Delicate
handling, dedicated maintenance and a little devotion ...
All essential
features that underpin a lasting relationship – whether it’s with a beloved partner
that happens to be a bicycle, or a dear friend who happens to live 7,000 miles
away in Argentina.
Yes, I can confirm that Rosie and I are still very much in
love a year on from our pilgrimage of passion
to Wales, and I can also boast that Romina and I are still friends five years
on from our brief meeting in Peru.
But, of course, you can only go for so long with short-distance pedalling and long-distance pen-palling before things get a little stale, and so we all perked up when Romina informed us that she was visiting Wales in August! I plunged straight into mapping out a 200-mile coastal route from my family home in the south up to my relatives in the north, which I promptly forwarded to Romina with attached instructions to begin serious hill-cycling preparation.
But since
Romina couldn’t quite fit a road bike into her luggage allowance, Rosie and I
were forced into making a serious compromise that could make or break our
relationship. It transpired that Rosie wanted to mix things up a little, and so
Romina would be straddling her for a week of sweaty girl-on-girl action while I
sought solace in brotherhood with my father’s bike – who was soon christened Darío in
acknowledgment of his traced Latin origins.
So there we stood all acquainted – Daniel and Darío, Romina and Rosie. And what better way to get bonding during this swinging adventure than to visit, well, the swings? We made our first stop of the day at my childhood park in the village of Login, where we climbed around on the frames before moving on to visit my grandparents nearby. It was here that the trip truly began as we sat down for our first feed of a week that was to feed us well; kicking off with a selection of Mamgu Maesmeini’s homemade cakes and pancakes with a strong cup of tea.
To complete
Monday’s 23-mile stretch, we moved on to Mamgu Blaenffos’s house, where we were rewarded with a hearty nut roast meal before mother
turned up to supply us with the de-greaser and lubrication that I had left
behind at home ... That’s not even an analogy. Moving on ... We ate apple and
blackberry crumble and went to bed.
All woken up
with a healthy breakfast, we waved farewell to my grandmother and set off for our second breakfast (classic scrambled eggs on toast) with auntie
Lynne, uncle David and cousin Ffion in Aberteifi. We spent our brunch chatting about
our northern cousin’s wedding celebrations that would also serve as our week’s climax
on Saturday, and perused a map of Wales in order to double-check our route for
the day ahead. Then, having reunited with the bikes for a quick photo in the garden, we proceeded to flirt with the Ceredigion coastline en route to lunch in the seaside town of Aberaeron. We were welcomed by a scent of
fish and chips, which drafted us through to lunch at a deli kitchen with my
auntie Ann, who had afforded us her lunch break for a chat about all things
Welsh and Argentinian, with Patagonia in between. Ann then returned to work, but we
extended our stay with an hour of reading and eating honey ice cream
in the sporadic sunshine along the harbour-front. Darío and Rosie used
the time to bond a little too ...
We then braved
the showering rain in cycling onwards to Aberystwyth – via some roadside tree canopies for shelter – where we
would meet my cousin Gwenllian for tea at the university arts
centre. Gwenllian shared her local insight in providing us with a hit-list of
places for our evening meal, which we eventually sat down to eat at a Greek
restaurant within earshot of the waves crashing over the promenade. Content
with our feed for the day, we retreated to the B&B (just bed, no breakfast), where I checked up on Darío and Rosie’s antics in
the bike shed before heading up into bed for a Tetley’s nightcap.
But we had to get to Machynlleth first, where the rain continued to harass us as we sought out some sheltered parking – which we eventually found by smuggling Rosie and Darío into the local church and abandoning them to atone for (or possibly compound?) their sins of the previous night. We left an entrusting note of thanks, and ate a warm serving of mushroom stroganoff in a nearby pub before placing the bikes on the train for the trip to Bermo.
Fast forward to
Llanfair, where we arrived at uncle Eurig’s farm bathed in a hazy 6 o’clock
sunshine that gently warmed the caravan for our night’s stay and stewed up our
appetite for a lasagne dinner expertly cooked by my auntie Sara and cousins
Mia, Alice and Melissa. Eurig then proposed an evening activity to enjoy the day’s
last light before dessert, and so we decided to take a walk along the
beach as the sun set red to both the shepherd’s and cyclists’ delight. I also
used the occasion to give Romina and Mia some much-needed stone-skimming
instruction, in return for an evening Spanish lesson in the caravan and a
morning tour of the farm respectively.
Thursday.
The penultimate and only strictly scheduled day of the week.
So inevitably the most chaotic.
The penultimate and only strictly scheduled day of the week.
So inevitably the most chaotic.
