The week before last my
head nearly exploded. In fact something in there might have, but without a full head scan I can't tell. It happened just after I'd spent an hour and a half trying and failing to get my estate agent to
care about my house sale. After I came off the phone, something just blew. And it wasn't just a little bang. It was
as if someone had put a crash helmet on me and then let off an atom bomb underneath. Nothing in the outside world was damaged,
but the inside of my head was completely destroyed.
My First Ferry of the week |
Anyway, it was on a Tuesday when my head blew up, and the next day I took a rare sick day. I'd spent 5 months fighting with my secondment as an assessor if it was an
alligator with toothache. Maybe my head blowing up was a sign I shouldn't be doing that anymore.
On Wednesday I went for
a massage and the massager woman (not sure of the correct term for a
female massager) said it was like massaging an ironing board. By
Thursday I was backing away from my secondment as if it was a stick
covered in dog poo. The only saving grace was that from Friday I was
on holiday for 10 days. If anyone needed a holiday it was me.
This is me needing a holiday |
One of the things I've
missed while I've been living on my own has been good conversations, so it was
nice to meet up with my old boss Damaris on Friday to have a good
long talk, mostly about technology and how things were better in the
olden days (that's pretty much all I talk about with anyone who'll listen). Then on Saturday I went to Leeds with my brother for
Cassette Store Day, and because we were hours early and there was no
queue, we got to have a good talk too. More than we have in years.
I'd originally booked
the week off, thinking I might go to Canada with Ruth, but when that
didn't happen I was left wondering what to do instead. Weeks ago
when I thought my house sale might have been through, I imagined all
kinds of fancy trips I might go on. New York, Berlin etc. But then
the house money didn't come through, so what to do?
The Islay Ferry - small or far away? |
I decided whatever
happened, I needed to get away. So I set myself the target that I
would be gone by Sunday.
For reasons best not
explained, I had to make a desk out of a camping chair and the parcel
shelf from my car, so I could use my computer at my house on Saturday
night, to book some accommodation before I left. This was something
to do with having two homes, but one with no internet, and the other
having nothing in it but the internet.
By 9 pm Saturday I was
done, so I bundled the computer into a bag, wrapped up the camping
chairs, put the car back together and went from my house back to my
flat, where I don't have the internet. It was at this point I was
thinking what a bloody dope I was, for not just getting the bloody
internet in the flat in the first place. It would have made life so much easier.
Me and my bike - during the difficult early part of our relationship |
Ruth bought me two
bikes before we split up. One of them got stolen a couple of weeks
ago, and the other one was a death trap when I got it (on reflection this may have been deliberate), but I recently got
it working so I could actually use it. Apart from an aborted attempt
at a ride with friends in July, I haven't used it. It's just been
stuck in the bedroom. Keeping it in the bedroom has its drawbacks, especially when my Ipod headphones get tangled up in the rear derailleur but that's another story.
Anyway, I've got a week off, and a bike I haven't used. This is it, I thought, time to get out there
on it.
Bike or Death Trap? You decide |
To be honest, I've
pretty much hated cycling for the last year and a half. Mostly
because of last year's Coast to Coast, when both the training and the
ride itself belonged more to the Japanese Game Show Endurance than to
any kind of pleasurable recreational activity.
Anyway, I decided. I'm
going to see some Scottish Islands, and I'm going to take the death
trap, not because I especially wanted to ride it, but because it's
the most simple and economical way of getting round up there. Much
cheaper than trying to get the car on and off the islands. But
whatever happens, I decided, it's not about the bike. Or the
cycling. I'm going to do as little of that as possible. Just
enough to get from ferry to ferry.
Due to the camping
chair / parcel shelf / internet / being in Leeds till late on
Saturday scenario, I only had time to book my first two nights away.
So I booked a night at Brodick on the Isle of Arran followed by a
night on the Isle of Jura (I wanted two but they were full). I would
have liked to plan the whole thing, so as not to have to worry about
doing things on the hoof, but it was the best I could do.
This is
what happened:
Sunday 8th
September
By the time I'd got in
on Saturday night I had no time to prepare for going away, so I got
up at 5 on Sunday morning instead.
