Saturday, October 27, 2012

Epilogue to travel blog (Epiblog)

The Adventurous adventure 2012 saw it’s final stretch and end last week. But I haven’t gotten around to ending the saga. The trip ended with a slight anti climax. But that’s reality, not everything ends with an explosion and dramatic reunion in Hollywood style. The trip wound down and I came home, so this last final update is just a small conclusion, thanks and a little philosophy. A bit wanky but nothing one wouldn’t expect from an update on my timeline.

Firstly thank you. In its conception the trip was always to be a solo mission. Regardless of how much I’d unplug from the internet, Facebook and everything else I’d have to travel alone. In the end though the laptop and smart phone ended up tucked away beside my clothes in the pannier bags, and so I brought you all with me. Any updates were a connection to back home and they cheered me up and made me feel a little less alone when I’d gone a week without speaking to someone who spoke English. It was also nice to know that someone took the time to read through something I took the time to write. Thank you for that.

Where I left off on the tale I was in Hannover and I stopped writing about Oktoberfest’s 4th day when Mike left. I wrote about the last few days but even writing about it was a chore so I’m not putting it up here. The weather turned towards the last couple of days and it looked set to be down pouring constantly nearly the whole way to Amsterdam. Niall’s phone showed an unprecedented amount of rain, either a tsunami or the apocalypse was on its way. The first day cycling out of Hannover proved not to be so bad. But day 2 was 80 kilometres cycling through sheets of heavy shower falling vertically thank god. Had there been a wind added to the mix the punctures that plagued my journey that day might have driven me over the edge and plundered my soul of all hope. Day 2 was mainly along the Mittelandkanal a really long canal that stretches a good bit across Germany, going nearly in a straight line from Hannover towards Amsterdam relieving a traveller from the burden of thinking and navigating. Though for the cyclist on a road bike with skinny wheels and thin tyres the gravel path isn’t ideal and is conducive to punctures. Add the rain and by the end you can expect a chain and gears full of grit and a bike covered in mud. Day 3 dried up and this was set to stay, but the clearer days brought colder nights. All my (very smelly) socks and underwear hung from the bags as I cycled along the road. The nights got colder and colder and on the morning of day 5 frost was on my tent and bike. But the roughing it being almost over hope diluted the hardship. The cold met a defiant perseverance and I ploughed on. The day before reaching Amsterdam I was 50 km short of the city in a small city called Amersfoort passing the time there rather than getting into Amsterdam and having to spend a night in the city with no money, the plan being to find some woods in the evening then cycle the rest of the way early enough the next morning to find the bus park, sort myself out and pack the bike into a tarp that had to pass for a proper bike bag to get on the bus. To pass the time I installed myself in McDonalds and went online planning out the next day and chatting with friends online for a few hours, eating speculatius biscuits and jellies. Around 6.30 I was strapping everything to my bags to go find the last forest that I would sleep in on my travels, when this Giant Dutch guy with long shaggy hair comes out from the restaurant. ‘Do you have far to go?’ he asked. ‘I’ve got to cycle another 10 or so km towards Amsterdam, gotta camp wild tonight, I’ve spent all my money so I can’t get a hostel.’ I said earnestly. ‘You need a place to stay? You can stay with me here in Amersfoort.’ The man offered. This is a pretty exact account of the conversation we had, the words may be a bit off but it’s representative of the entirety of our dialogue. So having not gotten to know one another, I graciously declined. 10 minutes later he and his son leave the restaurant and any paranoid suspicion that may have alarmed me earlier now was replaced by guilt and regret. He was just a normal dad and I could have slept in a bed and had a well needed shower, but wouldn’t thanks to my lack of trust. The next day I got all the way to Amsterdam with not even a flat, my tube with copious amounts of duct tape holding in punctures didn’t even have a pissing fit and give me trouble. The bus man let me take my bike on board and without a hitch I found myself in London. Here I conclude my account of my travels.

