Monday 9 May 2016

Day 9 - Portsmouth to Swindon

Monday 09/05/2016

Had a fantastic nights sleep on the ship with some gentle rocking from the waves and the dull throb of the engines. We have a bigger than usual cabin with comfy beds and we were gently woken by daylight through the cabin window. As we only had snacks last night, Krysia wanted a proper breakfast so we had a proper pig-out in the restaurant on board. Actually pretty good value at £7.50 as you do get a lot for your money.

Being a really long crossing and not really wanting to drink much more, we watched a bit of TV, laughed at a Spanish trucker telling jokes we couldn't understand and reduced ourselves to doing crosswords! 28hrs is a long time to kill on a boat but it was nice to eat / mong-out as we pleased and this boat was far quieter and more intimate than the bigger ship we came down on. We ended-up having another meal before we docked which was a bit much but it made sense as we were getting home late.

As the boat docked at almost 9pm, there seemed little point in taking the back-roads back home so we opted for the fastest route home and were back within 1.5hrs of uneventful motorway riding.

The bike has yet again proved to be very reliable. Not convinced my cush-drive fix worked 100% so will need to re-visit that as I need new tyres anyway. Speaking of tyres, the front Pirelli Scorpion has survived almost 20k miles and is still just legal (but cracking-up now). The more road-biased Pirelli Scorpion rear tyre managed less than 8k miles and is totally bald in the middle which isn't that impressive on a low powered bike and for a tyre that came with soo much tread. They otherwise both performed well in all conditions, but I will try something else next time. The previous Michelin Anakee 2 rear lasted well but had a road bias.

Anyway, enough rambling. Another good short escape and opportunity to see / experience some new things. Despite the weather, I think this will be classed as another successful trip. Personally for me another week on the road would have been better, not sure Krysia would agree with me there though....

Mileage: 1418
Beers: 21 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 2 massive G&T + 4 white ports + 10 brandys + 1 red wine + 1 bottle of red
Ass pain: 2/10 (Krysia) / 1/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0 (1 witnessed + 1 drop)
Coldness: 3/10

Sunday 8 May 2016

Day 8 - Aquilar de Campoo to Santander

Sunday 08/05/2016

Slept really well despite it raining all night and being quite chilly. The 3 season bags did their job and kept us warm and cosy. The campsite bar also appears to be a fancy wedding venue - it's a huge building and the guy running the place got the big open fire going so we had a nice evening before finally turning in for an early night.

There was a very light drizzle in the morning so we skipped breakfast and had to put our tent away wet as it was. The weather soon cleared and it wasn't cold but it was very windy, especially as we passed a couple of seriously flooded lakes which had waves on them like at the sea-side. We stopped for coffee and cakes before going through some lovely alp-like roads and villages. All very pretty but we had some time to kill before getting to the port so we stopped for more coffee which we enjoyed outside in the glorious sunshine - finally.

We decided to have a decent lunch so stopped at a lovely Taberna but we had real problems communicating and Google Translate got us nowhere. In the end we picked a random set meal from the menu. It was pretty substantial to say the least. Bread, cheese platter, large salad bowl, prawns, languistines, octopus, more prawns, crab balls, cake, a bottle of red and more coffee. It was a high quality feast that was certainly well worth the €30. Will be better than the slop on the ship.

We made the boat in plenty of time - it's a much smaller vessel and will take over 28hrs to get to Portsmouth - but we have a nice and big cabin with sea views. Let's hope that the crossing is smooth as I have doubts about how the bike next to mine is secured and I'm convinced that it will topple over on to my one! Not quite so many bikes on board this time but chatted to some guys that had been down to Morocco on their BMWs.

There is only one bar on the ship and one restaurant. It's the no-frills 'Economie' service, but it's fine and at least the bike parking wasn't as manic as last time! The sea is also getting pretty rough now that we're getting further from shore.

Tomorrow evening we will arrive in Portsmouth and will have just a short journey back home. It's been a good trip but we were really let down by the unusually cold and wet weather - especially whilst we were hoping to enjoy the Duaro valley. Ironically we understand that the UK has had a mini heatwave whilst we've been gone..... The bike also struggled with the bulk of two adults and all of our combined gear - will consider a more powerful bike next time or stick to riding solo! Also, next time I will invest in a Bluetooth headset if I'm travelling with someone as at times I wanted to speak to Krysia but couldn't (and vice-versa). When we are older, we will return in a camper-van and take 5 weeks like a retired Dutch couple that we met in the bar in Portugal.

