Sunday 30th June to Friday 12th July
Roscoff France, Plymouth England, Plymouth Loop, Burton Bradstock, Ryde IoW, Findon, Forrest Hill, Felixstowe, Gatwick and Home
Sunday 30/06/19 – Ferry; Roscoff France to Plymouth UK
Today we’re up, packed and loaded, and down at the Brittany Ferry terminal by 8am. We’re hoping there’s a cafe there for breakfast, and there is, but alas it’s closed 😦 We bid Europe farewell and thank you for the enormous pleasure. England is on the horizon.
We disembark and do customs with the minimum of fuss. Our accomodation is at McBrides Hotel in the old town of Plymouth. It’s directly opposite where the Mayflower left for the new world all those years ago.
We do our normal wander of the local area, and a very famous area it is too. This is where Sir Francis Drake deferred from immediately engaging the Spanish Armada to finish his game of bowls. Never mind that the tide was against him anyway, so it seemed a good thing to do at the time.
You know you’re in Blighty because there’s a Fish and Chip shop on every corner. We had mushy peas with ours.
Monday 01/07/19 – Ride Day; Plymouth Loop
It’s looking like perfect riding weather as we head off on a loop of northern Cornwall and all is going well until I feel a slight vagueness in the front while going around one of the million roundabouts we encountered in England. A quick check of the Tyre Pressure Monitoring screen shows that the front tyre is down to 28psi. That’s not good. We pull into a convenient servo and 15 minutes later we’re on our way after inserting a plug.
Our first stop is Port Isaac after a delightful jaunt through Cornwall’s countryside. It seems everyone else in the world thinks Port Isaac is a good place to visit today as well. I can certainly understand that though as there’s something very appealing about these old harbours. I think the TV show ‘Doc Martin’ is filmed around here as well. We cheekily park in a nook beside the footpath.
We turn north and ride through the hedge lined lanes to Boscastle via Tintagel. We walk out to the harbour mouth and I marvel at the work that’s gone into building these walls.
Of course no visit to Cornwall would be complete without sampling a traditional Cornish Pasty. OK, so I’ve now done that.
Crackington Haven is next on the plan and then home via secondary roads. The thing about riding through these areas is that the countryside looks absolutely stunning in it’s patchwork quilt of paddocks and soon to be harvested fields. The trouble is that you rarely get to see it because of the way they built the roads back in mists of history. It seems that their plan of attack was to dig down to find a solid base on which to build the road itself while piling the overfall on the sides of the roads, and then planting a hedge on top of that. So needless to say you can’t see a thing while you’re riding along.
Tuesday 02/07/19 – Ride Day; Plymouth to Burton Bradstock
We have our normal ‘in the room’ breakfast which consists of yogurt and a banana purchased the previous evening (in this case from the local Post Office would you believe), with muesli. A quick stop to wash the bike and we say goodbye to Plymouth and its history and mushy peas; we head east. The reason for the bike wash is that today we’re going to visit my sister Jill and her husband Phil. Phil rides a Triumph Sprint, so I have to be sure that the Guzzi will outshine Britain’s best. Easy peasy 🙂
Another delightful days ride as we pass through one English village after another. We stop at Dartmouth for morning tea and then catch the little ferry across the typical harbour.
On to Brixham and by-passing Exeter we continue to Sidmouth for lunch. Seems like all those tourists that were at Port Isaac yesterday are here today. Who am I to say anything?
We take to the road again, the Guzzi is loving these roads as we pass through Seaton and Lyme Regis before pulling in to Charmouth Beach where we take a nap under a tree.
We arrive at Burton Bradstock in the mid afternoon and it’s great to see Phil and Jill again after last seeing them at the end of our 2016 trip.
Wednesday 03/07/19 to Friday 05/07/19 – Lay Days; Burton Bradstock
We enjoyed perfect weather as we lazed around in perfect company and lovely surrounds.
Saturday 06/07/19 – Ride Day; Burton Bradstock to Ryde IoW
Time to move on, thanks for the wonderful hospitality Phil and Jill. Phil accompanies us for a ways along the route as we continue east through the beautiful surrounds and little villages with their narrow streets and too many parked cars.
Lulworth Castle was closed
And Corfe Castle was in disarray
The day was heating up as we pulled in to the world’s most popular chain of restaurants for our first Maccas in 3 and a half months. Still a feeding frenzy.
Then south through The New Forrest with its abundance of free roaming horses.
Further south to Lymington where we caught the ferry across the Solent to Yarmouth on The Isle of White
To Osborne Castle of Queen Victoria fame. It is beautiful.
