Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

April
8th 2009
Hutters in Totters

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A little late with this post, but to be truthful, the internet access was actually better on the continent than here in the UK.

We visited Totnes on our arrival back in the UK to see my son and his partner and spent a couple of lovely days with them on the Friday and Saturday. Sunday saw Mel and Hutters disembarking from an intercity train at Totnes station, and we spent a lovely few hours eating a nice lunch and drinking a little beer. By a little, I mean enough to get Mermy and La Rose quite squiffy and possibly a danger to motorists on our cycle ride back the 3 miles to our campsite. Still, we arrived safe and well and continued to drink into the night so as to avoid lunchtime hangovers, which I always fall prey to if I sup in the daytime.

Thanks A and M for coming over and sharing a lovely afternoon with us.

Mermy and La Rose

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March
16th 2009
Some Piccies

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Flickr for the first lot of Maroc pics

Love and Peace
Mermy

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February
23rd 2009
Ebay fun

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Check out this great advert we found on ebay this morning, we laughed like drains!

Honda C90 cub

Mermy

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February
21st 2009
Touareg ‘aint just a 4 x 4

Posted under Uncategorized

So much has happened since I last had the chance to sit at the old remington traveller and bash out a blog on the worn keys….

Rosie and I left Essaouira which clings to the fact that Jimi Hendrix stayed there in 1969. Everyone there knew Jimi Hendrix when he visited, including the 40 year old man we met who was taught English by Hendrix, even though he would have only just been born. Also they all tell you how he wrote Castles in the Sand whilst looking at the deserted sea castle just down the coast. (He wrote the song in 1967, two years before he visited.)

We liked Essaouira and liked to wander through the Medina and see the sights and smell the…..whatever the smell happened to be. We will go back for a visit before we go home.

After Essaouira we went down the coast to Sidi Kouaki where the huge firm beach is perfect for sand yachting, so that is what we did. The campsite we stopped at, was very much to our liking, with no electric, water pumped from a well once a day and bread delivered by an old man on a donkey every morning. The day we left to go to Imesouane, which is a surf spot and a sleepy fishing village, I developed a urine infection. We stopped at a chemist shop en route and stocked up on anti-biotics and codeine, and I then parked up in Imesouane and I went to bed for 4 days.

After my recovery, we stayed another few days, eating fresh fish straight off the boats and chilling out at the campsite which is owned by ex world no 2 windsurfer Jamie Lever and his girlfriend Ann Sophie, a super lovely couple.

After we left Imesouane, we headed down to Agadir to find a supermarket and stock up our now empty cupboards. We did not like anything about the place and after a noisy night at a parking de nuit, we headed south to find the desert.

We drove solid all day till we passed the gate to the Sahara at Guilmem. We then continued to the village of Tighmarte which is wierd and quite amazing. The village is set in a huge Palmerie which is a palm forest in the middle of the desert, and although the campsite was closed, we met a Saharan call Faouzi who took us to his home and gave us mint tea and let us park outside his house for the night.

We met a genuine Touareg Caravan master who still travels across the Sahara with a caravan of 25 camels to trade in Mali. They only travel at night and sleep during the day when it is too hot. He showed us his Touareg passport issued by the UN which allowed him free access across international borders.

After our stop in Tighmarte, we headed over to Plage Blanche, where the desert meets the ocean. We were hoping to sand yacht on some of the 50 kms of beach, but there was no wind and so we contented ourselves with walking on the beach and collecting stone to bring home and polish.

Today we left the Sahara after getting up in the jet black night and driving hard to reach Tiznit. We are currently parked in a nice new campsite with concrete floor and we will get the chance to brush a few kilos of saharan sand from out of every locker and crevice. The stuff gets everywhere!

Palmerie
sahara
touareg

Love and Peace
Mermy and La Rose

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February
3rd 2009
Fancy a date

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50mph winds, rain, hail, flooding, and that is only one day. I know I get no sympathy from those of you wading through the snow back home, but that is the point. You are at home and we have travelled 1568 miles as the crow flies and probably double that by road, to sun ourselves in Africa. However, the people, sights, and pleasure we are getting from our trip makes the bad weather less a chore, and we know that soon it will be hot as we head for the Sahara.