Mileage: 1331
Beers: 20 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 2 massive G&T + 4 white ports + 10 brandys + 1 red wine + 1 bottle of red
Ass pain: 2/10 (Krysia) / 1/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0 (1 witnessed + 1 drop)
Coldness: 3/10

Saturday 7 May 2016

Day 7 - Villablino to Aquilar de Campoo

Saturday 07/05/2016

Got up for a 9am breakfast despite a restless night with dogs barking outside and other strange noises keeping me awake. Had a great fried breakfast with good coffee and more cakes. After saying we wouldn't eat anymore last night we got loads of snacks and ended-up ordering a couple of large baguette sandwiches before bed time....

There was heavy rain for much of the night, but this morning is was just light rain despite all the grey clouds. The temperature was just 6C when we set-out which felt very cold bearing in mind our gloves, etc were still wet from the day before. Today's roads were much quicker and easier going and at least we got to see the countryside. We climbed over a 1600m pass where it got very cold, after that things started to warm-up with no more rain and even the sun dared to come-out a few times. We stopped for coffee and petrol and generally took our time. We looked around a small town called Cervezos or something, which was nice.  Unfortunately my sat-nav went a bit mental and we ended-up going 10km in the wrong direction and had to back-track.... Still, the views made it OK and it was nice to be back in the Picos with stunning mountain views.

We then headed straight for Agilar de Campoo which is a nice little town next to a large resevoir / lake. The dam was impressive and it was cool to ride over the top of it. To get to the campsite we had to climb another crazy steep road with 1st gear switch-backs. The camp-site is great - it's in the middle of a lovely forrest and has horses roaming around freely.

We cooked the rest of our food - the weather was warm and our forrest camp really nice. As it was still quite early and we were in such a nice setting, we decided to go for a walk by the lake. The water level was really high with many tree-tops sticking-out from the top of the lake. The views were stunning with snow-capped mountains and dense forrest surrounding the lake. As well as the cuckoos we heard the distant rumble of thunder but chose to carry on. Within a few minutes it was chucking it down and we got wet again before we could make it back to the camp-site..... Good job we had set-up camp as there were no chalets to rent here!

We had a nice day, but now we have little choice but to hit the bar again. No draft beers today so I am stuck with miniature bottles of strong lager. Why can Krysia get a monster of a Gin & Tonic yet I have to have a miniature beer?

Tomorrow we head back to Santander via a bit more of the Picos. More rain is due from 10am so we will try and get packed-up and back on the road by then. We should be able to leave the bike in the port and to go exploring Santander as our boat doesn't leave until quite late.

Mileage: 1251
Beers: 17 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 2 massive G&T + 4 white ports + 10 brandys
Ass pain: 5/10 (Krysia) / 1/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0 (1 witnessed + 1 drop)
Coldness: 7/10

Friday 6 May 2016

Day 6 - Braganca to Villablino

Friday 06/05/2016

The stone bungalow we rented was excellent and we slept well after all the Brandy. We were expecting a bit of rain today but it was torrential rain right from the morning. We took our time, cooked some breakfast in the bugalow and waited for the weather to get better. It didn't so we headed off over the small mountain roads back into Spain.

The weather was shocking - constant heavy rain with the roads leading us through the clouds and practically zero visibility. The road we took was a very windy, gravelly and narrow fire-track which was very steep. Would have been stunning in good weather but couldn't appreciate the views and spent my whole time trying to avoid the potholes and make the tight bends. Really hard work. Eventually rode into another tiny village where I came to a halt on an uneven surface and ended-up slowly dropping the bike as I couldn't take the weight when lent over.... No damage done to man/woman or machine but it was annoying as I can't believe the Sat-Nav lead us to such a rabbit warren of roads that appeared not to have been maintained since the middle ages....

Our next issue was that we were getting low on petrol and with places being so few and far between here, we had to detour to get fuel when we could. We then decided to just try and get to Villablino on the fastest roads possible. Despite the short distance and better roads, it still seemed to drag on in the rain.

We stopped in a small village just past Ponferrada where we had a couple of coffees, some potato pie and some cakes. It was still raining when we left the cafe and we both started feeling quite cold (the temperature has dropped to below 10C and colder up in the mountains). We got to Villablino and decided not to even consider camping! We headed out of town where we found a  small hotel (above a bar again) which is nice, cosy and warm and was only €41 incl. breakfast.