I strapped the bike to
the roof of the car and off I went. 203 miles to the ferry at
Ardrossan it was. I booked a B&B near the ferry so Sunday could
be a rest day. Good thing too, cos my head was still pounding when I
rolled off the ferry with my bike.
The 1.93 miles I did
on the bike riding around Brodick getting lost trying to find my B&B
it felt like the bike and I were strangers from different planets
who'd just met, and were having trouble finding any kind of common
ground. It was more Mars Attacks than ET.
Here are my feet in a B&B |
Eventually I found the
B&B. It was up a hill. I suppose there was nothing wrong with
it, I just appeared to be out of sync with it. I found out my room
had a bath, but the hot water was only on at certain times, mostly
times when I did not want a bath. So rather than requesting they
fire up the boiler for a single bathful, I had a shower. Also, for
some reason, porridge required 24 hours notice, although a full
Scottish didn't. A full Scottish is exactly the same as a full
English, except served with a pancake made out of potato, which may
be one of the most pointless and unnecessary things ever invented.
The next day I needed to catch the 1045 ferry from Lochranza, so I
enquired if I might get breakfast before the scheduled normal
kick-off of 8.30. We'll do it at 8.20 they said. Thanks, I said,
that'll make all the difference. Not!
Because my plans were
thrown together at the last minute as usual, I hadn't had time to get
The Rough Guide to Scotland out of the library. I've hired the same
copy about 6 times for all our recent trips to Scotland, and I can
even recognise the stains on it from our various trips. No matter, I
thought, Brodick's a big place, I'll finally buy a copy. There's
even a bookshop in Brodick. No problemo!
Except there was,
because the bookshop had about a million books on Scotland, but they
were all absolute shite. They were all things like '150 years of
Scottish boat painting styles'. Or 'Tartans throughout the ages' , or
'365 Whiskies throughout the year', or 'A guide to where to play golf
in Scotland' or 'Knit your own Arran sweater/.. No actual proper
guide books at all. And this was the same in almost every shop.
Fucking hell, I thought, surely I'm not the only person in the world
who has ever come to the Isle of Arran without pre-purchasing a guide
book. No I don't want to learn how to knit my own tartan, I just
want to know where the fuck I am? In one shop, there was a
conversation going on between what sounded like Lorraine Kelly and
Jimmy Krankie. And to be honest, although I love Scotland, I was
stood in there, with my head pounding away, surrounded by books on
tartan and whisky and castles, wondering what the hell I was even
doing here.
The Paps of Jura - don't look at me, I didn't name them! |
Thankfully a lot of the
places I wanted to go, I've been before, so I had to use my memories
as a guide, although some of these turned out to be unreliable.
My exploding headache
hadn't got any better so I went to bed about 5 pm, and stayed there
till the following morning.
Monday 9th
September
I don't know why the
bloody hell I ordered a massive steaming pile of bacon, sausage and
eggs for breakfast when I had to cycle 15 miles up the mountain road
to Lochranza immediately after it, but there you go. I got to the
ferry with about 20 mins to spare.
Once off the other end,
I had two hours to cycle the 5 miles to the next ferry to Kennacraig.
Even I can't miss that, I thought. I had a nice surprise when I got
to Kennacraig as I met some friends Tony and Gill there. I knew from
Facebook that they were in the area, but they didn't know I was, so
their surprise was probably greater.
We had a good chat on
the ferry, then they headed off to Port Charlotte on Islay, while I
caught the 5 minute ferry to Jura. I went to Islay last year, and
was disappointed not to get to Jura then, so as much as anything,
this trip was to put that right.
Here I am on Jura at last |
Once off the ferry at
Feolin, I waited for the 3 cars who'd also been on the ferry to set
off, and then I set off too, to do the 8 miles to the Jura Hotel. I
pretty much had the road completely to myself. Even though Jura is
famous for them, I managed to not see one single deer while I was
there.
The morning had been
cloudy but during the 2 hour ferry journey from Kennacraig it had
turned into an absolutely beautiful day. I still had the shadow of
yesterday's headache, but I felt blessed to see Jura at its best.
Brodick on Sunday had
been full of weekenders making their way home, kids with football
medals round their necks and family groups, but no-one you could
really talk to. The thing about being
on Jura is that every other person you see is an event. I stopped to
chat to an old couple who were parked at the roadside, the lady was
picking heather for a friend, and the next day I had a chat to some
cyclists. When you're somewhere so remote, not speaking to people you pass on the road seems plain rude.
