M’off…. Brittany calling yet again…

Sorry Ev!

Is that windscreen cover still giving you some joy in the van?

Thank you Tim. I’ve used it a few times now, mainly when leaving the van parked at the workshop for the day in full sun.

Great write up, it’s an area I know quite well from cycling holidays, now you’ve got me looking at ferry bookings !!!

Glad this report has given you some inspiration. I know some would say I go into the details too much, but it is these details that make people want to go and explore these places and parts of the world for themself.

Over the years I have picked up on things from reading various ride reports and places that I wanted (and still do) to go too visit/explore.

Whether these reports are written in great detail to draw you in, to make you feel like you are there or just a bunch of pictures lobbed at the forum pages with mere handful of random words thrown for some kind of context, well, It all matters nonetheless.

Some blokes on here have been places we’ve been too, and perhaps this was many moons ago, but they can’t go there again, for whatever the reason, be it health, age related, hung up their leather for good, funds not available reasons etc. It makes them relive their past and live again a little, see the change of the surroundings they once visited. It is this the reason why I bother to type these reports out. It gives me pleasure in doing so, knowing that it makes others enjoy it too. Yes I make mistakes, my spelling perhaps isn’t up-to snuff for some, but it is all me all original without any of wizardry (Ai) that is taking the world of creativity over.
I am not a writer, I frankly do not read literature so to speak. I struggle to stay focused and to switch off from all other things whilst trying to read. Motorcycle riding on the other hand does exactly that for me, it makes me focus, it takes away all the daily worries away and makes me feel free. This freedom in turn does allow me to express my experiences in my essays ride reports.

Pardon me for a long post. I’ll update the thread tomorrow, as I am simply knackered after another 500+ miles and being in the saddle from 05:45 French time, through to 19:05 local (20:05 FT).
 
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Thank you Tim. I’ve used it a few times now, mainly when leaving the van parked at the workshop for the day in full sun.



Glad this report has given you some inspiration. I know some would say I go into the details too much, but it is these details that make people want to go and explore these places and parts of the world for themself.

Over the years I have picked up on things from reading various ride reports and places that I wanted (and still do) to go too visit/explore.

Whether these reports are written in great detail to draw you in, to make you feel like you are there or just a bunch of pictures lobbed at the forum pages with mere handful of random words thrown for some kind of context, well, It all matters nonetheless.

Some blokes on here have been places we’ve been too, and perhaps this was many moons ago, but they can’t go there again, for whatever the reason, be it health, age related, hung up their leather for good, funds not available reasons etc. It makes them relive their past and live again a little, see the change of the surroundings they once visited. It is this the reason why I bother to type these reports out. It gives me pleasure in doing so, knowing that it makes others enjoy it too. Yes I make mistakes, my spelling perhaps isn’t up-to snuff for some, but it is all me all original without any of wizardry (Ai) that is taking the world of creativity over.
I am not a writer, I frankly do not read literature so to speak. I struggle to stay focused and to switch off from all other things whilst trying to read. Motorcycle riding on the other hand does exactly that for me, it makes me focus, it takes away all the daily worries away and makes me feel free. This freedom in turn does allow me to express my experiences in my essays ride reports.

Pardon me for a long post. I’ll update the thread tomorrow, as I am simply knackered after another 500+ miles and being in the saddle from 05:45 French time, through to 19:05 local (20:05 FT).
It’s a perfect balance of detail and entertainment from my perspective, the double act just adds to the enjoyment!
 
Ev, you have it right. For those who cannot ride, such reports keep the candle burning and the desire to ride again alive.
Not least as we humans are naturally copycats* curious creatures. We wish to explore it for ourselves and make it even better.

*Boffins in labs creating miracle medicines, meanwhile, chimps living in the jungle…
 
Blooming early rise at 05:00, we on the roar at exactly 05:45 as planned. An hour later, I see Captain gone, and for the rest of the day, I am a Billy no mates.

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He will soon be sat comfy aboard…

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… waiting to get a soaking for last 5 minutes of the trip, once he is off the boat at St Peter Port . ☔😬
It has been dry the entire trip, but last few miles will be soggy.

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Meanwhile, I am off to find me a coffee spot and some brek.

The local fishermen are just in with their catch, first customer waiting already patiently…

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Followed by their regulars.

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More later
Wednesday Morning… Continued…

Having watched Captain get on the boat, and tested the operating range of the cardo intercom, I have plotted a very simple A—> Broute straight to Coquilles, while avoiding Tolls. MRA has Spat this at me.

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I set off, but first I have a mission to fulfil, having promised my wifey that I would bring her back something that she loves. I’ve done it before, last time being in October of last year. She loved it not least as it was a nice surprise.

Time to find that bakery inside the walled city of Saint-Malo.

