Meet the Bradford father and son who raced across the world for a new TV show

Darron Speck and Alex Speck-Zolte from Bradford are on television show Race Across the World. Picture: BBC/Studio LambertDarron Speck and Alex Speck-Zolte from Bradford are on television show Race Across the World. Picture: BBC/Studio Lambert
Darron Speck and Alex Speck-Zolte from Bradford are on television show Race Across the World. Picture: BBC/Studio Lambert
Father and son Darron and Alex raced across the world in a trip like no other for a new TV show. They tell Laura Drysdale how the journey helped them to reconnect after drifting apart.

Reaching the other side of the world has never been easier - except for ten Brits who took on a challenge to travel to the furthest point from the UK by rail and road, without taking a single flight.

They were tasked to journey more than 12,000 miles at ground level to reach Singapore, without phones and bank cards and with just the price of the air fare to get them there.

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“The idea of visiting loads of exciting countries which are off the beaten track not very often travelled, the opportunity to visit those places and experience all these cultures, I just couldn’t miss,” says 48-year-old Darron Speck.

The teams were tasked with reaching Singapore without taking a single flight. Picture: BBC/Studio LambertThe teams were tasked with reaching Singapore without taking a single flight. Picture: BBC/Studio Lambert
The teams were tasked with reaching Singapore without taking a single flight. Picture: BBC/Studio Lambert

He took part in the challenge for new television show Race Across the World with his son Alex Speck-Zolte by his side. The duo, from Thornton, Bradford, were pitted against four other pairs for the competition, which saw the teams navigate five checkpoints en-route in the hope of reaching the final destination first to be awarded a £20,000 prize.

“It will test them physically and emotionally,” narrator John Hannah said, as he introduced the extraordinary journey when the series launched on the small screen on Sunday. He was not wrong.

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The first leg, which involved the pairs making their way from Greenwich, London to Delphi in Greece, already proved testing, with 20-year-old Alex claiming he was “at breaking point” as he and his father struggled to find a place to sleep in the Hungarian capital of Budapest.

“I go through a lot of emotions,” says Alex, the race’s youngest participant. “I cry, I laugh, everything really. I am myself through the whole thing. You will see every emotion going.”

“I saw Alex transform from a boy to a man,” his dad chips in. “How he starts the series compared to how he ends is a different person for the better.”

For Darron, a business analyst working on IT systems, the adventure was another to add to his list. He has travelled large parts of the world solo, hitchhiking and cycling to experience the globe’s hidden gems and immersing himself amongst each country’s people.

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“I love getting out and about experiencing new things and seeing new cultures. My day job is very regimented...to relax, I do the polar opposite.”

His travels have seen him sleep in tents on top of mountains, in the wilderness and even at the side of an active volcano.

But, whilst he is used to “the unpredictability and hardship” that travelling can bring, for son Alex, it was a leap out of his comfort zone.

“It was a bit weird not getting a shower and having to wear dirty clothes at times,” he says. He is seen packing Versace aftershave in the show’s first episode, as Darron explains to the camera that his son has “a pretty cushy life and no responsibility”.

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“The most difficult thing was that we would go to a restaurant to eat and have to pick the cheapest thing on the menu,” Alex says. “Some places we didn’t even know what it was. We ate some pretty bad food.”

The pair, who only met their fellow competitors on the start line, had just £1,329 each with which to complete the journey.

The show’s production team estimated each individual would have roughly £25 per day each to cover all their expenses - food, water, travel and accommodation.

Darron and Alex repeatedly reevaluated their money. “Sometimes we had to decide can we afford to eat?,” says Darron. “Can we afford to sleep in a hotel? These things that most people take for granted were constantly on our mind...You are very conscious that every decision you make could potentially stop you getting to the end.”

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They were able to work to make money on the way but each hour they spent earning, was one less they spent on the go.

When they did take on jobs, they tried to choose those that offered accommodation or enabled them to meet people who could help them with information, Alex says. They had only a map of the world, travel guide with job adverts and their cash.

“I would say probably the hardest part for me was having to talk and communicate and get on with strangers,” says Darron. “I’m probably an introvert by nature but I had to be extrovert to help us.”

“We have different traits. My dad wasn’t too good at speaking to strangers whereas I would,” Alex chips in. “We did rely on the kindness of strangers.”