View from Oban Bothy

View from Oban Bothy
Showing posts with label Whinge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whinge. Show all posts

Monday 20 May 2013

May 2013

LDWA Introductory Walk

May Day Bank Holiday was pencilled in as an introductory walk for newcomers and potential new LDWA members. The walk was supposed to be in North Wales but it needed to be re-located….the walk that is, not North Wales.
Advertised as 15 miles, at least two potential members took part in what was expected to be a pleasantly demanding walk in a new location, Rivington in Lancashire.
28 (?) walkers and two doggies started, I think everyone completed. You can read a very good report on the walk on Alan’s Blog.
For an introductory walk I feel it was much too fast and, and….  Read Alan’s report.
P1020346  Pre-walk address
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Towards Rivington Pike
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Rivington Pike
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Jon (on R) with his full TGO Challenge kit…and he’s still smiling!
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Alan and Sheila cooling their sizzling feet
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Excitement for the day – Bolton Mountain Rescue call out
I’ve little idea of where we went, although I do know we visited Rivington Pike, Great Hill, White Coppice and Brinscall.

What we did:

17.5 miles
2400ft ascent
4.9mph max speed
3.3mph average speed
More piccies here….but no map, I’m not sure if anyone knew where we actually went!

Saturday 18th May

Dunham May Queen: a procession, rain, cold, Morris Dancing….and tractors.
Some photos for Alan:
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 P1020086Unusual in that it’s petrol-driven
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P1020089 An old Fordson

Then there was my mate Matthew’s birthday party on the Wirral in the evening:

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The Birthday Boy….and no, he’s definitely NOT a Tory!
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Yvonne, my favouritist singer….resting singing
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Mary, Yvonne, May and John R

That was a good do…with loads of Scouse too!

Sunday 19th May

A recce…in between decorating duties:
John Bullen, walks secretary of the East Lancs LDWA, bullied pencilled me in to lead a walk in October for the group. My plan is to walk from Lostock Gralam to Hale. The will be beer at the end…so I know at least 2 or 3 will turn out on the day! When you’re responsible for leading a walk it’s important to recce it thoroughly…so here are some pics from the recce:
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NOT a trig point
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Plumley
More photos for Alan:
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This last photo taken close to Bexton Hall…perhaps Bexton Hall Farm?

This is the first part of the walk…it will be tweaked before the big day:
Lostock Gralam to Mobberley route
This bit I did yesterday was 10.5 miles, including the bit where I got lost. On the day the walk will go furtherer, around 15 miles altogether. And there will be beer. Did I mention that before?
Now I’m going to do some more decorating and then I’m going Scotland to catch up with my mates. Sue is driving…she’s meeting up with Martin at the end of his Challenge. Ain’t she nice?!

Saturday 27 October 2012

24th September, Via de la Plata, Day 6

To Fuenterroble de Salvatierra

First the good news: By 6am the rain had stopped and the forecast for the day was dry.

Now the bad news: Bed bugs. Although the albergue looked clean enough and I had slept in a silk liner, the little blighters had launched a night-time attack – I was a juicy target. All but Nico suffered the same fate, itching and scratching like blazes for the rest of the trip.

The route out of the town entailed a bit of a climb along a stretch of restored calzada romana (paved roman road) punctuated with quite large milarios with still-visible inscriptions. Crucifixes were a reminder that this Roman route has been adopted by pilgrims.

imageHalf-asleep, sunburned, hungry, itching…with Banos de Montemayor in the background

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The emperor Caesar Nerva Traianus Augustus (The emperor Trajan AD 98 - 117), son of Nerva, conqueror of Germany, high priest, with tribunician power, father of his country  (PP) Consul for the third time, restored this.  80 )CXXX).

Just shows that a good education is never wasted. In this instance it was Rick’s education. Thanks Rick!