It struck me that on every holiday or trip that I’ve ever been on there’s a gradual reintegration to where you left off. To get to Spain you get the bus to the airport, then fly then wait in the airport for another bus. Then the reverse on the way back. While you wait around the airport on the way back, or you look out the window of the coach at the sights that remind you of the week earlier you start to reflect. A week ago seems strangely different and you feel like you’re observing everything through different eyes. At least that’s how it is for me, and that’s how it was for me heading back up North after a month in France. The reintroduction was extended and slowed as my trip was extended and slow. Passing through Luxembourg only facilitated this by being a massive buffer between Germany and France. Having time in Amsterdam where the trip saw its birth to arse around and think felt profound. Looking over the rail of the barge that crosses the Ijmeer tributary and offers the cheap skate tourist a free boat cruise at the industrial side of Holland, looking at the world in operation while I was removed from its running and just an observer. I was left with an impression of vastness and enjoyed soaking in the feats that civilization has achieved. Even being able to stand in Amsterdam is testimony. This I felt and realized that it’s not something I normally appreciate being too wrapped up in my own little life, being a cog in the complex machine reduces your perspective and ability to appreciate the grand scheme of things. Naturally you can understand I felt a little sad.

Cycling is a wonderful metaphor for life. Probably anyone who has a sport that they love can draw comparisons between it and what they experience day to day, my punctures are my trials, my broken pannier my tribulations. Though I don’t think many sports can come as close to paralleling life as cycling. As Jack Kerouac put it. "Our battered suitcases were piled on the sidewalk again; we had longer ways to go. But no matter, the road is life." The Road being life a cycle trip with no set course is true to the comparison that I’m trying to draw. Turn left; turn right; go through Dijon or Digoin. It doesn’t matter really. All roads lead to home, what matters is that you enjoy your way and can make the most of it. When my pannier racks broke in the outskirts of Paris as I endeavoured to leave the city, despair haunted my will to carry on. When you suffer from your resources crumbling around you in life you feel the same way. What do you do? Get into the foetal position and die? There’s no hopping on a train to escape in life like I could have done in Paris, take a breath and think about what you can do. Clarity of mind sets in after a few miles on the bike. After the heart has started pounding and taken on a rhythm. After the lungs have become flooded with oxygen rich fresh air. After the skin pales on contact with the cold air, then flushes warmer than usual from the exertion. You’re in the zone. Thoughts flow freely. Problems can be easily broken down, and with cycling in particular you’re freer to use that zone to think about and work out other areas of your life. Cycling is a great metaphor for life but it can also be a great tincture for life’s more complex problems. Especially those more confounding problems that in the haze of every day working life can seem as impossibly coiled as a tangled mess of thread. A cyclist in the zone will remember that the thread though tangled is almost one dimensional in its simplicity. An ordinary person as prone to bouts of boredom and foggy headedness as any of his or her contemporaries can enjoy a serenity for a time. Knowing that he or she will cycle again and that any of life’s problems will unfurl themselves when they’re on the road and that clarity of mind sets in. In short, I recommend cycling for anyone looking for a sport.

And that’s it. But on my final note a special thanks to the great people who put me up along the way. Jorgy Bear. You sir are a legend. I’m still enjoying the Bochum curry sauce and I’m still sore that you made me use the steering wheel playing Mario kart. Next time you get an extra nun chuck and I’ll kick your ass. Tobias. Cheers for coming out for the chat in Brussels when the girls totally bailed. I’m fond of those chats, the kind of which we had. You know what I’m on about. That Belgian beer was stronger than I was ready for, apologies if you were putting up with a babbling piss head by the end of the night but honestly I just didn’t reckon on 10% beer being so effective. Judith. What can I say? Your hospitality and general humanity are outstanding. That night sitting around your kitchen with your family telling jokes drinking all your brother’s beer will stay with me. I’d a great time in your company. That tour of Paris has me hankering for more time in the place where I was punched in the face. Violence or no violence it’s a beautiful city. Diana. The tour of the old town. The cactus ice cream. The general tom foolery that we got up to on our own or with your bonkers friends was class. You tend to draw the funny intellects and the friendliest folks. I’m usually a bit shy around people’s friends but your friends were hilarious. Guys I can’t thank any of you enough and I hope I was a decent guest. I insist you come visit me in London some time once I’m there. When I’m set up expect a few messages on here badgering you to come out for a weekend.

All the best, Garion.