France, April 22nd - May 2nd 2011

Thursday, 21st April 2011, Bentlawnt - Dover (250 m)

We had decided that, unlike past escapades, we would leave home in good time, have a nice relaxed drive to Dover, find our usual layby and be ready, fresh as daisies, for the 6.00am ferry and a nice long day in France.

That was until T decided that there were still last minute jobs to do and that we had to call at his mum's in Birmingham because she'd made barra bridd.

The Rosabella purred along the motorway system - well, kind of purred - maybe more of a clatter similar to the noise of the cement machine in "How To Murder Your Wife...." (remember the gerloppitta gerloppitta machine?).

She'd had an oil and filter change before we left, and Harold had also topped up the gearbox oil as the box was a bit whiney. That particular noise had vanished completely and not a beat was missed as we trundled our way to the south coast, this time getting further than Corley services because we'd treble-checked that we had our passports!

We beat all our previous records for arriving late and eventuall got our heads down at 3.00am with the alarms set for 4.30. We reckon that whatever time we plan to leave home there is a vortex around Beltlawnt that speeds up time so that we are ALWAYS late!!

Friday 22nd April, Dunkirque

A lovely crossing (our first with Norfolk Line). Comfy, spacious and worth the extra 40 minutes or so over the Calais crossing.

We still weren't sure where we were heading but decided we would go to Cassel and decide from there. We turned off the motorway after about 10 minutes, at the Wormhault exit, and about half a mile up the hill was a set of traffic lights and a diversion around some roadworks.

T was struggling with what seemed like a very 'puddingy' gear lever. We'd been in fourth gear to get up the hill and as he tried to go down through the box the lever refused to work. We were at the front of the queue at the lights and while they were on red he shoved and pushed, all to no avail. He switched off the engine and tried to engage a gear - still nothing. Uh-oh! Feels like a problem.

On with the hazard lights and a wave to the following traffic to come around us (there was a filter lane which gave a bit of space). T peered under the bonnet but the linkage seemed OK. He wiggled the linkage to no effect.

"Do we need to call the breakdown insurance?" K asked.

"It looks that way. This is a good start - we've only been on French soil for about 15 minutes!"

K had called the breakdown insurance people a couple of weeks ago to confirm the change of vehicle. The paperwork hadn't arrived and she'd called again a couple of days before we left to ensure that the details were on record - she was, of course, assured that everything was OK.

"Hello, Swinton Insurance, breakdown help line - can I have your registration number please?......I'm sorry, we don't seem to have that number in the system. Can we have a credit card number please in case we have to charge you for the recovery - because of the Bank Holiday we're not going to be able to check until next Tuesday."

Grrrrrrrrr......

An hour later a recovery truck pulled up and T jumped out thankfully.

"Do you speak English please?"

"Only a leetle"

"OK. Le boite de vitesse est casse, je crois"

"Oh, right, your gearing box does not work"

"Yes, that's right"

"Have you called anyone?"

"Well, yes, that's why you're here isn't it?"

"No, I'm here because you are blocking the road"

"Oh sorry, yes, there's someone on the way"

"Are you sure"

"Yes thanks"

"Well if you're sure......."

"I am thanks"

T returned to the cab, muttering darkly about French pirates. He rang the breakdown service to find out what had happened to our recovery. Nicolas, on the French desk, told him that they were trying to pinpoint our position. T gave him the Lat/Long from the satnav. "Ah, zat ees 'elpful - someone weel be weeth you in fifteen minyootes"

Half an hour later a big truck turned up. The driver waggled the gear linkage and started preparing his low loader to take The Rosabella. She was winched aboard and we leapt into the cab of the wrecker.


"Stop!" yelled T. "Nous avons oublie the...erm...thing. Le trois thing". The driver stood on the brakes in panic while T jumped from the cab and ran over the road, through the now released traffic, to retrieve the warning triangle.

