Skip to main content

On the road


Sunday- Monday 10-11 Sept 2023

The Hull - Rotterdam ferry is an overnight service that leaves at 20:30. A short 80 mile trip from home is a nice way to start and the next day you disembark at 08:30 local time and hit the motorway.

The trip to Hull wasn’t without mishap, as one of the nice new Lucas retrofit flat wiper blades decided to stay in England by flinging itself off on the M18. Luckily on the Defender, the rear door blade is the same and so I moved that, also a nice new one. That also showed signs of not wanting to go to Albania and I had a difficult session to persuade it otherwise, in the rain at the side of the motorway and again at the services. I must be losing my wiperblade fitting technique.

Check-in at Hull is quick as there’s no customs or Border Force and we we soon driving on the ramp at the stern and onto the freight deck.

At the Sky Lounge there’s a great panoramic view of the Humber and Hull docks and a nice beer helped us settle down into “that holiday mood”.






We wandered around, laughing as we remembered that this seemed to be a big boat, until we saw the Brittany Ferries ones to Spain. Then it was back to the Sky Lounge just as the singer was reaching the climax of Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. If this had been a practice for a home Karaoke slot then she might have made the grade but honestly it was excruciating. Never has there been more welcome words to be heard than “I’m going to take a short break now; see you in thirty minutes”.

Next morning the Europort voew was as amazing as ever. What a hive of activity it is.







There was no custom check at Europort either. There was a queue for passports but it was swift and pleasant and we hit the road as far as the first MacDonald’s. Here the coffee machine had failed and the group of Hells bikers that followed us in were not happy.

Back on the road the temperature increased steadily and it became an extremely hot day, maxing at about 35, so quite tricky, especially in slow moving roadworks of which there are plenty in Germany. However we made good progress although it might not look so on the map.

We had a good overnight stop in a small campsite at Schweppenhausen, very close to the A16 (click here) efficiently run of course but marred by finding an oil leak at one of the gearboxes that I thought was fixed after the trip to the French alps. I know there’s a leak, I just can’t find out where it is. So a visit to a garage is planned for the morning. They just don’t know we are coming!




Comments

Phil said…
Glad you've arrived in Europe safely. Hope you get the leak issue sorted tomorrow. Good luck! Px

Popular posts from this blog

On y va

Hooray. We are off. The ferry was booked a few weeks ago and the pressure was then on to get all sorts of jobs finished on the house and Landy. Major cosmetic work was to cover the grey front doors with paint that matches the rest of the vehicle. On the engine a coolant leak had developed behind the water pump and so the P gasket and adjacent core plug were renewed. Also a cheapy head unit from those Chinese people replaced the old Sony fm radio. Now we have opened up the wonders of Car Play and all that comes with it. Finally the 9th gen iPad with WiFi became a 9th gen iPad with WiFi and ‘cellular’. This means we can use OsmAnd Maps which need no data and get their gps position off the ‘cellular’ chip in the iPad. More on this useful map in subsequent posts. We headed towards Portsmouth for a mid morning ferry via our old neighbours in S-I-V. There we had a great few hours updating each about our families and then proceeded to save the NHS, the country and the world too. I mean why no...

Escaping the weather

We stayed in Potes for four nights and during that time the weather was very hot, with the last two days maxima in the mid 30s. Bizarrely, last Friday night was one of the hottest, as at bedtime it was 27C and even in the middle of the night it was 25C. The forecast though, was ominous for the Picos (and worse for the UK) and so we made the best of the day by zooming up the valley to Fuente De. Here with perfect planning, we had booked the cable car for 10:30 and were whisked up in one cable catenary swoop, from 1,100m to 1,800m. It was sunny with wide views and we walked up a barren valley until we reached a steep scree-crossing path, where we turned around. Any further and it would have needed full kit and sleeping bags, as we were heading for a refugio . We got our fill of that high mountain and were back down in time to escape the mountains before the weather broke. The committee had decided that a city break to Leon was next and we had an overnight opportunity somewhere along ...

Potes and environs

Potes is a bustling town that’s clearly ‘in the mountains’ but isn’t quite a mountain town. Well that was what we thought until we went for a walk. More on that later. First we got to know the site ( Camping La Viorna ) and the neighbours. After the squeeze of the first night near the pool, we were upgraded to a pitch at the end of the lowest terrace which had a superb view of the eastern massive of the Picos. So although this was still a squeeze pitch, somehow we felt good about it. The ‘squeeze’ happened later in the day. ☺️ Happily our immediate neighbours were quiet Dutchland people who like to eat their tea early and retire in good time. They always enjoy taking to us Brits, rather than those Germans and soon I was engaged because I was asked a question. “Why do you have a UK flag on your number plate, rather than a Welsh Scottish or English flag?”. Tricky! I explained that England isn’t a country like Wales or Scotland. They have their own  parliaments and make rules for them...