 

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No escape from graffiti

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The next village, 11km ahead, was Puerto de Bejar, which I knew had an albergue that should provide breakfast. Well it would have done if it had been open. More of Aldi’s best washed down with finest corporation pop had to suffice.

imageThe very closed albergue 

I’m a sucker for old signage, particularly signs painted directly onto the sides of buildings…it’s a Timperley thing. Anyway I couldn’t resist this:

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imageThree familiar faces appeared – in good spirits too! They’d had a lie-in and hadn’t set off until past 7am…and at this stage they weren’t admitting to being bitten by bed-bugs. Well not just yet.

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I trundled onwards leaving Olga, Nico and Miquel, I really wanted to find somewhere for breakfast. It wasn’t to be, even the next sizeable village couldn’t provide food and drink. Well it COULD, but the woman running the cafe bar decided that a bunch of hungry and thirsty peregrinos weren’t worth bothering opening for.

Fortunately the bread-van was doing it’s rounds so an enormous sponge cake was procured for not a lot of euros – this provided sustenance, but a coffee would have been nice.

The village was pleasantly old and tired, the sort of place you could spend a lazy couple of hours just wandering around and soaking up the atmosphere. Shame about the cafe bar.

imageimageimage    imageBuen Camino – have a good trip! Drinking water for peregrinos and the village launderette

Small villages in these more remote areas are a bit short on facilities so laundry tends to be done close to the village’s water source.

imageIf you look carefully you can see Olga, Nico & Miquel ahead. Still another 18km to go but at least the sponge cake provided good sustenance. Shame about not being able to get a coffee though. Did I mention this before?  

This stretch of the camino has lots of bits of Roman remains – including more milarios. I THINK this is / was a milario:

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I’d noticed lines of ants, busy doing ant-like stuff. I was careful of these things, the word on the calle was that these little beasties could cause me rather more irritation than the bugs from the previous night.

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Caffeine relief came at the little village of Valdelacasa. This place had a few houses, a church (everywhere seems to have a church) and an old school house that had been converted to a cafe bar, presumably for peregrinos – there didn’t seem to be anyone else around.

imageRefreshed and rested it was time to get back on the trail. The terrain was fairly flat and not particularly exciting although odds and sods of pilgrimage stuff appeared from time to time, like this shelter:

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Although it was a 30km day, an early start and limited opportunities for rest stops meant that we peregrinos arrived in the village of Fuenterroble de Salvatierra around 2pm. We were all hungry and thirsty so we piled into the first (only?) cafe bar in town. Jugs of beer, bottles of wine and a rather indifferent meal of spaghetti with a tomato sauce followed by something deep-fried with chips did the job. At least we’d been fed and watered.

The very magnificent albergue in the town is legendary. It’s run by the parish priest who is apparently quite a character, sadly we didn’t get to meet him.

imageThe Albergue

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Just one of the many dorms, inside (above), and outside (below)

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This was quite a remarkable place. It has beds for 70+ peregrinos who get fed and watered for nothing more than a donation.

Easter Monday is when it all happens here, a mega fiesta all centred on the church – as many of these events are. The albergue which is also home to the parish priest (Don Blas Rodriguez Boyero) is used to store some of the stuff of such celebrations:

imageimageAfter washing the smelliest bits of my kit, I managed a lovely hot shower followed by a pleasant kip. Drinking wine and beer at lunchtime is all very well but there are side-effects!

More peregrinos arrived including Michel and Ermelinda. Ermelinda hailed from Hunduras so her knowledge of Spanish was to prove very helpful. The only problem was that she had very little English so translations had to be made via Michel in French and then to English.

We had chatted with Michel and Ermelinda a few times on this trip, but from now on we were in their very pleasant company more and more.

A couple of hours was spent back at the cafe bar – just to study the local evening life you understand. Nothing at all to do with drinking beer and eating tapas that kept appearing every time I ordered a beer.

imageTelevised football seems to have the same effect here as it does in UK. It’s nice to see a ‘pub’ culture though. Strange to think that not many years ago the powers-that-be in Westminster were try to encourage a continental-type cafe culture, whilst the REAL cafe culture is more like our old pub culture.

I blame Sky TV. And greedy pubcos. It’s no wonder we don’t go to pubs in the evening these days. We have zillions of TV channels and cheap beer from supermarkets. It’s not rocket science….and unless our pubcos sit up and see what’s going on around them we’ll have fewer and fewer ‘real’ pubs.