It started with
a sleepy amble over to the house, where we slid on our wellies to visit the
barn and subsequently found Rosie and Darío cwtched up and
tangled in a trio with the farm’s hulking quad-bike. Casting aside our judgement
and allowing them time to wallow in their filth, we continued to the pig sty,
where I tried to angle my way in among the pigs (with whom Romina claims
I share certain eating habits) as they devoured their breakfast. Jess the
sheepdog then led us into the field for her star turn as she expertly rounded
up the troops in line for Romina to play her part in dishing out their morning
feed.
We didn’t have
much time in Caernarfon, but what little we did have was mostly spent queuing
up for food in a chip shop as we eagerly (nervously?) anticipated our scheduled
activity at 4.30pm – a ride on Europe’s longest and fastest zip wire. But the
zip wire was hidden 12 hilly miles away in Bethesda, and we were still in
Caernarfon at 3.15. Cue chaos compounded by the lack of a map ...
We finally
found our way onto the rural road, but our bearings were blunted by
conflicting directions from well-intentioned locals as we began to panic. The clock was winning, but Romina spotted a car sales company on
our way through Bethel and so I rushed in with the hope of finding an
informed voice on the best route to take. We did not only find an informed
voice, but a genuine gent. Following some initial ribbing about my
being a lost ‘hwntw’ (a South Walian), the centre’s manager, Gari, made a
saintly offer to drive us over to Bethesda in his van. Within a minute, I was
thrust into the back of the van for a bumpy ride with Rosie and Darío
while Romina sat up front listening to Gari recount the history of the Welsh migration
to Patagonia. We soon reached our own promised land at the foot of the slate
quarry in Bethesda, and rushed up the
hill for check-in.
Breathing a
sigh of relief, I parked Darío and dropped my shoulder
to reach for the reservation documents from my bag ... which was not resting on
my shoulders. Or Romina’s. Or upon either of the bikes. I had left my bag in
the back of the van. With my phone inside. Fool.
We
had 15 minutes before our slot, so I took that time to redeem myself – Liam Neeson-in-Taken-style (ish)
– by fishing out the business card that Gari had (thankfully)
given us, borrowing a staff member’s phone to call his Ceir Cymru centre, obtaining Gari’s mobile
number from his colleague, and finally getting hold of him to arrange a meeting later on. We then moved on to the
relative excitement of the zip wire ...
We
signed in without the reservation, ditched Rosie and Darío, and proceeded to get
kitted up in some fetching red jumpsuits complete with full-body harnesses
ready to be latched onto the two cables hanging over the quarry’s placid
blue lake. Those cables being 1560m long, starting from a height of 432m, and
along which we would be travelling head-first at a top speed of 165km/h
(100mph)! We jumped into the truck and listened to the quarry's history as told by our guide on our crawl up to the launching platform, where we were greeted
with incredible views of Ynys Môn to our left and Ogwen
valley to our right.
We waited in line for our turn, and I felt a growing sense of excitement in place of the dread that I had originally anticipated. Suddenly, Romina and I were both hanging over the platform edge for three minutes of suspended small talk before the command ‘Release’ was quickly sucked out of our ears by the rushing air that enveloped us on our descent down the wire. The time seemed to slow before it sped up once more, and I actually found myself wishing it was 165 miles, and not km, per hour as we flew over the lake towards the landing platform. £60 for a minute’s entertainment literally thrown into the wind!
We walked back
to the base exhilarated, and, since there was no alcohol on the premises, I
headed over to the burger van to buy a well portioned bacon roll and red velvet
cake. These were not bought for our benefit, however, but rather they were
packed into my pannier ready to hand to Gari as a gesture of HUGE appreciation
once Rosie and Darío had rolled us
down the hill to meet him once more. We parted ways with a handshake and Darío
lazily chased Rosie’s tail up to Bangor, where we would take a short train
journey (it was late by now, so I didn’t want to poke around in the dark and
risk taking Rosie up the wrong alley) onwards to our night’s rest in Conwy on
the north coast of Wales.
And, BANG, this is where our day reached its peak. Upon strapping up the bikes and settling into our seats, Romina glanced across and spotted four unopened bottles of Stella Artois among the mass of strewn empties lying on the carriage floor. We shiftily dragged the bag to our side minutes before an Incident Reporting policeman walked in to take photos of the ‘scene’ and continued up the aisle with the train conductor, who later returned offering us an abandoned bottle of cheap daiquiri. Feeling smug with the day’s turnout of events, we ordered pizza upon arrival at our hostel in Conwy and spent the evening eating and drinking in the canteen before retiring to our bunk beds. Good day.
