Only once Porsche was convinced they wouldn’t be putting any of their customers in considerable danger did they give the green light––and even then it was still more of an amber one with intermittent flashing reds literally hours before the flag off in Queensland, Australia. In fact, it wasn’t until the last car literally got flagged off from the Brisbane dealership did the PWE crew start to believe it was really happening.
I joined up with the convoy somewhere in the middle of the earth in a place called Uluru National Park in the Northern Territory of Outback Australia. To say this place is remote is to say Manila is congested. This is a place so isolated and quiet, it is where silence comes when it needs to think. Just to put that into perspective for a car guy, let’s just say that it took me almost 1,000 kms to realise I was driving a left hand drive vehicle in a right hand drive country, because without context, there’s really no way of telling.
After enjoying cocktails at sunset by the world’s largest rock, the group were treated to dinner under the stars before being sent off with a full tank of gas, 80 litres of reserves in 4 jerry cans, two spare tires, one Our father, a Hail Mary, a Glory Be and an iPad that came preloaded with a custom built map that was built just for this trip. Initially I felt humbled by the grandeur of it all until I realised that in a way, it was the last supper. They had to be as nice as possible. Because while it may have all been recon’d by Jan’s team, this was still the great outdoors at its most open. And anything could happen.
Preparing for a road trip like this conjures up feelings you may never knew you had before. Because while I have been on hundreds of international media drives before, and all of them completely awesome, being out here, where the variables cannot be controlled by corporate, it heightens all your senses. It’s how I imagine the White House feel about Donald Trump’s Twitter account.
The convoy rustled to life around 7am, although the crew had been up far, far earlier. They had to Vulcanize every spare tire they had after bursting 11 tires in 10 minutes due to a particularly harsh patch of gravel and sand the day before. How these cars still remained screwed together after that brutal jaunt across the desert remains up there with whatever happened to Amelia Earhart. If there was ever a testament to the durability of a Porsche, this would be it. Simulations are great, but there’s no better test than actually having to get somewhere and being in the only option for it. And the Cayennes delivered in shovel loads and ate up every obstacle in their way with a smirk that said, “you want fries with that?”