Friday, 20 August 2010

We've made it - we're here in Bergen. Friday 20th August. 3,580 miles or 5,761 km


Time to get email addresses from the cycle-campers we shared the campsite with on Tuesday night- a late start for us all after the rain of the night and morning ... then off the couple from Stuttgart go....


Then next to go is Jan (from Scotland - just in case you didn't get this from the photo!!) ...

Rainy Wednesday evening at Leirvik, and our hut for 350 Kr  (about £37)


...Marrianne is in the hut next door to us ...


A view of Leirvik...

with an unusual 'sculpture' of steel with lots of small windmills...



The cycle path takes us around a road tunnel, with superb views over a fish farm...

I thought at first they were pumping oxygen into the fishpool - but no, it was fish leaping out of the water and glinting in the sunshine - amazing to watch.


Last ferry of the trip - half an hour to put our feet up and relax a little - nearly there....

By the time we were off the ferry both of us were suffering from legs that refused to cycle up hills - not quite sure why, but we both felt very pathetic!!!
Decided to find a hut or hotel after 26 miles - and this was the last room they had...

... and this was the view from the dining room where we had breakfast this morning.

The start of the clear out of our baggage before we fly home -no more camping now so Roger celebrates by chucking his Freegon and much mended stool out...


Not a very exciting or scenic route today - but most of the time easy to follow as we cycled on the cycle tack next to the main E39 into Bergen.





There is always another hill though - and a long gradual hill to negotiate about 8 miles out of Bergen - but a good view at the top to compensate us... Very mixed weather, but cooler today and drizzled from time to time on us..




... and finally we are actually here in Bergen ... packed out with people and traffic, and threatening to rain anytime soon ...








approx 40 km to Bergen, raining hard - Thursday evening - will we ever get there!!


We're staying in an apartment like room at a hotel, up above the coastal town of Osoyro and about 40km or so from Bergen.  For whatever reason both of us were absolutely knackered this afternoon - the legs just wouldn't work and there were lots of undulating hills - we are loosely following the E39 but the cycle track keeps taking you down to the coast and then back up to the road again, very frustrating.  Other times you will be cycling along a cycle pathway at the side of the E39 and it suddenly runs out - and you are the wrong side of the armco barrier to get onto the road - so have to trudge over grotty long grassed verges with hidden ditches and holes etc until you can get back on the road.It started raining as w reached Osoyro so decided enough was enough, even though we have only cycled 26 miles today.  The last room at the hotel, about £110 with breakfast (!!!) - but has a nice view over the sea!!!  Roger is asleep in the chair now, after watching stupid American comedy programmes on the tv.

Yesterday was a very late start - rained hard all morning so didn't actually start cycling till about 1.30pm.  Marianne(Swiss girl) arrived back at the campsite off the bus just as we were leaving - she had gone to Leirvik, the place we were heading to on our bikes that day, and bought a new tyre and inner tube - was going to fit in and then get back onto the road.  An interesting cycle, hilly but enjoyable -but daggers in my back from the dirty looks Roger gave me when we cycled 2 miles the wrong way at a junction - there was no cycle sign, or road sign that had a name on it that was on the map we are using since I don't have the detailed route cards for this section.  A couple of steep ups and downs, and we had to do them in reverse to get back to the junction again.  Turns out Marrianne did the same thing as well, which makes me feel slightly better.
As has happened very frequently recently it started raining again this evening - and once again we were 10 minutes too late to get the tent up in the dry.   Some huts at the campsite - only 350 so decided to have one - and we were very glad as it poured it down.  Marrianne arrived later and was going to camp until Roger told her that the cabins were good value.  Said our goodbyes to her this morning as she was taking a boat from Leirvik to Bergen as she had a hotel reservation for tonight there.  We may well see her in Bergen as she is there for 3 days - and we WILL get there tomorrow- honest.....  Feels a bit like a never ending dream somehow, and that we will never actually get there.  Poor Roger  still has his pulled muscle which is ok in the morning but hurting a lot by half way through the day - he insists he is going to cycle into Bergen though after coming all this way.
At least we are on the same land mass now as Bergen - we caught the last ferry of the trip today.
Have just booked 2 nights in a hotel in the centre of Bergen for Friday and Saturday night - Sunday we are booked in at a hotel near the airport.  Monday afternoon we fly to Newcastle and pick up a hire car, one way hire for a day - need to drop it back off at Manchester airport the next day.  Roger assures me the bikes and panniers will fit in .... we will wait and see.  I can see a trip to the nearest Halfords coming up to buy the cheapest bike rack they have....

