Author Topic: Paris South  (Read 13906 times)

Paris South
« on: 26 September, 2012, 09:18:35 pm »
When I put my bike on Owners Bikes, somebody said looking forward to the ride report. So I thought. Well you asked for it. This is just day one. So don't blame me..
I was in contact with a fellow cyclist through the crazyguy website who wanted to accompany me on this trip. At the last minute he informed me that he was definitely not camping, as it would be too much weight to pull with his trailer. Against my best instincts I agreed we would share the cost of B&Bs. We met at CDG airport and Rob seemed a good guy, we got on well from the start. I was a bit surprised by his small folding bike and huge suitcase trailer though. Off we headed in the dark for our first hotel. This proved to be harder than we first thought but eventually arrived to find the smallest hotel room that I had ever been in. But for E39 I could not complain. The staff were nice and stored the bikes in their rest room. The next morning we pulled the curtains of the room and found ourselves overlooking a Lidl car park. Lunch supplies sorted. After breakfast at McDonalds we headed out for Paris. The first thing we found was a bike path running alongside a hugely busy road. Great stuff. Off we trundled until I heard a crash from behind me. I looked back to find Rob spread-eagled under his bike. He was towing a two-wheeled trailer and forgets about the width of it.
Negotiating narrow bike paths with rocks or posts alongside ends up with the trailer wheels clipping such obstacles and throwing my new companion to the floor. After a few more crashes and curses [great entertainment for the drivers in the traffic jam at the side of us] we found a dual carriageway that was shared with thundering artics and crazy speed mad French drivers. I don’t know whether the blaring horns were abuse or greetings. Eventually we got off the highway of death and allowed the Garmin to lead us to the canal that would take us close to the centre of Paris. If we thought the dual carriageway was bad, Paris was a nightmare. Crazy, crazy, traffic. At first you think how are we going to negotiate this mess? Then you watch as Vogue models on upright bikes with a basket up front just ride serenely past red lights and flow smoothly into the utter chaos. Cars, trucks etc just move around them with never a beep of a horn. Ok. I just dive in and it works. Rob who is more of a gentleman than me waits patiently at each of the many red lights until I explain that he is the only cyclist in Paris obeying them and vehicles are actually encouraging him to go. Eventually we join the models and their mums and dads and anybody else on their trusty steeds to find our way to the Champs Elysees.
A place I’ve always wanted to ride, footsteps of Lance or Wiggo. Pictures of this, the Tower, Arc de Triumph all bagged and time to find our way to Fontainebleau. Hah!! Not a chance, we are directed this way and that until we reach agreement to just head South following the compass. Big mistake. A couple of hours later, find we are on the wrong side of the Paris suburbs and need to head back. It is now 6.30ish and we have been riding in 30degree heat all day. I spot a rail station and dive in to negotiate tickets to Fontainebleau. I am no hero that has to cycle the full route. I’m a lazy git at heart and will dive on Bus, Train, Lorry, donkey etc if it makes life easier. I came to see France not to die! I don’t do misery. Tickets purchased with two changes. We pile the bikes on a packed commuter train and more models in business suits help us to squeeze the bikes aboard [I love the French]. One delectable creature in perfect English informs us that we have to get off at the sixth stop to change trains. She bids us au revoir at the fourth. We dutifully disembark at the sixth and another model tells us as we watch the train departing that we should have got off at the eighth. So a wait for the next train and back through the same process. Eventually after negotiating stairs, and escalators we reach the Gare de Lyon for the Fontainebleau train. More stairs up to the platform and settle into the train, which should leave at 7.49. It leaves at 9pm. Never mind we are leaving the hellhole that calls itself Paris. But the lovely French are not finished with us. There is a problem on the track and we are moved off the train onto a bus for the last 15 miles of our journey. All of this takes time and we end up at our destination at 11pm in the dark and heavy rain. The place is deserted. France is now shut! Nowhere to sleep, no camping gear. Needs must and we settle for a deserted old building near the station and bed down on the concrete floor supported by some old cardboard sheets and lulled to a cold fitful sleep by the drips through the leaky roof. End of a perfect day? Err……
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Torslanda

  • Professional Gobshite
  • Just a tart for retro kit . . .
    • John's Bikes
Re: Paris South
« Reply #1 on: 26 September, 2012, 10:15:31 pm »
That would've been me  :thumbsup:

Bloody fantastic so far! Just reinforces what I said in June - the most essential part of any bike tour? The car!

<<Pulls up chair, grabs popcorn, waits for the next instalment...>>
VELOMANCER

Well that's the more blunt way of putting it but as usual he's dead right.

Re: Paris South
« Reply #2 on: 27 September, 2012, 12:30:14 am »
Looking forward to the rest... it has the makings of an epic tale.

IMO Paris isn't that bad, but maybe that's just from a Londoner's perspective. A few years back I was in PAris for a short break with Mrs Ham, a couple of days I left Mrs Ham asleep, hired a Velib, and followed entirely random Parisiens going to work or about their business - it was brilliant.