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It is naturally Chouquettes as seen in the bowl on top of the counter (right most). I’ve asked the lady for 10 of them and a couple of fresh croissants.

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Goods paid for, I set off. The weather was closing in on me, so there was no time to hang around.
Having pulled in at the fuel station, I topped of the fuel, just whisker over 10l. That’s plenty to get me going for the next 240-250 miles.

I get back to the junction of D137 and N176 and eventually merging onto N175 North, heading towards Avranches.
As N175 does become A84, I can’t help myself but notice that the rain clouds age getting closer. on the fly (cruise control on) i fire up MyRadar app, and can see that I am headed straight for the nice bit of heavy rain halfway to Caen and beyond, if I was to stick with the planned route that MRA has spat at me earlier. I make on the fly desi’s ion to peel off East onto back roads and head for Brecey, then Flers and Falaise as MY radar was suggesting that I would more than likely to avoid the weather altogether or at ther very least the worst of it.

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I reach Brecey, just as I passed the town name plaque, it started to lightly drizzle. I pressed of further along, in hope to outrun the weather, By the time I reached Flers, the weather was certainly closing in, as drizzle had become a bit more persistent, but I wouldn’t call it rain just yet. the tiny droplets weren’t making the noise on my visor as would proper rain drops do. I have polished the visor on my helmet with a little Shift-It Polish, knowing that I was likely to be riding in the wet. The stuff works well, beading the rain droplets off and blowing them off as the winds rushing over the visor. The little bottle has lasted me now for well over 5 years.
By now, the roads were getting bit more wet, and the smell of petrichor, was very pleasant indeed. Some very pleasant roads have been encountered, some less so.
Halfway (ish) between Flers and Falaise I’ve pulled over again, the rain hasn’t yet quite reached there, so I’ve fired-up the MyRadar app again to see which way I should be pointing the bike at, to avoid the worst of it. The weather sure was racing me. I still point the bike at Falaise and then towards Lisieux, in hope that the patchwork of dark blue and green will have phased over by then.

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By the time I reached Liseux the rain was a fair way in the behind me and to my left. Roads bone dry, but the sky was threatening nonetheless. The temperature has dropped to 11ºc at one point to before I got to Liseux, so I pulled of the main road into the forest along the logging track just south of Saine and a little east of Ruoan. I was shivering, despite wearing decent amount of clobber. It was thin merino socks and Rokker Revolution waterproof jeans (membrane on a bare leg) that made me feel cold. I’ve dug out my thermal leggings and thick (costco issue) merino blend boot socks. Having changed into these, I started to feel a bit warmer.

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I soon returned tot he main road, where a very short distance away I have spotted a sign for a lay-by with a viewpoint. The viewpoint however was signposted with another sign upon entering lay-by. It was 350m away along the path. Bike abandoned, I’ve trotted of. It was a good excuse to get of the bike after fairly lengthy stint in the saddle, not least as it was dry, rain behind name and taking a little walk had helped the blood move and warm me up in the process.

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I love a nice viewpoint, even on a grey day like this one was.

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… and a little orientation map…

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… view observed, I must head for the riverside. I turn off the main road some 200 meters lather, riding down the hill toward the river, as I look tot he left through the dense tree line, I get confused, why I am seeing a “white apartment block”. Afterall I haven’t seen it at the view point which is now above my head. I get down into the small village at the river side, turn left and i see this HUGE “white apartment block” floating down the river Seine towards Le Havre.
I chase after it to get ahead, so that i could take a nice and clear pictures rather than taking them in and amounts the surrounding houses.

The floating “White Apartment Block” is MV ASUKA 2, a Japanese, Yokohama based Luxury Cruise Ship, on its around ther world voyage, having previously stopped in Rouen (only a short distance away from where I was) and now was heading for London’s Tilbury Dock.

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It was impressive to see a ship of such scale on a river this narrow, that I will soon be crossing in around 30 seconds flat.

You can probably just about see to the left of the red & white pillon a (foc) little blue ferry, I was headed for it.

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Here she is! A nice and what is looking to be brand new little ferry. Taking 10 minutes between each crossing to load-unload and do the crossing itself.

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MV ASUKA 2 now disappearing around the river bend in the distance as I the crossing is getting under way.

To be continued…
 
… Continued…

No later than a couple of minutes go by and I ride off the ferry and onto main road. There to my right I notice people having their picnic lunch and ample amount of tables under the trees. I was looking for just the space like it to have my lunch too and this was just a perfect timing, as the clock tower somewhere in the distance had struck 13;30.

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Coffee on, I take out the saved provisions that’s we had purchased in Brittany a fed days previously. This was a couple of hard boiled eggs, some onion crisps, a handful of olives, topped and tailed radishes and cheeses onion sandwich on sourdough bred. Excellent and quiet, it was, Rain has stayed south of me now. I had nothing to worry about.