First we are going to take a week in tourist hell (or heaven, depending on the viewpoint) at Agadir. We may get a bus up to Marrakesh for a sightsee whilst we are there. Then we will be going south. An English expat that we met yesterday was dumbfounded at the suggestion of going south of Tiznit as in his words “There is just nothing there” well, that sounds right to us.
date_stall

Love and peace
Mermy and Rosie

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January
29th 2009
Oualidia

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23 degrees, not a cloud in the sky and we are parked by the lagoon in Oualidia (pronounced wah-leed-ya) a small almost sleepy, if that adjective can be used to describe any town in Morocco, fishing village between El Jadida and Essaouria. Famous for fresh seafood and for oysters, the latter delight we will be trying before we leave.

As soon as we arrived near the beach, we were pounced on by a couple of guys who it transpires are the local guardian and a local fisherman. The guardians are in my opinion a vital part of travel by motorhome. There is no official camp site here, so they get a piece of waste ground or parking spot, and give 24 hr security for a very small fee. We sleep safe and they get a couple of pounds. The former is a fisherman who for 150 dirham, about £13 pounds, will cook fresh seafood outside on a portable grill. As much sole, sardines, salad and bread as you can eat for two for a very reasonable price.

We are going for a walk to the lagoon later to see if the broad sand is suitable for Sandyachting, although from a distance it looks a little soft. Here is a piccy I just took from the roof of the van looking over towards the town.
Oualidia lagoon

Another piccy of the fisherman preparing our lunch!
fishy

He has a website HERE

Here is a nice little texting tool that I came across.


Send free text messages!

Please enter a cell phone number:
NO Dashes - Example: 7361829726

Please choose your recipient’s provider:

Free SMS

Love and peace
Rosie and Mermy

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January
26th 2009
Update to the update.

Posted under Morocco & Travel & Uncategorized

Oh how long since the last blog entry. So long in fact that I hardly remember that long ago.

We are now sat in a campsite at El Jadida between Casabanca and Safi and about 125 kms from Marrakech. We just left a lovely friendly site right next to the roaring Atlantic Ocean in El Mansouria, about 30 km north of Casablanca and about the first point that we are feeling ok about Morocco. The northern part of the country seems at a loss for identity, and does not know if it is Europe or Africa, but as you travel down that sense changes with every town you pass. That said, we are still a long way from Camels and sand, and are still very much in agriculture and greenery.

We were warned about the expense of booze here, owing to the fact that it is a moderate Muslim country, so we stocked up with a little bit for our journey. 4 litres of brandy 20 litres of wine and 20 litres of beer. Nine days into Morocco and we might have wildly underestimated our requirements as we have already gone through seven litres of wine and a bottle of brandy as well as 24 cans of beer.

Some of you might know that Rosie and I like to bird watch and we are excited about the amazing wealth of bird life here in Morocco. We were sat having a coffee at a motorway service station and three Crested Larks were hopping around in front of the mer-torhome. We have seen cranes and eagles, and have been woken in the morning twice by what can only be described as Clangers, we cannot see them but the comedy song sounds a little like the swanee whistles we sell on our stall. We took a walk and spotted four or five birds that are not even in our European bird guide.

The roads in Morocco are fantastic… for about fifteen minutes after they are laid, and then they deteriorate into potholed monstrosities which are designed to destroy shocks and keep the speeds below 18 mph!

I am able to blog now, thanks to a superb little modem which we managed to acquire second hand from a nice guy in Mohammedia. It is an LG cellular modem and we are getting unlimited mobile broadband for £18 a month. I think the coverage is quite good so we should mostly be within blogging range.

We went to walk on the beach today and decided that this is a great place to sand yacht, so we are staying for a little while to blow the cobwebs with some x-sailing. All we need is a decent breeze and we are good to go. The tides are also perfect for the next few days.

I will post pics asap that is to say as soon as pics are taken.

Love and peace for now
Mermy and la rose

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November
28th 2008
Going green in Barcelona

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Rosie and I went by bus yesterday into Barcelona. We alighted at the Plaza Catalunya in 3º of coldness and immediately went into Bracafe a really old and lovely coffee house for a coffee, cake and a warm. We then did a circle of El Corte Ingles the massive department store and were finally warm enough to promenade down Las Ramblas. 

We were taken by how clean everything is and how many recycling bins were scattered around the city. We even saw a council recycling van that was parked up taking everything from waste oil to old fridges.

