Intro to Tenerife and Beyond?

As the darkness of January hangs over us northern souls like an endless black and purple cloud, we sit in our comfy homes with the lights on and radiators oozing out heat, and we long for brighter and warmer days. The kamikaze hailstones bouncing off the conservatory windows finally convinced me that I needed to search for a comfortable climate to ride the motorbike.

On such a wintery day I surfed YouTube (again) for anything that could give a glimmer of hope that there were still places out there that were not wrapped in cold and darkness.

It will come as no surprise to you that ‘travel’ and ‘motorcycles’ feature highly within my filters on the infamous red and white app, but YouTubers will always struggle to keep me as one of their trusted followers due to my inability to remain interested in anything for long periods.

However, a young motorcycle chap popped up on the channel with a golden nugget of inspiration:

‘Road Trip from England to Tenerife’.

That was all it took to get me fired up, and so the seed was sown.

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There’s nowt so queer as folk!

As Andy D and I rode south together down a very wet M5, I was mystified why he would go to all the effort of leaving Carlisle on Tuesday morning to spend two days accompanying me on the English sector of my trip? Most of the riding was on motorways in weather which was typically English, it seemed the lure of visiting The Cotswolds and Exmouth, combined with a few pints out with me, was reason enough to get his bike out of the garage. In any event, it was good to be together for a couple of days even if I questioned it ‘the morning after the night before’!

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Ferry Crossing

“Boring isn’t it” says the octogenarian, by way of initiating a conversation with me. “Well if you want to get to Spain with a vehicle it’s either this or drive through France” I replied in a friendly manner. That was enough to allow him to continue with what he really wanted to tell me, which was that in his younger days he sailed around the world in his yacht. I seem to be getting adept at replying to people in such a way that it encourages them to tell me more. A shame I didn’t have this skill as a police officer, it may have come in handy, and prevented me from being labelled as one of the two “most boring bastards in the world”, the other of course being my work partner and buddy Andy M. In our defence the prisoner did say this as we slammed the cell door shut on him.

So back to Captain Pugwash, he seemed a thoroughly decent chap, slightly slimmer than his cartoon namesake, but it took intervention of his wife, presumably returning from the ladies room, to stunt his enthusiasm to tell me his life story. Nevertheless, he still had sufficient time to give me his first hand experience of several countries around the world before she dragged him off to the restaurant, probably muttering in his ear “For goodness sake Arthur, leave the young lad alone”!

I don’t know if he was called Arthur, but he looked like one, or at least how I perceive what an ‘Arthur’ looks like. Who I do know the names of are the ‘Pauls’ and Roger, no not Roger the cabin boy! Any similarity to the Captain Pugwash fable ends here. The Pauls and Roger are fellow bikers, I won’t bore you with the details but suffice to say, all interesting chaps in their own right.

Sitting in a quiet corner of the Commodore Lounge I have time to ponder the trip, and feel better about it. When in England I was starting to question what I was doing, leaving behind family and friends made me question myself. But sitting here I feel more positive, forward thinking, not looking at back. When in Exmouth and Portsmouth I could easily have headed north back into my comfort zone, I was tempted, but now I’m halfway to Spain I’m trying to grasp the nettle, and although it doesn’t hurt at the moment, I suspect it will.

The Road to Salamanca

The frosty bike seat seemed to confirm that today I will be leaving Salamanca in -1c, and if the forecasted +17c for my arrival in Mérida (just 170 miles south of here) remains true, it will be reason enough to encourage me to keep heading in that direction!

Yesterday’s 230 mile ride south from Santander to Salamanca was dry but very cold, probably due to the last 200 miles being at over 2,500’. I really felt like I was riding along the roof of northern Spain, although too far east to be in the stunningly beautiful snow covered Picos Mountains, which were clearly in view across to my right. The landscape and big skies’ made me think of the term ‘High Plain’ but even though I may be riding a modern day version of a horse, I don’t really fit the Clint Eastwood film ‘High Plains Drifter’.

My second coffee stop after which my hands regained some feeling!

I got a good getaway from the ferry port and after a coffee stop about 50 miles into this leg, a fellow Brit motorcyclist rolled up on his Yamaha MT-07. After identifying me as being one of his fellow ferry motorcyclists, my Madrid bound counterpart said he had ridden (along the same road) in hailstones. I looked back north to see the dark clouds, but had stayed ahead in the sunshine, and continued to do so for the rest of the chilly trip.

Changes

Sunday – Salamanca to Mérida

True to form I woke to brass monkey weather, a decent layer of frost on the bike seat made me in no rush to hit the (thankfully) dry roads. After a leisurely loading up of Reg, my first stop was down to the local garage to give him his first wash since leaving Carlisle. Once done and refuelled it was now a respectable 3C, but remained pretty much the same for the next 50 miles.

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Whenever will I learn!

Most of the places I go to are strictly native speaking, I’m cool with that and have mastered “I’m sorry but I cannot speak” Italian, French and Spanish, in their national tongue. Of course it doesn’t stop them wittering on in their native dialect, to which the encounter either descends into the Google translate app, or a game of charades. 