Re: Paris South
« Reply #3 on: 30 September, 2012, 04:27:27 pm »
Les anglais sur le continent......Im going to enjoy this..
Get a bicycle. You will never regret it, if you live- Mark Twain

Re: Paris South
« Reply #4 on: 01 October, 2012, 07:19:54 pm »
DAY 2
So a new day dawns. I can’t believe it’s 7.30 and survived the night without being gnawed at by rats or winos. Must have slept after all and not even a stiff back. Plus its daylight and we can view our surroundings in all their glory. Our upmarket room has walls decorated with various graffiti and the floor is a mixture of pigeon droppings and bowls of rat poison. Still it was cheap.  Up and packed away smartish and dive into the rush hour traffic to Fontainebleau to enjoy morning coffee and fresh croissants at a pavement café as we watch market traders, setting up stall for the day. Now this is France. We make good use of the bars toilets for a wash and brush up before leaving for our next port of call. A route is agreed upon. We are making them up as we go [big mistake]. The next hour is pleasant enough with good progress through the French countryside. We soon start climbing and it is obvious Rob is struggling on hills with his loaded trailer. Still it gives me a chance for a breather as I wait at the top.
We reach a flat plain and now the heavens open so we stop to don waterproof gear and off we go. Another long hill then a straight run to the next turnoff through a small town. The rain gets heavier and I end up stood in the open waiting for Rob to appear. The last hill has been a long tough one and I expect he will be a while. As the rain gets even heavier and I have no shelter I decide to ride on to the edge of town to find a bus shelter or I’ll even settle for a tree. The turnoff is well signposted so I see no problem. I find a little bus shelter facing the road and settle down with a banana to wait for a drowned Rob. I must explain at this time that Rob had insisted that he was not taking a mobile phone as he considered his Canadian one would be too expensive to use in Europe. I waited and waited. 40 mins passed without any sign so I rode back to the fork in the road and still no Rob. Well if he missed that turnoff he still knew the town we were heading for so I rode into and round the town centre. As is usual on this trip the place was deserted and I assume all the residents were dead, or walking/driving around Paris. Now I was in a dilemma. I needed to keep moving to keep warm and I was losing time reach tonight’s destination. I concluded Rob was also either dead or had got in front of me. Either way there was nothing I could do but follow the map towards the agreed destination. I headed off into a blustery headwind and set a good pace in the hope of catching my missing companion. No chance! I stopped at the first and only shop I saw and stocked up on fruit. They had not seen any other Velo. An hour later I found a bench to stuff myself silly before setting of again.
The rest of the afternoon the headwind stayed with me with the odd shower to keep me on my toes. I rolled into Gien just before five and stepped into the Tourist Info to find a room. The lady asked me where I had travelled from. Fontainebleau, I said. Oh she replied did you follow the river cycle route. What! There’s a route. Evidently I had added about thirty hill miles on to the journey. Doooohhh. The French beauty behind the counter showed me a list of hotels and I plumped as usual for the cheapest at thirty-five euros. It’s very nice she said directing me over the Loire to find this port in a storm. I never did find it! I searched in the rain for an hour, asked countless people and never found the ……g place. I gave up after I got caught in a storm on the outskirts of town where once again there was no shelter and the hailstones bounced off the road and my shoulders. You could not see more than about ten feet in front of you because of the curtain of rain. The road flooded before the cloudburst left to torture some other poor soul. Enough! The madness kicked in and I strode [or squelched] into the first hotel I saw as I rode back to the town. Chambre. Sil vous plait? Oui monsieur. Fifty-two euros. Who cares? Velo, garage? Oui. Petit da jeunier? Oui monsieur. Sorted. Bike locked away. Key handed over and I drag myself upstairs to open a door to paradise. A lovely room with En Suite. Wait for it! There’s a bath! My god a bath!  Yippee. Tea brewed with my electric element. Hot bath run. Fluffy white towels at the ready. I run the cold tap on the boiling bath water and it floods the bathroom floor. Arghhhh. No. No. No! It’s coming from under the bath. I’ve had enough water today! Sod it! I throw a bath towel to soak up the water and transfer cold water from the sink. I’m not changing rooms now and I’m soaking in that bath no matter what.
I soaked in that bath for an hour. Up and dressed and out looking for food at about eight thirty. Now, see, I’m staying in a Tourist town on the banks of the Loire and guess what. It’s now shut! Food, restaurant? Hah. All the shops, cafes, restaurants all closed. I wander the mean dark streets until I catch a young lad pushing his scooter into a doorway. I pounce, and in my worst French and ask him if there is a Pizza joint here. He’s young and surely he’d know if anybody does. Spot on. In perfect English he says yes. Parks the scooter and walks me up a side street to a little eat-in Pizza shop. It was packed. Not surprised as probably the only place with a light in the window in France. I have the best Pizza and beer I’ve had for a long time.
Now you may have noticed I have no thought for my missing companion. Not true, but there was nothing I could do without any way to contact him. I text my wife and asked her to check my e-mails to see if he was using his laptop and to leave him details of my whereabouts and route for tomorrow. And so to a lovely warm, clean double bed. Ahh.
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #5 on: 01 October, 2012, 07:41:48 pm »
 ;D I want day 3!!
Those wonderful norks are never far from my thoughts, oh yeah!

Torslanda

  • Professional Gobshite
  • Just a tart for retro kit . . .
    • John's Bikes
Re: Paris South
« Reply #6 on: 02 October, 2012, 10:57:47 am »
Me threeeeee!
VELOMANCER

Well that's the more blunt way of putting it but as usual he's dead right.

