Thoughts about Laredo

When I arrived here I felt apprehensive about the place but with the warm sun low over the sea shining onto my tent it is just beautiful. The sunset was one of the most beautiful I’ve seen.
Sunset at Laredo Spain

This is my last full day on this trip and I awoke with barely a cloud in the sky. It should be a beautiful day to sit and walk by the sea. Last night there was a constant thumping of dance music, a couple of miles away but persistent and headache-feulling. And in the other direction down the coast, I am sure, is a kennel, where hundreds of dogs pine and bark incessantly for their masters and mistresses. Strange this is such a beautiful setting but penetrated by such constant noise.
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This morning I went for a walk, partly to pass time, out of curiosity about this town and partly to make sure I knew the way to the main road for the morning’s quick getaway. This part of Laredo is strange. As soon as you leave this little area, and pass the stables full of horses and ponies to rent, it seems to be dominated by what looks to me like high rise public housing, as well as a hospital with various old people making their way towards it, and, rather tastelessly I think, a funeral parlour directly opposite it. There are lots of old often fat men sitting around. There is a grid of brand new roads around here with grassy lots in each square. Clearly there were plans afoot for more flat building but the recession must have struck.

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As an after thought I turned right instead of left toward the campsite as it looked like there was another opening toward the sea in that direction – we must be on a small promontory. A street from the main drag, things turned into a more upmarket feeling, with again flats but clearly holiday flats and a huge wide beach with a handful of people strolling up and down or a few swimming. By this time I was rather hot, being overdressed in a vain effort to keep my non-biking clothes vaguely clean for the social life on the boat, so I came back to the site. I used the shop – large but the usual poor quality and no fresh produce unless I missed it and the person there had no English. And the only camping gas they have comes in cans that don’t fit my stove. I’m nearly out and not sure I can get one more meal out of what I have.

I walked for 2 hours on the beach from the campsite, past the boat club, under the pier and found myself the other side of the headland and a beautiful sweep of beach, with only a dozen or so people in sight.
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The site is emptying out as I thought it might. At first it seemed heavily populated but it seems full of caravans and awnings that people leave here.
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From Potes to Laredo near Bilbao

From Potes to Laredo at EveryTrail

Saturday! 7th
Well, it rained yesterday evening so I got into my sleeping bag and tried to sleep but the rain kept me awake until it stopped some time shortly after dark. This morning its damp and cool. The showers are thankfully short though my flimsy travel towel is getting damper – in fact everything is getting grubby now. Its now that you yearn for those simple pleasures of a nice bed, bathroom, bath towels and a proper kitchen. But the roughing it is part of the fun – honestly. I bought some fresh bread from the shop and have my little jam containers purloined from the hotel for breakfast with a cup of tea (tea bags with dried milk – but its fine). It was delicious. It seems to have taken nearly the whole holiday to find fresh food. I shall stay put today, maybe walk into Potes (its 4k) and head off to the coast tomorrow, Sunday. I also read most of Venture into the Interior. Its interesting to have a parallel journey going on in my imagination. It gives some added status to my venture to Spain.
La Isla Picos de Europa camping
Before I left an extremely garrulous Dutch man engaged me in conversation. He is here, he said, because he won a competition to see the final stage of a cycle race around Spain. He said last night he met two girls down in Potes, half his age, who told him about a party which he accompanied them to. He says he got back to the site at 6am. He says he is an oil and grease salesman. He is travelling with two tents and was living life on this site in a large four person tent, though he showed me, just after I had got my earplugs in and helmet on, his spare tent, a Coleman 3 person tent packed up that weighed 5kgs.
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Sunday 8th

The last campsite probably at Laredo. The ride was fine, just under 100 miles, first of the Picos road going north from Potes, then some nice coast road where the sun came out and then, the unavoidable motorway going from near Santander over towards Bilbao. Despite having the coordinates for this place, I got taken down unpromising roads into industrial estates before finally deciding to just look for signs and follow them. So I arrived. It’s a bit unprepossessing to start with. For sure it is right by the Parque Natural estuary/beach but there’s a peerless fence around it and it is a rather full slightly down at heel family site for the Spanish. The site owner pointed out that there are tables scattered around the site and that I should camp next to one. Actually they are sinks – washing up sinks and I am right next to one of them. They are useful, very useful to cook on, to wash up conveniently, get water to drink and cook, but incredibly ugly. Its ok. And the sun came out for a while and the temperature rose to 29. While I can see that back in the mountains there is dark cloud and rain. So I think it was a good move to come out to the coast. A British couple and a young Spanish couple have arrived since I got here. I’m looking forward to some good walks by the sea tomorrow.