No more than 5 minutes later we were at the garage and The Rosie was being rolled off on to the forecourt. We sat in the sun and watched three mechanics in turn waggle the gear lever. They disappeared into the garage. Three minutes later K's phone rang. It was the breakdown insurance people.

"The garage have phoned. They've examined your vehicle and there is a problem with the gearbox."

"Yes, we know, that's why we telephoned you."


The Rosabella does something bad. In France....


"Ah, yes of course. Anyway, they've examined it and it requires a new gearbox. They estimate it will cost 1200 Euros."

"Yes but they've only waggled the gearlever."

"Well, that's what they are telling us is the problem."

"OK, the cover says that if a repair can't be carried out in the time available, the vehicle and occupants will be repatriated, so can we go for that option please, because they're not going to find a gearbox or get the job done by the end of our break, and I can get it done for a fraction of that price at home."

"No, I'm sorry. If its possible to do a repair in France, that's what has to be done."

"Its not going to be possible"

"Well, the garage needs to tell us that, and they're going to try to find a gearbox"

"How are they going to do that? Its a bank holiday weekend here as well."

"Well I'm sorry, you'll have to wait until Tuesday."

Sharp exhalation of breath followed by a 'give me strength' roll of the eyes.

"Ok, the policy allows us a hire car and hotel so we'd better get that sorted out"

"Erm...no....sorry. Its a car OR a hotel, not both"

"That's not what it says in my policy document"

"But I'm afraid that's the way it is"

Sounds of suppressed, astounded rage.

"So if we have a car, where are we supposed to stay?"

"The garage have said you can stay on their forecourt in your motorhome."

It was all shaping up nicely. If you like that kind of thing.

"OK, can you sort a car out please?"

Half an hour later, "We've arranged a car for you with Avis in Dunkirque centre, but you do need to pick it up by 4pm as they're closing for the Bank Holiday"

it was half past three.

"You'll have to get a taxi - keep the receipt and we'll reimburse you. And you can keep the car until Tuesday"

The garage administrator called a taxi for us. We were eight miles from dunkirque and he turned up at 3.45. He did manage to get us there but we were terror stricken by the time we arrived.

The next bit of good news was that we couldn't have an additional driver, even though we offered to pay. This meant that K would be doing all the driving whilst T was consigned to the death seat.

We headed in to Dunkirque - what a charming place! We found a nice bar, a great greengrocers and a fab charcuterie. We bought enough food for a celebration meal (well, at least we had a nice cosy Rosabella to stay in, the sun was shining and the coffee was better than on the M6).

Back to the garage and a brief franglais conversation about camping on the forecourt. No problem, and would we like mains electricity, and just help yourself to water from that tap over there, and there's a loo and a shower just there. Obviously, if the mad English people choose to spend their vacances in a garage, they need to be made comfy in case they go berserk.

Our home for a week.
The mechanics had all drifted off by about 7.30, most with a wave to the strange people up the corner, and we were able to take stock of our surroundings. It was quiet, the little ZA was 8 miles out of the town, there were a couple of empty carparks and lots of trees, with blackbirds and thrushes singing their bedtime songs. All in all, it could have been a lot worse.

We had dinner and sorted the bed out. It had been a long, stressful couple of days and we were both worn out. We turned in and slept the sleep of the exhausted and innocent. Until about midnight when a recovery truck turned up with a broken car on the back. There was much crashing, banging and engine revving as the boys put the vehicle into the compound at the back of the garage. This was to become a regular occurence over the next few days and we got used to the disturbance, thanking our lucky stars that we weren't stuck without a car, accommodation or someone to give us a cuddle.

Saturday 23rd April

Do you know that feeling when you wake up, the sun's shining, you're in the Rosie, you're on your hols in France and everything is lovely - until, a nanosecond later, you remember? Well, that's exactly how it was when T's eyes opened on Saturday morning and he really had to have a word with himself whilst making the cuppa. Things could be worse!

