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Look, I'm blonde okay, right down to the roots!
What day is it, oh right, Wednesday. So Monday was spent in manual labour and posting the revised book 14, The Girl. Here's the direct link on Amazon.
So Tuesday, I've been looking at the maps covering 'my' little corner of Wales and I came up with a short little circuit, so I set off bright and early - well overcast and not quite as late as usual and headed for the Severn crossing. Once over the water I climbed away from Chepstow before dropping to Raglan, by now the sun was trying to break out and it was all quite pleasant. From there I took the old road across to Abergavenny and the Usk valley. My destination for a lunch stop was a bit further yet, along the A40 towards Brecon, at Crickhowell. (I'm sticking to English names to give you all a chance of pronouncing them!)
I spotted a tea wagon just short of the town so instead of sandwiches by the castle it was bacon sandwich and tea in a lay-by! Partly fed, I continued into town for a look at the castle remains before a little side trip to see the chambered tomb that sits almost on the A40 as you leave town. Then it was back into Crickhowell, down to the Usk and over the ancient bridge to start the next part of my route. Up the valley, climbing in low metres per kilometre, over the Brecon canal and then left and up! and up and up, its not a huge distance to the top but you go from @ 60m to 512m, about halfway crossing into open moorland.
I admit to stopping a couple of times - to take photographs you understand, the views north (behind you on the climb) out into the Brecon Beacons are pretty impressive. Once I reached the summit I stopped for my sandwiches and to enjoy the upland ambience, something I've been missing for @ 10 months. But time was getting on and my guesstimate was another 80km to ride so I set off anew for the south Wales valleys.
Down to the Heads of the Valleys road then it was back to climbing to reach Blaenavon from where it was pretty much all downhill to Cwmbran. I did a bit of valley hopping to get to Caerleon and the Usk once again then out of that valley to reach the eastbound A49. It was overcast by now so I didn't stop for eis but instead pushed on to the bridge and a return to England.
The kilometres had been adding up, I finished on just over 180 of them shorter than the last few rides for sure but with 1975m vertical metres, it was a pretty hard days riding.
And so to today. Well more hard labour for the landlady (lol) and a shortish walk of @ 8km which included time spent BlackBerrying, gaining a myriad of punctures and lacerations in the process. I collected about 2kg of the things so I ended up making an apple and blackberry crumble, from bush and tree to cooked and eaten in 3 hours - an hour of that was walking back! The apple was maybe a bit tart but the berrys were suweeeettt! I think Bev liked it, there was a pattern on the bowl but no longer!
This would've been posted sooner but I managed to put the wrong chapter of 21 up, though I remembered it, anyhow, its fixed now. So this evening its Sports Day from book 2 and Kabin Fever from book 21.
Tschussie
Madeline Anafrid
Comments
Blackberrying ...
Stopped in little off-the-main road cafe, and we asked of the blackberry pie was fresh.
Our waitress rolled up her sleeve and showed us the damages. Oh!
One of the joys
One of the joys of living in Oregon was blackberrying and making pies. I had a little white dog that I had trained to find the ripe bushes for me by giving her a taste of the bounty. :)
Hugs,
Erin
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
you
Should see my legs - sure they'll recover in a day or two but some of those gouges hurt!
Madeline Anafrid Bell
Getting pricked while picking blackberries?
How quaint.
Ok, I'm feeling rather smug at the moment. I have a thornless blackberry plant in my Fruit Cage. The crop this year is huge. The fruits are cheery tomato sized and so sweet. I've had a great crop of red currants. I've been blitzing them along with some soft scoop ice cream. Then a few blackberries on top and you have a great desert. The slighly sharp red currants compliment the sweet blackberries.
Well done on climbing up to Bleanavon. I've been to the flatlands of Norfolk today and helped an old friend move into some sheltered housing. Wonders never cease as the M25 was not a car park at six pm on a weekday evening.
Samantha
you keep
blackberries in a cage? sorry that and 'thornless' smack of cruelty of the highest order, the only good blackberries are wild and most importantly free! I really thought better of you.
Madeline Anafrid Bell
How else can I keep those thieving
Magpies off my crops eh? They took all the cherries from one of my trees and broke a branch in the process.
I grow Tayberries, Red Currants, a few Strawberries as well as the Blackberry in my fruit cage. it is 5m x 5m and I need to fill it somehow.
Besides those berries are really yummy. :) :)
I have to fight a war against brambles. Next Door's garden is 100% brambles. some are 12-14ft high and they seem to get everywhere. Their fruit is good but much more suited to making jam and pies.
Samantha
Thieving Magpie
Rossini anybody? He definitely penned an excellent "curtain riser" for that opera.
G/R
you could
er, 'dispose' of the Magpies, a bit of pest control. Whilst you're about it, we have recently acquired marauding Gulls, its worse than living in Yarmouth!
Madeline Anafrid Bell