Re: Paris South
« Reply #7 on: 02 October, 2012, 06:49:53 pm »
encore.....
Get a bicycle. You will never regret it, if you live- Mark Twain

Re: Paris South
« Reply #8 on: 04 October, 2012, 09:15:29 am »
Route created by looking at school atlas of western Europe on one page with additional help by Autoroute Express  :P  :facepalm: How I wish I had your courage!! I am afraid even to ride a motorbike in Paris, after driving there.
Now waiting for day 3 - what an adventure, what a good read  :) :)

Riggers

  • Mine's a pipe, er… pint!
Re: Paris South
« Reply #9 on: 04 October, 2012, 03:09:44 pm »
Day 3! Day 3! Day 3! They all chorus.
Certainly never seen cycling south of Sussex

Re: Paris South
« Reply #10 on: 05 October, 2012, 10:19:07 am »
DAY THREE
Alarm goes at 7.45. Do I get up? Is it still raining? I could just stay here. No I can’t. Yes you can.  I’ve developed an invisible friend since I started this lonely trip, who keeps arguing with me. Ok. Give up. Got to be done.  Check weather. It’s dry! It’s dry! Check last nights washing. Shorts still a bit damp, rest of gear ok. That’ll do. Breakfast is good and in true cyclist tradition I scoff the lot and more. Cross the bridge over the Loire and confidently turn left, two miles up the road and quick conversation with a guy mowing his lawn. Should have turned right over the bridge. Doohhh.

Ok I’m off and into my stride. Lovely sunny morning, bike humming away nicely. This is the life. Who wouldn’t want to be a touring cyclist? My faithful steed, and me, as one, traversing the continent. There’s just that funny noise now and again as I pedal. Probably nothing. I stop to check map, Garmin and sextant. I’ve leaned the bike up against the gate of a mini Château. The mini guard dog charges down to threaten me barking it’s tiny head off and then decides to take out it’s gallic temper on my rear carrier through the gate slats. It only gives up when I kick it in the head and squeals off to tell its mummy. Time to leave.  The miles are flying by as I head south. Still very quiet though which is good but no people as usual. Until I stop for a comfort break that is [all that tea at breakfast] then half of France turn up on the road, including two cars full of Gendarmes. A loaded tourist barge also appears out of nowhere on the nearby canal. How can a barge just show up?  I’ve started so I’ll finish. Like the French care about anything. I ride off.
 That noise is back again. Never mind. More miles fly by and it’s now near lunchtime. Trouble is I’ve got no lunch and there’s no shops as usual. Two hours later I’m starting to chew on the flies that are hitting me in the face and still no shops. Past lunch, must be nearly teatime. And then I spy it. It’s a lane covered in blackberries in the middle of nowhere. I love blackberries! I have to gorge myself on pounds of the things as I out manoeuvre the wasps for the biggest and juiciest. A couple of good belches and stained red handed and lipped, I once again hit the road on my trusty steed. Sure that noise is getting louder. Stop pedalling. Noise stops. Hmm. Bottom bracket? My invisible friend says don’t go there so I won’t.
 I’m heading for Nevers so I check my directions with a couple of cyclists. They argue about the best way and then the guy tells me to cross the river and turn right, his lady disagrees but whatever. I cross the river as instructed and find myself in a small town. I’m now getting wary about being stranded without a roof over my head. It’s 4pm so I decide to stop for the day. It’s raining anyway. I look for Tourism office. Even if you don’t want anything you get to chat to a beautiful woman. But first there is a Patisserie open at the top of a hill. I get something edible and also directions to Office of Tourism. Can’t find it. Up and down that bloody hill in the rain I trudge and then I spot it. It’s down a back alley in a church courtyard, no signpost nothing!  The office houses a lot of hire bikes so I enquire about a bike shop. I’ve not got the tools to strip a BB. No there is no bike shop in town. The nearest is in Nevers. Oh well. I’m once again shown a list of available hotels by the resident goddess and dutifully [just to impress her] pick out the cheapest at E35. She rings up and books me in and as usual assures me that it’s very nice. But the room will not be ready till 5pm.  That’s ok I think. I’ll just sit in the hotel lounge in a comfy chair and wait, out of this damn rain. Hah. How do I manage it? I squeak [don’t mention Bottom Bracket] my way uphill towards the address and find it’s a restaurant with a tiny hotel sign over the top. There is no hotel entrance, just the restaurant door. Which is firmly closed.
It’s 4.35 and raining. I bang on the door. Nothing. I end up sat outside on the wall in the rain thinking about the leather chesterfield chair I should be sat in next to the roaring log fire while another goddess prepares my luxurious room, also running my bath prior to joining me. Work with me here, I need cheering up. At five to five a large [fat] scruffy guy comes round the corner and beckons me to join him. I don’t know whether this is for sex or a room, or both. But for a roof, a leather chair and a fire I’m now anybody’s.
The guy leads me to a pair of large steel double gates at the back of the building and ushers me in. He speaks perfect English. I enter the yard and nearly go ar.. over t.t as a large grey rabbit runs under the wheel of the bike. The large yard is full of all kinds of junk and populated by rabbits and guinea pigs running around. I pick my way across and he leans my bike up against a large rabbit hutch and he assures me it will be fine. Ok. Bike is secure with a furry set of guards. We go through the back door of the speaking kindly “hotel”.  Arghh! It stinks. Stinks of animal or dog or some horrible thing. Sticky carpets etc.  Now what? I’m outside town, its raining, tourist office shut. No choice. I’m issued with a room key, Monsieur informs me that it’s a shared shower on the landing [I think. “Shared with who or what? Rabbits, dogs? What is that smell?”] He disappears. I find the room, open door. Nice. Think. Air raid shelter with wallpaper.
The smell is just as bad or worse in here. There is a grubby partition in the room with a toilet and sink. No door, just a partition that does not reach the ceiling. Right then. Windows and shutters flung wide open and bed checked. Hey. It’s clean. Fresh sheets. Just don’t put anything on the floor.
 Not a bad little town I notice as I escape the rabbit warren to look for a meal. The well-fed proprietor said I could eat in the restaurant, but I did not have the courage. My bike could be keeping company with the contents of the menu. So town it is. The place is deserted as usual but I find an eating-place in a cellar and it’s pretty full. Weird. You don’t see people on the streets. How do they get here? Do they sidle down the wall, nipping from doorway to doorway? Is there a curfew on? Do they know the war is over? Am I sharing meals with the resistance? Still.  Had a nice ‘billy no mates’ meal served by a sultry but sulky waitress who threw the meal at me as I very unkindly interrupted her chain smoking conversation at the bar. When I asked for the bill she just nodded her head at the till to tell me she couldn’t be bothered to get up and stroll the full 3 yards to bring it over and I had to go to her and pay. I do love the French but they have yet to get the hang of customer service and this lovely was an “I hate my job”, star. I stroll back to the converted cowshed and enter by the restaurant, [there are actually people in there but doubt if they are resident], as I did not want to step on some furry friend and destroy tomorrow’s menu.
 Up to my cell and discover my room’s opposite the family’s room. Their door is open and the television is blaring, a five year old is screaming and crying and next door to me there is a loud American woman arguing on a mobile with somebody who does not want to ride a bike they have hired tomorrow. Oh well. Earplugs in, pillow over head. Tomorrow is another day.
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Riggers