The weather really ruined the day. Not experienced such crap weather since I went to Ireland. The views would have been great but with clouds, fog, heavy rain and misty visors we saw very little today. Ended-up with no photos. I reckon that today would have been amazing in the dry with gorges, mountains, rivers and some views resembling Dartmoor and others Snowdonia.

Hit the bar - it would be rude not to support the local economy! Some excellent strong bitters on offer.

Tomorrow we head back into the Picos where we should be able to camp about 75 miles away from the port. We are due more rain tomorrow though so I suspect we'll be looking for yet another hotel!

Mileage: 1090
Beers: 13 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 1 massive G&T + 4 white ports + 10 brandys
Ass pain: 3/10 (Krysia) / 1/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0 (1 witnessed + 1 drop)
Coldness: 7/10

Thursday 5 May 2016

Day 5 - Porto to nr. Braganca

Thursday 05/05/2016

Another very warm night but this time I slept with the sleeping-bag open and also with the door to the porch open. Slept much better but we were awoken by the sound of light rain on the tent. It was a good excuse to quickly pack our stuff up and find shelter for a sandwich breakfast before another long ride.

The weather was drizzly and foggy for most of the day. We rode through Porto along the river - very cool bars / cafes looking a bit shabby-chic if you like all of that kind of stuff. We continued along the roads that followed the Duaro river - very nice road with great views but it was hard work in the wet with shiny man-hole covers in the middle of the road on most corners.... Very few straight sections made it difficult to take in the views whilst riding.

We stopped for fuel, coffee and cake in a small village. It was good to get out of the rain, but our waterproof gear kept the rain out and it was nice not to be boiling hot like yesterday. Progress was really slow, hours went by and we didn't seem to be covering any distance. Saw some more shocking driving - nobody looks in their mirrors and people just pull-out in front of you. Saw a HGV driving like a nutter down a very windy road. As he approached blind bends where he needed to use both lanes then he just 'beeped' and carried on with slowing down much. Inevitably as he rounded another bend there was a loud bang and he hit a Transit van that was in the middle of the road waiting to turn at a junction.... Glass, plastic and metal everywhere but no flesh & blood damage. The whole road was blocked, but being on a bike we managed to squeeze through.

The Duaro Valley really is stunning. Such great views with Vinyards absolutely everywhere along the 'Porto Wine Route'. Lots of river cruise ships heading up and down the river. Shame the weather spoiled the views. It was very rural and the road constantly twisty but we did ride through some pretty towns by the river.

We decided to break off from the Duaro Valley road and head to Braganca en route back to Spain as it would have taken us hours to finish the road. A new road heading North had just been built, which was empty, so we covered loads of distance in a short space of time. We stopped again for a meal in a roadside restaurant which looked quite posh. We didn't really fit-in well with our soaking bike gear. Nobody spoke English so our food order was a lottery. We got Goulash, Sausage Roll things, bread and Tuna with crackers as a starter, followed by soup, followed by belly-pork / potatoes / salad and finally warm-cake & fruit-salad to finish (with some great coffee). Not eating again tonight - we were stuffed! All for €20 in total! The nice velvet seats were left soaked from my wet motorbike trousers!

We started looking for camping in Braganca and found a sign which took us way out onto the sticks to a place called Cepo Verde where we have rented a wild-west looking little stone house which is actually very nice with all the mod-cons. Good value at €35 - it even has a wood burner!

Nice bar - sampling all the local brandy varieties. Some are excellent! They also have the world's biggest pen-knife!

Tomorrow we head back into Spain. We are due more 'light rain' tomorrow and then 'heavy rain' on Saturday so I think it won't be much fun going forwards.

Mileage: 942
Beers: 9 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 1 massive G&T + 4 white ports + 10 brandys
Ass pain: 5/10 (Krysia) / 2/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0 (1 witnessed)
Coldness: 2/10

Wednesday 4 May 2016

Day 4 - Santiago to Porto

Wednesday 04/05/2016

The night was warm - our 3 season bags were overkill but my new sleeping mat was amazingly good. Slept quite well but it was a little tight in the tent with half our gear inside it and I felt a bit too hot.