We sat in bed and did yesterday's crossword while we came to. It was a beautiful day, too good for lolling around worrying about what was going to happen and how much it was going to cost. We were optimistic - if they couldn't sort the van we'd just go home and take it to our trusted mechanic. No problem. Meanwhile, we weren't at work, we were in France, there was apparently a nice beach (we'd seen pictures of it - covered in tanks and being strafed by the Luftwaffe!), and we were saving an arm and a leg on diesel!

T made brekkie, K tidied up and we decided to be sun worshippers. Up the road, a coupe of wrong turnings, a stop for cheese and wine and then a whole day in the unseasonably warm weather (28 according to the thermometer - pretty good for April). A few hours of sleeping, reading and generally slobbing and we were both feeling a lot better, and planning how to spend our time until next Tuesday.

A big pasta-y thing for supper, an early night and good sleep, broken only momentarily by the boys bringing in a couple of cars.





The beach, somewhat quieter than.....
 

..........in 1940
 













Sunday 24th April

Much the same as Saturday except enlivened by the addition of Joseph to our garage-bound life.

T went into the workshop to fill the water carrier, which we were using to keep our tank topped up. There was a gentleman, probably in his seventies, having a very agitated conversation with one of the mechanics. He was wearing an England baseball cap and as T went past he remarked on it.

"Yes" said the old man in heavily accented English.


"I live in England. My car's clutch broke in the night and they won't fix it unless I pay up front! They don't trust me! They don't know who I am! Not going to Brussels are you, by any chance?"

T apologised that we weren't going anywhere but suggested that he came and had a cup of tea with us.

"Oh, thank God. Some civilised people at last!"

T helped him into the Rosie where he introduced himself. "My name is Joseph and I'm Belgian - NOT FRENCH! My brother was the High Commissioner to (somewhere), my wife is related to (some English Duke or other) and my cousin is a cardinal who should really have been Pope if it wasn't for that German, Ratzinger! And that mechanic doesn't trust me to pay up for fixing my car! C'est une outrage!!"


He went on to explain that he lived in Whitstable and was on his way to visit family in Bruxelles. He said that he could have cried when we offered him a cuppa and that in return we could accompany him to Bruxelles and stay in his five-bedroom family house - all we would need to bring were our toothbrushes. If not, then the least he could do was, next time we were crossing the channel to let him know because as a shareholder he could get us through the Tunnel for a fiver.


He told us his life story, about his mother being a reknowned communist activist in Belgium, his issues with catholicism, his dealings with corrupt politicians. He was very engaging and interesting and we were happy to sit and listen. Eventually he said that he was going to have to call a taxi because if he could get to the station he could get a train to Bruxelles. We, of course, wouldn't hear of it. We were going to Dunkirque anyway and it would be no problem to drop him off at la gare.


The stories continued as we drove in to the town centre and when we reached the station Joseph gave us, once again his thanks, gave us his number in case there was any way he could reciprocate our help, and the last we saw of him he was nattering to a couple of backpackers on the steps of the station, no doubt regaling them with stories of European dynasties to whom he was related.

We continued to the beach and had another lazy day, again formulating plans for the various possible outcomes of The Rosabella's bad behaviour.


Tuesday 25th - Friday 28th April

As the week went on it became more and more obvious that our options were decreasing whilst our blood pressure was rising as a result of the insurance company's continual attempts to not spend any of our premium money. There were some highlights:
     
    Well - if we must....!
    
