Day 09 - Sunday 7th September
Today was a rest day, spent washing, eating, cleaning & drying clothes and cycling kit and moving the tent away from some very noisy neighbours in a caravan the otherside of the hedge! It was also spent eating and doing our best to eat our way through the Tesco Extra which was just (OK 13km bike ride) down the road... Their supply of vegan/dairy free veggie food was severely depleted...
Day 10 - Monday 8th September 2014
Fylingdales Moor - 85.9km
Last night Stuart asked a seemingly simple question regarding the Middlesbrough Transporter bridge – namely what time did it start running in the morning? Last time we had arrived on a Bank Holiday to use it and it had not long started running that day… So simply humouring him (this was after all a Monday morning, and not a bank holiday or a Sunday…) I looked it up. Imagine my surprise when I found out that it has been closed since January for repairs and a repaint! An alternative was needed and rather quickly and there are not many alternatives to the transporter bridge as it turns out! In fact for cyclists, there is only 1 alternative – the A1048 and it is a not a great alternative – but better than the A19 on a Monday morning. So with that sorted we settled down for the night – it was already starting to get chilly; in fact it is finally cool enough (not cold enough, just cool enough) to start using the sleeping bag as a bag rather than a quilt!
The morning dawned bright and sunny and before long we had a dry tent to take down despite a very heavy dew and internal condensation. It still never ceases to amaze me at how quickly this Hilleberg tent dries out after a quick wipe down! Not much really happened other than it clouding over by 8am. We got to the alternative bridge we had planned only to find it too was closed and the traffic was diverted onto the A19...
We looked at the A19 – it was stationary so would not have actually been too bad, but decided to take the standard cyclist approach and ignore the road closed signs and were ‘rewarded’ with a small ‘access for cyclists and pedestrians has been maintained’ sign! That made life much easier and yes, the bridge was closed and just to make life fun the pedestrian/cyclist access side was the side we were not on and didn’t have a dropped curb… (This is a problem on a laden touring bike, I can’t just pick my bike up and lift it up the curb and even bouncing the bike up a higher curb can be difficult!)
We quickly re-found the planned route, picked up fresh bread and further on down the ‘road’ soon reached the conclusion that the planned route was not suitable for touring cyclists and tbh was may not have been a bridlepath either – but we only decided on that when we made it to the far side and failed to get our bikes through a locked gate (having cycled round the edges of numerous fields and tracks to get there)… bikes unloaded, lifted over the gate and re-loaded we were soon on our way again, but today was going to be one of those days… We soon found our way blocked. One way led to a farm and the other ‘access’ was a footpath and therefore not a valid option (laden touring bikes and styles are not compatible even if you are pushing the bike up the footpath…)
We had until this point been trying our hardest to avoid the A171 which runs from Middlesbrough south up and over the North York Moors. It is the main road that runs along the east coast and I wasn’t that keen to cycle it to be honest! It was also a national speed limit dual carriageway at that point… However, someone, somewhere was smiling on us today because the entire length of dual carriageway had the inside lane coned off in both directions for grass and hedge cutting and given that they had already cut the grass on our side, we had our own private lane!
Whilst cycling along this section, a roadie caught us up and pulled alongside Stuart for a chat, commenting that we were ‘well laden’… actually we are not, but hey ho… He then took great delight in informing us that the North York Moors are not flat… What is it with road cyclists and the <insert swear word here> North Yorks Moors? (This happened last time as well!) We know it is not flat... do you really think touring cyclists are that naïve?
Lunch was taken at the top of the first climb (15%) which we both did without stopping and which we both did on the pavement (sorry folks but it was safer than the d/c up the climb) and strangely we never encountered any pedestrians walking up the climb!
Lunch time views (or toilet view - read below!)
Lunch view... or toilet view...
We did have one laugh whilst eating lunch... A minibus arrived at the car parking area and out of it got a youngish woman (definitely city girl) who went straight over to the burger van and asked where the nearest toilet was... she was 'advised' rather loudly that she was looking at it (he pointed over to the gorse bushes beyond us) and told to make sure she found herself a good view and squatted down lower enough to be out of sight...
the burger man even gave her a napkin and asked her to make sure it found a litter bin afterwards... I think we all contained our laughter until...
After that the pavement vanished and it was back to the road, now single carriageway, so for the duration, our rackpacks wore our hi-viz jackets and the rear lights went on… We are slow on some of the climbs and can be as slow as 4kph! For a while it was pretty rolling with easy climbs…
Who says the North York Moors aren't flat?
More of that rolling scenery...
And yet more...
The she's taking photo's pose...
OK - its not all flat - you get these sudden sharp dips, but they do give you something else to photo...
Then we dropped into Whitby and froze… it was a long downhill and neither of us were really expecting it! Sheesh it was cold…Spotting a café sign at a garden centre, there was little objection heard from my OH when I suggested a stop to get warm again… Not really knowing what to do with the bikes and with people taking really large ‘trolley’s into the garden centre, we just wheeled our bikes in as though it was a perfectly normal thing to do…
Whitby
Castle Abbey from the garden centre café.
Once we had warmed up, and put on some warmer clothes (arms added to our tops so converting them from short sleeved to long sleeved tops) we headed back out. It didn’t take long to get cold again and at one point my teeth were chattering as we finished the descent into Whitby! The climb back out soon had us warmed up again though! Also having made use of the wi-fi at garden centre we had checked out our planned route for tomorrow and soon realised that whilst we could do it, it might not be as enjoyable as we would like, so we rearranged our route for the rest of today, changed our planned campsite (nothing booked, just the one we were aiming for) and stayed with the A171. As it turned out, it was way too early in the day to have headed off to our original campsite as it was. 3 more +16% gradient climbs soon had us wondering about the wisdom of continuing and also soon had us much warmer than we wanted on the climbs!
At one point we had one of those “oh no please don’t” moments with an old (and I mean old) motorhome that got stuck behind us. It was only stuck because the driver could not make up his mind whether to overtake us or not… We were on the approach to one of those down and ups that the North York Moors are famous for, a sudden drop with a bad bend one way, then drop again with a bad bend the other way, then one of ‘those’ climbs…. On the approach I had seen a long line of vehicles all stuck behind a huge yellow double decker bus coming towards us. I couldn’t see all of the road in between me and the double decker and it was lost from sight, but I knew it was there… Cue the motorhome taking the most inappropriate moment to try to overtake us both! Just at the point where I had met the first of the bad bends (sharp right), the motorhome tried to overtake. I swore at him loudly – I may well have also been shaking my head at him as well… “not ****** now, not in front of that **** big bright yellow double decker bus that is about to come around that blind corner” I don’t know if he heard me, Stuart certain did because I heard him snigger, but luckily the motorhome driver changed his mind just before the bright yellow double decker arrived on the scene… Mind you talking to Stuart later on he hadn’t seen the double decker bus either!
We are now at Grouse Hill Caravan Park which whilst signed as being on the A171 is actually up and over a hill away from it, so that the road noise is not too bad and it is quite quiet (£15 for the night) and we have just watched a sundog (parhelia) which lasted for 10-15 minutes which surprised both of us because the cloud layer has been such that we didn’t expect to see a sunset let alone a sundog.
The Sundog (Parhelia) or a rainbow without the rain as I ended up explaining to someone once... For those wanting to know more (and it is actually very interesting) please see this link at the
Atmosphere Optics website.
The 'full' view. Shooting into direct sun is quite difficult and even at -2EV the sun is desperately over exposed still, but this is taken with a little compact camera and not really the best thing to be dealing with the requirements to photo a sundog.
http://www.strava.com/activities/194296220