Friday morning - just had a massive breakfast with lovely views, now relaxing before cycling into Bergen.  Photos not downloading quickly so will leave them till later.

Wednesday, 18 August 2010

Camped 100 km from Bergen, raining hard now. Wednesday morning, 18th August



This photo was taken yesterday late afternoon, very hot and humid after a wet, grey and miserable start to the day.  An  unexpected campsite appeared after 32 miles of cycling - thought we had another 15 miles or so still to go.  Roger's back still bothering him so decided to stop here - what a difficult decision to make ......  Very undulating terrain again which Roger really hates....
A very small little site at the side of a tiny marina - stood watching the jellyfish swimming around yesterday when we arrived - fascinating to watch.  By a few hours later we had been joined by the German couple we camped with back at Flekkerfjord (from Stuttgard), Jan a lass from north of Cromarty, Scotland - lives on a farm not far from where the Nigg ferry should have gone from all those months ago.  She flew over to Bergen a couple of days ago and is cycling south for 3 weeks, taking ferries and trains on the way.  Have met a couple of different cyclists who have/are opting to miss out the Sweden and border area of Norway - taking the ferry to/from Denmark instead.  Also Ann Marie, from Switzerland who has cycled a little below are radar along the same route as us, and the same time frame, from Kristiansand.  She can't really miss us on the route because of our two bright orange tops ...... so has spotted us on and off all the way here.  She had a bad day yesterday - a puncture she repaired followed very soon after by another.  She was on her way to catch the ferry we needed to take yesterday- unfortunately we were well ahead of her, on an earlier ferry - so a guy stopped to help her and took her and the bike to the ferry, and then arranged for his daughter who lived at the place where the ferry went to, to collect her and drive her up to this campsite.  Roger helped her find the small thorn in the tyre that was causing all the problems.  There was a gazebo like tent with table and benches outside the cooking area and toilets, so we all congregated there last night to cook our meals etc.  Then the rain started - really heavy and carried on, on and off since then.  Hoping the weather will cheer up again before lunch time as it usually does - but not looking hopeful at the moment.  Ann Marie has just arrived with her umbrella to tell us that the tyre has gone down yet again - she must be cycling very heavy as along with her umbrella, she has a barometer which she tells us has gone very low, plus a huge tool kit that Roger says would fill half of one of our panniers.

Not that many photos today as very similar undulating scenery to what we have been cycling through before.  We had a relaxing day at Skudenshavn, but unfortunately when we cycled into the small town to explore the park there, minus the panniers, Roger pulled a muscle in his back which has been causing him a lot of pain when he moves - walking a bit like a crab at times ....  Says not too bad when cycling, but for 24 hrs after he did it was very painful when he went over any sort of bump in the road.
Went to the park to see the Yes/No seat - a great way to elevate a very boring bench overlooking the sea -good marketing on someone's part - they say many a romance has blossomed here!!!



There is also a lump of rock in the park that is different to all the other rock round about.  It is known locally as the Moon Rock, because it was believed to be a meteorite.  It has been analysed though and is over 800,000 years old and is of the same type of rock as is found in the mountains to the east of Norway.  It is thought to have been deposited by a glacier.



The night before last we camped at Haugesund, next to the monument to King Harald who unified Norway - the 20 odd smaller monuments around the main one represent the different areas that became united.


Roger smells his socks to see just how bad they are.....