  • 
    Our loo. We had always been a bit squeamish about using the loo on The Rosabella. Yes, we know its silly but we'd never had a toilet on the original Rosie, we'd never needed one and the thought of what is essentially a bucket of....well....you know what sloshing around at the back of the van had never really appealed to us. Nor had the thought of emptying it which K had decided that, because his dad was a plumber, was by default T's job. However, when we'd been sitting at the front of the traffic jam, T, overcome with excitement, anxiety and coffee had announced that he was 'going to have to go'.On the garage forecourt, K, with the option of to-ing and fro-ing from the mechanics' 'facilities', had decided to follow suit. Now, after a few days we were completely happy to use, on a limited basis you understand, our little bathroom. T had had to find the instructions to figure out how to empty it and done so with rubber gloves, apron and waders at the ready, finding out in the process what most other motor homers already know, that it was a more or less painless process.
  • 
  • Decathlon. What a fantastic shop! There's one on the outskirts of Dunkirque, it sells all manner of outdoor sports things at reasonable prices AND it has a free, easy-access wi-fi hotspot AND it had a spotless loo, perfect for the operations that didn't come into the 'limited basis' referred to above. Mind you, we do now have more walking socks than you can shake a stick at.
  •  
  • Paris. K had never been to Paris and T's half a dozen or so trips had all been in winter so we decided to take full advantage of the hire car for a day trip to the City of Light. It was a couple of hundred miles, we arrived at midday and did the whole bit - Arc de Triomphe, Champs Elysee, lunch in les Tuilleries, Pont Neuf to St Germain, Notre Dame (where in an attempt to get out of the way of a rapidly advancing Cardinal, T ducked under a barrier to find himself seated amongst the dignitaries at an Easter service), the Opera House and then dinner in Montmartre. Home to our forecourt, dusty, footsore and tired.


Cassel windmill




Wednesday was murky and we decided to go to Cassel for a mooch. Still no news from Swinton despite calling them and being told they would get back to us. One of the garage boys had told us that a gearbox was 'introuvable' but that the insurance people were very reticent about paying for repatriation. We decided that we would be a bit more proactive and called Tim in Perpignan.
 We asked him if he would have a word with Fabrice, the fellow who had looked after the old Rosie in St Laurent, to see if there was a gearbox anywhere around. We had a message to say that Fabrice was going to call the garage in Dunkirque to see if there was anything he could do.




On the way back to Dunkirque we visited Belgium - for about three minutes. Travellers or what!

When we got back to the van K called Swinton again. Again, we were told that the mechanics were still trying to sort us out but that repatriation was now an 'option'. Then we were told it was only an option because if the cost of bringing the van home outweighed its value, then they wouldn't do it.



This was the point at which the normally kind, understanding, tolerant T lost his temper, took the phone from K and demanded to know exactly what we'd been paying our premium for, for all these years. They'd  kept us waiting for recovery, they'd decided we couldn't come home at the start of this episode despite him advising them that the repair would not be effected, they'd decided we couldn't have accommodation and a hotel, just one or the other and they'd not kept us informed to the point that we'd had to spend a fortune on phone calls to them. And now they were going to try to wriggle out of getting the van home. And how exactly were they planning to put a value on a 1989 Tabbert in excellent condition when they hadn't even got the name Tabbert on their database when we'd set up the cover?

There was a silence at the other end of the line.

"Of course sir, I understand how you must be feeling......."

Another barrel from T along the lines of "so you're stuck on a garage forecourt are you," etc, etc, etc.

"OK sir, I take your point"


Round 3 from T about how they may well be taking something much more effective than a point if they didn't get something sorted..


"Yes sir, I promise I'll call you in thirty minutes and let you know what's happening"

Which is why, from that point on, we received phone calls approximately once an hour with updates as to what they were doing - its a wonder they didn't let us know when they were going to the loo, or phone us to wish us night-night and godbless!


On Thursday we went for a mooch around Dunkirque and visited the great little museum housed in the former headquarters of the Allied forces. It really brought it home to us how, in those dark days of 1940, it was such a touch-and-go situation for the future of Europe.



Walking back to the car our now-regular phone call informed us that The Rosabella had been valued at £1000, and as the recovery cost was £980 it was 'touch and go'. T responded that it was obvious that they'd valued Rosie as a Ducato panel van - they confirmed that that's what they had done. T told them that they would have to do better than that and that the insurance value was much, much higher than that. They asked for details of the insurance company, which we gave them, but again it was down to T to point out to them that next day was a bank holiday in the UK (a wedding apparently) so they wouldn't be able to check it out and that our ferry was booked for the Monday. Then the bombshell...!