Arriving in Craighouse |
I loved the ride to
Craighouse, and I loved the Jura Hotel too. As soon as I walked in I
felt at home. Where can I leave my bike I asked? Wherever you want,
the receptionist said. I don't suppose theft is much of a problem
round here, I said. No, not really, she said.
My room in the Jura Hotel |
I loved my room too.
Whereas the B&B the day before with it's timings all out of sync
with mine looked like it had been built by Laura Ashley, my room at
the Jura Hotel was basic, but perfect.
Sunlight was flooding
into the room through the bedroom window, and I made myself a coffee
and then went for the bath that I'd wanted a day earlier. This time
there was hot water. The bathroom suite was that rubbish avocado
green that used to be fashionable years ago, but I didn't care.
Bike Theft - not a big problem on Jura |
The hotel also had a
copy of the Rough Guide I'd really wanted to bring with me, so I read
up on a few things for later in the week, went for a walk and then
arrived for dinner around 7 pm. For some reason it seemed important
to arrive on the hour.
It was worth coming to Jura, just for this view |
The dining room had
beautiful views of the bay and this helped somewhat to combat the
strangeness I felt at eating alone. There were only six other
diners. An elderly couple, and 4 people who appeared to be from a
walking holiday who'd only just met each other.
Craighouse Bay - if this isn't nice, I don't know what is |
The food was okay. I
had cullen skink and gammon. The waitress was lovely, and also
Scottish, which turned out to be a novelty as most of the people who
I met in shops and pubs and cafes and restaurants for the rest of the
week, were English. It would have been a good week to invade
England, as there can't have been many people left there.
The elderly couple
sitting behind me seemed to be one of those couples who've got
nothing left to say to each other, but like the pilots on Airplane,
the old guy had had the fish. I know this because at approximately
15 minute intervals he mentioned this, and each time the fish got
better. 'Well, that fish was absolutely delicious. Well, that fish
couldn't have been better. Well, that fish was the best fish I've
ever tasted in my entire life'.
The walking group
sounded like they'd just met, and they were having the type of safe
conversation that you sometimes have with people that you've just
met. Someone thought that Waitrose's Organic Range had gone
downhill, and then when the waitress came over to take their packed
lunch orders, well I've been to shorter plays. Someone wanted an
apple instead of an orange, someone only wanted tomato with their
tuna if the tuna didn't come with mayonnaise. It took ages for
someone to decide how many sandwiches were in a round etc.
After I'd been sat
there about an hour, an Irish lady called Stella came in who I'd seen
on the Ferry, and sat at the table next to me. Somehow we got
chatting, and I forgot all about the other conversations or
non-conversations that were going on, and got immersed in one of my
own. One of the dangers of travelling is that you can get
buttonholed by some monologuer who wants to use you as a sounding
board to unload a pre-prepared speech, and in those situations you
could just as well be replaced by a cardboard cut-out. But this was
an actual proper conversation. If either of us was a nutter
unloading a monologue I wasn't aware of it. Although I did wonder by
the end of the evening if I'd have anything left to say if we met
again at breakfast, as I somehow seemed to have gone through pretty
much my whole life story.
In the week or two
before I went away, I'd been reading a lot about the Moon Landings,
and one thing I found fascinating was the descriptions of the Command
Module pilots such as Michael Collins of the experience of being on
the far side of the moon and out of radio contact with the entire
Planet Earth. Some of them found this extreme solitude exhilarating.
I'm not saying that being round the back of the Paps of Jura is
anything like being on the dark side of the moon, but after weeks of
waiting for my phone to ring about my house sale, and it not doing, I
found the lack of mobile phone signal there strangely comforting.
Tuesday 10th
September
I did meet Stella again
at breakfast, and I did find some more stuff to say. Turned out
Stella was heading to Port Charlotte on Islay the next day.
Trying to beat the rain out of Craighouse |
I'd also decided to
head to Islay, but I didn't want to end up at Port Charlotte. I
wanted to head to Colonsay on Wednesday and so I wanted to find
somewhere quite close to the ferry for Wednesday morning. But Islay
was much busier than I expected.
