INTRODUCTION




INTRODUCTION


As with my other blog - "Grandpa's Voyages" - the idea for this one arose from a desire to make available to my Grandchildren photos and descriptions of some post-retirement adventures.

When I took up long distance cruising in my own yacht I had little idea and no plan for the length of time I expected to continue with that lifestyle.

But, after 13 years, when I reached New Zealand for the second time in 2009 - after one and a half circumnavigations - and at the age of 73, I realised I needed to start making plans to change.

So, I put the yacht up for sale at a price reflecting fair value but one that was high for the local market.

I thought I could change my life straight away at that price, but if no sale developed I could refurbish Alchemi for ocean cruising and continue on my way for a few more years.

As an alternative way of life I conceived the idea of reverting to a hobby of my youth - cycle touring - and so specified and bought a suitable bicycle - described in the October 2016 post of this blog as - "My Steed".

Alchemi did not sell in New Zealand so I did have her refitted and spent another five years visiting the Islands of the South West Pacific and continuing my second circumnavigation as far as South Africa - all as recorded in "Grandpa's Voyages".

So, the yacht was not finally sold until 2015 which was the year I finally began my fourth age with cycle-camping trips to Suffolk and the Loire Valley. But by then I was 79 years old so my camping was only practicable by carrying tent, bike, and equipment by car to sites from which I could make modest rides on the bike - rather than the continuous touring I first had in mind in 2009.

By August I also decided camping with a tent was unnecessarily spartan and so bought a caravan instead and went off with that to Spain and Portugal between October and November.

I have continued this new life in 2016 and hope to be able to do so for many years to come.

The layout and style of this blog will adopt the "Grandpa's Voyages" format with posts containing narratives and photos of my various expeditions.






Friday 25 May 2018

CENTRAL LOIRE VALLEY

AMBOISE AND BEAUGENCY

April 2018



LEAVING MARCILLY

I ended up staying nearly three weeks at Marcilly, mainly because of the van problems.

Initially, the only help the van dealer provided was to say they would ship a new hitch and stabiliser unit to me (at my expense). In due course that arrived bringing with it a manual explaining its design and installation in more detail than I'd ever seen before.

The manual very heavily emphasised the risks of the unit failing to work properly if the tow-ball wasn't fully compatible and
the kit supplied included a new ball meeting the requirements – but it wouldn't fit my car because it was too short to clear the rear bodywork.

The manual also confirmed design and manufacture of the ball should conform to ISO 50 (nominally having a 50mm diameter) and should not be worn to less than 49.61 mm. The Subaru ball supplied with the car when both were new was hard-stamped accordingly and having learned the French for a Vernier Caliper (Pied a Coulisse) I found an electronic one in a hardware store on the Industrial Estate in Dreux. Use of that confirmed the minimum diameter of the Subaru ball was 49.74 mm. So that didn't seem to be the source of the problem.

The site maintenance engineer and I then tried fitting the new hitch on the car's ball without fitting the hitch to the caravan, and compared the position of the colour indicators, allegedly showing whether or not the hitch and ball were properly connected, with the equivalent indications on the original hitch fitted to the caravan. 

There was no visible difference.

I reported these findings to the UK dealer and then had a long telephone conversation with the new workshop manager appointed during the time I was at Marcilly.          He explained the colour indicators were not a fully reliable method of confirming security of the connection and neither was my physical test of trying to lift the rear of the car by heaving upwards on the van's tow-bar though that thinking was on the right lines.           But I might have just been lifting the downward weight of the van, resulting in the rear of the car rising on its springs without moving up enough to actually tension the springs via the tow-bar.

The new manager had now introduced a new briefing instruction to be given by the despatch assistant when customers take delivery of a van emphasising the only foolproof way of checking hitch security is to lift the rear of the car by winding the van up on its jockey wheel.