  • Mine's a pipe, er… pint!
Re: Paris South
« Reply #11 on: 05 October, 2012, 11:42:00 am »
This is brilliant.

Book material I'd say! Keep it going Adenough-ers. Sounds like danger and mishaps are your constant companions, along with your imaginary 'friend' of course. Leave that one at the ferry on your return.
Certainly never seen cycling south of Sussex

Re: Paris South
« Reply #12 on: 05 October, 2012, 11:58:50 am »
I'm wondering what happened to Rob. Along with wondering what was so heavy and essential in his suitcase that meant he couldn't carry a tent.
<i>Marmite slave</i>

Re: Paris South
« Reply #13 on: 12 October, 2012, 06:22:58 pm »
Day 4
I wake early in my carpeted dog kennel and check the weather. Wait, no need. I can hear the rain lashing against the unpainted shutters. I turn over and consider staying s. here for, oh, at least ten seconds. No chance! My nose could not stand it. Up and out [don’t stand barefoot on carpet]. Check washing. It will do. Check out breakfast, avoiding rabbit having a scratch on the stairs. Breakfast is not too bad for 1 euro. Trouble is I paid 6! No wonder I was lonely in the dining room. Apart from Topsy that is. Bless. Never mind, back to room and quickly pack up. S..t dropped washing on carpet.
 Still pouring as I pack bike up and wheel through mini zoo to rear gate. There is nobody about but big gate slides open and zoo inhabitants don’t make a run for freedom. Unlike me. I’m off! I find a Lidl down the road and provision up leaving unlocked bike outside.
 The town is quiet as I skitter down the wet cobbles to the Loire and turn left for Nevers. This is a pretty busy main road but well surfaced and I can knock some miles out. The rain however is getting heavier and I come to a sign for a rail station. It’s tempting so I ride down to check it out. Course it’s deserted, no booking office open and no human activity. Back to my route to find the road is closed and diversion signs. I’m not following a diversion in this weather so I follow the closed road. Eventually I come across the works, supervised by the hi-viz, professional shovel leaners. There is no road or pavement but that does not bother a cyclist. With the bike over my shoulder I tramp though the mud field dodging the odd JCB or tipper under the watchful gaze of Henri, Pierre etc who say nothing, just nod through the smoke from their damp gauloises. The road is its usual fine French self from here on in and once again the miles roll by. Rain stops and the sun decides to see what’s happening as I enter another charming village. I spot a human and ask a nice old guy to direct me to a cycle path that I have seen on my map. He immediately shakes my hand, what a lovely gesture, he  then gives me directions in very rapid French. I can just make out right and left and straight on. The rest I have no chance and, I think, I explain that my French is mon petite. He turns away and trots off to his car as I turn away to check the map. Next thing there is a tap on my shoulder and he has returned with a map he has drawn for me on a scrap of paper. What a lovely guy. I thank him and off he goes after shaking my hand again and patting me on the back. Not sure if it’s a sympathy thing.
 I then spot a Tourist office and decide to see if I can filch a local map. Well. My world has fallen apart! All my preconceptions about these Tourist offices staffed by a bevy of lovelies. It’s just not true! It’s a nice big well-stocked office and as I approach the desk I see two well fed ladies tapping way on computers. I greet them in my best French but am studiously ignored. After an age. They correctly assume, I won’t go away. The one nearest to me tears her self away from the “All pies are lovely” website and deigns to raise a bushy eyebrow in my direction. I ask if she speaks English. A sigh and a twitch from her rosy scrubbed cheeks and she nods her, I’ve not had time to comb my hair this year, head towards her companion. This lady struggles up from her seat, this one is marginally smarter, and bigger. She’s had a meeting with a hairbrush somewhere today though. She shuffles over to the counter. “Monsieur. You are in France. You must speak French.” This in terrible English. Nice. Thank you very helpful. That’s what I thought I was doing. {French customer care at it’s finest]. So I count to thirteen in French to her [as far as I got in school]  and ask again in French for directions and a map. Hey! She smiles. “See monsieur you can speak French.” No I can’t. Never mind. She throws me a map and clumps back to her desk to bury herself in the “All foreigners are s..t” website.