We dropped in to Fishbourne to check out tomorrow’s ferry departure point before finalizing the very pleasant days ride at Ryde in what would once have been a fairly grand hotel. We took a wander around town as is our wont.
Sunday 07/07/19 – Ride Day; Ryde IoW to Findon via Goring by Sea
Mmmm, that noise outside is rain so it’s on with our, what Norma has come to call, Panda Bear Wear and we head for Fishbourne and the 8am ferry which means we forfeit our included breakfast at our hotel, not happy about that. The crossing to Portsmouth is uneventful if wet and we stop and grab a pic of the Victory of Nelson fame
before taking to the congested freeways to Bruce and Sheila Martin’s place at Goring by Sea. I boarded with Bruce and Sheila when I was in England some 49 years ago. Needless to say we have all aged. We enjoyed a lovely meal at a typical English pub and talked about old times. We then rode the 15klms to a tiny out of the way village called Findon.
Monday 08/07/19 – Ride Day; Findon to Forrest Hill
Via Arundel and it’s perfect castle
Petworth and East Grinstead where we stopped at the local Moto Guzzi shop in the hope of seeing the latest V85TT, but they didn’t have any on the floor.
We then headed north towards London. I wasn’t particularly looking forward to this section of the days ride and I thought we’d be engulfed by traffic. But by sticking to the lesser roads we had what was our final day of solitude and wandering enjoyable roads and lanes before the last 10klms to my Uncle Albert’s.
98 years old, lives by himself and still has all his marbles and a huge store of experiences. We’re all claiming his genes 🙂
We had a thoroughly enjoyable lay day with Uncle Albert and took the opportunity to get to better know my cousin Tristan and his family. We hope to be back.
This pic of Norma and myself in Albert’s garden. Looking pretty relaxed, you can see all those cakes and icecreams have caught up with me.
Wednesday 10/07/19 – Ride Day; Forrest Hill to Felixstowe
Today is the final day’s ride of this wonderful adventure and was predominantly a freeways day as we negotiated the constant traffic. We stopped at Ipswich and washed the bike for its return to Aus and to hopefully please our picky quarantine inspectors.
We booked into the grand old Orwell Hotel which had seen better days but was still not too bad. We celebrated our blessings and each other with a fine meal in the fine old dining room before retiring and sorting our gear for the return of ourselves and bike to Australia.
Thursday 11/07/19 – Felixstowe to Gatwick
A bitter sweet day as we left the life of fantasy behind and faced the prospect of reality as we dropped the bike off at the shippers
and caught the train to Gatwick airport.
A quick glimpse of the Shard Tower from the train window was as near as we got to London on the way through.
Friday 12/07/19 to Saturday 13/07/19 – Gatwick to Melbourne
A final glimpse of England’s perfect patchwork landscape as we head east and we’re done.
Some stats:
We did 11,903klms on 66 ride days and had 40 lay days.
I fitted new Michelin PR4 GT tyres prior to leaving which have worn exceptionally well with probably 60-70% wear and one puncture.
We used mainly 95 E5-10 fuel, or whatever we could get and I don’t think it matters what fuel I run through this Guzzi because I can’t tell the difference in performance or fuel consumption.
The bike used about 250mm of engine oil but I think most of this was seepage from the leaky oil pressure sensor switch.
I am so grateful for the opportunity to undertake the second trip of a lifetime. This wouldn’t have happened without the encouragement and support from such an amazing lady as Norma, not to mention the fact that she was there for every kilometre, every laughing moment and also the few tense moments we encountered with hardly a murmur, although goodness knows what she was thinking on a couple of occasions – thank you so much my love.
We are also both thankful of the fact that we didn’t have one incident of any real concern with the bike nor any problems with our health. One cannot ask for any more than that. The weather was also very kind by in large.
So until next time, if there is a next time, thank you for following us and participating in our journey. God Bless.
What a fantastic trip you have had
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Have enjoyed reading your trip diaries mum & dad.
Sad to see the end of them but glad to have you both home again!
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Looking forward to your next adventure…
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Oh yeah. Working on a plan right now for 2021 for 3 months. Ship into Barcelona for 5 weeks in Spain but mainly north coast Spain to and through Portugal – hence followed your Portuguese journey with interest. Then transit back to Barcelona and take a ferry to Genoa and up to the lake district etc and do a loop through Switzerland then across France and over to Ireland – I’ve just reread your 2018 through Ireland. That’ll give us a couple of weeks to do a little bit of Scotland. Anyway that’s the plan and those areas are all we really want to do in Europe that we haven’t already done.
You enjoy yourself. I’d think it would be different traveling without Sandra.
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