You got me worried there for a moment,
, I had to go and check my post. No, I'd definitely written
sister!
She was very nice indeed, no problems sharing a room with her.
The tours, both of them, were very pleasant though sometimes a bit slow for me but I don't go on them for speed and/or distance. It's nice to be able to stop and take photos or visit places and know that at a steady pace I'll either catch them up or get in not far behind them. I think the two weeks has done what I'd hoped - given me some muscles back! Best run for the bus today than I've done in a long time
Also got decent cycle tan - ankle sock line, short line and a bit of a short sleeve line - especially as the first week was wall-to-wall sunshine. Nice riding round Penrith as it's mostly rolling countryside with some higher hills a bit further out as you head either into the Lake District or into the Penines. The ride up the main road to Hartside (highest café) was lovely especially as it hardly changed gradient and I just stayed in the same gear all the way up (and not bottom gear!). The Coast to Coast route goes through Penrith - it's like a motorway on the weekends
All sorts riding it from a CTC tour taking several days, several charity rides and just those riding it because, like the guys from the club that runs the Fred Whitton who I rode with for a few miles one day I was off on my own.
Transfer day was fun, riding from Penrith to Dumfries (unloaded) - I stopped to visit somewhere just off the route, having agreed to meet them for tea at Caerlaverock. I get to Caerlaverock just behind Tom but there's no sign of the other two who have ridden up. Even more puzzling, Tom says didn't I see them... Ron had spotted someone he knew and turned round to catch up with them and had taken Malcolm with him while Tom had decided to plod on (he's getting back to fitness following a hip replacement). Still no sign of them by the time Tom and I'd had tea so, as Ron is the deputy tour leader, we think he should know where he's going and we head off to find our own way through Dumfries as I had a good idea where the hotel is for the night and a map. By the time the other two turn up, they're over an hour later than us and with 15 more miles on the clock!
Dumfries and Galloway is a very picturesque part of Scotland, bit like Penrith with mostly rolling countryside and higher hills further inland to the east. Weather not so good but still mostly dry and not too cold though the rain on the 2nd half day of rain on entire holiday was freezing
and I just wanted to get in to the hotel and get into some water of the hot kind. Fortunately everyone felt that it wasn't really the day for seeing the Glenkiln sculptures (Henry Moore among others) though the morning had been amazing with a tailwind blowing us up the hills
Bumped into a group (all men) from the Carlisle Border City Wheelers doing a similar tour twice but with hostels not hotels.
For next year's tours, I'm thinking of going to somewhere like Porta Pollensa in Mallorca (or Italy, or Spain, or somewhere warm and abroad) in spring and then maybe Isle of Man later in the year. Either organise it myself or join a 'training' camp - anyone interested/got ideas?