Monday, December 11, 2017

Christmas 2017

Christmas 2017:  This is usually a personal and highly subjective blog, tinged with what I would like to call sardonic humour, but it has been subverted on this occasion to a simple newsletter, with family updates, and some photographs; in my own case mainly to illustrate the aging process, but with others to show mostly smiles of happiness.  I hope that this is not about to turn into the sort of round-robin which was so celebrated by the late Simon Hoggart.  As he observed, ‘One reads with polite indifference that a dog one never knew has died.’  For more of his wonderful insights into the genre see:


But some of our friends and family have had a difficult or even tragic 2017.  The photographs here show us, if not exactly in our best light, at times when we were smiling.  And we hope for many more of those for us and for you in 2018.








Natalie and Ben welcomed new addition Louis, born 2nd April 2017 and found time to smile in Cornwall


And Louis smiled a lot once he learnt how to do it




Coco was not certain what to make of the new arrival




"But if they want I'll smile to pretend I really like him"



But she was able to forget the new baby when having her own sort of fun


Our good friend from Lenzerheide, Marina Bergamin, Natalie's Godmother, was able to join us for the Christening on 3rd September




Norman Pipler, Lindsay's Dad, with Louis



One of Dorset's good days this summer - not as frequent as we would like



Sunshine and spectacular scenery walking in Slovenia (Lake Bled)



We were privileged to attend Lindsay's French cousin, Dominique's 60th birthday party in Hangest sur Somme.  This is taken at his home in Bellancourt.  From L to R, AAM, LM, Micheline Roblot (Norman Pipler's First cousin), Dominique Roblot and his partner Paule



We cycled in Alsace in September.  This is pure Sylvaner grape juice - honest!



Anna and Graham at 5am in Bray-Dunes, at the start of the French Divide 2 (qv; also see bikingforbrioche.com and my previous blog)


Anna worked for the advertising agency TMW until September, when she transferred to the clothing company Rapha.  Her colleagues in advertising are pretty clever with their farewell cards.

Nick and Catherine enjoying sunshine and cocktails in Majorca



Katie ran for charity

And surfed...

And relaxed - but also passed her financial management exams

and a Happy New Year!















Saturday, August 19, 2017

Chapeau! The French Divide

The French Divide vaguely entered my consciousness when my daughter Anna, who has been enjoying some challenging riding with her partner Graham, including an introduction to Cyclocross, announced that she was going to do an endurance race in France.  Nobody seemed to know much about it.  It had only been run once before, and was the brainchild of a French cyclist called Samuel Bécuwe.  It was known that the route was from the sea at the Franco-Belgian border to the Spanish border in the Pyrenees but not much more.  Anna called her campaign ‘bikingforbrioche’ and decided to raise funds for World Bicycle Relief – a charity that provides rugged reliable no-nonsense bicycles for poor countries where owning a bicycle might make the difference between being able to go to school or not.  She and Graham embarked on a punishing training regime, which most weekends seemed to feature a minimum of 200 miles on the road, and in order to prepare for the trip also bivouacked in fields, including a memorable night of thunderstorms on Golden Cap in Dorset.  I also received updates stating that Graham or Anna had done a Zwift race around London, or even popped over to Holland to participate in some event there.  Eventually I discovered that Zwift is a digital link from a stationary bicycle turbo trainer to a computer, whereby one can choose a route of varying difficulty virtually anywhere in the world to make indoor training less boring.

Eventually the information and the route arrived, in a piecemeal fashion.  The proposal was over 2200Km of cycling, 70% off road, using VTT bikes (Vélo Tout-Terrain), and entirely unsupported, i.e. find your own accommodation or camp, your own water, your own food.  The time limit was 15 days.  Consider for a moment what that entails.  The distance – approximately ⅔ of the distance covered in the Tour de France, in only ⅔ the time.  The bikes – much more rugged and less easy to ride than Tour bikes.  The support team – none, compared with extensive mechanical and domestique assistance, luxury coaches, comfortable beds, adequate feeding and water.  It seemed a very tall order to even consider undertaking the journey.

