Wednesday 12th May 2010
(Sorry about lots of text in the first half...there weren`t many photo opportunities on the motorway!)
Somewhat later than the advertised 7am the doors finally opened on our strange new world.
Well....it may have been a foreign country but there was nothing strange to us about grey leaden skies and some determined looking drizzle.
Ho hum....hey,we`re on holiday!!
Peter moved over to let me pass and I lead us out amidst the soot belching diesel lorries and coaches whilst checking the strange looking roadsigns.
Compared to the oh so familiar France,even the font style was different,but the signage was good and we were heading in the right direction.
Initial impressions of Holland were good,despite the weather.
Everywhere was neat and tidy as we followed the lorries along our first dyke top roads.....the road is a good ten or more feet above the surrounding fields and rows of greenhouses and agricultural wholesalers.
Numerous cyclepaths were in evidence,with mopeds apparently allowed to use them too.
Initial impressions of riding a UK handed combo on 'the wrong side of the road' weren`t quite as bad as I`d imagined it to be......but a frustrating aspect was the difficulty of seeing past the lorries in front of me,in order to check for road signs,because the narrow roads made it unsafe to move the combo over to the left to see as it would have put the sidecar in the path of oncoming traffic.
The only options were to drop back more than normal....or to drift onto the verge to see past on the right hand side,and that was potentially hazardous when your narrow road is ten feet above everything else!
Gradually the spray lessened and the road opened up.
Before long we were about to join the first motorway...the A20 signed for Rotterdam.
The first bit of motorway wasn`t as manic or suicidal feeling as ours,and I felt happy to adjust to the sensation of Uralling 'over here' while checking the route.......but it soon started busying up.
Many major routes have European wide 'E numbers' as well as the national 'A numbers' so one motorway spanning more than one country will remain the 'E whatever' from start to finish while also having for instance 'A 123' in one country and 'A 456' in the next,etc.
Confusingly the Dutch seem to prefer the 'E numbers' so I had to scan for the E31 to make sure I was on the A20 !
Likewise,our tunnel route of the A4 was the E19 and the ensuing A15 was the E31,and so on.....all just what you want when on 'the wrong side' and looking out for traffic on all sides of you and also ensuring your companion is still behind you!
We were approaching the merge of motorways for the tunnel section and the traffic was quite thick and heavy....I was scanning for the expected road numbers whilse counting down the junction numbers until the point to veer right (or South) for the tunnel.
Just at the expected point I was suddenly confronted with nine lanes of motorway branching in three different directions.....and none of them looked right!!
The road numbers didn`t tally...the next place names weren`t as expected and I couldn`t see any mention of the tunnel!
Call it unsafe..call it reckless...call it illegal,but I stopped on the painted chevrons where one set of three lanes drifted off into the distance while the traffic thundered past on the left and right.
Peter pulled up behind and I gave a Gallic shrug to indicate I wasn`t too sure.
The momentary stop allowed me to assess the lie of the roads and to sort the right one out........my brain had just been trying to do too much at once.
I felt like punching the air as we rode through the tunnel and then merged with the A15....oops,I meant E31...oh,you know what I mean.
So then....tricky bit done....we`re on the right road in the right direction.
Traffic is lighter....but quite a few lorries.
Clear road visible ahead of the slow moving lorry I`m following....indicate left,check mirror...mirror clear,do 'lifesaver' (look over outside shoulder)...move to left and smartly accelerate past lorry in the 2nd lane.
Check that lorry has been cleared by a good margin for Peter....check mirror,do lifesaver on inside and move into 1st lane.
Check mirror...no Peter.
Am closing in on another lorry but I stay between the two and move to the right verge in order to try and see behind the lorry that`s following me.
Just manage to see Peter sat behind it,and as I`m now closing on the second lorry it`s time to repeat the overtake procedure.
It was safe to pass this lorry,which to my mind said that it was safe for Peter to overtake the original one...but he didn`t.
Bear in mind that I wasn`t exceeding 65mph at any point and mostly at a needle`s width below 60mph in that 'sweet spot' which Dee has.
Peter appeared to be resolutely staying at around 50mph or possibly less judging by how close behind him a lorry was and I wondered if it was to prove a point from the discussion on the ferry.
Certainly he wasn`t trying to draw my attention to any defect with his bike so it must have been through choice.
I`m sorry but I wouldn`t have felt safe in such close company with big vehicles and that`s why I pass them whenever I can.