Leon to Potes via the Picos

Leon to Potes through the Picos at EveryTrail

Today presented a few challenges. Breakfast at the hotel was everything a hotel breakfast could be, huge variety and potentially endless, although much of it came in little containers that left a small mountain of litter on my table afterwards. Breakfast was deserted. I’ve been avoiding coffee for the last four days and it is definitely helping my stomach.
I had half a plan to head over to the Picos again and camp at Potes which Alan Rogers gives a good rating for. But the first challenge was to escape the underground car park. It presents a steep and winding concrete road up onto the street and not only that, you have to stop on the steep incline, press the button on the wall for the door to open above you and then spring out up the last part of the slope and onto the street.; OK in a car but a little tricky on a big heavy bike. I made it but with the odour of burning clutch in the air that seemed to hang in my nostrils for a while after I had ridden out of town.
I had an idea of the route, quite tight and twisty after a while and I found eventually I got into a new technique with countersteering and leaning the bike under me while I kept relatively upright. It was making corners feel much more under control. But havint just discovered this, I think we must have crossed into a different autonomous region because the road surface suddenly became much worse, full of potholes, tar banding and negative cambers. So I slowed down. Then I got high enough to be riding in cloud and at times I could only see a few yards in front of me, this combined with tight 2nd gear bends with sheer drops on one side and overhanging rock on the other. Now add the odd cow wandering over the road and you have the full picture.
After a while I reached an iconic biker location, the Puerto San Gloria, a lookout on a spectacular downward hairpin complete with a few sports bikes parked and their riders looking through the mist to the valley below. I did not stop to join them. I barely saw them and kept going down concentrating for grim death.

Eventually the mist cleared but the bends did not ease up for another 15k. But I made it down to Camping La Ilsa Picos de Europe campsite just out of Potes by 2pm. I could have revisited a site a stayed at on the way down but that would have meant another hour travelling so I decided to stay. I was initially a bit iffey about the site – it’s a bit featureless and next to a road (though behind a stone wall) but I warmed to it: English is spoken and the shop sells some fresh produce and chilled white wine. The wifi also reaches to me tent on occasions.
After tonight – just three more nights before the ferry.
Tonight I am cooking my most elaborate variation of a pasta dish: local organic onion and beef tomato cooked in olive oil with herbs, chorizo and pasta and white wine. Meanwhile a woman is playing an elaborate hiding the ball game with a large, lovely old dog. I have no idea of the breed. It pretends to growl at her and prance off as she tries to get something out of its mouth. Humans and animals. Maybe we learn something from them – or from our relationships with them.

From Leon

Thursday 5th September
I rode 265 miles today nearly all on motorways, on my journey back east toward Bilbao where I leave from on Tuesday morning. Motorways here are more twisting than at home and have only a fraction of the traffic. At some points, as they span deep valleys, the sense is vertiginous, with the valley hundreds of feet below and the other lane of traffic, hundred of feet above, high on its own stilts.
from Galicia to Leon at EveryTrail

I saw this hotel, Infantas de Leon on Tripadvisor. I fancied a break from camping and was expecting a wet day which it hasn’t turned out to be though it rained lightly for the first couple of hours and threatened with dark skies all day. So I’m here, in a rather smart place though the first three reviews I read all rated the welcome – two were from motorcyclists and one from a Camino walker wanting to give herself a treat. With breakfast and secure parking for bertha all for €60 (camping is about €18 a night). Finding my way on the big bike to a hotel in a city is a different experience to searching for a campsite in the country but in a way no harder. One review praised the view of the cathedral from the hotel but there is no cathedral in sight. The bed is comfortable. Its time to take a stroll. Let me fish out my cleanest smartest clothes.
Cathedral at Leon, Spain
at Leon, the walker's sign
Leon Spain

I had dinner in the bar, hearty with white wine at €1.40 a glass. I wish I had realised how cheap it was, I would have not said no to the third glass. I need to find a way to get out onto the balcony to have a camel now…

Trip to the Cape of Arousal

Today I took the ride southwards on the coast road down to the bay of Arousal, but it wasn’t as successful or enjoyable as yesterday’s ride.