The time arrived.  I wondered why the bikes were so difficult to fit into the 4x4.  They were the newer type of off-road bicycle – 29 inch wheels, not 26, with a single front chain ring and a huge rear cassette on the derailleur.  The white cliffs of Dover (which are grey close up, not like our lovely Dorset Jurassic coast) faded as we travelled Southeast towards Dunkirk, and we descended the ramp into France to make our way around the ring road in search of the most remote spot on the top right hand corner of France – Bray-Dunes.  Arriving at the Mairie, there were a number of rather athletic looking males in lycra, all looking terribly serious, waiting to register with the French Divide team.  After hanging around and chatting to some of the other participants, many of whom had undertaken other endurance rides, the briefing began.  It was followed by a repeat in broken English.  The major learning point for me was that if looking for fresh and drinkable water, the place to look in France is a cemetery!  For some reason, most French cemeteries have a source of l’eau potable.  We were asked to reassemble on the beach at the Belgian border at 5.30am the following day.  Getting up at 03.30 English time on the Sunday was hard, and unsurprisingly there were few spectators as we reached the Dunes du Perroquet at the end of the beach road where Belgium begins.  After assembling the bikes, checking the tires and inserting the latex mixture which protects against punctures, the French Divide team checked the lights, high-viz gear, and roll out was at 0615, led by a cyclist in Le Coq Sportif costume.

Gray’s Elegy in a Country Churchyard speaks of the ploughman leaving ‘the world to darkness and to me’ but the reverse was true for me.  Left alone in the dark, the glimmer of dawn on the horizon, I climbed the dunes, and saw the sun breach the line of the coast to the East.  It was time for me to leave, to return to the UK, leaving the team to plough on into rural France and indeed Belgium, the organisers having cunningly arranged for the ‘Dividers’ as they now became known to experience ‘The Hell of the North’.  This term refers to the cobbled or pavé byroads in Belgium which many major cycling events, including Paris-Roubaix and the Tour de France, pass over.  The FD team had arranged for some of Le Tour’s greatest routes to be followed, including a final challenge over the infamous Col du Tourmalet in the Pyrenees.  The participants had been issued with full GPS coordinates of the route in GPX codes, with a minimum requirement of checking in at four checkpoints, in Epernay, Quarré-les-Tombes, Cahors, and the Col du Tourmalet, before finishing at a tiny village called Mendionde in the Pyrenees just above the Spanish border.  Some of the off-road route was designed to follow the classic pilgrims’ way from France to Santiago de Compostella.
Much more than that – I can’t tell you.  But here are the pictures…  Anna was the fastest of the nine female riders.  She and Graham completed the route in under 13 days.  A total of 2222Km, an estimated 35000m of ascent, one puncture, a disintegrated bottom bracket, in an event where almost 30% of the riders abandoned the race.  Chapeau!

Leaving the Grey Cliffs of Dover

29 inch wheels take up a lot of room

On vous propose...

The Profile

Amazingly there were two cyclists there before us

Apprehensive but excited

Tous pret

It's important for Le Coq Sportif to check his phone...

...Before leading them out

...And leaves the world to darkness and to me...

Somewhere in Northern France

Great scenery, especially when it's flat

They needed crampons for some of the Parc National Regional du Morvan

Calories that we could only dream of - eight croissants each for breakfast

FD wanted them to do the Col du Tourmalet the hard way
...but maybe it was worth it

...and Le Coq Sportif is there at the finish in Mendionde


Duncan s'est déguisé en coq pour accueillir ses compatriotes Anna et Graham. Ce dernier avait accepté le pari de suivre sa copine sur la French Divide. Il est prêt à repartir pour une nouvelle aventure mais seulement si elle choisi un pays plus petit à traverser. 

Elation at the finish

Avec Samuel - chef de la route 'French Divide'
Anna's track by GPS over 13 days, an average of 178Km per day!


Well done!

Monday, May 8, 2017

Norfolk - the Lost County -April and May 2017


I should be working for the English Tourist Board!

On the pretext of visiting an aged Aunt we arranged a cycling holiday in Norfolk.  An array of possible routes opened up when we began to consult our cycling book.  As Noel Coward memorably penned, ‘’Very flat, Norfolk.’  We decided to start with the flattest route possible, and therefore made our way to Ely.  Until now, I had thought that Noel Coward was the only quotable source about the county, but it seems that Kazuo Ishiguro, in ‘Never let me go’, now has the monopoly.  One of his characters, on learning that Norfolk is the ‘lost county’, forever envisages it as the place where things that are lost are sent.

