There are some great photos to go with this update but you'll have to take my word for this until I get to Wifi, so I am afraid you will have to make do with my monochrome notes for now!
Saturday
Leave Lalibela, heading West to Gonder where I had heard there were troubles but enquiry suggested it was ok to go now.
Rubbish breakfast
Cold morning at 2500 metres
Immediately make a wrong turn and have to turn the bike on a gravel slope, and repeat this a couple more times

Fortunately today’s ride of 360 kms will have less than 20 kms of piste ...but I was still pretty tired by 4 pm!
Good to see Chinese engineers out supervising new roads building...
The odd isolated roundabout in middle of nowhere
Then I finally Rejoin the tarmac and see red hand
Decide I have enough petrol and head off west...then second thought and turn around and fill up at black market...no more water than regular stuff! Just dearer but still only £/litre or so
Glad I did as it was another 150 miles before any petrol and I would have been worrying about running out!
Then get to turnoff North up the mountain to Gondar: it's a terrible muddy mess and locals say it's another 6-7 kms of dirt...I am knackered and ask around. Eventually someone says (in Amharic/ English) ‘or you could take the bypass ‘! Which I find...12 kms of lovely tarmac up the mountain too city and I treat myself to the lovely Inn of Four Sisters. Turns out mine host is Belfast/Ethiopian Chelsea supprter! Good to see that the conflict of a few weeks ago seems to have subsided. (Referring to Gondar, not Chelsea!)
Early to bed after spaghetti with vegetables and a Fanta...living the dream!
Have spent most of the day between 2500 metres and 3,300 metres so it has been cold which is also tiring
Sunday: a spot of fettling and tourism:
Wake early and visit beautiful and very well attended Selassie church but resist the inevitable ask for money to enter and view from outside. Ditto later the Castle!
Everywhere worshippers throng in the customary white wool shawl.
Then I go back to the hotel work on the leaking filler cap, with Emily my 5 year old helper in attendance.
Finally and with trepidation I set off, aiming for Metame on the Sudan border, but keeping an eye fixed on the filler as it has been pulsing alarmingly. But the test ride showed it would stay out although on actual 200 km ride west it still leaked.
Tony has warned me that things were tense on the road northwest and mentioned one of his tours had problems earlier in the year. He said I may end up getting a security escort.
And indeed I saw armed soldiers everywhere in the villages but experienced no problems. I was slightly rattled to see the buses I was overtaking had soldiers with guns on the roof, a bit Wild West style.
Also a dramatic moment with an errant cow which lead to some unplanned off-roading but I kept the bike upright . Amazing how much faster a speed seems off the road than on the tarmac!
But arrived safely at Mrs Firewhot's wonderful establishment. A lovely lady and a warm welcome which included laundry and an Ethiopian supper and several coffees which she cooked from green beans beside me.
(She also had one of her girls wash my socks for me).
And the warmth down at 800 metres, quite a change and some mile and a half lower (2,400 metres) than yesterday. Will need to acclimate to this again as the last three weeks has all been at altitude.
With that I turned in Sunday night, conscious I had a challenging day trying to cross the Sudan border without the necessary Customs paperwork!
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