Part 2 of the series. Part 1
Very, very wet. Photo by Robb.
Hopes are nice, but they ain’t reality. My attempts to sleep that night were fitful at best, leading me to try and sleep an extra hour in the morning and leaving me with a leaden feeling through the day, as if I had attached small weights to all of my limbs. But that wasn’t the real problem. The problem was the rain.
Robb is a bit more bemused about this than I. Photo by Robb (even if I took it).
Cold, gray, and wet. Photo by Robb.
This was not the sort of monsoon rains I’d seen in Texas or
Florida, where the sky was like a sprinter pulling out all the stops for a few
mere seconds. No, the sky was more measured than that. It was happy to maintain
more of a steady jog, content that it could do this all day. Nothing else to
do, oh no, just keep on showering.
Subsequent to many mournful looks outside, we began our journey
down to Middelburg. I had on my spandex, my jacket, my gloves and my raingear,
and pumping down the route I almost convinced myself that I was feeling warm.
But then I started to feel the slow trickle of water around my back and down my
shoulders, as the rain slowly but certainly found whatever chinks in my armor
there were. The best I could hope for was to keep moving, to at least keep my
legs burning enough to warm myself as I rode. But this was a tricky prospect as
well, my eyes were stinging from the rain and navigating anywhere fast was
difficult.
Maassluis - very cold, very Dutch.
10 miles in and we reached Maassluis, where we would catch
our first ferry and then begin to ride along the islands of the southern Dutch
coast. We boarded the ferry and I shivered a little, anxious to get back to
riding so I could keep myself warm again. But, as the ferry began to reach the
opposite side of the river, Robb spoke to me:
“Paul, are you feeling alright?”
As a native Wyomingite, the cold and I are well acquainted. I
swell with a certain native pride when I can handle it while my other friends
are left shivering. In college I would regale my Texas friends with stories of
just how cold it would get, and when I was challenged I took pleasure in
pulling up my hometown’s page some weather site and showing them that yes, it just
did reach negative 30 last week.
Oh and speaking which... (from wunderground.com).
I still tell myself that 50 degrees is t-shirt weather, even
if I’ve grown a little soft after all my time in Texas and California. I am a
Wyomingite, ergo I laugh when the mercury drops and my more southern friends
are wearing their thick coats. Maybe I’ll put on a light sweater. Just for
appearances.
This equation, however, apparently changes once we go from
dry to wet. This was new, and far more unpleasant than I had expected. The
rainwater rapidly sapped my heat, leaving me chilled. I must have looked like a
ghost.
“Paul, are you feeling alright?”
“I’m not sure. Maybe? We really need to stop for some
lunch.”
The ferry docked and we went to find a place to eat right
near the station. The food helped, but as I sat in the pub I realized just how
cold I had been feeling. If we pressed on, this was what I had to look forward
to for at least another 55 more miles, if not more. Worse, we’d be by the
coast, which I imagined would mean we’d then be greeted by cold wind blowing in
from the North Sea. Meanwhile, 10 miles inland, lay Rotterdam. We could catch a
train down to Ghent there, and be rid of this miserable rain – but if we
continued on our trek southwards Rotterdam would get farther away. This was the
moment to decide.
At the end of lunch, I spoke: “I really don’t think I can do
this. Sorry Robb.”
There was shame in my voice, but that feeling was quickly
replaced with a wave of relief. I could go make myself do some gonzo ride some
other time, some time when I wouldn’t be getting drenched. And as we rode over
to the Rotterdam train station, it felt like a great weight had been lifted
from my shoulders. After a very cold hour of confusedly trying to figure out
the ticket system, we boarded our train.
A strategic retreat. Photo by Robb.
Sitting in the train finally let me feel warm again, though
I was consciously aware of how damp I continued to be. It stayed with me for
the whole ride, and when we stood up we could clearly see giant, embarrassing water
stains in the felt of the seats. Departing the train in Ghent, we could quickly
feel the heat being sucked right out of us, our damp clothes freezing again in
the cold. We immediately took off to find our hosts for the evening, hopefully
in possession of many radiators.
Our stay in Ghent was with another person I had met through
WarmShowers, a woman (in her mid-30s?) named Hanne. It turned out that her
boyfriend (Michale) was also around, and we so just so happened to arrive as they
were having a going away dinner for him as he headed back to his home country
of France for a while.
Me and Hanne. Photo by Robb.
Michale. Photo by Robb.
There seems to be a certain French archetype, the one that
gives us Philippe Petit the high-wire artist or the fellows who developed
parkour, and Michale seemed to be cast out of the same mold. Much of job work
in Paris seemed to involve him strapping himself up in climbing gear and
hoisting himself up skyscrapers. He practically bounded with energy, and
throughout the dinner was singing, making us play Pictionary or otherwise
drawing. All with a warm smile on his face.
Important things. Photo by Robb.
Hanne was quieter, but a superlative host. She kept us plied
with gueuze beer and potatoes gratin, and kept the music playing when Michale
wasn’t singing. She herself did a significant amount of work in the cyclo-advocacy
movement in Belgium, and so I spent much time peppering her with questions
about what the state of cycling was like there.
We finally tucked in for the night, thankful for a good end to a long day. I feel asleep almost immediately, my body glad to finally get some rest. I didn't know what to expect for the next day, but it felt we were due for some more good cycling karma again.
No comments:
Post a Comment