To the Cape of Arousal at EveryTrail

The road is not as attractive and there were roadworks in a town about 5 or 6 miles down the road and a diversion which got me completely lost. I knew the name of the town I was aiming for, Ribeira. In my lostness I got swept onto a motorway that I could see on the map but wanted to avoid. In the end I made it to Ribeira, which is the kind of town that guidebooks describe as ‘a gritty port town’, hot busy, big trucks and tricky to navigate around, but a few stops to look at the map and u turns later I was leaving town. I managed to stay on the right road back, the only event being my arrival, along with others, at a recently occurred accident. A bright yellow delivery truck and a car were severely smashed and it was impossible to work out what had happened but everyone seemed safe and completely unhurt.
Today is more humid and a little overcast. The other Brits left this morning and I think I may do the same tomorrow. Its very pleasant here but short of spending tomorrow lying on the beach or swatting flies at the campsite, I think I have exhausted things here. But I still haven’t decided where to head for tomorrow. There is a medium-sized looking town Leon about half way toward the region I want to end up at on Sunday. I might see if I can find a hotel there. There are no Alan Rogers recommended campsites there, though apparently a great many.
This holiday has been so much more successful than previous camping trips and I put that down to two things so far: I have got the right guidebook to chose campsites, so for the most part I have avoided the nasty ones which can just feel uncomfortable. Here, as in the first site I stayed in, there is a thankful variety of travellers, young couples, even the odd single person, apparently gay couples, all in a variety of tents. There’s something about the barrage of families and the slightly affluent retired folk in motorhomes that feels alienating because there is no point of contact. With the unusual travellers there is, or at least the possibility. The other ingredient – again so far – has been the weather, warm, sometimes hot, dry. There’s nothing worse for the spirits than rain, particularly when you don’t know how long it will last. The other difference is that I’ve stayed in one place if I like it rather than move on every morning in a distance-covering operation. In fact, this trip is a few days too long, a result of the hugely different ferry prices.

From Asturias to Galicia

1st September
Some thoughts as I pack up in the morning, I have the advantage of getting the morning sun up here to dry everything off. I fell asleep quickly (after listening to Bruce Springsteen on my iPhone) at 10.30 but awoke again at midnight with children running around and chattering and laughing, but quickly settling shortly after midnight. Then I was awoken again at 4.30 but loud festival music thankfully distant. Why it started at that time I have no idea: did the wind direction change? It was bizarre.
Now at 8.30 I am up before the entire campsite, nearly packed and keen to get back on the road. I have felt an outsider here, a shadowing single figure on the outside of this site of happy families. Sometimes its right, when solitude doesn’t feel conspicuous, as at the last site, with a range of different people there, but sometimes it does not feel comfortable and I wonder where all the serious minded interesting lone travellers have found to stay that I haven’t.
Today I will ride up around the top corner of Galicia and not sure where I will aim for tonight. I even thought a hotel would make a chance. I even thought this model of holiday may have had its day.
At Muros campsite. What can I say? I rode 215 miles today in increasingly hot weather. I stopped off for a very quick lunch looking over a beautiful little port but with choppy seas. But I had lost my keys somewhere (I found them in the bike) and was anxious about the steep climb up back to the main road and sure enough there were obstructions but I ploughed on up not wanting to stop as hill starts are a performance on such a heavily laden bike. The journey was enjoyable though the GPS kept getting lost adding to the overall sense of confusion about where I was and what direction I was heading in. And there were tolls. I followed a car through the lane that seemed to let people through automatically but not me, so had to push Bertha back from the barrier and try another. By this time the temperature was showing 33 degrees. Now I have finally understood the weird thing happening with campsites. I had loaded a while back a Europe full of duff specialist-Dutch motorhome campsites. They are close to the much nicer Alan Rogers sites but when searching for the right address on the GPS I’ve got confused. So luckily I worked that out before I turned left to what looked like the huge and ghastly beach front site and kept on the road another few miles to the sharp uphill right (that I stopped on because of poor slow speed style) that led to this lovely campsite – where there is a field for free form camping, shared only so far with a Portuguese couple and a female cycling duo who are riding from Santiago de Compostella to Lisboa (they said). They are friendly, speak some English and share an incredibly narrow tent. They must be good friends. Now someone else is walking over the space looking for somewhere to park. Also sounding Portugese though driving a Spanish car. Ah they are coming next to me… I have the feeling I may stay here till the site closes on 9th September, or at least 4 or 5 nights. I am rather exhausted by all this rather lost riding. There is meant to be a ‘supermarket’ here on site, and a restaurant (I’m having coffee there now with breakfast croissant).
This is a different climate down here, much hotter and there are flies and cicada after dark.
From Arbon, Asturias to Muros, Galicia at EveryTrail

The night was warm and the morning also bright. I think there is enough to do to stay for a while. I’ve stopped reading Seven Pillars of Wisdom and taken up Being and Time instead. I was growing tired of the constant theme of cruelty in Lawrence’s writing.