Bruichladdich Mini Market - a very cycle friendly place |
I figured I'd stay
somewhere near Bridgend, which is central for the whole island, but
there was no room at the inn. I stopped at the tourist information
in Bowmore but the lady in there said I'd be lucky to get anything.
Apparently there was one bed left in a shared dorm at the Youth
Hostel in Port Charlotte, but I didn't fancy that, although I did
like the idea of seeing Lorna the manager again. I first met Lorna
in Rishikesh in India last year, but she wouldn't shake my hand at
the time because she was picking up garbage out of the streets, but
during our conversation I found out she was the Youth Hostel Manager
at Port Charlotte, so I went there last April, to get my handshake.
Anyway, after a few
further unsuccessful attempts to find a B&B I eventually rolled
up in Port Charlotte at 3.30 pm and met Tony and Gill again at the
corner shop.
Waiting for the Youth Hostel to open |
When the youth hostel
opened at 5 I booked their last remaining bed, a top bunk in a room
full of Yorkshiremen, and it must have been meant to be, because it
was Lorna's last night before a 10 day holiday so if it hadn't been
then, I would have missed her.
I also met Stella at
Reception, and after a day on a bus she was keen to get a bike ride
in, and had managed to hire one from over the road from the hostel.
Having recommended it
to her, I decided to ride down to Portnahaven with her, to see the
seals. There were only around 4, and Len the sheepdog was there too,
although there were no seals on his rocks tonight, so he didn't have
to do too much. It was after 7 when we got there, and we were hungry
so we had a meal at the very small pub, run by some bloke from
Berkshire. I had a pizza.
On the Atlantic Coast at Portnahaven |
On the way back I was
telling Stella how pleased I was that we'd met in the restaurant the
night before, as there was pretty much only the man with the fish to
keep me amused, and after I told her about the old guy with the fish,
she spent the next 10 minutes imitating him, but substituting the word
Alpaca for the word fish. This was because we were passing a field
full of Alpacas at the time. She was saying things like 'That's the
best Alpaca I've ever seen'. That kind of thing. You probably had
to be there.
On the ride from Port
Askaig to Port Charlotte during the day, and into the wind, I still
hadn't felt at peace with the bike, but on the evening ride to
Portnahaven, I really started to grow into it. The ride back was
especially good, because it was much easier than I imagined it would
be.
In fact it was at this
point, that the whole holiday started to become about the bike. I
remembered Islay and Mull last year, and the problems I'd had on
those holidays with other bikes creaking, and things falling off
them. And I remembered the casual remark I'd made about getting a
drop-barred tourer that had indirectly led to me getting this bike
that I was now on, that had started off as such an abortion. And the
irony was that now I was back in the same place I'd made the remark,
but with a perfectly working tourer. Nothing needed tightening, and
nothing needed fixing. I couldn't have gone on a much more
convoluted route to get there, but there I was all the same.
Because I was on my own
for the week, and therefore only able to stretch far enough away to
take close up pictures of my own head, which blocked out most of the
scenery (I could have used the timer but couldn't be bothered) I
started taking pictures of the bike. And as I started taking more
and more photographs of the bike, it started to feel less like It's
NOT about the bike, and more it's ALL about the bike.
The bike in one of its earlier incarnations at Fountains Abbey |
The whole coming to own
that bike was a horrendous botch job, and symptomatic of mine and Ruth's poor communication at times, but actually getting out there on the
bike, after months of false starts, felt like salvaging something
from the wreckage.
Going cycle touring at
all, starting with that trip from Newcastle to Edinburgh 8 years ago,
was so out of comfort zone, so different to anything I'd ever have
thought up to do myself, and yet here I am I thought, out here doing it by
myself.
Another thing about the
ride to Portnahaven, it started to relax me. After a day of
searching fruitlessly for accommodation, it was nice to have a bed,
and dump my stuff and get out there. What wasn't quite so relaxing
was sleeping in a room with 13 snoring farting Yorkshiremen, who all
rolled in from the pub well after my bed time. It was like sharing a room with a really terrible smelly orchestra, and I was glad when it got to 6 am and I could grab my stuff and get the hell out of there.