 The maps actually not bad and show me a cycle track out of town alongside the river. Trouble is it’s really for an MTB and before long I retreat to a busy Tarmac highway. The rest of the day is pretty uneventful. Fields, cows, hedges, deserted villages, rain, sun, rain, rain, rain. Get the picture, but it’s touring and I’m fine with it. Creaking bike though and I keep getting a whiff of something not nice. I think it’s coming from my shorts. No not that. I dropped them on the carpet this morning when they were still damp, Flopsy still with me. I reach another  village and stop for a comfort break as I spy a public toilet sign. Interesting. There is no door on the toilet and looks like there never have been so all your actions are open to public gaze. Oh well as I’m in France. It’s starting to reach that hour when I need to find a bed for the night. Luckily I come across a little town. Luckily there is one hotel on the main street. Unluckily it is shut! Hmm. I spot a supermarket down the road. This yields yet more fruit and a box of cream do-nuts on offer. Plus a bike lock. Good stuff.
I’m now on the outskirts of town with no sign of a room so I head back to the main street and bang on the Hotel door. No sign of life at all. I’m just wheeling my bike away when there is a shout from the side of the hotel. Madam comes striding round the corner. Now if you have ever watched Allo, Allo you will be familiar with Renee’s wife. It really is her. The living spit. Incredible. I stand gob smacked as reaches me, saying, I don’t know, something in furious French. Grabs the bike and wheels it away into the rear of the hotel. I run after her and she is propping it against the wall in the back. There is half a guy in the yard. Top half. He’s stood in a deep trench, leaning on a spade. He  reaches out his hand to me. I thought he was stuck! But he’s the owner he explains and he has a problem with le pipe. Madam [Edith]comes back and thrusts a key in my hand for the room. No English off either of them. Believe me or not, but the guy in the trench is a thin version of Rene' without the apron. It’s crazy. I’ve got a room, parked the bike and still no mention of price or whether I want it or not. I have to ask Rene' how much the room is. Thirty-five euros he tells me, writing it down on a piece of paper with a stub of a muddy pencil and eleven euros for evening meal. This while he is still down the trench and leaning on the paving to write. I’m on my knees in the muck  talking to him and working out French scribble. Hope he can't smell my shorts. I love France!
So. Up the creaking rear staircase to my room.
 It’s a step back in time. Think 1930s. Original furniture, huge bed, ancient window shutters etc with an old but really nice bathroom. A  candlewick bedspread for crying out loud! Lovely and clean though and smells fine. I like it. There’s also a  phone,  but its one of those with a big round dial. Great. I put a brew on and break into the do-nuts. Big mistake. Greedy git that I am I scoff the lot and promptly fall fast asleep. The phone wakes me. It’s got one of those rings that grabs you by the scruff and throws you round the room. It’s Rene' to tell me that evening meal is being served. I didn’t know that I’d ordered it! I head down and find the 1930s restaurant buzzing. I’m sure I’m the only guest.
 People are still coming through the door. It must be the only place in town for the locals. Renee seats me and I’m given the menu. Evidently the eleven euros is for a three-course meal and one of the options is steak! No wonder it’s busy. Madam is the only cook, toiling away in the kitchen and Rene' is the only waiter. He’s run off his feet but the meal is superb and I spend time talking to his son who wanders in for last orders. I think what a great end to a challenging day as I make my pleasantly, weary,way, upstairs to the past.
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #14 on: 12 October, 2012, 07:01:46 pm »
Rob is fine. Sent me some pictures today. Had a good time eventually. Just read the first paragraph on this link. http://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/page/?o=1&page_id=302236&v=9h.
Funny old world. :)
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #15 on: 14 October, 2012, 08:05:56 pm »
Formidable......
Get a bicycle. You will never regret it, if you live- Mark Twain