Sunday, 15 August 2010

Skudenshavn, Norway. Saturday 14th August (posting number 2)




Tuesday night it rained hard overnight, and we spent the morning on a really bad internet connection that kept dropping out looking at flight options for getting home.  Finally packed up and left by mid-day, so only an hour or so ahead of the time we stopped the day before!!  In this photo you can see the main road in the distance, going straight u the side of the hill.  This was the very bottom of the last hill we came down the night before.



A typical view for us - the cycle track leaving the paved road to off down an undulating with steep sections of gravel.



Must be one of the smallest churches????



View from the top of the first major hill of the day - 260m high. (from sea level).  Think the grey structure you can see must be a dam wall?  Before we plummeted back down to sea level once again - of course.......



Working our way down from the top of hill number 2, the high point of Norway if not the trip - 275m.  You can see the sea glistening in the distance.







Back down at sea level, Jossingfjord.  The site of The Altmart incident in the early days of WW2.  Almost 2 months before German troops occupied the country this fjord was the scene of the first battle of the second world war on Norwegian territory.  Late in the evening of 18th Feb (I think 1940), the German tanker, the Altmart was boarded by a party of Marines from the Royal Navy destroyer, HMS Cossack in Jossingfjord.  On board the tanker were 299 captured British seamen, who were all freed in the dramatic rescue.  Seven Germans were killed in the action.  The Altmark had sailed as an auxillary with the German Pocket Battleship 'Admiral Graf Spree' in the South Atlantic.  Throughout the autumn of 1939 the 'Admiral Graf Spree' had posed a constant threat to the British Merchant Marine.  Surviving seamen from the sunken British traders were now on board the Altman, in transit to prison camps in Germany.  The Altmart entered the security of (the neutral) Norwegian territorial waters north of Trondheim Fjord, giving every appearance of being a normal merchant ship.  Despite British protests the prisoners were not discovered by the Norwegian authorities, who allowed the vessel to sail with a pilot and escort southwards down the coast.  Two days later the Altmark was intercepted by Royal Naval vessels near Egersund.  The British sought to capture the German tanker, which took shelter in Jossingfjord.  The attack that took place was in clear violation of Norwegian Sovereignty but the Germans had deceived the Norwegian authorities by denying that the ship was carrying any prisoners, and also failing to make telegraphic contact with the Bergen war harbour on passing as required.  The attack on the Altmark took place on the personal orders of the Minister of the Navy, Winston Churchill.  The incident received big headlines in the Norwegian and international press, but it was later determined that the Norwegian authorities had conducted themselves by and large correctly (Norwegian view at least???) over the two days that the ship had been in their waters prior to the attack.   The lack of Norwegian resistance to the Royal Naval action was strongly criticised by Germany, and historians believe the event sharpened Germany's interest in the Scandinavian countries.  After this incident Germany could argue that Norway was incapable of defending her neutrality.  
The accolade 'Jossing' has remained the fundamental term of praise for any Norwegian that has demonstrated determination to resist the occupational force.  But it was first used as a derogatory term by the Norwegian National Socialist Party in relation to Norway's passivity during the Jossingfjord rescue attempt.


Along the side of the Jossingfjord, through blasted out tunnels



Two small wooden huts from long ago sheltering under the rock overhang - now a tourist attraction.

As you come round the corner at the head of the fjord you see where the road goes - up, up and up very quickly.  See the tunnel half way up the rock face ...


... but what a view when we got up there.  Managed to cycle virtually all the way up - but in the tunnel pitch black and steep uphill - neither of us could keep our balance without being able to see anything around us, so had to push the bikes up through the last half of the tunnel.  'Only' a 200m hill but in a very short distance.



Some bright spark had written lines in yellow up the hills today - at 300m to go, 200 m to go, 100m and 'topp' written once you had got to the top!!  Perhaps to help the racers to know when to put a spurt on?  


A late finish to the day, but very satisfying - managed to virtually cycle the whole of the three big hills.  The view looking back up into the mountains from the valley bottom, with the hills still in the sunshine.  Made even later because we had to do an extra couple of miles to find a shop open to get food for the evening - had not wanted to carry the extra weight with us up the hills!!!!


A delightful and very welcome campsite in a tranquil and green valley - there were three lots of us cycle campers packing up the next morning.


