M’off…… Pas de Calais

Odds ‘n sods

The railway station / crossing at Cassel, which the British troops blocked with two locomotives, in an attempt to slow the German drive to encircle the town in 1940:

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The former border check point and customs house between France and Belgium, rendered rightly obsolete with the EU’s Freedom of Movement, enjoyed by its multiple millions of citizens but denied to the UK:

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Lots is spouted on this forum (often by bods who never seem to go anywhere) that Europe is becoming homogenised into some single federal state, nationalities being eroded. 10 seconds will show that the individual nations are still fiercely proud of their countries. A Belgian considers themselves no more French or Italian, than a proud Scot or Welshman, considers themselves to be English or Greek.

They have managed to preserve their national and regional identities, whilst still embracing the EU, for all its faults and foibles. They are richer for it, whilst we are poorer


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I tripped over this seemingly very popular lunch spot.

Just a smidge north of Poperinge, so useful perhaps for anyone doing WW1 stuff.

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Here’s a right-on sister, living in St Omer:

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And a very friendly cat, which lives next door, along with a garden full of very strange ornaments:

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St Omer cathedral has scrubbed up very well:

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Very interesting Richard thanks for sharing - I enjoyed that!

Enjoyed that ta very much. 👍

Thank you both.

It’s surprising how much you can see and do in two days, without a huge amount of effort, beyond a bit of Googling. That it can be done on a motorcycle that is cheap and decidedly unpowerful (compared to many) is just a bonus. That said, it’d be good in a car, too or (I guess) on a bicycle.
 
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They have managed to preserve their national and regional identities, whilst still embracing the EU, for all its faults and foibles. They are richer for it, whilst we are poorer
We're poorer because of socialism (we've had over 30 years of it)... not from leaving the EU. The UK never 'fitted-in" with mainland Europe for multiple reasons... one being that the British always obeyed the rules, whereas the likes of France, Spain, Italy etc. simply worked out ways to circumvent them... just sayin'
 
We're poorer because of socialism (we've had over 30 years of it)... not from leaving the EU. The UK never 'fitted-in" with mainland Europe for multiple reasons... one being that the British always obeyed the rules, whereas the likes of France, Spain, Italy etc. simply worked out ways to circumvent them... just sayin'
our loss...
 
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I'm surprised someone didn't have a moan at you for parking on the road. They don't seem to like it at all..
 
Now to think about my next short hop across the water, but it won’t be for a week or two.
 
Safe trip home. An interesting trip, especially the railway gun which I have built a model of in the past. On Dorking high street there is a very good model shop, in their window they have a 4ft long model of the Schwerer Gustav, railway gun. The largest artillery piece ever made, the gun itself weighed 1100 tonnes and fired an 800mm shell that weighed 7 tonnes to a maximum range of 40km. It is an impressive model. I would love to know if the actual railway carriage is still in existence. The Imperial War Museum has a shell from the Gustav.
IIRC, wasn't something similar used in the Franco-Prussian war and the Great War to shell Paris?
 
The site is definitely worth visiting and takes about an hour, if you read the well displayed information boards. The boards, whilst giving the site’s purpose and construction, also tell the visitor about the bats which overwinter in the tunnels (the site closes over tge period, to leave the bats in peace) and the geology of tge chalk into which the tunnels and shafts are carved. Interesting, to me at least, is they they can tell the multiple thousands of years over which the billions of tiny creatures lived (their shells form the metres thick chalk, the same as White Cliffs at Dover) and the global temperatures at the time. In essence ,the world and its seas were warm when the tiny creatures died and sank to firm the chalk. It then got cooler and a layer of what became flint covered them. It then warmed and the chalk restarts, then cools, the flint layer reappearing. You can see tge layers in the tunnels:

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The galleries end with a small exhibition, telling the story of the Canadian army, which landed on D-Day and fought along the coast, all the way to Holland, to liberate the Channel ports. Their struggles are generally overlooked. I plan on visiting their cemetery (I have been past it lots of times, but never stopped) and have a read of the two volume history of their endeavours.

From the V3 site, it was D roads back to St Omer.

A simple but good day out.
GEOLOGY!!!

It gets everywhere…

(Nice trip btw.)
 
It's funny that due to the Great War and WWII most of us have a lot in common with Northern France, quite a few of our Fathers and Grandfathers ended up there at some time in the 20th century fighting for a common cause.
 
We're poorer because of socialism (we've had over 30 years of it)... not from leaving the EU. The UK never 'fitted-in" with mainland Europe for multiple reasons... one being that the British always obeyed the rules, whereas the likes of France, Spain, Italy etc. simply worked out ways to circumvent them... just sayin'
That's just a trope I'm afraid. Quite often our mainland Europe neighbours were complying with the rules (particularly environmental, animal welfare and food regulations in my field of experience) when UK companies and agencies were doing their best to avoid or circumvent them.
 
That’s the Westvleteren brewery, their beer is only available from there, it’s a fine brew. Not far from there is the St Bernadus brewery with an awesome rooftop café amongst the hop fields. Also well worth a visit.
 


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