The nice thing was that
before I went to bed, and even though she was going away in the
morning, Lorna took the time to come and talk to me, and so I filled
her in on most of the details about how my life had turned into a
giant dog's breakfast over the last few months. At first I promised
to let her know when I'd got it all sorted, but I figured that could
be never, so I said I'd let her know if I got any single aspect of it
sorted instead. That made the communication that much likelier.
Wednesday 11th
September
By 7 am on Wednesday
morning pretty much every cyclist in the youth hostel was up and
having breakfast ready for the 16 mile journey to the ferry. The
consensus was that we'd all set off around 7.30 and that was also the
time Gill and Tony were planning to leave the campsite. There was
one Irish guy who was determined to leave at 6.30, but that seemed
seriously pessimistic to me.
Lorna's pile of stones outside the Youth Hostel - getting them to balance on the bench is the really hard part |
About halfway to the
ferry, it started raining and as the rain got heavier I passed a
teenage girl waiting at the bus stop for the school bus. She didn't
have a coat on, but was huddled inside her blazer to keep warm, with
her back to the rain. If one thing summed Islay up for me, it was
that despite the cold and wet, as soon as she spotted me, she gave me
a wave a a cheery greeting. To be honest I've no idea what the
greeting was, it could have been in Gaelic, but whatever it was,
unless she was very good at faking positive body language, she was
wishing me well. Where else would you get that? Especially in the
rain.
The cyclists from the
hostel all gathered back together at the Port Askaig Ferry Terminal,
including Gill and Tony, who'd decided to skip Colonsay and stay on
the ferry all the way to Oban. The forecast was pretty bad, and I
too decided that being stuck on Colonsay in the rain with no
visibility for 7 hours didn't sound like much fun. I decided instead
to head back to Mull, and maybe stay at the Craignure Inn.
No room at the Inn - but they did have food |
The ferry journey was
around 4 hours in total. I spent the first hour or so trying to
fathom the Krypton Factor like puzzle of the ferry timetable and it
was one big frustration of the trip that it's difficult to be
spontaneous when using the ferries, because they tend to dictate when
and where you can travel. I gave up eventually and read a book
instead.
I said bye to Gill and
Tony at Oban, and then caught another ferry to Mull. The Craignure
Inn was full and after ringing round a couple of far too expensive
hotels, I ended up hiring a six berth Shieling at the campsite Ruth
and I stayed at last year. They even hired me some bedding. To be
honest, it was overkill to hire a massive six berth tent to myself,
but after the night before with the farting Yorkshiremen, I was happy
to do it. The minimum hire was for 2 nights as well so that solved
the problem of where to go tomorrow. I wasn't going anywhere.
Not sure if this tent is big enough |
I went for tea at the
Craignure Inn (cullen skink and sausage and mash). Instead of last
year's table service, it was now order at the bar, and my order was
taken by the most Australian Australian since Crocodile Dundee, who
had a tiny little moustache and insisted on ending every sentence
with 'Alright Matey'. I talked to a family from Cumbria at the next
table for a bit, but I didn't want to be the buttonholing type, so
after a few pleasantries I let them get on with it, and just ate my
food.
Wednesday night I had
my best night's sleep of the trip, wrapped up lovely and warm in my
borrowed bedding, and with no-one snoring to bother me.
Ah that's better! No snoring Yorkshiremen tonight |
Thursday 12th
September
Having a full day to
myself on Thursday and with my accommodation for the night already
sorted, I decided to have a ferry free day and to ride the scenic
route round the back of the island from Salen to Pennyghael. I had a
full breakfast at Arlene's coffee shop at Craignure before departing
and then I stopped again at the coffee shop in Salen. Even though I
wasn't really hungry I wanted to stop there cos I'd enjoyed it so
much last year, and I managed to force down a jam and cream scone on
top of the full breakfast. Probably as well I got some calories on
board for what was to come.
Salen - Unnecessary Coffee Stop |
The first bit after
Salen was perfect. In the same way that being behind the Paps of
Jura had that far side of the moon feel to it, so did this back road
to Pennyghael. I remembered the end of Pushing Tin where Billy Bob
Thornton is trying to get John Cusack to jump in a river, and he says
'You can't jump in the same river twice', and it occurred to me that
you can't ride the same road twice either.