"Oh, you and your partner can go back to the UK as foot passengers - you could have done that last weekend............."

T almost ate the 'phone. We'd been sitting on a garage forecourt when we could have been at home sorting things out!



"Yes sir, just book yourself on to a ferry - it will have to be from Calais because Norfolk Line don't take foot passengers - and send us the bill. We'll arrange for you to drop off the French hire car at Calais and we'll have a car waiting for you to pick up in Dover. Oh yes, you could have done that earlier and we would have paid for you to go back to France and collect the vehicle if it had been fixed....."

We decided w would save the row for later, when The Rosabella was safely home. And, after all, revenge is a dish best served......... so on.



Straight back to our Decathlon hotspot and a booking for the Saturday morning ferry. Back on to the insurance company and suddenly everything is running smoothly (the only hiccup - well, apoplectic attack! - was when T was told it would take anything from two weeks to a month before The Rosie would be trucked home) - cars sorted, everything!

Friday, another day on the beach and a listen-in to the wedding. The French commentators were very excited, which is more than could be said for T, although with our kids' big day approaching (T's son is marrying K's daughter - keep it in the family we say!), K was in a very gooey mood.





We stocked up on wine (20 bottles of Villageoise) and found various safe places in The Rosie to stash it and spent the evening tidying up, putting things away ready for Rosie's piggy-back ride home, emptying various tanks (T's job!) and packing whatever we could in to rucksacks and our little wheeley case.



We still weren't clear about whether they would actually bring The Rosabella home and T was wondering what the response would be when we said that we needed to recover clothes, kitchen equipment, bedding, bathroom stuff and so on.

Saturday 30th April

A quick drive to Calais, dump the car, an uneventful crossing and there was the guy waiting with the one-way hire car.


We arrived back at Bentlawnt mid-afternoon, feeling bereft when we saw the space on the drive where The Rosabella should be, wondering what would be the next hassle in this saga.

Forest of Dean, 2nd-3rd April 2011

We wanted to be in Bristol for K’s father’s birthday on 2nd April so we decided we would try again to find a nice spot somewhere in the Forest of Dean. Our original plan was, as usual, to leave after work on Friday night but in the event we were both tired after a busy week and so we decided to wait until Saturday morning, leave early and have brekkie on the road.
We left Cleeton St Mary at about 9.00 and headed down to Symonds Yat in the Wye Valley, scene of some of T’s less successful rock climbing antics in the days of his youth – adventures which included picking his climbing partner out of the top of a tree after he (the luckless partner) had plummeted from the top of the cliff, his fall being arrested by the welcoming boughs of a large oak. The poor bloke had already suffered after T had stuffed his chalk bag with holly leaves. The chalk is used to coat the hands and fingers, soak up sweat and give an extra bit of friction in moments of panic. T had decided to prove to his 'friend' that artificial aids were unnecessary on such simple climbs

The Rosabella was cruelly treated on the lane up to the big Forestry Commission carpark, it being narrow enough to pull the rubber insert from her offside trim. (It is noticeable that Rosie’s nearside is far cleaner and ‘dinge’-free – probably something to do with a left-hand drive vehicle being used on UK roads). There was no real damage and T was able to replace the trim quickly with the aid of his best Pound Shop mallet.

After breakfast we wandered down to the river where we spent a lovely hour in the early spring sunshine, watching the antics of novice canoeists on the rapids just down from the hotel. A lovely young chocolate Labrador lived up to his breeding by making a beeline for the water despite the exhortations of his owner. There were swans on the river too - although we saw no one with a broken arm there was a woman from Birmingham who was out of breath.

While we were on the way back we heard a crashing in the undergrowth behind us. Our first thought was that it was a dog having fun but it was a beautiful doe clattering up the track behind us. We stood stock still, but she vanished into the trees before we could reach for our cameras.

We sat and ate ice creams in the picnic area before heading off deeper into the forest in The Rosabella. T was remembering various Dennis Potter plays, especially ‘Blue Remembered Hills’ in which the children were all played by adults including Colin Welland, and Helen Mirren. The author was born in the Forest of Dean and this autobiographical piece is set there. It made a great impression on T at the time (the early 70s he thought).