Trigueros is a one horse town without the horse! I like it though, this is not a place Brits abroad come to, and hence the English language doesn’t feature highly on the list of importance for the locals.

On our travels, Rachel always used to be a bit ‘wide eyed’ at my choices of local cuisine, I’d rather try my hand, or should I say mouth, with local fare, isn’t that part of the experience of travel? I must admit that I’ve had my bum bitten on a couple of occasions, in more senses than one!

But getting back to where I am now. A little bar restaurant was recommended to me, so after a beer to kill time until food got served from 9pm, I used translate to leave it to the barman to choose my food. I included I liked meat, fish, chips & potatoes.

On arrival of my two courses, two things were immediately apparent, firstly, I know where the horse went! Secondly, fish. In England we think of fish as cod, salmon, trout, even prawns and mussels. But my plate obviously contained something quite different, no it wasn’t a huge albatross egg, oh no, this was fishy, in more ways than one! You can sprinkle and fry tentacles as much as you like, but this was definitely not a fish dish I was accustomed to! 

So far, so good…….

The unassuming bar restaurant
Maybe i should have just stuck with the ‘meat’ egg and chips?
Fish, of sorts!

Tuesday and Wednesday – Ferry Days

The questions have followed me along this journey, the questions of leaving England, of leaving my family and of leaving my friends, the emotional tie was dragging me back, and I agonised over the thought, piece of cake for some, difficult for me. In the words of Freddie Mercury “This is a tricky situation, and I only have myself to blame”!

The question of Why? Why am I doing this alone? Maybe I should only tour with mates on their bikes, maybe I should stay with my family, concentrate on life in Carlisle, I have so much there! Salamanca was a turning point, or as it turned out, not. Salamanca is a beautiful city, but it was my most difficult time, I wanted to come home, but yet again I clung to the reasons for continuing the trip. The sign pointing to ‘Comfort Zone’ was north, I carried on south.

It must be Reg and not me?

As I wait at the ferry port I set to scribbling some ideas for the blog on my phone, I am frequently interrupted by people, which I welcome, as I enjoy the interaction. 

Whether it be the vending machine maintenance man offering me a free coffee and wishing me a safe trip, the guy from Berlin who asked if he could photograph Reg, (which I duly obliged by allowing him to sit astride the bike whilst his wife took a photo), or the guy from Madrid just coming over to chew the fat, and again wishing me an enjoyable holiday! All this within the space of just half an hour! People are so friendly towards me and I’m sure that, if it’s not just Reg, then it’s the fact I ride a motorcycle.

Improvisation- a borrowed bucket and some shower gel to spruce Reg up
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Captain Sensible

The hotel I stayed in on the northern side of Santa Cruz had me saying to myself “Now this is my kind of place”! It ticked every box, and had me asking the receptionist if they had any other hotels on the island but alas, it was a family owned one. My stay was only brief, I arrived at 1230am and left just ten hours later, but it was enough to tempt me to return for a couple of nights prior to my return ferry in three weeks.

On Thursday morning it was with some relief that Reg and I escaped the clutches of the traffic light infested capital, and headed south west down TF1 towards Los Cristianos. I was also glad that Reg had been parked in the shade for the morning’s ‘pack up’, as it was already 20c by 11am.

We weren’t under any time pressure heading to our destination for the next six nights, as our arrival wasn’t expected until 2pm, and we were just an hour’s ride away. I took time to take in my new riding environment, to my left was a clear view of nearby Gran Canaria and to my right the mountains. Everything looked splendid in the bright sunshine, blue sky and blue sea. I felt that I had arrived, reflected on what it took to get here and swore at myself, the polite version being “Bloody hell Big Bird, you did it”!

Although my nickname is Big Bird, I don’t usually talk to myself in that manner, but I’m trying something I recently read in a book which I have with me. Friends Nige and Sue very kindly gave me ‘Journeys to Impossible Places’ by Simon Reeve. For some reason I haven’t yet found Tenerife contained within its pages, but in it he is very open about himself. He says when he’s on his own and dealing with his ‘internal voice’ he tries to treat himself as he would a friend, and uses his nickname, as it softens any harsh criticism. I smiled when I read the line that followed about what his wife’s advice is “Don’t be so hard on yourself, and try to give just a little bit less of a toss about almost everything”. But this moment wasn’t a criticism, it was a good feeling from just getting here.

On the TF1 with the orange thingy Antonio kindly gave me
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The Nadgeries

Most important job on Friday morning was to go straight to the red light capital of the island, red traffic lights that is, to reclaim the T shirt I left in the hotel on Thursday night, old people eh? Once that was packed away on the bike it was off to ‘The Nadgeries’.

The Rally Dictionary 

Nadgery: A section of route, frequently ‘not-as-map’, where competitive skill should be moderated to avoid a ‘moment’. 

Yep, I’d agree with that. 

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