We decided to take fast roads for the first few miles today before peeling-off on the more scenic roads. The small roads are brilliant, but to cover 150 miles can take more than 7hrs of riding so sometimes you have to make a few compromises. As it happens my Sat-Nav and paper-map were both pretty inaccurate today...

We had coffee and sandwiches for breakfast at the campsite before heading off. It was not windy today, the weather was boiling at over 30C at times. Too hot especially in slow moving traffic. The roads were pretty average until we got into the mountains in Portugal at Moncau. Lovely forrests, wine valleys and the odd stunning building. The roads were twisty and fun but with two people + luggage the centre stand hit the ground when I got too carried away.

I made a few wrong turns and twice ended up going up roads that were amazingly steep with tight turns. 1st gear clutch-slipping stuff - it was difficult not to wheelie and if I had to stop then we would have fallen over as I would have started skidding backwards... I also went through a motorway toll both without paying but realised that I had done wrong and managed to get a correct ticket issued....

We got to Porto just in time for rush-hour. Crazy-busy with some bad driving also on offer. The sat-nav took us to a campsite that turned-out to be a fancy office block. The next campsite had apparently stopped being a camp-site 12 years ago... Ended-up heading over the river where we are camped by the sea. We cooked some more Smash / Couscous with All Day English Breakfast and Irish Stew followed by soup and sandwiches.

The weather suddenly became overcast and the temperature dropped significantly but we still went to the beach even though it was getting late. Inevitibly we ended-up in a beach bar. Finally got to drink some white port in Porto so my life is complete!

Tomorrow we take on the Duaro valley - not sure how far we get or if we find anywhere to camp. We are due thunderstorms on Friday, I suspect that we may get rain tonight and tomorrow!

Mileage: 715
Beers: 9 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 1 massive G&T + 4 white ports
Ass pain: 4/10 (Krysia) / 3/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0
Coldness: 1/10

Tuesday 3 May 2016

Day 3 - El Campu to Santiago de Compostela

Tuesday 03/05/2016

The hotel was a nice treat after riding up to almost 8pm last night. Good value at €40 for the two of us, but we spent the same on food / drink! Super-comfy bed made it difficult to get-up this morning.

After making-up a bit of distance yesterday, we decided to have a go at making it to Santiago de Compostela rather than camping by the Bay of Biscay.

We had breakfast at the hotel even though we really didn't want it after all the food last night, but it meant that we could skip lunch (well unless you count breakfast bars when we stopped) and push on a bit. It was very windy all day, but really warm and sunny. Perfect weather for motorcycling.

We had a break at Ribadeo by the coast where we were meant to camp but it was early and we had made good progress so we pushed-on to make up some of the one day that we were short of for this trip. After the fantastic mountain roads, we had to do a load of dual carriage roads and motorways to cover the ground but even they had nice views and were pretty empty.

We got to Santiago and had the tent set-up by 5pm. Clothes all laundered, got showered and cooking food by 6pm. Good camp-site - only a 2km stroll from the old town. We cooked some of our own food for a change. Spicy Chicken Curry with Smash and Couscous, followed by Carrot and Lentil Soup with Rye Bread and Ham Sandwich chasers.... Quality. Then we went into town to check-out the sights.

We felt like real pilgrims walking the last 2km (but more like 4km with our route) of the Camino de Santiago finishing at 9th Century cathedral. Lots of hills - pretty tired after walking around the old town and all the way back. Phone reckons we've done 30,000 steps today! Santiago is cool. Lots of narrow streets with interesting shops, bars and street entertainment. The cathedral was stunning inside and out.

A concert was just getting going in one on the old town squares as we headed back, we probably should have stayed but we'd have never got back.... Glad we chose to camp here as the town was worth visiting properly.

Just watching the 2nd half of the Bayern Munich vs. Atletico Madrid match. Tense stuff - Lewandowski is pretty handy.

Tomorrow I reckon we skirt Vigo and make it out of Spain and down to Porto on back roads.

Mileage: 551
Beers: 9 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos + 1 massive G&T
Ass pain: 4/10 (Krysia) / 3/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0
Coldness: 1/10

Monday 2 May 2016

Day 2 - Santander to El Campu

Monday 02/05/2016

Had a good night on the boat and slept well. The boat arrived as planned, but as always it was carnage on the motorbike parking deck... Hundreds of bikes packed in so tight that it was almost impossible to walk over and get to our bike. Anyway, the weather was good and within minutes we were on the back roads heading for the Picos. Weather was nice and warm but there was still snow by the side of the road at 1500m. Met some cross country ski guys who were down from Leon for the weekend. Lots of snow high-up.