Predictably,before long Peter and I had quite a distance between us with numerous lorries and vans in between,and as the traffic was building up again on the approach to another six lane merge,it wasn`t safe to be gazing in my mirrors for him.
Finally,after a couple more motorway crossovers and merges,I couldn`t see him at all......not even after pulling over onto the hard shoulder for a while.
It wasn`t practical or even safe to attempt to go back looking for him,and it would have been foolish to guess at a junction he may have taken in error so seeing as we each knew where the rally was on Thursday it was best to just carry onwards.
I was having lunch in a services near Maastricht at 1pm when I got a text off Peter saying he`d missed a junction and was on the road to Namur.....and shall we regroup in Bouillon that evening?
I agreed,saying to meet at the very distinctive roundabout that looks like a chessboard near the middle of the town,by a stone bridge.
After the motorway,I took the N30 towards Bastogne until I saw a sign for the 'Ardennes Tourist Route' which got me on the N89 headed to Bouillon and then I rode through lovely fresh smelling forests on superb road surfaces.
It was in the Ardennes that the Battle of the Bulge took place in World War 2.
And it was on this day that Russian Iron met American Iron.
This was in St. Hubert (I seem to remember) and commemorates the liberation of the town by American forces in 1945.
Here`s my first view of the town..........the tank was encountered later atop the hill to the right.
I stopped on the outskirts of Bouillon to fill up with petrol and to have a loo/coffee stop.
I also decided to give Dee a good clean while I had a rest....she was rotten dirty from all the motorway spray and the wet forest roads,but the day was now dry.
I like my bikes clean...and it lets me check all is well too.
Additionally it frees off stiff joints and exercises cramped limbs.
That`s my excuse and I`m sticking to it!
While doing this,I heard a nice sounding twin cylinder bike approaching and looked up to see what it was.
It was a Ural combo!
A Blurple one...........it was Peter!!!
Five minutes later and we`re both reunited and shaking hands at the 'chessboard roundabout'.
The building opposite is the Hotel de la Poste but Peter muttered something about it 'Looking a bit expensive'......and mumbled about seeing a hostel sign.
Well,I`ve never been in a hostel in my life,and wasn`t about to now.
We found the Tourist Information Office just behind the Hotel de la Poste and they marked a map for us showing the lesser priced hotels.
Note 'Lesser Priced' as opposed to 'Cheap'.
We ended up traipsing around Bouillon and up a a massive hill that nearly gave me a coronary (don`t ask why we didn`t ride...it 'seemed like a nice walk to stretch our legs' ) and finding a great looking and CHEAP place overlooking the town ......but it was closed !
Here`s a view from beside it...shows the height we`d walked up to (in bike kit !) and also shows how lovely Bouillon is.
On the other side of the river valley is a splendid castle.
Well,we got down the hill quicker than we climbed it,and asked in a tavern if they had rooms for the night.
They didn`t but said the most reasonable rooms in town were likely still available.
In...yep,you guessed it....in the Hotel de la Poste !!!!
We got a splendid room each for 65 Euro with buffet breakfast and an underground automatic gated garge 'cell' for the Urals.
One wonderful shower later and I went out scouting for likely good eating places.
Research done,I returned to our hotel and invested in a Belgian Trappist beer.
I said 'invested' because a glass of it cost 7 Euro !!
But it was worth every last cent.
I savoured my investment while Peter languished in a hot and restorative bath.......once fully recharged,he and I walked across the stone bridge and treated ourselves to a superb meal.
He had a salady thing while I got a 'Pizza Diabolo' which was entirely made on the premises and had such a delicate selection of peppers,chillies,onion and garlic that no one item overpowered the next.....delicious and perfect.
Our other discovery was the local Bouillon beer....well recommended.
We researched this over several glasses and each was as good as the previous!
As I`ve said,Bouillon is a lovely place.....especially by night.
Walking along the river bank to settle our meal,it looked as if the water under the bridge was crystal clear,and that you could see full channels for the water.
It was in fact the effect of perfect reflections.............
Not sure if it was the effect of the beers or the atmosphere of the place but I was in danger of getting all arty with my camera.
Did someone say beer ??
Come on Peter,let`s invest in more Trappist stuff at the hotel.......
Peter was happy to join me !
I must admit...it`s a damn fine hotel.....look at the bar area!
Hmm....Peter`s empty glass suggested that another Trappist beer was in order.
Things started to get a bit squiffy from here on.
Let`s see what Thursday brings eh ?
It should see us at the rally site !!
(To be continued soon)