It doesn't get any better than this, but it was about to get a lot worse |
Not only was I riding
round the island the opposite way to last year's ride with Ruth, this
time I was alone, instead of sun there was mist and cloud and despite
the familiarity, it all felt brand new.
Enjoying those last few moments of being dry |
Once I got far enough
away from Salen that turning back wasn't an option, it started
absolutely bucketing down. And the wind got up too. I was soon
soaked to the skin, with hard rain whipping my face. Luckily it
wasn't particularly cold, otherwise I would have been in trouble.
Although it was quite a few miles away, I knew the shop at Pennyghael
would have hot coffee, so I wasn't too concerned about the wet.
This picture doesn't even begin to show how heavy the rain was |
I couldn't remember
exactly how far it was back to Craignure from Pennyghael but I'd
decided it was around 12, so I was a bit concerned when I got to
Pennyghael and discovered that I had another 20 miles to do, through
the mountains, to get back to Craignure. I did think there was a
small chance I might die of hypothermia, but a lack of alternative
transport options, just meant I had to go for it.
It is indeed very wet |
As it turned out, the
ride back to Craignure was much easier than the ride going the
opposite way with Ruth had been last year, and finding it so made me
feel a whole lot better about finding it so gruelling and frustrating
going the other way.
I'm sure there's a view out there somewhere |
After getting back to
my massive tent, I managed to get all my clothes dry in one of the
industrial size campsite driers, so I didn't have to pack them wet,
all except for my wet shoes, which I threw away. They were knackered
anyway. Luckily, for once I'd the luxury of a spare pair of shoes, something I rarely have on tour.
Thursday evening I
decided not to go back to the pub for tea, and so I wouldn't have to
go out again after getting back, I'd just picked up some pork pies
and cooked meats from the Spar, on the way back from Pennyghael.
This turned out to be a good idea, as with all my warm clothes in the
drier all at once anyway, my going out options were limited. It was
blowing a bloody gale, and I wasn't walking to the pub in a T-shirt.
No sirree!
Around 8 pm on Thursday
night I got a text from Stephen reminding me it was Graeme's Keep to
the Roads Audax on Saturday, which I'd really wanted to support, but
I realised I'd totally messed up on the date, thinking it was the
week after. Could I get back I wondered? I'd have to catch 3
ferries, cycle about 65 miles and drive home from Ardrossan all in
one day. Could I do it?
I decided to try. I
still didn't have a map or guidebook, so all the distances I'd
calculated in my head were purely from memory. I estimated it was
around 55 miles from Oban to the next ferry at Claonaig, and that was
going to be the hard bit, because if I didn't catch the 4.20 from
Claonaig, I couldn't catch the 720 from Brodick, and that would be
the end of that.
On Thursday night I
didn't sleep as well as the night before. It was a lot colder for a
start. Also, I had a dream that I chose to call an Inverse Bobby
Ewing. I dreamt all about the last few months, and how I'd split up
with Ruth, and taken the nightmare job as an assessor, and I dreamt
about how I now live alone, and about how my house won't sell, and how I'm facing financial meltdown if something
doesn't give soon. And for a moment when I woke up, I thought it was
all a dream, like a whole series and a half of Dallas. But then I
realised, Oh fuck. It's not a dream, that's my life. And as I
reflected on the last few months and years, I tried to identify the
tipping point, the place where things had started to go wrong, but I
couldn't.
I reflected that unless you're very lucky, life is never so simple that every aspect of it is going well all at once. It's more of a case that while some things are going wrong, other things are going right. Sort of
co-existing. Hopefully balancing each other out. But then from an unknown point that I couldn't identify, maybe this year, maybe last year, maybe the year before, maybe 5 years ago, maybe longer, things had started to unravel, and somewhere along the line the balance had gone out of the system, and the equilibrium had got lost.
And now here I am, on my own
in a 6 person tent on the Isle of Mull, with a job I can't understand, with no wife and with an unsold house, and I'm a long, long way from home.
I tried to think back to time I would go back to if I could, where everything
was just right, and running along smoothly. And I couldn't. Because that place doesn't exist. In life, as in cycle touring,
all you can hope for are moments. And sometimes the moment where you feel the most at peace, is the one just before the heavens open on the road to Pennyghael. But then sometimes it's the reverse too.