Re: Paris South
« Reply #16 on: 16 October, 2012, 05:41:28 pm »
Day 5
I awake in my 1930s boudoir and my invisible friend says. “Stay here longer, look how cozy and warm it is. You don’t want to be out riding a bike today. Lets stay in.” I resist such tempting offers, gingerly lower myself from this high old bed, and  flinging back the ancient shutters , check the weather. It’s sunny! Sunshine in France. Today will be a good day. My friend sulks off into the distance of my mind. I’m alone and ready for breakfast. Hey,  looking forward to this after last night’s superb meal. Rene’ is up and running about, expecting my appearance. No sign of Edith. I’m led to my seat in a now deserted restaurant and asked, tea or coffee? Looking good! Tea sil vous plait, he disappears and soon he is back and with a flourish deposits a cup of black tea on the table. Next, I am presented with two slices of bread, a knife and a tiny pot of jam. Viola! Breakfast is served. That’s it! Hell! They got me! Six Euros for that! My fault.  I was lulled into a false sense of bonhomie. Never mind, the room and dinner was a good deal so I have to let this one pass. I tuck in. Rene suddenly reappears with a wicker basket, I’m thinking, ahh got it wrong, more food. No. It’s full of freshly dug potatoes and he flops down beside me, pulls out an ancient peeler from his apron [yes he’s got the apron] and sets to, peeling a mountain of spuds while chattering to me about the day  in full ‘speed ahead French. Who the hell,  peels spuds anymore?
Rene’ asks about my route and then informs me that it is very hilly’. Great  something to look forward to!  I ask to pay ‘le Addition’ and he presents a hand written bill. Now, this is, an, all untouched by the modern day, hotel but as I pullout a MasterCard, an up to date scanner appears magically from under the counter. Bill paid. I weakly totter up the stairs due to lack of sustenance and drag my luggage down to my bike. I need to check what the worrying squeaking noise is before I go any further. I  find that my pedal is almost in pieces, as bits of it appear to have been falling off along the way. I’m either a very powerful rider or I’ve got crap pedals. Make up your own mind. I repair as best I can, using cable ties and thank the lord that the problem is only a cheap pedal. So off I squeak down the avenue for half a mile in completely the wrong direction until I see a sign, turn around to retrace my steps and hope that nobody is watching my embarrassing mistake from the hotel window. I streak past, head down, at five mph, but I’m sure I detected, out of the corner of my eye, a flash of light reflected from a shiny potato peeler.
Good progress this bright sunny morning but Rene’ is right there are a lot of hills and I’m working hard. The pedal is mocking my feeble efforts as it squeaks in unison to my laboured breaths. I’m making for a town called Chantelle [sounds like good song title] and I reach this sooner than I thought, so I pass on through, although in my weakened foodless condition I do have to stock up on more fruit. The gorilla look is starting to grow on me. I pass under a busy motorway, dodging heaving levanthians that threaten to sweep me within their huge wheels. I’m on one of the main feeder roads to Clermont Ferrand and the increase in traffic shows this. I don’t fancy hitting the A road to Clermont in the rush hour so decide on an early finish in the first decent town that might have a bike shop.
I roll into a pleasant looking town and engage two stout looking madams in a  conversation about the whereabouts of the Tourist Information. They must have worked out what I wanted [how I don’t know as neither spoke a word of English and I probably asked them if the river passed the bus on a Thursday] or something like. However they showed me the way, or told me to bugger off, don’t know, but I got to the Information centre and once again, faith restored,  there was a Lovely, waiting to attend to my needs.
The hotel book came out. There was only one in town and another close by that welcomed pets. I didn’t want another night being assailed by the essence of dog or rabbit s..t,  [my shorts still have a kind of odour there] so I plumped for the town one. They didn’t answer the phone so I trotted off to go bang on the door. I found the hotel, which was situated, in a nice square overlooking a fountain. There was a long table set up outside the bar that was populated by ten French guys in work clothes. They were all drunk out of their skulls and were busy throwing water over each other as I arrived. This was two thirty in the afternoon. The hotel bit was open so I don’t know why they weren’t answering the phone but whatever. There was a room available so that did me. I enquired about breakfast and wanted to know if it was Buffet. After my last experience I didn’t want to get caught out again. Yes buffet I was told and I could eat as much as I wanted. That’ll do for me. The room was lovely, overlooking the square and the P.. sheads down below but I assumed they would soon leave or fall into a coma before the day was out. Shorts drying in the window. I went for a stroll, the town was lovely and there was a bike shop. I needed to service my bike, buy and fit new pedals plus I was tired so I decided to book an extra night.
I set out for a meal in the town that night but I had not learnt my lesson and the town was as usual mostly deserted. I spotted a Pizza place at the bottom of an avenue and headed for that. Halfway down I thought there was someone sat on a bench. As I approached it appeared to be a midget [can I use that word?] not sat down, smoking a cigarette and leaning against the bench, wearing a leather jacket, she had long dark hair and a Sid James complexion. Bit of a rough diamond methinks. She had spotted me approaching and walked up to me, craned her head, way, way back and asked me if I wanted to have a Bon Time. I politely declined this scintillating offer at the same time thinking how her and six foot two me would manage that. I suppose love, lust or Euros would find a way. The Pizza place was empty and I was shown to a table in the middle of the room. My order took forty minutes to turn up. Biggest Pizza I have seen and it was terrible! With a large lump of iron settling in my guts I left the joint and made my way home in a roundabout route to walk off some of the carbs. Turning a corner I heard kids laughing and who should come into view with two youngsters in tow, but my long haired, tiny, leather jacketed sex machine from earlier and she had a guy with her. Very strange. There were no good times on offer now.
All was quiet back at the hotel. They seemed to have removed the bodies and tidied up. My bike had been locked away in the bar and I was looking forward to a day off tomorrow.
Night all.
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #17 on: 16 October, 2012, 07:18:34 pm »
You obviously avent adenough yet.  Those Frenchies really know about food, n'est-ce pas?