A fairly typical house style in this area ...

I liked the owls on a branch decorating the house.


A 'hippy' type community on the coast - could have whiled away the day sat there in the sun.








We sat for ages watching the salmon leaping out of the water in this spot - where the river meets the fjord.  Some of the fish were huge and made dramatic splashes - often two or three leaps at a time like a large stone skimming the surface.  Very spectacular - as long as you were looking at the right place at the right time - reminded us of Barry who kept missing the leaping fish when we were having lunch one day in Denmark.  I have been told that the salmon don't go up the rivers until there is enough water in them - makes sense really.


I liked the idea of a ship instead of a tree house in this garden.





... and great to see an electric car plugged in and being charged.






Is this a sheep, or is it a friesian cow or a border collie in disguise???


The power of a honey buttie on a weary cyclist .....






Late in the day, rain threatening, and tough terrain - and Roger's tyre goes down.  Attacked by small black biting flies as soon as we stopped ....


... and the power of a Snickers Bar to help us on our way ....



To give you some idea of the terrain we were cycling through at the time - gravel track, steep undulations etc - but hopefully we were very near the end of the 'hilly' part of the trip???


We didn't quite get to the campsite before the rain came - and rained all night and until 11 am or so the day after - so yet again another late start.


Left by mid-day - and a complete turn around of the weather to beautiful blue skies.


I loved the quality of this light - not really captured it as it was - would have been fabulous in a cathedral.

... not quite as hilly, but still challenging from time to time - this bridge had gaps between the planks - just wide enough for our tyres to fall into - ok for mountain bikes - they could cycle straight over it whereas we had to push.


What a fantastic sunset ...  taken from our campsite overlooking the sea, beach and sand-dunes, with a lovely little fishing harbour next door.






Roger with Randolph, a Norwegian who had a caravan on the site.  He used to be a very active cyclist and came to tell us all about the amazing distances and speeds he used to do in the many annual races eg. from Jossingfjord to Stavanger in just over 4 hours .... on a racing bike, on the main roads not the meandering route we have taken (probably 3 days worth of our cycling....) - he had seen us arriving at the campsite, late in the evening once again after a late start and brought over two chairs and a table for us to use - what bliss.





About two weeks ago we had tried to contact Eric and Randi, two Norwegians we met a year ago in Battle at a meeting of fellow vehicle overlanders, who live in Sandnes - 10 minutes from the campsite we were staying at now.  Found out by another source that they were away in Iceland so had not been surprised to not get a reply from them - but at 11pm we got a text from the - they were just back that evening from Iceland - where were we???  And they are only at home for a couple of days before going off back onto the oil rigs where they both works as nurse medics - 2 weeks on, 4 weeks off.  Arranged to see them at the campsite about lunch time, so had a slow start to the day once again in the beautiful warm sunshine.  Eric and Randi arrived with their grand-daughter.


Finally left after 2pm, and rode as fast as we could to try and get the 16.45 pm ferry - fault is that we have now run out of detailed cycle maps - don't ask me how but I am missing the last 6 or 7 pages of maps for Norway!!!  so have had to get an ordinary map which is not really good enough for what we need - so have to make it up a bit as we go along - trying to miss out some of the lower gravel sections that meander around the coast off the much faster roads. Could see the structure below from a long way away but didn't realise that it was where we were heading for.  A massive crane that is demolishing what looks like an oil rig platform.

On yet another ferry - lost track now but must be about number 31 or so.


The foot passengers are poised to rush ashore as soon as the ferry docks and the ramps are allowed down.


Welcome to Skudenshavn ....








We're planning on having a day off tomorrow and exploring the town and area around, a lovely little campsite, good facilities and internet - that has finally allowed me to upload these photos. 

Next idea re getting home is that we are trying to rent a van from Newcastle airport on a one way hire, to leave it at either Burnley or Manchester airport.  Awaiting some quotes.  Decided to book the flight home a week on Monday as no cheap(er) tickets left for the end of next week, and so no pressure on us to rush tis last bit of the trip.