Here comes the rain! |
I also wondered whether I've got worse
at dealing with things, whether I've become more prone to getting overwhelmed, or whether
I've always been like that, but it's only recently that I've started
to notice it. Maybe it's just the accumulated effects of a lifetime of being alive, that means I'm easier to knock off course than I used to be. Who knows?
Anyway, I didn't have time to ponder existential
dilemmas any longer. I had to get my ass in gear for the ride of my
life.
It's a long way home from here |
Friday 13th
September
I was packed and ready
to go by 8 am on Friday morning, and the first ferry was at 8.45. I
didn't get off to a good start after landing at Oban. I got
immediately lost, and wasted half an hour going in the wrong
direction on the A85 to Fort William. Eventually about 10.15 I was
heading in the right direction. I stopped a mile or so outside Oban
at the top of a bloody big hill, ate some cooked meat and chocolate,
and kept going. I've cycled between Claonaig and Oban before, but
that was in the opposite direction on the incredilby hilly and
winding Route 78 last year. I knew the main road would be shorter, I
was hoping for easier too, but I'm not sure it was. It was still
bloody hilly in places, although there were lots of views out to sea,
and it was a gorgeous day to be on a bike.
All the villages I
passed through between Oban and Lochgilphead had Kil in the title.
Kimartin, Kilmore etc. I stopped at local shops in two of the Kils
and bought chocolate and energy drinks. In one I was going to get a
pie or a sandwich, but they didn't have any ready, and I decided I
didn't have the time to wait, while they made one. The first one
advertised home made pies. Where are they I said? Oh, they're
frozen, the woman said, you can take them home and cook them. I'm on
a fucking bike I didn't say, I don't need a pie in the future, I need
one now.
My leg's so sweaty my camera's steaming up |
I got a shock when I
arrived in Lochgilphead, because I saw a sign post that said it was
not only 15 miles to Tarbert instead of 10, but it was also 26 miles
to Claonaig, instead of 15. Holy crap I thought, I'm going to have
my work cut out catching that ferry.
I stopped a little
further on at Ardrishaig, drank some Lucozade and ate some chocolate,
and wondered what to do. I took some pictures which turned out,
along with all the others I took that day, to be completely misted
up. I don't often sweat on a bike, mostly because I don't try hard
enough, but I'd really been going for it today, and having the camera
in the pocket next to my sweaty leg, must have misted up the lens.
It didn't demist until later on the ferry, when it had a chance to
warm up.
It was nearly 2.20 in
Ardrishaig and I probably had about 23 miles to go. It was going to
be tough. By 3.15 I'd reached Tarbert but I still had about 11 miles
to do in an hour, and that included the hilly 5 miles over from
Kennacraig to Claonaig. I seriously thought at that point of just
abandoning the day's activities and getting a B&B in Tarbert, by
the lovely harbour, but then I thought, oh let's keep going.
This is a picture of Tarbert from last year. This year's picture was all misty |
I made it to Claonaig
with about 3 minutes to spare. After cycling for virtually six hours
straight, I was quite surprised to find when I dismounted the bike on
the ferry that my legs had turned to jelly, and I had trouble
climbing from the car deck to the seating area. I ate some more
chocolate, and was pleased to see the familiar shape of the mountains
of Arran come closer. They looked particularly impressive in the
early evening light, but the camera was crocked, so I couldn't get
any pictures of them.
When I got off the
ferry at Lochranza I felt positively light headed at the prospect of
having a whole 2 hours to do the 15 miles back to Brodick. Compared
to what I'd already done, this seemed like walking pace. I stopped
at the Distillery to top up on fizzy pop and biscuits and then I had
a wonderful solitary ride through the stillness of the early evening
through the mountains and down the other side and back to Brodick. I
made it with about 15 minutes to spare, which seemed like ages.
I had a chicken curry
on the ferry, and I really hoped I didn't get food poisoning before
Graeme's Audax after working so hard to get this far. It over 12
hours since I'd left Mull and dark by the time I rolled off the ferry
at Ardrossan. I found my car and loaded the bike onto the roof, and
as I did so, I said 'Thank you'. It's maybe a silly thing to thank a
bike, but it seemed appropriate. The longer the week had gone on,
the more it had become part of me, and the more natural it felt, each
time I climbed back on. And that last day, the ride back to Brodick.