Despite three memorable years in a University not far to the south, I had never visited Ely.  Bicycles were excellent in Cambridge for local journeys, but the weight, size and reliability of the machine that I jettisoned at the end of my time there did not encourage trips further.  I did once nobly cycle some enormous distance in the middle of the night to return a lost contact lens to a girlfriend in St Neots, and had she lived in Ely it might have enriched the experience.  I know that strictly speaking, Ely is still in Cambridgeshire, but having come this far from Dorset it feels like Norfolk.  We stayed at The Old Hall, just outside, with a fine distant view of the cathedral (‘The Ship of the Fens’), and the family in ownership turned out to have had a contemporary of our friend Xerxes at the King’s School, Ely in the 1960s.  School photographs in the upstairs corridors proved the point.  The weather was dreary, but we made use of the time to visit the cathedral.  Ely council is surprisingly generous in allowing free parking, which certainly encourages one to visit.  We were just in time to experience most of the Evensong service, including a superb setting of the Magnificat by Charles Wood.  The choristers sang beautifully, and having processed out at the end of the service they disappeared immediately, no doubt to do prep or to get supper or both.  We were left with the conductor of the choir, who despite his charming appearance during the service declared himself too busy to show us the medieval wall painting of the martyrdom of King Edmund (shot with arrows by the Viking invaders). There were two rather large lady vergers or canons or something who also disappeared, if that is not a contradiction in terms.  But we admired the magnificent Octagon (built after the Norman tower collapsed in the 1320s) and the general ambience of one of our finest and oldest cathedrals.  Building of the present cathedral commenced in about 1071 after the defeat of Hereward the Wake in 1070, and took just over a hundred years.  Ely is full of pleasant walks through the cathedral precincts and by the river Ouse and we then enjoyed an excellent dinner at a country pub, the Anchor Inn at Sutton Gault.

Evensong, Ely Cathedral

Ely Cathedral, from the South


The following morning we cycled into Ely and then commenced our circular ride through the Fens.  It’s strange how on a circular route the wind can always seem against you, but I only counted a real back wind for about five miles of the 47 we covered.  Our route lay out to the North West via Coveney, and sadly we passed the Anchor Inn at a time in the morning when only desperate alcoholics would have ventured in for another drink.  I can vouch for their strong ale though, sampled the previous evening, which is memorably called ‘Azzaparrot’.  Apart from the fertile black soils of the area, the most striking geographical feature is the arrow straight parallel course of the Old Bedford river and the New Bedford river, otherwise known as the hundred foot drain.  This latter channel was engineered in the mid 17th Century by Dutch engineers to drain the frequently flooded land.  It runs for about twenty miles, with few crossings.  The huge levees on each side mean that one is cycling some two metres below sea level.  Recrossing of the channels is achieved at Welney, a small village marked by its two bridges and the excellent Lamb and Flag pub.  There is a feature on the ‘Fen Skaters of Welney’ on the wall.  In the 1890s, the Fenmen, particularly the Smart family, rivalled the Dutch speed skaters, and became world champions.  This was before anyone had bothered with figure skating.  Charles Causley’s poem ‘A Ballad for Katharine of Aragon’ which carries the line, ‘As I walked down by the river, down by the frozen fen…’ keeps popping into my mind.  Even though it is about the fens at Peterborough cathedral where Catherine (usual spelling but not Causley’s) is buried.  The pub ambience is cosy, the home made pork crackling pieces are the local ‘naughty but nice’, and the beer is excellent (Elgoods’ Cambridge Bitter).  Above the welcome open fire is a magnificent case containing a 36lb pike which was caught locally in 1957.
Although we weren’t ‘down by the frozen fen’ it was still somewhat chilly and we were reluctant to leave, but completed the ride back to Ely, loaded the car, and drove to the north Norfolk coast.  This is a large county and it takes an hour and a half to reach the inaccurately named Cley-next-the-Sea.