In the meantime the site maintenance engineer had made a good job of re-wiring the 13-pin electrical plug and using the now recommended method of checking, the van duly followed the car without a problem on a tentative test drive – and has done so on all subsequent journeys.

So, it seems the only real problem was an inadequate briefing when the van was delivered coupled with unreliable visual indicators of connection security.         

I now think the latter was probably more of a problem with the Subaru than the Mercedes, as the initial spring rate is softer to give it more off-road capability.        I hope to get a price refund for the new but unused hitch and stabiliser unit.

POSITION AND GEOGRAPHY OF THE CENTRAL LOIRE VALLEY

The source of the Loire is in the Cévennes (part of the Massif Central) not far from Lyons in the Rhone Valley and over 1,000 km from where it debouches into the Atlantic west of Nantes.

The section from Tours to the river-mouth is roughly one third of this distance passing westwards through the region I visited during my first land tour in 2015.        So this year I decided to go farther upriver and have a look at that part of France now known as “Centre-Val- de-Loire” (a huge region roughly circular with a 400-500 km diameter south of Paris).


Overview Map

Here the land slopes gently east-west and the river passes in a huge semi-circle with a diameter of about 150km centred on a city called Vierzon having Tours at its western end and Nevers in the east.

This is the area famous for its rich History, Chateaux and Vineyards, including such well-known names as Tours, Blois, Orléans and Sancerre.

Whilst fascinated by historical events and the benefits of viniculture I was though as much interested in the prospect of being near water with scope for some some gentle, traffic-free cycling, as I was in traipsing around busy cities and the domestic circumstances of ultra-rich people in the past.

AMBOISE and MOSNES

Having enjoyed Tours Castle and Fonteyvraud Abbey in 2015 I decided to start east of there near the city of Amboise and chose a small campsite at Mosnes village called “La Poterie”. This was delightful and operated by a very friendly couple who always had a cheery word and smile for campers and passing cyclists alike.

Cyclists and campers were often the same because the “Loire a Velo” cycle route passes immediately outside the camp entrance within a few metres of the river itself.     Several expeditionary cyclists carrying all their possessions pitched their bivouac tents at “La Poterie” for an overnight stay.


Looking Upriver from the Camp Entrance


And Looking Downriver

The site was very small, perhaps 40 pitches and a handful of chalets, but had all the necessary facilities – ablutions, washing machine and drier, waste disposal etc.

The site also had WIFI access on each pitch included in the overnight fee, and arranged delivery of “Une Demi-Baguette” and “Un Pain au Chocolat” every morning. Together with French butter and a large cup of “Café au Lait” I prepared myself this made a wonderful breakfast leaving me satisfied until evening dinner.

The nearest supermarket was in Amboise, that has a Chateau, but not one in which I had a particular interest. Otherwise it was a busy regional centre with lots of traffic and too many people.

I did explore by car a few times and went for three or four cycle rides up and down river on the Voie Verte sections of the “Loire-a-Velo” route during which I took these few photos.      


The Loire here is pretty wide


And has many beaches created from sands brought down during springtime floods

The rides were all pretty short though because soon the cycle route had to use multi-purpose roads and riding along with cars whizzing past every so often doesn't have the same appeal.

BEAUGENCY

This is another old city with its own Chateau but I chose to go there because it had a campsite by the river and I hoped to find another Voie Verte section of the cycle route.

But that didn't work out so well because it turned out much of the route here was again on roads used by other traffic.

A travelling fair set up on the river bank on the city side was another deterrent.      The campsite on my side was very open and contiguous with a small golf course in the same grounds with both being fully visible from the fairground.

So I was mildly concerned about van security in these circumstances – I had no evidential reason for this but it would have been so easy for one of the “Travellers” to drive across the bridge and whisk my van away that I decided not to risk leaving it for longer than a quick trip to the supermarket.

My only record of this place is one photo I took because I liked the contrast of the pink blossom against the green background.


Contrasting Colours at Beaugency


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