Sky TV is here to stay. The survival of our pubs is in the hands of the pubcos who charge exhorbitant rents and restrict the beers their pubs can sell. Worse, they will only allow their landlords to buy beer from pubco-owned distribution companies….at inflated prices. It’s a cosy arrangement where the greedy pubcos have their tenants by the wotsits. And it hurts everyone. Except the pubcos.

If you need further convincing, take a wander down to your local micro-brewery tap. It will be independent of control of the big boys, will supply excellent and affordable beer. It will also very likely be busy – unlike the Enterprise / Punch whatever pubs up the road. There are exceptions of course, Joe Holts and J.D.Wetherspoons for example: they give customers what they want and are justifiably successful.

I’ll get off my soapbox now.

Anyway I slept rather well that night…in spite of my itchy bits.

Total distance for the day: 30km

Although the the route had so far been through gently undulating terrain and had the ‘feel’ of a very low level walk, the average altitude was a heady 3500’ ASL. Hardly high, but not what I expected.

Sunday 3 June 2012

Day 10, to Callater

 

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Strictly speaking my visit to Callater wasn’t part of my Challenge although it was originally. My planned route was to take me over Lochnagar but there looked to be more snow up there than I was happy with.

In addition to this I had the responsibility of getting Lynsey’s birthday cake up to the Lodge for her surprise birthday celebration. Sooooo…..

1) I arranged to leave my tent etc at Kate’s in Braemar, to be collected the next day.

2) Jeanette transported the cake and me to the lodge in her 4x4

3) I stayed at the lodge on the Sunday night

4) I walked back to Braemar on Monday morning to collect my kit and walk to Ballater.

This meant I wasn’t breaking Challenge ‘rules’, yet I still got to do Callater. Simples!

And so the Plan swung into action. Much of Sunday was spent sorting stuff, eating, and socialising with other Challengers. A good way to spend the day. Louise needed time to rest her poorly tootsies and Callater wasn’t on her route anyway so she stayed an extra night at Kate’s bunkhouse, along with Nik Lawcock. I gather Merlot may have been taken – especially when Sue and Martin rolled up.

Jeanette rolled up during the afternoon and loaded me, my lightened pack, and The Cake into her 4x4 and off we went, up the road and along the LRT to the lodge. All was well until we spotted Lynsey, Alistair and Isabel walking along the track to the lodge. QUICK – hide the bloody cake!!

We did and by the time we pulled over to say hello, the cake had been unceremoniously shoved under the seat in front of me. Phew!

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I walked through the door of the lodge to greeted by Bill, who shook my hand with his right hand and handed me a cup of tea with his left. Who said men can’t multi-task?! It wasn’t long before I was being absorbed into the unique atmosphere of the lodge. I don’t have the words to describe my feeling for the people or the place, it’s just very special to me.

clip_image006T’other Lynsey, Michael and Peter outside Callater Lodge

A convivial evening was spent in excellent company, and of course the highlight was Lynsey’s birthday surprise.

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        Bill with The Birthday Cake                                        Lynsey, the Birthday Girl

And now a moan:

There were new faces this year – most were rather taken aback by the hospitality offered by Bill, Jeanette, Michael, Ross and Keith – and others too. It’s good manners to accept such hospitality graciously, as most did. I’d like to think that any inappropriate behaviour exhibited this year would not be repeated in the future. It’s bad form.

End of moan.

Bill, as ever, was the perfect host. He never ceases to surprise with his knowledge of Scottish poetry, song and traditions. I thoroughly enjoy being in his company. A real gentleman.

As the evening progressed, songs were sung, poetry recited, and stories told. A ceilidh in the true sense of the word. The room began to empty as the guests retired for the night, and so ended the (almost) perfect evening.

My intention was to get to my bed before 1am so I would be up, bright-eyed and bushy tailed for my return walk to Braemar and continuation to Ballater.

I’m afraid it was another failed plan, it was well past 2.30am when I finally hit the sack.

Perhaps plans aren’t such a good idea after all.

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