A great day’s cycling, this post was just going to be about the cycling, until a dog nearly bit me. But first.
Starting out in a cold mist, up the “Stevenson Trail” for a few kilometers. About twenty French walkers in three groups going along, from last night’s hotel. Bit boring being accompanied when I’d enjoyed solitude for the past couple of weeks.
Stevenson really did the area a favour by writing his book, a whole tourist industry is now based on it. There were two posters in the hotel last night – in one he looked exactly like Hemmingway in White Hunter mode, full grey beard and bush hat, in another like a dissipated Marcel Proust, thin face and black moustache. Ridiculous.
His book though, is great.
So now the the road, uphill about 7km of 6%, I didn’t photograph the signs to the inevitable Col (de Finiels).
Then off the road and up steep tracks through clearing mist, I’m all alone in an eerily quiet landscape, just, now and then, the sudden sound of rushing water as I pass a cascade.
Video gives a sense of themorning’s atmosphere.
A sense of the afternoon atmosphere
This is what RLS has to say about dogs:
At the end of a fagging day, the sharp, cruel note of a dog’s bark is in itself a keen annoyance; and to a tramp like myself, he represents the sedentary and respectable world in its most hostile form.
The sedentary and respectable world can seem hostile to the Tramp, the Traveller, the Dreamer. We are all born into a strange alien world, but some take easily to the conventions of society and thrive in it, for others there is always a discomfort in the conventional world, the barking dog suggests a threat to the unconventional among us.
Anyway, going past one house three dogs came out and chased me, egged-on by eachother no doubt, the biggest, a black-and-tan monster bit at my leg, I moved it just in time and he only lipped me. Too much.