The twisty roads were hard-work on an under-powered and overloaded bike. We got to see the bronze deer statue though which was nice but were flagging after skipping breakfast. We stopped for a late lunch in a little village in the mountains which was nice and gave us the energy we were missing.

Got to Riano where we planned to camp at a nice place overlooking a big lake. Apparently the snow had only just cleared a week ago so the place was shut. There was nowhere else to camp so we rode on about an hour and checked into a nice rural hotel above a pub full of old boys. Nice enough but no idea what it will cost as nobody speaks English! Have a feeling that we won't be camping much as it's not really on the main tourist route and it's only because of the pilgrims walking the Camino de Santiago route that there are any places at all to stay at.

Despite not really being hungry, we ordered another set meal. We got a ridiculous amount of food - proper US portions! Bread, fried bread cake thing, a massive bowl of salad, all before the gargantuan main courses. €12 each - total bargain!

Tomorrow we may try and make-up some time and try to push on to Camino, if possible. The small mountain roads are epic..... as long as you don't have to cover any distance.

Mileage: 330
Beers: 6 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's + 3 big red vinos
Ass pain: 4/10 (Krysia) / 1/10 (Me)
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0
Coldness: 1/10

Day 1 - Swindon to Plymouth

Sunday 01/05/2016

We set off nice and early to catch the boat from Plymouth to Santander. The weather was a little chilly but it was dry, initially. Our son Konrad was parachuting at Dunkeswell down in Devon so we did a slight detour and caught-up with him there - having missed his very early jump.
The weather started turning bad so we carried on to Exeter and the A38. As we got closer to Plymouth it started raining so we just ploughed-on and managed an easy 200 miles on the petrol I already had in the tank. It took an age to get onto the boat which wasn't ideal as the rain worsened.

In any case, our cabin is nice, so we will need to make the most of it before we start roughing it in the tent.

Met a bunch of faces we knew from Swindon on the boat, a lot of chat and funny recollections over a few beers. Good evening.

Great to escape, particularly having left my last job recently and feeling a bit tired in general. Nice to have a bit of freedom. No accommodation booked, only a rough route plan - we will travel where the road leads us with the only real deadline being to make the return crossing!

Mileage: 177
Beers: 6 + wierd coctail + 3 big vodka's
Ass pain: 1/10
Mechanical issues: 0
Accidents: 0
Coldness: 3/10

Thursday 28 April 2016

2 days to go - packing time!

Decided to give the bike a quick once-over and start packing all the important stuff. Noticed that the cush-drive rubbers were half shot again (after a few thousand miles). Shocking, Yamaha must make them out of chocolate..... Did the usual fix of chopping an old inner-tube up and packing the rubber strips in between the sprocket holder and the original cush-drive rubbers. Gives a nice tight fit and should prevent any further wear and slop in the drive-line.

Also spotted that the gear lever was very loose. Awkward access, but it's a nice and tight fit now.

Tyres are not great, but they will do until we get back home. Pumped them up to just above the maximum 2-up pressure as I don't want them over-heating....

Other than that, the bike is fine - having been serviced recently. A bit of checking, oiling, greasing, lubing and unnecessary fettling and she's good to go.

Fixed my tent (replaced a broken pole) and then started putting all of the camping and cooking gear into my new massive LOMO 100 litre dry-bag. Filled the entire bag! It looks silly and encroaches on the rear seat a little - but what can you do when you need to get 2 people's stuff onto one bike.... Might have to re-think this when on the road - I have my old Ortlieb bag in there so may go for a twin stacked arrangement to see if that helps.

Got a couple of spare tubes and some tools loaded-up so we should be OK with any minor issues.

Put a few essentials into the panniers and then pointed-out that the remaining space in one of the panniers was all that my wife is getting for all of her personal items. Looks like she will also be taking a small ruck-sack! I don't need much stuff beyond my bike 'compression' clothing which I can wash on the road and it will dry overnight - so I just need a T-shirt or two and my Bear Grylls survival trousers!

We're good to go!