We were booked into the Cley Windmill, which is a charismatic spot, though the wheel room is achievable only by ladder and is undoubtedly best booked by young athletic people.  We had to take what was available and were billeted in the Longhouse next door.  The prices are comparable with London, and reflect what the owners can ask for a romantic location on the north Norfolk coast.  When we leave two days later it is noticeable that ‘Essex Man’ with his shiny new white Lexus RX is paying with fistfuls of notes, so perhaps the black economy extends here and offers Norfolk hoteliers some benefits.  An interesting local couple whom we meet the following evening at the excellent Cley Windmill dinner (duck spring rolls, hake, chocolate tartlet) explain the frequency of Dutch gabling and red brick houses of the area as the ballast brought back by boat in return from the wealthy wool trade with Holland in former centuries.  They also provide a footnote on Essex man: don’t equip yourself with too smart an outboard motor on your boat.  Weekends see night time raids from Essex, with chainsaws used to take out motor and transom on your boat, and the whole lot is on a container from Felixstowe to the continent before you can say ‘Honda 4 Stroke’.  The footpath to Cley beach passes by the windmill, but it’s another mile more or less to the sandbanks of the coast from this point.

Cley Windmill



Our first evening is scheduled for our special meal of the trip.  We dine at Morston Hall Hotel, not too far away, in the restaurant run under the aegis of Galton Blakiston.  The menu speaks for itself.  The cost is enormous, but as always on these occasions, we remind ourselves that we almost never eat out, and that for Lindsay, with her professional hat on, this is ‘research’, though sadly HMRC do not accept this.  But let me advise you – if you do want fantastic food, perhaps not as elaborate as Galton’s, but cooked by a former trainee of his, Daniel Smith, then visit the ‘Ingham Swan’ near Sea Palling, where we ate on our last night.  The bill was about 40% of that of the Morston Hall Hotel, and we certainly didn’t feel short changed foodwise.

Scallops with Norfolk asparagus, Ingham Swan


A great experience.  And next day we needed it.  Lindsay decided we had to visit Brancaster, and it’s a long cycle ride from Cley, especially if you want to avoid the A149, the coast road.
On this day, the coastal highlight was Blakeney, which is smaller and has a more intimate feel than Wells-next-the Sea, which although attractive, is more touristy.  From Wells, a track leads through the coastal belt to the Holkham Hall estate, which we cycle through.  Holkham Hall is an example of the 18th century’s taste for Palladian style architecture, and is on the grand scale.  From the south side of the estate, a country road leads into the unremarkable little village of Burnham Thorpe, which despite the fact that it is some miles from the sea is known as the birthplace of Lord Nelson.  Thence to Burnham Market and so to Brancaster, which is rather disappointing.  It’s mainly known for its golf club, the Royal West Norfolk.  After many inland miles we find our way back to Cley, visiting the beautiful church of North Creake, with its superb hammer-beam roof, on the way.  North Norfolk is adorned with magnificent churches which were built in the days of tithes to the church from the very successful East Anglian wool trade.

Blakeney


From Cley we move on towards the area of the Broads, reed fringed stretches of open water formed by the rivers Ant, Bure, and Yare.  There are relatively few places where one can get close to the Broads on the road, but we do our best, and the vistas remind one of scenes from the jigsaws of childhood.  Wroxham is a little overcrowded and touristy, but there is a lovely picnic spot near the Norfolk Broads Yacht Club on Wroxham Broad, and the White Lion at Neatishead is a good lunchtime stopover.  The most beautiful section of our ride however is near the beginning.  Southeast of the town of Aylsham is Buxton, where we leave the car in the Bure Valley Railway Walk car park.  Soon after leaving this spot with its charming little steam train, we cross the Bure at Brampton on a beautiful old bridge.  Flights of bluebells in the trees, cowslip meadows, and a glistening stream make this a lovely spot.



Bure Valley Railway



Our final night in Norfolk is spent at Dairy Barns, Lound Farm.  The cost is less than half the price we have spent elsewhere, and it represents excellent value.  On our last day, we do another circular ride around the coast at Sea Palling, Horsey, and past Horsey Mere, Heigham Sound, and Hickling Broad.  A chance exploration takes us to How Hill House, and the beautiful grounds stretching down to the river Ant, again, a locale with scenes reminiscent of Constable and the huge skies of Suffolk.  This was certainly the highlight of our final day, and reminds one that if prepared for the English weather, ‘Staycation’ can be a great option for a holiday.

Sailing on Horsey Mere


The River Ant at How Hill House

Boardman Mill - a 'skeleton' mill