We simply spent the day rooting down little alleyways and staring up at the great buildings. Talking of great buildings, the market hall in the Ramblas was superb. Not just a great space but the stalls were a work of art and you get the impression that the staff spend hours dressing the stall for business. In the trade we call it ‘Flashing’ and they do it so very well.

pict0056

Another thing we loved in Barca was the drop and take bike system they have for the locals. You pay a subscription and you can take a bike for ten minutes from a stand and use it to get to a different part of the town centre. Exceeding ten minutes incurs a fee and the max is two hours, but the people take one leave it and then take another. As long as there is 10 minutes between dropping off and taking another, then there is no extra charge. A great and green way of moving around the town.

pict0092
 
We shall be returning to Barcelona tomorrow but will be going by train this time and taking our bikes so that we can explore more easily. (Taking bikes on Spanish trains is free and very easy, they have special areas on the train and can accomodate 5 bikes in each carriage)

Till then folks pics can be seen at http://flickr.com/photos/17314462@N00/sets/72157610348169886/

Love and peace

Rosie and The Merman

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November
25th 2008
Barca

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Hola from Espana. 

We spent last night at Le Boulou a few miles from the border and this morning at the crack of 10 we set off to drive the 200km to Sitges where we planned to stay for a while. I will gloss over the details of how we got lost but suffice it to say that it cost us €18 in tolls to go twice through a tunnel that we had previously avoided by driving over the top of a mountain.

Anyhoo, we are now safely ensconced in a lovely campsite near the sea and 35km from Barcelona. There is a bus right outside the gate that goes to the centre of Barca and take an hour. Rosie and I plan to spend two days sightseeing and a couple more exploring locally on our bikes. We will be cursed for the next few days with daytime temps of around 20º so we might just get a bit of colour in our cheeks. (Mind you it is only 4º at night)

We are here for a week and then will be heading down to Finestrat where a friend of my son lives. The address is the house with the outside kitchen between the mayor and the Belgium rockstar, so given the fact that we got lost on a main road with a modern satnav, I hold little hope of finding Dominic’s house.

Love and Peace

Rosie and the Merman

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November
24th 2008
Otter than July.

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Having written a couple of innocuous blog entries moaning about the weather etc, I thought it about time I told you some of the joys of our trip so far.

Rosie has spent little time in France and so we planned the journey south to take in places that I know and love and places that I would have liked to see if I was not thundering past in a 38 tonne truck.

We spent some time in the Charante because I worked there 20 plus years ago. We stayed in Cognac for a couple of days and spent time ferreting around the old town. The electric bikes we bought are a godsend and make it easy to go off and explore. As I said in a previous post, the tourist side of Cognac is closed for the winter and so we decided to move along. To this end we went to St Fort which was a nice place to stop and spend a little time riding our bikes through the vinyards and stopping off a St Palais du Nė to show Rosie where I used to work. 

I said in my last post that we went to Bordeaux, but we did not stop. The plan was to find somewhere close to the city to park and then explore the town on bikes, but unfortunately we could not get close due again to all the camping places being closed and so we went to the coast near Arcachon and watched the sun set over the bay.

The next day we headed off in a south east direction towards Carcasson. The reason we are going that way instead of straight down towards Bayonne, is to avoid big mountains in our quest to spend a few days in Barcelona. The drive took us through the wonderful forests of Gascogne and across into the Cathare region to our stopping point alongside the Canal Du Midi in a town called Trebes, which is just a few kilometers from the beautiful city of Carcasson. The most amazing Medieval walled city I think I have seen.

As we have trundled south, we have been struck by the regional variations. In the UK, go three or four hundred miles and the houses are the same and the people look the same etc. In France just 50 miles can totally change the landscape, house style and the people. Previously I have been dashing through the countryside at 50mph for 10 hours a day and France has gone in a day and a half and all I have interacted with are the staff at a truckstop. It is nice to drift through the land and to cover as much or as little distance as you wish.

As a grand PS, we went for a walk along the canal du midi yesterday and spent 20 minutes watching two otters playing in front of us. Totally unafraid they swam within two feet of me as I grabbed my camera. I will have to try to post some pics on Flickr but my battery is just about to die.

otter01

 
Love and Peace

Rosie and the Merman

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