We eventually found a nice spot by the side of a stream at a Forestry site called Wenchford. There was a family using one of the barbecue grills provided at the site but we pulled along the track to a little clearing and decided to stop and at least have dinner in the beautiful setting. There was a sign on the barrier saying that the carpark was locked at 8pm – it was only 5 so we knew we had loads of time. T fettled, trying to find the cause of a leaky tap while K sat and relaxed, between passing tools and ignoring T’s bad language.
A young couple who had pulled up close to The Rosabella and walked their dog seemed to be having a problem closing the bonnet on their Clio. T, unable to resist either the challenge or his nosiness, sallied forth with WD40 primed. A bit of a spray and a waggle with a screwdriver and they were sorted. They also told T that although the Forestry Commission Ranger would be around at some point to close up, he was a nice bloke and would probably let us stay.

K prepared supper – smoked haddock, broccoli, and a crème fraiche and chive sauce, helped down with a beautiful Sancerre – and just as we sat down to eat the Ranger duly appeared. He told us that he had to lock up and that we would have to leave. T asked him what time the barrier would be open in the morning and was told that it would be about 6.30. T suggested that we wouldn’t mind if he locked us in but he replied that he could lose his job if he did that. T then put on his sad face and explained that we’d just settled down to dinner and asked him what would have happened if we’d been out walking when he came. He said that he would have had to put a letter of explanation on our windscreen and lock us in. When T then suggested the obvious, the Ranger said that, as we looked like ‘normal people’, that would be ok providing we realised that if we had an emergency in the night the barrier would be locked and there was little mobile signal. The only emergency that T could imagine was running out of Sancerre so we duly accepted all responsibility, he gave us the bit of paper and we all ended up happy.

We settled down again to our beautiful supper. It was almost dark by now so we lit candles and ate our meal accompanied not only by Maria Callas on the stereo but also a nightingale in the bushes next to us. It was a sublime duet and will remain an abiding memory of a moment of paradise.

We slept well, as usual in The Rosie, but woke early to a fantastic dawn chorus, with percussion provided by a woodpecker. Whatever the aural version of spectacular is, this was it and we just had to get up and make the most of it. We had a cuppa and went for a walk along the old railway track that the Commission has converted to a waymarked walk, stopping to record the birdsong along the way. Back along the bank of a stream, spring flowers starting to appear and even a rope swing to amuse us. A beautiful standard poodle, out for a bounce with his owner, came ‘pronking’ towards us, lifting off vertically with excitement and then carrying on his exploration with gusto.
Back to The Rosabella for breakfast and then on to Bristol for the birthday lunch. Just a few little glitches to iron out and then all systems go for our planned trip to France over Easter. What a great weekend!

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Pwllheli, 11th-13th February 2011

The band usually heads for Perpignan in spring, for our annual 'working on material' trip, which inevitably turns in to a long weekend of silliness punctuated with some singing in bars, whether they want it or not!

This year however various circumstances came together which meant that we couldn't do the usual so we decided to prevail upon Neil and Sue's hospitality at his sea-front house in Pwllheli, a repeat of a visit we did in May 2010.

As then we parked outside Neil's place, along with Dave and Jenny in their Peugeot, although we did receive some grumpy looks from passers-by, who obviously thought we were the vanguard for a meet of some sort.

We did loads of singing, eating and walking on the beach, AND, K was able to have her first proper shower in The Rosabella, T having got to the bottom of the dump-valve problem with a bit of advice from a friendly engineer at our local MH dealer.

So we're now almost all systems go, looking forward to our planned trip to France at Easter.

