Showing posts with label bicycle touring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycle touring. Show all posts

All good things

In retrospect, threads were becoming unwound.

A pain had developed in my right knee. The beauty of the surroundings muted by thoughts of a return to England for a friends wedding. Then news came that crossings at the Thai-Burma border had been suspended.

Listlessness reigned as the forward momentum that a bicycle craves stalled toward inertia.

I stood by a Wat scuffing stones and smoking. Decision eluding me. If in doubt keep on going had been my mantra but I lingered still. A bright hello interrupted my leaden musings as Thawi, a young monk, introduced himself and we got to chatting. On hearing my quandary he explained that it was simple. 'You can cross into Burma at Tachiliek' and offered to give me a lift to Chiang Mai. Just like that, the clouds cleared and the way forward was clear again. No need to retrace pedal strokes. Follow the stream, don't swim against it.


All that was left was to secure my faithful steed to his. 

Diptocarping around

Ko Lanta faded beyond the horizon as the last boat trip of this coastal diversion led me towards Trang.


Islands and time floated by 

A secret garden south of no man's land

Perlis passed in a procession of sun browned paddy fields. Irrigation channels became quiet tracks to traverse Malaysia's smallest and most northerly state. The capital Kangar slipped by without a sideways glance as I rushed towards my 26th border crossing.


Bicycle blitzkreig

Thai visa in hand I fled Pennang before dawn on the first free ferry to Butterworth. A quick roti chennai later, I gave the bike it's head and whistled north.


The countryside opened out into a patchwork of farms spread across lush riverland.


Trusty Steed

One thing has remained constant during my travels. 



And that most faithful friend is well deserving of an ode

A bicycle born near Bristol
Heard a silent starters pistol

Solvitur Velocipedo

Cocooned in my forest lair by day, by night holed up in the sequestered serenity of the campsite's riverside glade. I passed my time beneath the 1600m peaks that closet the table land. Five trails led away from my tent; four into the forest hills. The fifth, least used, led back to roads and noise and people. Occasional forays that way into the tourist hub of Tanah Rata's main drag to procure food a fleeting, grating reminder of the busy reality just a tree screen away.


The stillness couldn't last. Altitude is a a cyclists hardest won currency; the urge for a spendthrift splurge rose irresistibly. With a glorious descent promise-note burning a hole in my pocket I packed up my camp and romped through Brinchang and Kampung Raja, the tableland's northern most stations. The scale of the developments was difficult to miss. The WWF's describing land clearance as "rampant" did not seem hyperbolic looking over valleys glaring back from reflective cellophane and glass.

Return to Titti Wangsa

Leaving behind Tamra Negara before dawn I ignored the temptation of a return boat ride. Instead I took the quiet roads south along the banks of the river Tembeling. Rushing south over the hilly landscape through isolated Kampongs and Orang Asli settlements. Stopping at a banana stand a cheeky older woman helped herself to one from my bunch with the arched eyebrow, incomprehensible innuendo and insistent stare of a practiced flirt. Inevitable palm oil encroachments followed as I closed in on the main road west from Jerantut.

Heat rose, humidity cloyed, but no solace from mid day sun was sought. Gripped by a mad dog's longing I pressed onwards unwilling to stop before I had retraced the Lipis river road section I had ridden two days prior.

With sweat stung eyes noticing afternoon shadows stretching I veered into one of the small road side cafes that dot Malay roads and rewarded my westward dash with shade and a cold drink. Touching the ice filled glass first to my forehead and then rolling it across my abdomen a sharp pain fired. Muscles knotted oddly under the glass and I became dizzy. The moment passed but I resolved to take a little more time over cooling off. 

Fortunately my race was almost run and I was a mere 25k from my planned destination. Returning to my earlier strategy of scuttling from shade to shade it was not long before I rolled into the shabby chic of Kuala Lipis.
  The already colourful Chinese frontage downtown, enhanced by New Year preparations. 

Pahang: Judge not lest ye be judged?

I left Fraiser's Hill wreathed in a thick layer of wet mist.


Ignore the spinal tap impersonator blocking the mist-obscured view fairly pulsing with highland cool 

The upland forest continued to titillate as I weaved down the hairpins.

Doolittle Fallacy

Suffice to say I didn't die.

