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Man traveled to 10 countries in 24 hours using only public transport

I’d hoped to make it to 11 countries, but a broken down train in Alsace, France, meant I didn’t end up having time to squeeze in a side trip to Hungary."

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By Charlotte Penketh-King via SWNS

A man traveled nearly 600 miles and to TEN countries in 24 hours - using just public transport.

Jo Kibble, 40, traveled from London to Eijsden, in the very south of the Netherlands, to start his challenge to travel to as many countries in a day, at 11:58 p.m. on Monday.

It allowed him close access to as many different countries as possible, and he used buses, trains, trams, coaches and hire bikes.

He traveled to Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, France, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Austria and Slovakia, ending his challenge in Breclav, Czech Republic, at 11.25 p.m. on Tuesday.

He challenged himself after doing a similar trip eight months ago, to see how far he could get solely on trains from London in 24 hours.

Jo, who lives in Charlton, southeast London, and heads the cabinet office for Ealing Council, said: "It was a fantastic experience.

"I’d hoped to make it to 11 countries, but a broken down train in Alsace, France, meant I didn’t end up having time to squeeze in a side trip to Hungary.

"Over the course of the journey, I traveled on eight trains, five buses, a coach, a tram, and a hire bike.

"Under my rules, to tick off a country, I couldn’t just sit on a train traveling through it - I had to arrive and depart on different vehicles, so at the very least, I had to change.

"The comfort ranged from a very cramped, overcrowded 1 a.m. coach from Liege to Luxembourg, to a first-class express through the incredible scenery of the Austrian Alps.

"The journey also included a visit to the clinically clean capital of Liechtenstein, to a run-down station in the Bratislava suburbs."

At 11.58 p.m. on Monday evening, Jo embarked on his adventure from the little village of Eijsden in the southern Netherlands - leaving on the last train of the day to Belgium.

Arriving in Liège, Belgium, less than an hour later, he boarded a Flixbus coach at 1 a.m. to Luxembourg where he then hired a Vel'OH! bike from the park and ride where the coach arrived.

He cycled to the main bus station in Luxembourg and boarded an express bus at 4 a.m. to Saarbrücken, Germany, before switching to a tram at 5:40 a.m. to Sarreguemines, France.

Jo then boarded a train at 6:13 a.m. to Strasbourg, followed by a train at 7:51 a.m. to Basel, Switzerland, but this train was terminated at the border due to a technical issue.

He then had to take the next train to Basel and therefore missed his planned onward connection to Hungary, reducing his adventure by a whole country.

Nevertheless, Jo soldiered on and took a train from Basel to Zürich at 10:06 a.m., followed by a train to Sargans at 11:38 a.m., and then a bus to Vaduz, Liechtenstein, at 12:33 p.m..

He caught a bus at 1:18 p.m. to Schaan, then a bus at 1:28 p.m. to Feldkirch, Austria, before boarding a train to Bratislava-Petrzalka, Slovakia, at 2:17 p.m.

Jo then took a bus to Bratislava-Hlavná at 9:38 p.m. and finally boarded a train at 10.06 p.m. to his last destination.

After a whopping 23 hours and 27 minutes, Jo arrived in Breclav in the southeast of the Czech Republic at 11.25 p.m., ticking off 10 countries in total.

He said: "I'm pleased I did this challenge.

"It's great to see that things you spend a lot of time working out on paper can work in reality.

"Luckily, the last train had a sleeper car to Prague, so having hopped off at a very cold Breclav at 11.25 p.m., I could just hop back on and go straight to bed, and wake up in the Czech capital the next morning.

"I've got a couple more days in the Czech Republic and then I'll be wandering home.

"Ending up one short of how many countries that I think is possible to visit in 24 hours gives a potential for a future challenge."

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