Lunch done, I pack up and get underway along side of the river heading north along the river bank. Lovely scenery, with chalk cliffs to my left.

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My next planned stop was Intermarche fuel station, Where I filled up for the remainder of my journey all the way home. I had a distance of 138 miles to go the the Chunell and another ~100 miles to cover in the UK.

Having filled up, I reviewed the route and timing. By the time I had qued for fuel, I’ve lost best part of 10+ minutes, and the lady in the payment kiosk had shut the blind, chucked the “Ferme” sign up against the window), locked the door and presumably called it a day. Now I hate the preauthorisation payments at the fuel pumps on my HSBC Global Money card. In this instance that i us exactly whatI had to put up with, a €150 preauthorisation, for a €31 worth of fuel. I am still waiting for this “pending” payment to get cleared. Now I do not store money in that account for the forthcoming trips like some people do. I load it up with what I feel will be plenty for the trip and go. In this instance, I thought that €600 would suffice for this trip. However if I had filled up at the robotic fuel statoin twice today, I wouldn’t have had enough credit on the card to preauthorise the payment. Why can’t this be processed a bit more quicker? I don’t like using my alternative credit card, not least as you get shite exchange rate and the dreaded “non sterling fee” on top. Argh….

I decided that I was risking missing my check-in and essentially my crossing too with only 7 minutes to spare before the official check-in time was up at 17:20.
I started a new MRA route from A—>B via the motorways while avoiding Tolls. I was only a very short distance away from the A28 heading north to Abbeville, where I would come off it and ride the D1001 along side of the A16 Peage section all the way to Boulogne-sur-Mere.

I keep checking my surrounding for weather. It was bucketing properly just north of Saint-Valero-sur-Somme

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It was bone dry where I was though. It was quite a strange feeling actually riding along the wast open farmland, one minute you’d be blasted with a westerly cool wind pushed by the rain, and the next you’d be blasted from the east/south east with much warmer wind.

I had pressed on since leaving the fuel station, MRA informing me well in advance of the “High Risk Area”, so I was prepared to be on my best behaviour :D and hopefully lack of 📸 whilst chipping away at the remains time and my ETA to the terminal was now on the cards for 16:50, half and hour before checking would be closing. I get held up in the traffic at the junction for A16 near Boulogne-sur-Mere. I’ve lost 9 minutes in that gridlock of trucks, horse boxes, you name it and I swear it was there. Not easy to filter, and Frenchies wouldn’t budge as they normally do the right, leaving you space to pass, reasonably safely. I get onto the A16 and open up the taps, a little 😝.
I soon make up 4 minutes as I arrived at the check-in robot at exactly 16:55. I once again do get offered an earlier crossing.

Passport checks done, I am straight away headed for the queuing barriers.
Here I meet a couple of blokes from t’Derbyshire. One is in his late 50s on a Yamaha Tracer 700 I think and the other I’d say in his early to mid 30’s, riding a RE Continental GT. A nod at them and them back at me. That was a mistake I come to regret.
The elder bloke just out the blue coms up with this story and starts to tell me about his Peage booth experience he had and how a Motorhome had reversed into him, because he had stopped behind said MOHO and the bloke decided to reverse out the lane and try another booth, as this lane apparently wasn’t spitting out the ticket at him. The MOHO (according to him) “had pushed him back some 10m, whilst he was blasting his horn, where eventually the driver had realised something was wrong and ended up being perched him self on this blokes front wheel, with the MOHO’ rear wheels being completely of the ground!” The young one doesn’t say a word, just smiles (allot) must be wind :D or he does knife that the bloke is making the story up, whilst I think to myself “Great story pall to tell your grand kids’ laugh it off, then make my excuses that I need to check my route home, send an email, change clocks from KM to MPH etc and basically ignore them for the remainder of the crossing.

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I did actually do many of those things, including checking the weather and the big blob of yellow weather hanging between Folkestone and Dover. There is also allot of weather forming on the south side of the M25, so I make a decision to go over the Dartford crossing and over the top bit of M25. There is hardly any difference for me in distance whichever way I go. I think it is less than 5 miles.

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Whilst waiting to be loaded, this had rocked up. Some value is in there.

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We soon get loaded, once cagers have been let on. Departure is on time. I am happy to stretch my legs after hooning for two and a half hours along French countryside.

I break out my second (posher) sandwich made of cheese, onion and tomato. I finish it off with an apple, that I have been carting about ever since I left home five days earlier.