I accelerated downwards for perhaps five feet before my heels hit ledge. Jarred forward by the impact my flailing hand clutched handful of thorns which finally brought me to a halt.

A shaky, undignified, but thankful stop.

Legs straight and rigid, both arms locked behind me from the shoulder, torso leaning forward at 45 looking straight down. I must've looked like nothing so much as a very out of place and inept ski jumper.

Tentatively I stepped back from the brink. Now feeling 100% keen to be down I carefully descended the blessedly flattening lower portion and hit the bottom.

Thank fuck, I thought eloquently.

I was shaken. Failing to follow the path to its conclusion called into question some of the qualities with which I had begun to identity: Adventurousness, stoicism, stubbornness. The confidence in my willingness to carry on regardless was suddenly in doubt. If I can't even reach a sodding waterfall... At least I could say with certainty that I didn't have a death wish. Having set out on this trip depressed that I suppose was no minor thing.

Retracing my steps looking around for turn off's missed, my certainty that this hadn't been the way evaporated. The path underfoot was undeniably there if over grown and tough going.

The phrase 'kids and oldies may find it tough' swirled. May???? Maybe I had just wimped out.

I got back the rainforest level and trudged back eyes cast down.

A beautiful Blue Necked Keelback appeared right in front of me. Delicate coils of luminous orange. The Keelback was calm, no flattening of its neck to threaten a strike with its small venomous mouth. Instead it paused and then gracefully waved its way to a sunny leaf strewn spot to bask.

I watched enraptured as he relaxed and, just like that, I felt much better.

Battle of the Bulge

Departure #2 was from a lovely spot called Hutan Lipur Sungai Sendat, a waterfall, just north of KL. Peter, keen to test out his new hammock, joined me. Arriving in the early hours of the afternoon we found it closed...

Fortunately Peter and I are on the same wave:

The best sort of travel always involves a degree of trespass. The risk is both the challenge and the invitation. ~ Paul Theroux


So we ducked under the police tape and were rewarded with a blissful place to camp for the evening.

Bicycle Sounds

I was recently contacted by Fil Corbitt. A talented podcaster from Reno.

Showing uncharacteristic poor judgment he wanted to do an interview with me.

Here it is:
 
Naturally I apologise to Fil and you for my relentless erring and umming, an odd pronunciation of Pasargadae, and even odder plummy accent. I put the later down to a spontaneous post-colonial reaction to talking with an American.

Musandam and bust

I was pleased to be waved through the border crossing at Dibba.

I was pleased not to have to pay for a new Omani visa.

I was less pleased to now be an undocumented foreign national. 

To complicate matters further, non-GCC nationals (me) aren't allowed to pass between border crossings here. Travelling from say Dibba, north to Khassab and then on to re-enter the UAE at Ash Sham was prohibited. 

A shame indeed, as that was exactly my intention. I'd read about dolphins cavorting in the fjords around Khassab and I meant to see them.

Bureaucracy be damned.

So I scooted out of Dibba to make camp.

An obliging acacia grove provided a discrete and comfortable spot. 

Emirati hospitality

Where the north-eastern extremity of the Arabian Peninsula tapers into the mouth of the Persian Gulf geography gets exciting and political boundaries get confusing.

Enclaves within enclaves compete with exclaves to confound the unwary cyclist.

For those with a taste for such things the addition of internal Emirati borders reveals yet further complexity.


Predictably we British must take our fair share of responsibility but this patchwork is at least the result of a commendable effort to ensure borders correspond to the reality of local loyalties on the ground. A starker contrast to the brutal linear creations foisted upon much of Africa is hard to imagine.

My practical considerations were limited to making my way towards Musandam while minimizing visa costs and avoiding dead ends like those I'd encountered in Al Ain

Muscat: The wadi forks

I left the mountains that had beguiled me so and moved from Oman's desert interior to her salty coastal plain.




A different Oman, no longer dominated by the Rub' al Khail's echoing void but by the call of the waves. Fishermen and maritime trade replace goat herds, camels and date farming.

Homes from home.

A collection of the various nooks and crannies that have sheltered and provided me a more-or-less restful nights sleep during my first 24 months on the road.

I've enjoyed wonderful evenings in hostels, in rest houses and with generous Warmshowers hosts along the way. But the most memorable nights, the most vivid,  have been happened upon places.