More excellent myth-busting.  Thanks!

Re: Paris South
« Reply #18 on: 25 October, 2012, 09:16:12 am »
Ca va, Adenough?
@SandyV1 on Twitter http://twitter.com/#!/SandyV1

Re: Paris South
« Reply #19 on: 31 October, 2012, 01:36:51 pm »
Day 6
I wake and stretch in anticipation of a long lazy day in the sun. I’ve been promised a decent breakfast so skip down the hall to the dining room. It’s deserted! But the promised buffet breakfast is all laid out. It’s as they said, so I dive in, cereal, more cereal, quoisants, more quoisants, juice, cake, more cake. Oh what a lovely day. I stagger and belch my way back to my room to make plans. First stop find the bike shop.
 My bike has been moved from it’s overnight in the bar and is resting in the sun in the secure yard. These French are nice people. Off I trot and find the shop hiding away down a side street. Collection of old bikes outside. Looks good. I enter and Bonjour the proprietor who ignores me and carries on tidying some fancy parts he has in a glass case. I look around for a set of cheap pedals but don’t find anything. I ask Monsieur Ignorant but he sighs and says “moment” and carries on with his most important task of dusting a piece of shiny metal. I give it a couple of minutes and think “sod this, I’m off”. As I walk down the street he runs after me, horrified at the thought of losing a sale but I tell him “forget it”. It’s a beautiful day and I’m staying in a good mood.
Now I’ve mentioned that I embrace the bone idle lifestyle if I get chance, which unfortunately is not often. You see I have a flight booked from Beziers in a few days. I’ve established that from here on in the going gets even hillier and there is no direct train service after Clermont Ferrand. I’m unsure if I can complete the distance in time and the original plan was to ride as far south as poss and maybe jump a train.  There is a train station in this town though, so I go pay a visit. Nice modern station with a model working on the only ticket counter. I ask about trains south. She says she speaks no English at all and does not understand my French. I suspect she just thinking P..s off you old git and don’t bother me while I’m trying to read my French celebrity magazine. I give up and leave her to her French OK or whatever it is. Time to go back to the lovely in Tourist Info. This piece of heaven gets into the SNCF website and happily prints me off all the possibilities for onward travel and tells me about a Decathlon store in Vichy. I tell her about my experience at the station and my bewilderment that the station staff  do not understand one word of English. No, I am told “she does, they take it in school”. “She probably just could not be bothered”. I reluctantly leave the ever helpful lovely [who turned down my marriage proposal, can’t think why] and head for a fruit shop.
 I need to stock up as  France closes for two days from Saturday midday. Served by another lovely lady and my faith in the French [well the women] is once again restored. Humping my fruit back to my sun kissed  room over the bar, I’m aware I still have a pedal problem to sort.
After lunch, I head out for Vichy on an unloaded bike, which fly’s along and I soon knock the 30 kilometres out, apart from some of the hills that have my eyes watering. I shoot downhill towards the town over a big roundabout completely ignoring the huge Decathlon store on my left and stop at my first bar to ask some scruffy drunk rolling his own, where the Decathlon is?  I’m thinking he can’t understand my destruction of the French language but as I realise later, he is trying to get round the fact that I have just come down the road from Decathlon and am asking him where Decathlon is! He walks over and grabs my shoulder and I ready myself to whack him with my bike pump. But no. He’s just laughing and spinning me round to face the direction I came in. Doohh!!
 Back I go. It’s right in front of me now. Must try to get into the habit of actually turning my head when I’m riding. I’ve now decided to buy a tent and sleeping bag to try to get the hotel costs down. Unbelievable! There are no small tents in the store. Sold out! I do manage to nab a 12Euro sleeping bag though and some cheap pedals. If I have to rough it again at least I have a bag. Pedals are fitted outside the store. No they’re not! The squeaky one is but the other one, though damaged will not budge. So I give up and ride it as it is.
 Still it’s a quiet return journey apart from the startled dogs that have not heard my approach until I am on top of them. They bark and chew in desperation at garden gates for a slice of tasty cyclists leg. When I was creaking they had ample time to plan a strategy before I arrived.  I could hear their crazy barking well ahead of me. Now I was leaping in shock as they came from nowhere.
 The rest of the day is spent in delicious bone idle mode including an evening spent with my Kindle and more fruit. Clermont Ferrand tomorrow. 
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #20 on: 31 October, 2012, 01:41:53 pm »
Quote
Ca va, Adenough?

Très bien, merci :)
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #21 on: 31 October, 2012, 02:02:23 pm »
No white space in the item makes it very difficult to the casual viewer to read. Just saying.

