The desert of northern Saudi Arabia is not where you would expect to find a man from Edinburgh, with the powerful sun a cruel challenge for a pasty Scot.
However, this is where Sean Flynn is kicking off his career as a professional rider, part of the seven-man DSM squad at the Saudi Tour. Fortunately, the Dutch chemicals company has produced its own suncream specially for this occasion, so he is no more burned that other riders with more melanin.
Despite the step up to a WorldTour team, despite all the trappings that come with being a professional athlete, Flynn is keen to stress that he feels the same as he did before the move came.
"You almost imagine when you're younger that you will feel like a different person, but I don't, I'm just the same person, just in a different kit," he says. "I knew I was going to be a pro probably only when I signed the contract, because before that you were always in some doubt, even if there is interest, is it true. Even once I'd signed, until I got in the kit and in a race, I still didn't know if it would happen."
DSM is a good place for a young rider just starting out at this level. In fact, Flynn is only the 12th youngest rider at the team, despite this being his neo-professional year.
"It doesn't feel like I'm going into a team with all experienced guys," he tells Cycling Weekly. "Obviously we do have people like that, like John, but there's also youthful enthusiasm, and a development attitude in the team. There's not too much pressure to be immediately winning races.
"The team has a long term vision, which I really like. It's a nice environment, surrounded by guys in a similar position to me, still on their upward trajectory."
Flynn is actually unusual in the DSM setup, being one of only three riders aged 22 or younger that did not come into the elite team from the development squad. The other British riders there, Max Poole and Oscar Onley, used this way into the WorldTour team.
"It felt strange first off stepping in, because the DSM development guys have been there longer," he explains. "I had been in contact with the team for a while before joining, so I could see it coming, and in that sense it didn't feel too strange."