Unused spots that I can slip into unobtrusively without interrupting the flow of life around me.

A life outdoors.
A disused mosque's mihrab on the outskirts of Al Ain just shy of the border between UAE and Oman: making use of a conveniently fly-tipped chaise-longue.

The desert foothills of Oman in the lee of 5000 year old Bat Tombs. 
(The sharpe-eyed amongst you will see them peeping at me from the crest)

Invited to lay my roll mat down in an isolated encampment in A'Dakhliyah province, near Al-Hoota cave: Falling asleep under starlight to the restful sound of shuffling goats.

A cold night on the Lion Mountain near Yazd spent snugly in a fantastical, hand hewn, cave complex.

Outside the caves early the next morning 

After a day spent wandering the burnt remnants of glorious Persepolis I camped quietly in the decaying remnants of the Shah's last hurrah - his tent city.

An isolated mosque two days ride from Isfahan provided some flat ground on which to pop my tent and some interesting charades with the local narcotic anonymous group meeting there.

A crumbling church in the far south of Armenia provided an atmospheric candlelit night.

A freezing first night in north east Iran was spent happily in a Shepherd's lean-to.

Waking the dawns subtle hues cast a magical spell across the land.

Though the rising sun also shone light on the lean-to's roof construction which gave me pause...


The isolated Bgheno-Noravank monastery lost in the woods along the Armenia/Azerbaijan border provided a marvelously Gothic atmosphere
Candle light and a copy of Shelley helped but real authenticity was provided by the bats streaming out at dusk.

The 12th Century Orbelian Caravanserai on the high pass leading out of Lake Sevan.

Over 2000 meters up and with freezing fog bringing visibility to almost naught finding and falling into this stone monolith felt miraculous.

Restored by a pot of porridge, kept company by a good book, and illuminated by the watery light of a waxing moon which seeped through cut outs in the roof I huddled in my sleeping bag against the -8 cold; warmed by imagining all those travelers who had sought shelter here, just as I had, over the echoing centuries. Magic.  

True meteorological magic had been wrought overnight disappearing the fog blanket and revealing this stunning vista

A morning memories are made of.

A night on a stone masons couch might've lacked mod cons but was a generous key hole into a world of skills I, with my suburban background, had little knowledge. And the couch was the more than comfortable enough to send a tired cyclist to sleep.

Bridge adjacent real-estate near the Georgia/Armenia border provided a lovely peaceful spot for a nighttime encounter with inquisitive cows.

A riverside spot a days ride out of Batumi was kindly offered by a local publican and resulted in a memorable evening pint in a deserted bar during a black-out.
Bus stop becomes alpine chalet when I was caught by heavy rain on the last leg of a Georgian mountain ascent.

Who could ask for more? Especially when friendly passing Georgians stopped in to share cockle warming cha-cha.

A night camped in the imposing remnants of medieval castle in a lowland valley of central Georgia. 

A fittingly industrial structure provided shelter from high winds and a nights rest on the outskirts of Stalin's hometown.

A fireside huddle with other bicycletourers in central Anatolia 

Before waking to the gentle Turkish dawn in the fallow field kindly offered by a sympathetic farmer.

The outrageous view from my Cappadocian cave.

 Morning in a quiet olive grove nestled among the fairy chimneys near Göreme I awoke to the unfamiliar sound of hot air other than my own signalling a glorious balloon ascent. 

Out the back and beyond the trees of a Turkish truck stop some quiet and solitude was waiting.

A quiet grove on the outskirts of Ankara where wild radishes grew.

Of course it isn't all idyllic slices of well found quiet. On the long grueling, puncture plagued, run into Istanbul through the seemingly never ending outskirts I fell upon this fallow field well after dark too tired to do anything but sleep.

Leaving the bike maintenance for the morning.

Greek salt lake forests provided a more conventional nights camping.

Majestic Byzantine watch towers dot the Hellenic coastline and made for utterly delightful slices of history upon which to pass the night.

Basic? Sure. But wonderful and beautiful and self discovered.

A windswept rock on the outskirts of Adrianople mightn't be everyone idea of an evening well spent but the memory of the sea pounding as dusk fell and the city began to light-up round the bay is not one I'd readily trade for a hotel room. 

A smaller, less imposing, byzantine watchtower still provided a perfect marker by which to camp and read some Gibbons.