Well, for me it felt like one of my greatest cycling efforts ever.
But then as I sat there
in the dark car, I realised I wasn't even nearly home yet. I still
had 203 miles to go. I managed to navigate from memory to and beyond
Glasgow and then once I was back on the M74 I stopped to get a bucket
of coffee at the services. I don't like driving in the dark and I
think I felt more scared and alone on the drive home than I'd been at
any point that week. It's a lot easier to feel lonely in a car because
you're boxed in. On a bike, you're connected to the rest of the
world. You can feel everything. Maybe it was that feeling I'd lost after my Coast to Coast exertions,
and so it had been good to find it again this week.
I got caught in about 6
lots of roadworks between Glasgow and home, and some of them involved
following an escort vehicle at 10 mph to get through them. I stopped
once more to buy some Red Bull, but the last 2 hours or so seemed to
go on for ever, as I was getting increasingly sleepy.
I fell into bed around
2.20 am, and I set the alarm for 6 to get ready for Graeme's ride.
Saturday 14th
September
Although I was probably
nuts to agree to it, Stephen had suggested to me that I do the 100K
ride, when I could have easily done the 50K, and for reasons I still
don't understand about Stephen's suggestions, I went along with it.
I wasn't too worried about finishing. Just to get to the start felt
like a triumph.
What had driven me on
the day before was to be there and show my support for Graeme and his
event, but I needn't have worried, since there were about a million
cyclists milling around at the start when I got there. Just think
what response you could have got if you'd only publicised the thing,
I said to Graeme. I don't think he noticed. He was too busy issuing
Brevet Cards to all the hundreds of riders.
I was quite surprised
that my legs worked at all on Saturday, although they did feel kind of
bruised from the efforts of Friday. I insisted on riding the Hewitt,
the bike I'd got to know on my travels, and as usual I packed loads
of stuff so I probably slowed myself down unnecessarily, but overall
I was pleased to have as much energy as I did, especially considering
the fact that the 100K is one hilly ride.
Pretty much from the
outset, I lost touch with all the other riders, and if I'd done the
whole route I would have been out of time, so I chopped about 15K off
and chose to get back, before the hall got packed away Also, by the
time I got to the Lion Inn I seriously needed some hot food, so I
stopped there for about half an hour or more.
The Lion Inn - if I hadn't stop to take so many pictures I might have finished the ride |
I wasn't all that
disappointed when Graeme tore my Brevet Card to shreds in front of me
and chucked it into the bin when I told him I hadn't quite managed
the whole course. Frankly I was pretty amazed I'd managed to do 52
miles. Between Thursday and Sunday I'd cycled 186 very hilly miles,
most of it with a fully loaded tourer. I'd cycled through the
mountains of Mull and Arran and a big chunk of the Kintyre Peninsula
and also some pretty big hills in the North York Moors. So what if I
hadn't done any of it very fast? Going slow has its advantages. The
speed I go I often get to appreciate every contour on the faces of
the sheep that I pass along the way. Speed isn't everything.
Why oh why didn't I do the 50k? |
I ended the week
feeling much better than I begun it. There's something about the big
open spaces, the mountains and the sea, particularly those bits that
are on the far side of mountains and away from civilisation, where
problems don't seem as big.
I caught 10 ferries in 6 days and cycled
around 280 miles including the Audax.
Big open spaces - good for combatting stress |
Another thing that made
the problems not seem so big was that some of them were about to be
solved. Within a week of getting back, my house sale went through,
and I went back to my old job, the one I can actually do.
It's not
quite the whole Bobby Ewing effect, because I still have a few things which need sorting out, and I'm
still prone to being overwhelmed at the slightest provocation. But the good thing is, my head no longer feels like a bomb's just gone off inside it, and that's got to be a good start.
Thanks Jonathan, I really enjoyed that. You paint just as good a picture of life as you do of the scenery. It was good to see you on our trip. You turned out to be just one of quite a few people that we crossed paths with several times. Part of the fun of islands and ferries I guess. Great news about the house too.
ReplyDeleteHe tore up your Brevet Card in your face? The heinous swine.
ReplyDelete