Re: Paris South
« Reply #22 on: 31 October, 2012, 02:16:24 pm »
Quote
No white space in the item makes it very difficult to the casual viewer to read. Just saying.
Lost me there. no comprende.
Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #23 on: 12 November, 2012, 07:09:27 pm »
Day 7
Time to get up and attack another huge breakfast. My friendly voice in my head is back arguing. Maybe I should keep riding south and see how it goes. “ You can’t do that. “course I can” But you’ve been told it’s all hills” “I can do hills” “Hmm. Maybe not these hills. Remember you’re a fat old bugger” “thanks I need you”. I decide I’ll see when I get to Clermont Ferrand. See how I feel and visit the station there. I pay madam and she warns me how much more expensive the hotels will be the further I ride and that Beziers will probably be double. Great. I don’t linger too long otherwise what I’ve stashed from breakfast may start slipping out from under my shirt. Monsieur has once again kindly parked the bike for me, so I saddle up and ride away into a sunny new day.
I was dreading riding on the busy highway. I saw it yesterday, signposted for my destination, but as I passed through the town I saw another sign for Clermont Ferrand and it turned out to be a secondary road. It was quiet , only the odd car passed me plus a gaggle of highly coloured Sunday French racing cyclists who swept past without any greeting and probably a gallic sneer at my Traditional English Touring bike. Bet I had a comfier bum though. This was a great ride on a great day. Sun shining, bike quietly whirring along. Long rolling hills. Love it! It’s over too soon as I’m soon riding into a quiet Clermont Ferrand. It’s early and the place is very still. I glide into the town centre and pick a bench in the sun for some banana time. Decision is made to take a train from here. But I need to find the station. I try to find the  Gare on the Garmin and hey it works!. I get a nice big pink line on screen to follow. Part of the route takes me through a big park which I suss out for a wild camp, if I can’t find a cheap room. Keeping in mind my last hotel telling me rooms are more expensive the further south I go. Clermont is a sizeable place and I imagine not cheap. The parks no good anyway. Too busy, bordering a main road and quite a few noisy French prats about with cans. Reminds one of home, you know those days when the sun shines and the tattoos need an airing.
Station looks nice and modern so I take the bike in and approach the info desk.

I start a conversation in my best crap French. The guy looks blank and peppers me in shotgun French and I reply, probably asking “is there a train in the garden with chickens inside the bicycle. We back and forth for a while. I’m thinking [probably unfairly “why do they not know any English at all?” When he suddenly chirps up in perfect English “Oh you want to buy a ticket?” Sh…tt. What happened there? Never mind. I’m directed once again in perfect English to the right counter where I have to start all over again to a non-English speaking ticket seller. Surely my French is getting better? I ask for a ticket to Beziers for tomorrow. Somehow I’m understood and when I ask if the Velo is okay to travel I’m informed that it is up to the conductor. Not very promising.
However that’s sorted and I sniff out the area closest to the station for a room. Everywhere is closed and the first two hotels I come across want 120 Euros a night. I do find a seedy looking craphole near the station for 54euros but it’s all locked up until 6pm.  I decide to ride back into the centre for a look around the town and come back. I’ve not been here since 1988 and thought it was a scruffy place then, but now it’s very bright and modern. I like it.  Great tram system.

I notice down a side street a hotel sign so I wander down for a look see. There is a guy on a modern reception just locking up so I ask about a room.50 euros he quotes. Now, I don’t really want to rough it. All very adventurous and all that but the reality is that’s it’s crap and I really don’t want to keep paying for hotels but sometimes you just think “sod it” lets have an easy life. I go for it. He takes my details, tells about how he loves Blackburn [first English conversation for a while] and gives me a key. You know I’m in the middle of France, having a conversation with a Black French guy about the merits of a football team just up the road from me. Touring is great. Breakfast I’m told is Buffet and “very nice”. “Yea right.” Said I’d see in the morning. He locks my bike up in the garage, gives me the combination for the door and he’s off home. Now this is a scruffy side street but I’m not expecting much but it’s town centre for eating and near enough to the station for my 12.40pm train. So off up to my room to dump my stuff. Hey, Talk about striking lucky! The room is greeeeat! Very modern with a fabulous bathroom, including a hairdryer. Satellite TV, Air con. Bottles of lotions to pinch, the works. It’s colour co-ordinated, all sexy red covers, couch and furniture. I’m well impressed.  Quick shower and a wander out into the town. They have a fabulous cathedral here.

I go inside, sit in wonder for a bit and then hear music out side to find a full orchestra in the cathedral square with a good-sized crowd enjoying the classical music.

I lean on the nearby bit of staging to get a better look as the tempo changes. Whack! I’m startled by a kick to my elbow. I’m that busy watching the orchestra I don’t notice a group of dancers climb up behind me on the stage and start their own traditional routine. It was probably quicker to kick my arm out of the than disrupt the dance. Aahh the French.

It’s good though if you like that sort of stuff. I’m not that into it, as the orchestra has stopped and the dancers have brought their own musicians. There are some big girls clumping about up there though.  I go for a long walk and as usual get lost but it’s a nice place to be lost in and I’d visit again. Got a huge meal in the evening at a burger place where you can eat on the pavement tables for 7euros including a drink. Wish I’d booked a later train now. Still I’m off to make the most of the best hotel room ever on this trip. Time to sleep alone in my sexy room. Sniff..


Nothing left to prove. http://adenough1.blogspot.co.uk/

Re: Paris South
« Reply #24 on: 12 November, 2012, 07:42:50 pm »
Excellent
Get a bicycle. You will never regret it, if you live- Mark Twain