Brecon Beacons, 28th - 30th January 2011


Bentlawnt - Brecon - Bristol (310 miles)
Two wet ones in Clun Forest

We were itching to get out again. We'd had a last-minute, completely unplanned overnight in Clun Forest a couple of weeks before (the casserole was cooked and K suggested we might as well eat in The Rosabella on top of a hill somewhere, so off we went). It had belted down with rain and we'd had a quick traipse along a path, got soaked and gone home for Sunday lunch. Not exactly a load  of effort but nice to be out nevertheless. 


However, we still felt bloated after Christmas and decided that we should head for the Beacons where the hills are fairly easy but spectacular once on the tops.

T had been fighting with the water system in The Rosabella, water coming up in the wardrobe from the heater dump valve. Amidst much muttering along the lines of 'we never had problems like this when all we had was a bucket and a bottle of water..........' (T would never admit to being a Luddite - maybe its his age - and these kids of today, well..........!) he thought he had nailed the problem.


He picked K up from work at about 6pm on a bitterly cold, clear night, and after a fish & chip stop just outside Hereford we set off for Brecon. T had had a look at a satellite image of the area around Storey Arms, just south of Libanus, and had spotted a likely-looking pull-in on a minor road next to a lake and, lo and behold, there it was, just waiting for an old motor home and its inhabitants. A glass of wine, a couple of aspirin for T's three-day old headache and we were bedded down for the night. He was awake at 4-ish, head pounding and freezing where various bits of him had been sticking out from beneath the double quilt. Heating on, a glass of water and kip for another couple of hours.


Saturday morning dawned bright, clear and very cold. T turned the tap with a triumphant flourish - NOTHING, apart from the sound of water happily tinkling away under the van! A quick examination was enough to tell T that his work on the water system wasn't quite complete, and it was back to bottled water for this trip.


Copious amounts of tea and biccies were followed by bacon and egg and after clearing up we headed the mile or so back up the road to the parking area at Storey Arms.

 
Boy was it cold! As we climbed toward the summit of Corn Du a nagging wind froze our fingers and toes and once on the top we hurried to find a sheltered spot for sandwiches and a drink. Out of the wind, although it was cold, the sun was beautiful and we lingered with a few other people, enjoying watching the clouds boiling below us.


Brocken Spectre on Corn Du
While K wandered around on the top the mist filled the valley floor, and we were lucky enough to see a Brocken Spectre. The "spectre" appears when the sun shines from behind a climber who is looking down from a ridge or peak into a corrie filled with mist or fog. The light projects the climber's shadow forward through the mist, apparently magnified to giant-like proportions. The head of the figure was surrounded by a glowing, rainbow-like halo (a 'glory').
This was K's first view of the phenomenon - only T's third in over 30 years of spending time in the mountains. It made our day.
   
 

Corn Du and Pen-y-Fan
 


A breather on the track up to Corn Du


 







We hurried on to the summit of Pen-y-Fan, now completely in the mist, and back down again in to the sunshine on the saddle between the two summits. A slow amble back down, warming up with every step, stopping to lend a stick to a young woman who was struggling with sore feet - she returned it to us when she arrived back in the carpark.


Hot chocolate with Bailey's and squirty cream helped with the rehabilitation back to warmth and a quick trip in to Brecon to buy more bottled water and a hinge to replace one that had broken on the folding worktop (there's always something to do with a Rosabella!) and then back out of the town on a different road to find our Saturday night lodgings, a beautiful spot alongside Tal-y-Bont reservoir. Quiet (one car all night, and some ducks quacking), no light pollution so about a billion stars shining, cosy, well-fed (K had brought a rice dish she'd made at home the previous day). This is why we have The Rosabella and love the life the three of us share.

 
Our lovely wild spot on Tal-y-Bont


Another beautiful dawn, the water turning pink, Venus rising over the hill, followed by a sliver of old moon, absolutely freezing outside but warm and snug under the duvet. Obligatory cups of tea, lovely brekkie and on the road again to visit K's parents in Bristol. Home on Sunday evening after a really lovely weekend. Can't wait for the next trip - North Wales in a fortnight. But we can do without the water problem, thank you very much!!



Sunrise over Tal-y-Bont reservoir




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