In the thin air of the Indian Himalayas, Jack set out to conquer the world’s three highest motorable roads—Khardung La (5,359 m), Norbu La (5,340 m), and Umling La (5,800 m)—in a single push. Battling extreme altitude, freezing temperatures, and relentless gradients, this project was a true test of body and mind at the very edge of human performance.
In Jack’s words - ‘Thats the hardest thing I’ve ever done…’
In June 2025, Jack paid tribute to the birth of the Tour de France by recreating its inaugural 1903 route—2,428 km across six brutal stages, each averaging nearly 400 km. Riding a modern bike fitted with original-era two-speed gearing, he embraced the same simplicity and hardship the pioneers of the sport faced over a century ago.
This project wasn’t about breaking records but about reliving cycling’s romantic past—long, sleepless nights on the road, endless gravel stretches, and the quiet beauty of riding through history, one stage at a time.
In May 2025, Jack set out to climb the ten highest paved roads in Europe—back-to-back—in a single ride project. Covering five countries and thousands of meters of elevation, the challenge celebrated Europe’s most iconic mountain passes while testing the limits of body and mind.
In partnership with Outride, Jack joined a week-long ride down the California coast with one mission: to get more kids on bikes. Each day combined riding with school visits, where Jack shared his story and encouraged thousands of students to see the bike as a tool for freedom, confidence, and better mental health.
Beyond the ride itself, the rally created lasting connections—sparking conversations between students, teachers, and local communities about the power of movement to transform lives and build stronger, healthier futures.
On the 9th of October 2024, Jack arrived at the Northern most point of Japan having crossed the entire country in just 5 days and 17 minutes. Jack smashed the existing record by over 16 hours and in doing so, wrote himself into the Guinness World Record history books.
The worlds longest continuous bike trail. 1067km of remote gravel in Western Australias South West, Jack knocked 5 hours off the exiting FKT to claim his seventh record. 2 days, 12hrs 15min, with just 17 minutes of sleep. Jack rode through record breaking temperatures and weather conditions.
Upon completion, Jack carried out a week’s worth of community activations which saw him engage with 3,500+ children, to educate them on the power of goal setting and exercise to better their mental health.
Mirroring the journey of the inaugural ‘Bullet Train’, Jack aimed to cycle from Osaka to Tokyo in less than 19 hours, through three major cities made up of 20,000,000 people. Possible?
Jack broke multiple World Records as part of his year long 2022 project. He not only rode 1,000,000m of Elevation, but Everested 52 times on 52 different climbs and raised $500,000 for three Mental Health, Not for Profits.
A project three years in the making, Jack gave the Tour de France peloton a ten day head start, and then raced them to Paris. A new Tour de France Record, in just 10 days of riding, Jack completed what takes professional cyclists three weeks, arriving in Paris three days before the Peloton.
A 715km route spanning the South to the North of Portugal with 10,000+m of elevation, Jack smashed the previous record of 28hrs by 4 hours, to log a new FKT of 24hrs.
A total distance of 3,505km spread across 7 days. Jack broke the existing record by over 150km with 9hr still on the clock.
3 Everestings in 3 Countries in 3 Days (Italy, France, Spain)