Monday 25 April 2016

Route / Plan

Always good to have a plan. Sometimes best not to stick to it too rigidly, but you gotta start somewhere. Here's a starter for 10: -


Day 1 – Sun. 01/05/16 - Swindon > Plymouth ~165 miles (3 hours)

Plymouth to Santander boat sails at 15:45 so we leave Swindon at 09:00 via Bristol / Dunkeswell to visit older son at Uni / Parachuting.


Day 2 – Mon. 02/05/16 (Bank Holiday) – Santander > San Vicente de la Barquera A8 > Unquera N621
> Buelles N-621 > La Hermida N621 > Potes > La Vega > Vejo > Portilla de la Reina
> Riano ~105 miles (4 hours)

Boat arrives in Santander at 12:15 – Road cuts through Picos Mountains


Day 3 – Tue. 03/05/16 – Riano > Retuerto N625 > Casielles > Canga de Onis > Oviedo > Ribadeo ~195
miles (<7 hours)

Camp by the sea somewhere.


Day 4 – Wed. 04/05/16 – Ribadeo > Lugo > Santiago de Compostela > Vigo ~180 miles (5 hours)

Check-out pilgrimage destination and try to cover some distance.


Day 5 – Thu. 05/05/16 – Vigo > Moncao (P) > Braga > Porto > Vila Nova de Gaia ~105 miles (4 hours)

Camp outside of Porto by the beach and get the bus into town for drinks.


Day 6 – Fri. 06/05/16 – Vila Nova de Gaia > Peso da Regua N222 > Pinhao > Macedo de Cavaleiros
> Braganca ~190 miles (<6 hours)

Road runs along first part of Douro Valley before heading North towards Spain

This is where we run out of time so may need to do 2 days in one if we haven't already made-up time:
Day 7 – Sat. 07/05/16 – Braganca > Ponferrada (E) > Villablino ~150 miles (4 hours)
Day 7! – Sat. 07/05/16 –Villablino > Vanes > Aguilar de Campoo ~145 miles (3.5 hours)


Get back into the Picos Mountains for an easy run back to the port.


Day 8 – Sun. 08/05/16 – Aguilar de Campoo > Corconte > Santander ~75 miles (2.5 hours)

Boat leaves at 17:15 so we head-out slowly and stop for lunch en-route.


Day 9 – Mon. 09/05/16 – Portsmouth > Swindon ~80 miles (2 hours)

Boat arrives at 20:45 so we ride straight home.


Friday 22 April 2016

8 days to go.... but where to go?

This year my bike trip plans didn't really pan-out as expected.....

Plan A - The original plan was for a bike trip that would bring together a lot of my old pals for a drunken adventure around my favourite bike destination - Morocco. This would be the funniest trip of all time as we are all the best of friends since childhood and the possibilities for fun are endless.

Plan B - With limited holiday availability we all decided that perhaps it would make more sense to do something a little closer to home. Boat to Spain and then a loose plan from there.

Weeks passed and it became clear that not everyone could commit the time, money and / or they couldn't get hold of a bike.... On top of that, the Plymouth / Portsmouth to Santander / Bilbao tickets were selling-out fast so a decision had to be made. The alcohol inspired plan was falling apart at the seams.....

Plan C - Does Dino fancy another trip to the continent? Unfortunately Dino's father passed-away so he had to burn a lot of his leave on sorting-out his late father's estate. Dino was out.

Plan D - Go Nomad. I am happy travelling on my own. Whilst not having anyone to share the experience with, you do engage more with the locals, get a better feel for a place and you can do what you want, how you want, when you want. That said, suddenly having to pay a load of extra money for cabins, accommodation, etc. seemed a bit wasteful which led to......

Plan E - Take the wife as a pillion! I normally do these trips as a bit of an escape and I don't mind roughing-it so why take someone who prefers home comforts and doesn't like motorbikes..... I would have even less space for my gear and the bike riding fun would be reduced but: -

1). It didn't cost much more than going solo, so it would be a cheap 'holiday treat' for her.
2). I will have someone who can cook for me.
3). The distances are pretty short so I shouldn't get too many complaints.
4). My mum was happy to 'baby-sit' our 13-yr old.
5). I will have someone to drink Port with in Porto.

So, boat from Plymouth to Santander. Picos de Europa. North Coast of Spain (mostly back-roads). Santiago de Compostela. Northern Portugal and down to Porto. Douro Valley. Back via Spanish back-roads and through the Picos. Ferry from Santander to Portsmouth and home. So only about 1500 miles or so in 9 days (2 days on the boat). Easy.....