This years International rally was held in Belgium, near Staden in the Flemish region, we have a rally here every year anyway but this year it wasn't the "Begonia" it became the "International", the great thing was it attracted more people and Nortons than before but it was more expensive. Of course it doesn't help that the last time we were there the Pound was attracting around 1.4 Euro whereas now its around 1.05 or even parity if you go to some places so it felt expensive anyway. That said it was a fantastic weekend and as always it was very well organised and it was fantastic to meet up with our countless friends from Europe and even make a few new ones.
We left on the Wednesday just after lunchtime and had a meander down the A68, waterproofs were on but only the roads were wet and we avoided any rain, a stop at Corbridge for a late lunch and then on to Thirsk for a stopover at the campsite at Thirsk racecourse (recommended) . A pleasant evening in the local pub and a wee dram back at the tent to get the holiday started.
The following day we rode down the small roads Alan Clark showed us a couple of years ago, stopping at the same excellent cafe's, we even met friends of his at one of them and spent a while chatting bikes before heading to the port of Hull for the ferry. Phil and Jim appeared a while later having just left Perthshire that morning and we had a pleasant evening on the ship.
Disembarking from this ship used to take 10 - 15 minutes to get through passport control but the Europeans are determined to make us pay for Brexit so they now scan all the passports (which of course are scanned in the UK before you leave) and they have two lanes for the whole ship, it was ridiculous, at least 90 minutes if not more to get clear, thankfully it wasn't raining!
We stopped for an early snack at a small town near the port before wobbling down the back roads to Staden.
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Lunch at Corbridge |
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Cool Cinema in Thirsk |
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Town clock |
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It's a nice Olde Worlde place |
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Hovingham breakfast |
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Good Bacon Rolls |
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Lodola which the owner described as crap! |
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At the port |
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Taking air on the deck |
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Busy place here |
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Leaving the UK behind |
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Church in Lissewedge |
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This represented a strange shaped woman's bottom |
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Fi and her bike |
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Jim and Phil ready for the road |
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Staden for lunch
We got to the rally after lunch in Staden, signed in and partied, talked, looked at bikes, fixed bikes and all the other things that rallies are about Until the Sunday, we also visited Guy and Anja who we met at the Scottish Guzzi Rally for a superb lunch on the Saturday, this part is better explained by pictures.
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Guy's LM1 and home made sidecar (for carrying beer to Rallies) |
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Silly games, Fi in the thick of it! |
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Spent much of Friday evening with our new Italian pals Luciano and Tea |
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He was hoping the Norton tattoo would wear off before work after the weekend! |
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Fi getting ready for the kickstart competition |
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Hessel in good form |
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More of the Dutch guys |
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Nice |
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Cool |
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Getting ready |
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Now I am not a fan of lightweights but these two 400cc Electras made it here so that could be a first |
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Hans's bike |
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Our recently departed friend Raymond Fockedy's bike on show, nice touch |
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Yellow Peril bike, serious kit |
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Paul's very nice Norvil |
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And from the rear |
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Famous race bike |
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Nice |
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Pure class if you just look at the detail |
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Richard Payne's Commando, he won best Commando, matter of fact since I started going to Norton Rallies he has won the prize more often than not and he does ride it!
We said our farewells on Sunday and headed first for a night in Paris to meet up with my daughter who lives there, another nice night then on the Monday a surprisingly easy exit from the city to the small town of Honfluer in Normandy. Honfluer is a very nice seaside and harbour town, the inspiration for many artists over the years. We found the municipal campsite right on the outskirts and a 5 minute walk from the centre, it was nice, the temperature was 30 + Degrees so we stayed until the Wednesday. Wednesday of course it rained, the first real rain of the trip and although we complained we knew we had been lucky. We headed for the town of Sainte-Mère-Église, famous for being the first town liberated by the allies in 1944 and made famous in the film "The longest day"
We started off on the small roads that follow the coast but in 2 1/2 hours we managed 28 miles due to the traffic (fecking Motorhomes!!!!!!!!!!) and got thoroughly soaked, Fi's Right Exhaust had come slack and for the first time ever I left without my exhaust spanner which turned a routine 2 minute fix into a bit of a pantomime. Eventually we parked up on the pavement and Fi found a huge rock, passers by must have wondered as they passed what the crazy guy was doing hitting the bike with a huge rock! I used a tyre lever as a punch and it held so that was a result, a few miles up the road we passed a garage which had some classic cars in the workshop so I thought I'd stop and borrow a hammer and drift just to be sure, the grumpy guy kept me waiting for 15 minutes and when I explained what I needed he said no and immediately shut the workshop doors! Thanks my grumpy French f*ck. I have noticed on my travels that 95% of people are brilliant and 5% are arseholes, he belonged firmly in the 5%.
