After a
dreadful night where I could hear the person in the next room breathing, I was
on the road by eight this morning spurning the hotel breakfast for one of my
own making. This required me to have a hot pain
au chocolat for morning tea which has to be the best, most chocolatey one
I’ve ever tasted!
Apart from
that, the day was much like yesterday: similar scenery: a river; similar people:
fishermen; similar track, although, surprisingly, a better surface the further
from the big city it got. Apart from getting soaked feet (again) and covered in
seeds in every cranny of my bike bags by grass more than a metre high on an
overgrown track early in the day, the way was pretty good and the surface quite
easy. Some road, some gravel, mostly hard-packed. And a few places to stop. But
not much relief from pedalling really, which was a shame as my derrière was
hurting quite a lot.
I had got the
urge to move on, so was in Redon, which had been my day’s destination, by 12
noon. I ate lunch by the side of the river for the last time. I had made the
decision. I had had enough of canals and rivers, enough of grey skies and
enough of no people anywhere mile, or rather, km after km. My plan had been to
see the river to its mouth, but no one had been able to give me any information
on the route other than that the bike path doesn’t go through. The alternative
looked long-winded and a bit hilly, followed by another day of picking my way
through a not very attractive and very built-up area to get where I needed to
be.
So I determined
to get to the sun and the sea, and head for St Brévin-les-Pins on the Atlantic
Ocean. And fast. I took a train. Bikes travel free on many trains here in
France and so it did, without having to be folded up; it was supposed to be suspendu from a hook but it was hard for
even the helpful men to get it up there. From Redon, I changed at Sevenay
(steps down, steps up to a different platform, another helpful man), and then
to Saint-Nazaire.
This was a
good start, but Saint-Nazaire is across the Loire from St Brévin, where I had
managed to reserve a B&B for the night. The river is four kilometres wide
here at its mouth and there is a huge suspension bridge across. The coward in
me emerged. Yes, it is possible to bike up and over and apparently people do,
but there is only a painted-on-the-road bike lane. With no bus available and no
taxis in sight, I took up the offer that Monsieur from the B&B had made earlier
in the day when I’d rung to reserve: if all else failed he would come and get
me in his car, which he did.
It took him
thirty minutes each way, but he seemed quite delighted by the whole thing. My
little bike fitted, folded-up, in his little car, and once I’d figured out that
the front passenger seat was not on the left of the car, we were off. On the
way, he talked flat out pointing out this and that with such gusto I thought we
might end up in the Loire.
St Brévin
sits at the south point of the enormous river mouth. It’s an almost sleepy, seaside
sprawl, with rather cute single-storey whitewashed and red-tiled-roofed houses
and holiday homes for people from Nantes and around. This is the official start
of Eurovélo 6 which runs for 4000kms east to the Black Sea (any takers? I think
I’d like some company for that one!).
It is also on
the Eurovélo 1 which is planned to eventually run from Norway to Portugal. The French
part of this was officially opened only last year and runs all the way from
Roscoff (north-west Brittany) to Hendaye in the Basque country near the Spanish
border. The French refer to it as the Vélodyssée and it’s the reason I chose St
Brévin for tonight. The chambre d'hôte,
Fleur de Sel, where I stayed is therefore very well placed and has special
accreditation for the welcome they give to cyclists. Monsieur even checked and oiled my bike while
I was out for dinner. He and his wife both have fold-ups too but he was
drooling over the quality of my Brompton!
Lovely,
lovely people. A really great find (thanks Hannah!). Galette au saumon Atlantique at a local crêperie for dinner then back to my room. The sun is still shining
through my window at 9.30pm; the air is warm. I might be able to stop coughing
now! So glad I made it to the sea.
your bike must be really heavy indeed... :) Enjoy the Velodyssée!
ReplyDeleteGo Wendy, you are my hero. And maybe some plastic bags tied over your shoes if you have to ride in the rain again? Apparently it works!
ReplyDeleteBut hopefully you won't need any rain resistant gear now you are at the seaside. Velodyssee, what a nice name.
DeleteI agree with Rosé! You are my hero too! .... I am really enjoying your blog....
ReplyDelete