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From a distance (I did not want them to smell the onion in my sarnie) I observe this Swiss fellow chatting with these two t’Derbyshire bound fellows whilst I tuck into my sarnie. I think he too bails out on them. As he’s walking by and I stuff my face with my sarnie, I greet him in my rather veeeery rusty German, he responds back in German “wie geht es Ihnen? with a smile. I respond “Gut” but make him aware that I can understand german better than I can speak it. After all I haven’t spoken it in great anger in over 22 years. We engage in conversation, about our travels. He’s from Southern (Italian) poart of Switzerland, having traveled from there to his place in Tuscany, then back up via Austria Germany, Luxembourg,etc. to the chunell. He was on his way to Tottenham (north London) where hi RUssian girlfriend does live, as he had some good news for her about becoming a Swiss citizen. He’s riding a 2016 R1200 RS with nearly 100k KM on the clock. He said he wanted GS, but found it too tall for him. I have warned him about leaving his bike unattended in London and that he must secure it, lock it etc. He replied “I know, it was already stolen last year” and that he found it the very same day. He did go for a walk around the area, and there is was covered up only 5 minutes away from where it was token from.
We carry on chatting, then before we know it, the train does come to a halt.We have reached our destination. Astride the bikes, we are underway, breathing in the fumes left behind by the cars before us. Lovely.

We got spat out onto absolutely soaking wet M20, with clear sky ahead and a huge black cloud behind us and to the left. It makes for a challenging ride, with setting sun striaght in my eyes, with considerable amount of spray being kicked up by the traffic in front. It must’ve just stopped raining, it was that wet. I soon set cruise control to 75 mph, with Swiss fellow following me behind. The other two had made arrangements to stay the night in Ashford, before heading home the following morning. I peel off onto A229 (then swiss fella carrying on on M20) then M2, which helped me to avoid getting soaked by the cloud hanging over the M20/M25 junction up ahead. I never see the swiss fellow again.
I filter throughout traffic at Dartford crossing, and soon make good progress, My ETA when leaving the terminal, was 19:37, I end up arriving home at 19:05.
I greet my wife and handover her the now not so fresh Choquettes that I had ferried for over 480 miles all the way from Saint-Malo. She doesn’t hang around and refused me to take a picture of her, as she knew it end up on here, and she wasn’t in her best dress up.

Then Olivia had to do her bit of inspection.

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I had covered just under 545 miles in total to get home. With a constant threat of getting soaked, I was more focused on getting away from it, rather than paying attention on exploring. Still it was pleasant and adventurous enough to maker me feel content and seeing visiting previously unseen parts of France.

Thank you to all of you who have given me ideas over the years from your own ride reports, as well as mentions in person.

Thank you to @Arsey for inviting me over, showing me around some places I haven’t been before, a surprise overnight trip to La Rochelle and for putting me up at his gaff. It was a good giggle, even if I could have made it much easier on myself, by choosing a ferry crossing instead. But as it was mentioned somewhere, I have been saving my £20 (£40 exchanged for Le Shuttle voucher) Tesco vouchers that I was planing to use to travel to Austria with my wife this coming bank Holiday weekend to visit my school mate, she, her partner and they dog Luna, have moved from Dublin to Vienna and had invited us to come and visit.
Unfortunately, wifey was out of work from late May (days after we came back from flooded Cochem) until early December last year and having started her new job, she has six month probation to follow through with, that is hopefully happening with a positive outcome in early June. So she did not want to take the risk and rightly so.
Anyway, the tesco vouchers were due to expire at the end of this month and I also had a £30 compensation voucher from Le Shuttle for delaying our crossing (Austrian trip) last year by I think two and a half hours. It was Wapping that given me the idea to claim, so I did as did he for his delayed crossing just a little while before. So there you have it, my crossing had cost me only £48 and I got to see the parts of France I would otherwise never had seen.

I have arrived home on fumes, having covered in total just over 1812 miles.

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That’s it folks.

Till next time.

Ev
 
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Good concise report, Ev 😜
We had a giggle and a bit of hooning . Amazing that the Voge didn’t break down , being Chinese shite !! 😜
Not sure I’d add 600 miles to my journey to use £30 of Tesco vouchers , especially as the ferry I took to Guernsey normally continues to Poole, arriving at 1300 !
Although , as it was a Wednesday , that was the only day when it doesn’t continue to Poole and goes to Jersey instead .
We now have Brittany Ferries serving Guernsey and DFDS serving Jersey , with currently one weekly inter island service !!!
But at least all of our St Malo ferries are now direct , whereas previously many routed via Jersey , where you had to disembark on foot to clear customs then re-board again .
A right PITA !
 
Shut at that time in the morning, I’m afraid.
Well I was looking forward to it, not least as I wanted I see what their coffee was like. Hey ho, it never crossed my mind to stop there on my way back up, but then again, I’ve lost a bit of time in getting away (inland) from the rather grim looking, very dark and very wet cloud that was chasing matter me to my left.
 


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