Thursday, 31 December 2015

Calp to Altea from free to 25€ /night

Moved 11K down the coast in search of hot water and electricity as well as little less full on & built up.

Had a great last dinner in the street - all the best of wild camping cuisine....



Thanks to Rough Guide found Altea with a huge camp site close to a pebble beach v similar to Sandgate! From the beach had a clear view across the bay to Calp with that distinguishing rocky out crop. 





Altea seems to be an idle bid way between Calp and Benidorm - the latter is a 1.5€ bus ride in the number 10 so I'm told. 





Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Bilboa & the Guggenheim

Decided we'd spend this Christmas in Spain and tick off some Bucket list Items The Prado in Madrid & The Alhambra in Granada.



The first surprise on the trip, apart from the very pleasant ferry trip across the Bay of Biscay, was the Guggenheim Museum in Bilboa. I was taken aback. The cynic in me had always considered this a bit of post modernist  hype summed up in works of Jeff Koon. 


I was wrong! The building and its art where pure WTF art. Everything about the building was extraordinary and seemed to work so well with Koon's works. 


Inside was just as WTF with huge spaces for some great art from Rothko, Warhol and many other international Abstract Expeessionists & Pop Artists including a few local artist. 

The Guggenheim in Bilboa with its Origins in The New York version proves to me Musuem brands such as  British Museum & The Louvre can export their brand whilst maintaining their integrity. 



....another pleasant surprise was the 
Making Africa exhibition a celebration of African Art & Design. 


A interesting contrast to the British Library's West Africa Word Symbol Song...


All in All very much enjoyed the visit to
Bilboa!



Saturday, 3 October 2015

Some Surprises on the way...


A Piece of The Wall


You can buy a post card with a blister packed piece of the wall. Looked very shiny & very cheap - the piece of ‘The Wall’ looked like it could have come from my back yard totally unconvincing to my eye and imagination.

Tesco Clubcard


If I’d had my Tesco Clubcard I might have been eligible for points if I’d asked - I didn’t so I didn’t…nevertheless I like the possibility of collecting points in the Czech Republic.

Wild Camping in Germany



Wild camping’s illegal but over night parking is not.
Here’s us overnight parking in a forest on the way to Köln  A forest in between what sounded like two or three motorways

Friday, 25 September 2015

Into Europe with the Bongo


This is the first time on the trip - Karlstadt -  I’ve had the opportunity to sit, reflect & write, as we
travel West across Europe heading back home.

Moving East we were on a mission to reach some good old friends across Europe on specific days and times, unlike us they have work and other commitments to meet so early arrival or late departure wasn’t on the agenda.


Now almost two thirds the way into our first sortie into Europe, time to reflect. Surprised how easy it is driving on the right, the ferry, the traffic, the camping all very easy.

The weather has been really kind to us so far, as have all the drivers both car and lorry - haven’t been tooted once! Have to keep reminding myself to drive in gutter,on turning left  aim for the gutter, keep in the gutter then its no problem. I’m happy on the gutter.

Oh yes, I forgot the Sat Navs - Tom Tom & Google - they have been brilliant couldn’t have done it so painlessly without them. Even when they went mad resetting themselves while demanding that we ’turn around when possible’ we simply retraced our steps to where it went mad, once there invariably it recovered its sanity and took us on our way.


Loved shopping at Lidl especially loved & enjoyed the prices of the Wine and Beer - like being back home but paying 50% less. Oddly my favourite brand of German sausage I buy in the UK is not sold here.
Hirschau stop over on the road to Nuremberg
Campsites have been universally good, some even brilliant , particularly the German ones huge spralwing sites in great settings with heated pools and man made lakes with sandy beaches.
Some had restaurants and all had WiFi (of varying quality - some bad, mostly very bad )

As usual met some great people including Karl Debrick en route, on his own, on a push bike to the Munich Beer Festival - outstanding bloke and character true Brit!

                           

Talking on bikes saw some very odd two/three wheeled transport like things on the journey:














Europe's Highlights so far....

After visiting our friends the highlights , for me , so far have been:


Magdeburg where I visited the 13th Century statue St Maurice in his eponymous Cathedral,  I've written and spoken  about him and this statue , I plan to write more about my visit.


Nuremberg visiting Albrecht Durer House, Nürnberg, Germany to have some sense of how the great man lived. Delighted to spot his coat of arms as a stained glass window , plan to write about this image, only taken me almost five years since I first saw his coat arms.


Zeppelin Fields in Nuremberg where Hitler and his National Socialists held rallies for 200,000 in an arena designed by Hitler’s architect Albert Speer - extraordinary, awesome space - theatrical state management on a monumental scale, absolutely monumental. 

Sunday, 19 July 2015

Bit of BongoLand in Abbey Wood


Had lunch in the Sun with the Swans & Birds in the Bongo by Thamesmead  Lake, very pleasant.

Friday, 17 July 2015

Big Skies in Southern England (written 11th July)


Enjoying our first wild camp of the summer on the banks of the Thames.
Big skies all around just a few miles from the M4 quite a find. 


Quite quiet, secluded save for the odd dog walker or cyclist. And from across the fields drifts the sounds of disco seems everyone's Happy and Dancing on the Celling then there's the occasional sound of s distant train. 



Sadly we've left all the cooking utensils in Sandgate so had to eat salad & salmon with white wine from plastic disposable trays and couldn't make any tea or coffee. 

Good to be back on the road with the Bongo & Big Skies. 