We visited the museum in Sainte Mere and then booked into our caravan for the night (it was pissing down and it didn't seem expensive) then it cost an extra 22 Euro for sheets on the bed, we would have been better in a bloody Hotel, there was also a list of rules longer than the EU book of silly laws, nice campsite but don't book a van for the night!!
For the Thursday we booked a Chateau in Briquebec, only 58 Euros and a proper old Castle, owners were nice and the food was excellent but twice the price of the room.....ooops. The cafe across the road was owned by a nice guy who used to have a Mk3 Commando back in the day, still interested and showed us some photos of guys he knew who were racing on the Isle of Man, maybe we should have stayed there as he had rooms but we found out after the event.
Friday a short run to the Ferry in Cherbourg, very efficient but my God I think every English family were on the ferry going back, 3 hours of being in the middle of a creche, bloody nightmare. The exit in Portsmouth though was super efficient, all passports checked BUT they had more bloody staff on, take Note Zeebrugge port!
We stayed with Martin & Sue in Didcot but Sue was in London so Martin had to put up with us himself, later on we met his neighbour Geoff, another nice guy.
Saturday we had the almost 400 mile run home, it was sunny but the traffic on the M6 was hellish, roadworks, speed control signs, this country needs to get its roads fit for purpose, maybe a start would be to tax motorhomes and caravans to the hilt, that would help!!
So in summary, a great International, fantastic holiday, excellent to meet old friends and great to make new ones, mostly sunny and the Nortons were great, what more can I add.
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Barges on the Seine in Paris |
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Sunset from our restaurant |
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Lunch in Honfluer deciding where to stay |
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Old churches of course |
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Tower outside the campground |
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Honfluer, old and nice buildings |
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and in Black and White |
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History |
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The Harbour |
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This went like a fair........ |
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Nothing better, sunshine, camping, looking at bikes, wine! |
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Entrance to the port |
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Monet took much of his inspiration from here |
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Pont Du Normandy, very impressive |
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Something missing? |
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Eateries were packed |
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Lat time we were here there were around 5 people! |
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Get thee behind me Satan |
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Interesting architecture |
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Paying homage at sword beach, statue of Bill Millin
Bill Millin was the "Mad Piper" who played allied commandos ashore under heavy German fire at Sword Beach in Normandy on D-Day, on the extreme eastern flank of Operation Overlord.
He was the only piper to lead allied troops into battle that day following a War Office ban which said pipers would attract sniper fire. But his commander, Brigadier Lord Lovat – Simon Fraser, hereditary chief of the Clan Fraser – was a law unto himself. "Ah, but that's the English War Office, Millin," Lovat told him. "You and I are both Scottish so that doesn't apply."
Millin recalled: "Lord Lovat said this was going to be the greatest invasion in the history of warfare and he wanted the bagpipes leading it." On the landing craft sailing out of the mouth of the River Hamble in southern England, "he said I was to play and he would worry about the consequences later."
The "Mad Piper" label came from both Millin's own comrades and the German defenders of Sword Beach at Colleville-sur-Mer, who said after capture that the only reason they didn't shoot him is that they thought "he must have gone off his head."
Although one man was shot dead alongside him on his landing craft, and he saw many of his comrades floating face down in the surf, he said the sound of his pipes drowned some of the gun and mortar fire. "I didn't really notice I was being shot at myself," he said. "The water was freezing. The next thing I remember is my kilt floating in the water, like a ballerina." He launched into one of Lovat's favourites, "Hielan' Laddie", as he waded ashore. Lovat, firing his old non-service issue Winchester rifle and brandishing a walking stick, gave him a thumbs-up.
On the beach, in the heart of the battle, Lovat asked him, "Would you mind giving us another tune, Millin? How about 'The Road to the Isles'?" Millin half-jokingly replied: "Now, would you also want me to walk up and down, Sir?"
"Aye, Millin, that would be nice. Aye, walk up and down."
The piper recalled the tremor of mortars in the sand as he walked up and down Sword Beach three times amid thick smoke and dead and wounded comrades yelling for medics. "When they heard the pipes, some of the lads started cheering but one wasn't very pleased and he called me 'the mad bastard'. Well, we usually referred to Lovat as the mad bastard but this was the first time I had heard it referred to me."
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The Church in Sainte Mere Eglise , a dummy hanging from the roof representing John Steele who got caught wounded here in the invasion |
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Gliders that took the airborne division in |
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Mainstay of the US army |
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Bomber that took men and gliders in |
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Partroopers bike |
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John Steele, hanging around |
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Again from the campsite |
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Our Chateau in Bricquebec |
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Archway to the town |
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pretty place to visit |
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Queen Vic came for tea |
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Nice place to stay |
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Dining Room |
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Fi catching a nap before the ferry |
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Bikes at rest in Didcot |
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Saying goodbye to Martin and Geoff |
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