"Wait! Those are fragile!"
When we landed at Shannon, sure enough, one of the bikes was missing the bolt that holds the skewer in place. It probably just vibrated off. Fortunately, our plan had been to take the train to Dublin anyway, and it was easy enough to find the proper part there.
Our itinerary took us south from Dublin and across the southern middle, then north along the west coast. We stayed at B&Bs, where each morning we'd fill up on a hearty breakfast of eggs, bacon, and lots of soda bread. That kept us going until a Mars bar break in the afternoon, at which time we would peruse the map and a B&B guide, find a phone box, and call to reserve a room for the night in a place two or three hours ahead. Each evening involved a visit to a pub; I remember frequent delicious salmon dinners. And Guinness, of course. Lots of Guinness. Not to mention Harp. Or my favorite: black and tans.
Rock of Cashel |
Cemetery adornment |
Whereas the roads in the Republic of Ireland are narrow and hilly—up, down, up, down—the British-built roads in the North were wide and beautifully graded. Our pace picked up remarkably.
We visited the Bushmills distillery on a deeply foggy morning. Inside, a fire burned, and shots of whiskey—including Black Bush and the 10-, 16-, and 21-year-old single malts—were lined up on the bar. We were nicely warmed up once we staggered back onto the road and on our way toward Belfast. Coming into that city proved an adventure as the country road we'd started on gradually transformed into M5. We had a Michelin map, which doesn't show much detail—or point out the parts of town one might want to avoid. (This was during the "Troubles," mind you.) Somehow we found our way to downtown Belfast, but once there we learned we couldn't lock our bikes up and go explore. Any "abandoned" anything was treated with suspicion. So we climbed back on our bikes and continued south, toward the Republic.
There are other stories, but I'll leave my reminiscing there. It was a wonderful trip. Almost makes me want to do another one, lo these thirty years later. But first, I should probably start riding my bike around home. Without loaded panniers.
(The illustrating photos are the only three shots that I converted from slides to digital files. I'm sure I have many more slides where these came from. Maybe someday I'll get around to converting them too . . .)
3 comments:
I love that photo of you two. I remember hearing about that bike trip. It sounded (still sounds) so adventuresome.
Now...a walk across England?
what a trip!
yeah. count me in for a walk across… Scotland! Panniers do make the bike so heavy. love the ride.
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