Sunday, 11 January 2015

Dentdale & Johnny's Field

Dentdale in general, and Ewegales Farm aka Johnny's Field in particular left a lasting impression on me.

There were three things that made the Bongo’s stay at Ewesdale Farm in Dentdale so memorable:The Welcome, The Site and The  Countryside. A forty minute drive from the M6 to some of the most wonderful sites in England.


The welcome we had at Ewegales Farm was amongst the most memorable of the welcomes we had at any campsite throughout our journey. Campsite welcomes were universally good but a few did stand out either for the way the hosts just went that extra mile to make make us feel welcome, either with a big smile or showing interest in who we were and what our needs might be: a pitch close to the toilets please, where were the local shops, where’s the nearest pub or when we’d had difficult journey to reach the site and they didn’t make a big fuss of the sign in process reducing formalities so we could settle quickly.


We pulled off the road in to a very narrow lane over a bridge following the sign to Ewegales’ Farm Camping. On the left hand side of the road there were three gentleman of a certain age enjoying the late evening sun,  a cigarette and a chat - minded me very much of BBC’s Last of The Summer Wine .


A sprightly elderly man jumped with a big smile identified himself as Johnny - the site owner - advised the rate was £5 per night per person including flush toilet and shower facilities. The price was right, sadly the facilities were to prove to be not quite right but Ewedale has so much more going for it than simply its facilities, their rightness did not matter (…that much!).


Being an open field there were no marked pitches so we could pitch anywhere. We choose the farthest end, putting as much distance as possible between us and a group of loud campers. Their shouting and radios and music disturbing the field’s natural quite.

Our neighbours didn’t at first appear to be to our liking.

Campers share Johnny's Field with some very wary sheep, who eyed us suspiciously whenever we moved either in the Bongo or on foot. At all times the sheep kept a safe, secure distance between us and themselves. So together - we and our neighbours - we pushed the sheep to the back of the field and up on the the bank over looking the field. They thus maintained a respectful distance, the same could not be said for our fellow camping neighbours, as they seemed to be a problem through their numbers and noises.

E made the first contact in her usual forthright manner asking them to turn the music down. They couldn’t have been more accommodating, they not only turned the music down but invited us to their BBQ and to cave exploring - yes they could loan us head torches. We accepted the BBQ invite but respectfully declined the invitation to go cave diving!


We went on to get to know our neighbours much better. They were led by a very friendly chap whose name now escapes me but he was a real enthusiast for the out door life. Despite being a council worker he was very much a country man at heart who could speak knowledgeably about hiking, climbing , caving, who seemed to be very much at home around a campfire sharing stories and singing songs into the night. It was his idea to organise this weekend once a year for his friends and family, bringing them together here in Dentdale in Johnny’s Field.

One of my abiding memories of him (and Ewegales) is siting around that open fire by the stream that runs along the side of the field with him and his friends and family talking about Life, the Universe and Everything into night. While the kids played football in the dark using their caving head torches - despite the constant shouts for the adults to stop playing to save the battery life for caving.

Turn left out of Johnny’s field and you are on the road to Dent.


The field is two miles from Dent a picturesque Yorkshire Dales village, the birthplace of the founder of modern geology Adam Sedgeick.



The walk into Dent from Johnny's field is beautiful, full of arresting views. The cottages on the way and on the hill sides have all been ‘done-up’ becoming white-washed, architect-redesigned, pastiche of what they once were, now they seem to be mostly second homes or holiday lets for some distant, remote town dwellers. They give the walk a sanitized cliched view of the English countryside with everything in its place, a sense of order and discipline.



The one feature that seems to have been left to decay gracefully are the corrugated barns and out houses. Their soft decaying rusty reds and browns contrasting with the delicate green hues of the fields and hills and the stark, bright, harsh whites of the gentrified, renovated cottages.



Dent has a very friendly shop which stocked all a camper might need from food to firelighters, some great pubs as well as a cafe with wi-fi, as did the Village Community bus stop where you could down load an app to find your way around Dentdale!


We used the Community Bus for the return journey , the volunteer driver dropped up right outside Johnny’s field.

Turn right out Johnny’s Field and you are on the road to Dent Railway Station  at 1,150 feet the highest mainline railway station in England.





The ride up to view the railway is one of the most breath taking ones I’ve experienced. An enduring example of how man and the land scape can work together without leaving a scar. Where man’s handiwork compliments nature, creating an harmonious vista. Part of the station has been converted Aga’d holiday lets.




The views of Dentdale from around the station are stunning. My periosnal favourite is the view of Dent Head Viaduct  with its 10 arches, 100 ft high and 199 yards long gracefully spanning the ravine, seamlessly integrating into the valley’s landscape and still standing, taking passenger trains after 139 years. Testament to the quality of the engineering skills that went into building the 72 miles of The Settle to Carlisle Railway.



No mention can be made of The Settle to Carlisle Railway without mentioning the great loss, of life in its building.  Hundreds of lives were lost in its building, for example the spanning the Ribblehead valley caused such loss of life that the railway paid for an expansion of the local graveyard. Such beauty found in form and function of The Settle to Carlisle Railway viaducts certainly came at a great price to many.

I couldn't end this post without mentioning the beautiful skies of Johnny's Field especially the beautiful red sunset turning the green hills surrounding the field red.....




Ewegale's farm & Dentadal left a lasting impression - its welcome, its site and its surrounding country side resonate months later, I’ve very much looking forward to the chance to return next year to enjoy it again.