Two go Uralling to the seaside.
So, there we were, one Sunday evening. Pip had just had a call from a cousin telling us she was getting married in Cornwall in June. A friend e-mailed us the same evening inviting us to a pic-nic on Dartmoor. The wedding was at one end of the week, the pic-nic at the other. Sounded like a fine excuse for a holiday to us. Then Pip said “Why don’t we take the Ural?!” What a girl!
Now, Pip usually needs a car full of stuff just for a weekend. So how was she going to manage with just this little case for a whole week of Cornish Uralling, plus a family wedding?

I still have no idea, but she did, and looked fab too.
The whole idea was a trip as far from our usual ‘get there as quickly as we can’ runs as possible. That meant planning a route that involved ‘red A roads if we must, yellow B roads and those little black and white roads.’ No boring trunk roads or motorways for us. We had plenty of time to wend and wind and we were damn well going to enjoy it.
So we did. We found backlanes and clattered down them all the way from Bampton to just west of Bristol where we found this:

Time for a cuppa - and THE best Scotch egg from the farm shop next door.


They were selling an appropriate sort of water for sidecarists too:

Refreshed, we headed onwards to Exmoor where we were staying our first night. No point in hammering along, is there? We thought it would be fun to stay in a couple of Youth Hostels on the way down. When I cycle toured as a teenager, they were always great places. Now, with a few years and a few posh hotels, they’re still great. Although rather small. I’m sure we had more room on the last Brittany Ferry we travelled on:

But breakfast was good (as was the previous evening’s Venison Pie and pints of Otter at the White Horse), so we planned a few more windy lanes:

Somewhat greyer skies today - a foretaste of the weather to come.


But Pip was enjoying herself:

So all was well. Bear in mind the furthest she’d been in the sidecar before was a thirty mile round trip to Lechlade and Burford! What a girl!
And soon we managed to hit Devon:

We dropped in at Barnstaple to use the cashpoint:

Strangely, we got accosted by Christians giving out socks. No, really. It was Fathers’ Day, so they’d taken to the streets and were handing out socks to passers-by. “God so loved the world that he sent his only sock...” Nice people.
We also found this place - the Boston Tea Party cafe. Brilliant grub and another much-needed cuppa: http://www.bostonteaparty.co.uk/
We set off again, clacking down more backlanes that got tighter and steeper. Before long it was time for another rest:

Pip was still happy:

And so was I, even if we were completely (intentionally) lost:

What a bloody ridiculously gorgeous place Devon is:

We headed off to find the coast road to Tintagel, where we were staying our second night:


They seem to do hills properly around here. 650 isn’t really a lot of engine to be pulling two of us and luggage around slopes like this:

And drum brakes that are more for show than action are a little fear-inducing on descents like this:

So it was time for a bit of spannering overlooking the sea:


Not exactly a hardship.
More anon... Time for another cuppa.

So, there we were, one Sunday evening. Pip had just had a call from a cousin telling us she was getting married in Cornwall in June. A friend e-mailed us the same evening inviting us to a pic-nic on Dartmoor. The wedding was at one end of the week, the pic-nic at the other. Sounded like a fine excuse for a holiday to us. Then Pip said “Why don’t we take the Ural?!” What a girl!
Now, Pip usually needs a car full of stuff just for a weekend. So how was she going to manage with just this little case for a whole week of Cornish Uralling, plus a family wedding?

I still have no idea, but she did, and looked fab too.
The whole idea was a trip as far from our usual ‘get there as quickly as we can’ runs as possible. That meant planning a route that involved ‘red A roads if we must, yellow B roads and those little black and white roads.’ No boring trunk roads or motorways for us. We had plenty of time to wend and wind and we were damn well going to enjoy it.
So we did. We found backlanes and clattered down them all the way from Bampton to just west of Bristol where we found this:

Time for a cuppa - and THE best Scotch egg from the farm shop next door.


They were selling an appropriate sort of water for sidecarists too:

Refreshed, we headed onwards to Exmoor where we were staying our first night. No point in hammering along, is there? We thought it would be fun to stay in a couple of Youth Hostels on the way down. When I cycle toured as a teenager, they were always great places. Now, with a few years and a few posh hotels, they’re still great. Although rather small. I’m sure we had more room on the last Brittany Ferry we travelled on:

But breakfast was good (as was the previous evening’s Venison Pie and pints of Otter at the White Horse), so we planned a few more windy lanes:

Somewhat greyer skies today - a foretaste of the weather to come.


But Pip was enjoying herself:

So all was well. Bear in mind the furthest she’d been in the sidecar before was a thirty mile round trip to Lechlade and Burford! What a girl!
And soon we managed to hit Devon:

We dropped in at Barnstaple to use the cashpoint:

Strangely, we got accosted by Christians giving out socks. No, really. It was Fathers’ Day, so they’d taken to the streets and were handing out socks to passers-by. “God so loved the world that he sent his only sock...” Nice people.
We also found this place - the Boston Tea Party cafe. Brilliant grub and another much-needed cuppa: http://www.bostonteaparty.co.uk/
We set off again, clacking down more backlanes that got tighter and steeper. Before long it was time for another rest:

Pip was still happy:

And so was I, even if we were completely (intentionally) lost:

What a bloody ridiculously gorgeous place Devon is:

We headed off to find the coast road to Tintagel, where we were staying our second night:


They seem to do hills properly around here. 650 isn’t really a lot of engine to be pulling two of us and luggage around slopes like this:

And drum brakes that are more for show than action are a little fear-inducing on descents like this:

So it was time for a bit of spannering overlooking the sea:


Not exactly a hardship.
More anon... Time for another cuppa.





















































































