you only find when you go looking for trouble. Photo: Andy Cochrane
The Crew
These four have been riding together for years. Every two years or so, they pull off a major expedition — the kind of trip that most riders only talk about. This time, the goal was ambitious: ride the ancient Silk Road trade route, staying off-road as much as physically possible.
Andy Cochrane is an adventure writer and photographer whose work has appeared in The New York Times, Men's Journal, Outside, Gear Junkie, and Backpacker. He doesn't just ride — he documents the raw, unfiltered reality of life on a motorcycle in places where the road disappears.
The crew, loaded up and ready for anything the mountains throw at them. Photo: Andy Cochrane
The Route
The Silk Road isn't one road — it's a network of ancient trade routes stretching from the Mediterranean to East Asia. For this expedition, the crew focused on the off-road sections: mountain passes above the clouds, forest trails where GPS stops working, river crossings that test both rider and machine, and vast open steppes where the horizon never ends.
The Expedition
- Start: Europe — loaded up with camping gear, tools, and spare parts
- Through: The Balkans, Turkey, the Caucasus, and into Central Asia
- Terrain: Mountain passes, forest single-track, river crossings, gravel roads, ancient caravan trails
- Style: Off-road as much as possible, wild camping every night
- Bikes: Adventure machines loaded to the limit
Into the Wild
The photos tell the story better than words ever could. Dense forest trails where the canopy blocks out the sky. Fully loaded bikes navigating rocky single-track that would make most riders turn back. River crossings where the water comes up past the wheels and you just have to commit and hope.
Left: Rocky forest trails with fully loaded bikes. Right: River crossings — commit and don't stop. Photos: Andy Cochrane
This is what real adventure riding looks like. Not paved mountain passes with scenic overlooks — but trails where you're not sure the path continues, where your GPS shows nothing but green, and where the next fuel station is a question mark.
The moment between the chaos — boots off, snacks out, stories shared. Photo: Andy Cochrane
Camp Life
When you're riding the Silk Road off-road, hotels aren't an option. Every night is wild camping — setting up tents in forest clearings, cooking over small stoves, drying gear, and planning tomorrow's route by headlamp. The camp becomes the best part of the day: where the riding stories come out, where the laughs get louder, and where the bond between riding buddies turns into something deeper.
Camp life — tents, bikes, and everything you need between the trees. Photo: Andy Cochrane
"Do hard things with easy people. Pick riders who laugh when it gets hard, who help when something breaks, and who never complain about the mud."
Why This Matters
The crew didn't fully complete their planned route — and that's part of the story. In adventure riding, the plan is just a starting point. What you actually discover along the way — the detours, the breakdowns, the moments that weren't on any map — that's where the real expedition happens.
For me, watching these four riders operate as a unit is the ultimate inspiration. They're not sponsored pros with support vehicles. They're riding buddies who decided to do something extraordinary together. That's the spirit I want to bring to every ride I plan. The route matters, but the people you ride with matter more.
Mountains, gravel, and the kind of roads that only exist at the edges of the map. Photos: Andy Cochrane
What I Took From This
- Crew > Route: The right people make any trip survivable and every failure a story worth telling.
- Off-road is the point: Anyone can follow a highway. The Silk Road is found on the trails between the highways.
- Plans are guidelines: The trip you actually take will be different from the one you planned — and usually better.
- Wild camping changes everything: When your home is wherever you stop, you're truly free.
- Document it: Andy's photography proves that the story doesn't end when you park the bike. It lives on in every frame.
Source & Inspiration
- Do Hard Things With Easy People — Adventure Rider Radio — The original podcast episode featuring Andy, Sean, Josh & Marlin
- Andy Cochrane — Adventure writer, photographer, and rider
- Adventure Rider Radio — Full Podcast Library