The views weren't half bad either.

The golden hills of northern Greece made camping a cinch.

Sometimes you do get the balance wrong: A torturous night sleeping in an alleyway in Pella, the birth place of Alexander the Great, waiting for morning to visit the museum while being variously assaulted by mosquitoes and stray dogs.
Free camping doesn't mean hiding from the world. There's no retreating into paid for privacy. This often mean chance encounters with the most wonderful people. 

Take Angelo, a 71 year old Macedonian church artist. We bumped into each other while I looked for a spot to camp by the lake his church overlooks. 

The next morning was spent in exultant conversation and trying his home made nettle tea. 


But mostly I sought out quiet unused corners. Is this more admirable than a hostel or a hotel?
No.
Did it work great for me?
Yes.

The harsh fact is that I wasn't contributing to the local economy to the same degree that someone buying souvenirs and staying in paid for accommodation would.

But surely to boil down travel to an economic transaction would be a mistake. Lest only the rich traveler find merit.

Kosovan riversides.

An bombed out hotel on a stormy night overlooking Kotor bay.

A patch of wasteland just big enough to stretch out on and marvel at a singular view of beautiful Dubrovnik. 

A quiet spot outside an abandoned quarry in Bosnia.

(Had to tread carefully with that one)

A quiet church a few hours climb outside of Assisi.

Atop an Apennine pass watching a night of vicious electrical storms swirl around me. 

Then enjoying the morning calm.

A mosquito infested and thus utterly deserted spot on the banks of the mighty Po. 

A disused hut on the Gotthard Pass gratefully fallen into after getting marooned on a mountain top island in the Alps.

Out macho-ing an aggressive cob swan for the right to this pleasant spot on the banks of the Rhine.

A peaceful meadow in the rolling countryside of the Black Forest.

A lush Alsace floodplain 

Doing my best to pretend the bull behind the barely there fence was friendly

More bovine bonhomie in the cattle shed of a Luxembourgian farmer who took pity on two sodden cyclists during a thunder storm.

A more typical north western European pitch. Lush green fields whose edgings had room enough for a discrete nights sleep leaving no trace.

An unused patch of grass beside a graveyard which, after a polite inquiry, was happily volunteered by its custodian.
My first free camp spot back home in Albion. Not perfect as it was on a dog walking route but I'm hopeful that any small inconvenience I presented was mitigated by the cups of tea I shared with the handful of passer-byes.
Soggy nights in New Zealand south island during winter allowed a slightly broader range of free camping options as less people tend to take a walk in a storm. Making the most of available seating required some creative if unimpressive constructions.

A mossy glade provided the most comfortable night one could wish for in Tasmania.

This beautiful slice of antipodean bush may look like the back of beyond but was in fact the discreet screen for a waste water treatment plant. Didn't stop me making friends with the abundant wallabies and a couple of other free campers who had had similar ideas.

Beside a glistening lake in country Victoria.

Next to a lovely wooden church in Gippsland.

Inside an unused bird watching hide looking out towards Wilson's promontory and the Bass Straight.

Respite from the winter winds atop the southern alps after going through Arthur's Pass

Another chilly but beautiful night in the Southern Alps.

A patch of wasteland looking back at a towering minaret in a small coastal town in UAE.

In search of shade in the harsh landscape of Musandam.

In the grounds of center for Paralympic athletes in Dubai waiting for my flight the next day. Swapping stories and laughs with some incredible people.

Before getting woken by the sprinklers!

An abandoned beach front shack in Oman - fishing net sun lounger included.
Behind a wall on a coast road in Oman.

Unprepossessing perhaps, but hiding this lovely sunset.

There were many and more but for those who made it this far I'll finish with another bridge. This time on New Zealand's south island.

Whether you call it stealth camping, free camping or just being a tramp. Doing it this way isn't about being miserly for me. Its the profound peace of mind that comes with knowing, without a shadow of a doubt, that at some point if I keep on peddling I will arrive at a place for me that night. A place I fit. I won't know it till I see it and I wont know who I'll meet or what I'll find but I will find it and I will fit. Beautiful or tawdry it will be worth the finding and remembering.

Itineraries and bookings and cleverly found routes with the necessary amenities are well and good but the sheer bliss of heading in a direction unsure of a destination but safe in the knowledge that one will reveal itself is hard to beat.