Once Darío
and Rosie had piped down, we decided to treat ourselves to lunch in a hidden upstairs cafe with some tasty cranberry and cheese pies and salmon and spinach fishcakes. But all this leisure and
luxury kept eating into our afternoon, and soon we had to venture back up the
hill to check out and change into gear for the final 28-mile stretch to our week’s
final destination. I sought out directions for the trip by dropping into the
local leisure centre, where we felt that Welsh warmth once again as one of their
employees printed out a couple of maps to help us
find our way onto the quiet roads towards Denbigh. With all this local love,
who needs a smartphone map?!
As Darío
and I slotted into position as steering wheels behind Romina and Rosie’s pacemakers
for the last time, it quickly became evident that Romina had built up an
impressive head of steam over the week as she powered her way over the asphalt
in rush-hour traffic. Rosie was visibly quivering between Romina’s legs as we
raced the final leg south from St. Asaph, and this aroused Darío into action as we
overtook to lead the way to uncle Hywel’s house on the outskirts of Denbigh.
173 cycled miles on from St. Clears, we had made it.
And, doubly important, we had made it in time for dinner. With Darío and Rosie tucked away in the garage, we sat down to eat a beautiful chicken dinner with our hosts (and parents of the groom) Hywel and Eiddwen, who introduced us to their guests of honour (parents of the bride), Malcolm and Debbie, ahead of the next day’s celebrations. We were soon well acquainted and were regaled with stories by Malcolm about ransomed pumpkins and the integration of artificially inseminated queen bees, both of which are interesting topics best explored with the gardener/bee-keeper himself before you ask me to explain further. A couple of portions of dessert later and we were ready for bed; and when I say bed I mean the two-man tent pitched up on the lawn. Yet, all snuggled inside our heavy duty sleeping bags, the tent held its own in competition with the house, B
We woke up hungry and foraged our way into the house, where we were soon joined for breakfast by my cousin Tomos and his wife Katie, who had just returned from their honeymoon beside Lake Como in Italy. We flicked through their holiday photos among the rapidly growing audience of relatives in the kitchen, before a visit to Ruthin market and lunch at the arts centre quickly brought us up to the time of collection ... when my parents, along with my brother Mathew and his girlfriend Becca, arrived in the touring van to take Romina and me over to the hotel in Halkyn where we would all stay the night. Darío and Rosie cosied up next to Simba in the back of the van for the remainder of the evening as we promptly returned to Denbigh for the wedding celebrations.
Although I was
seated for most of the night, mainly due to the two generous plates of hog-roast
I had eaten rather than the accumulated mileage cycled, the party was a great
climax to the week as all bar two of the family members we had visited on our
trip turned up to toast the newlyweds. It was also a fitting end to our
culinary tour of Wales, with the evening’s dessert offering up a selection of
Welsh cheeses layered into the form of a wedding cake soon found
swimming in a bowl of my chosen local chutneys. The ale and wine continued to
flow as everyone mingled and made their way towards the night’s crescendo on
the dancefloor, where a mixture of dad- and drunken-dancing dominated the tiles
as the band signed off to a rendition of Creedence Clearwater
Revival’s ‘Rollin’ on a River’.
Although already completed in distance, our trip was now over in essence too; for Saturday night’s celebrations had brought us back full circle in reuniting us with our week’s hosts and had returned Darío and Rosie to their significant others. Rosie was mine once again. But she had undoubtedly grown attached to Romina (as had most of my family along the way) and we were both sad to see Ro go as we dropped her off with Ann and Gwenllian in Aberaeron on our drive home to South Wales. The roadside shoulder rubs, English–Spanish(–Welsh) intercambios and bike-related double entendres were all things I would miss after a week of companionship on the road, yet I was ultimately grateful for the short time we’d had once more. And I even promised she could ride Rosie again in future.
Those who know me will have noted the significance of that last statement, as I don’t open this monogamy to a third party easily ... But, as Iris Murdoch once proclaimed: “Every man needs two women: a quiet home-maker, and a thrilling nymph” – so pray let us all meet again soon.
Daniel Bowen.
Although already completed in distance, our trip was now over in essence too; for Saturday night’s celebrations had brought us back full circle in reuniting us with our week’s hosts and had returned Darío and Rosie to their significant others. Rosie was mine once again. But she had undoubtedly grown attached to Romina (as had most of my family along the way) and we were both sad to see Ro go as we dropped her off with Ann and Gwenllian in Aberaeron on our drive home to South Wales. The roadside shoulder rubs, English–Spanish(–Welsh) intercambios and bike-related double entendres were all things I would miss after a week of companionship on the road, yet I was ultimately grateful for the short time we’d had once more. And I even promised she could ride Rosie again in future.
Those who know me will have noted the significance of that last statement, as I don’t open this monogamy to a third party easily ... But, as Iris Murdoch once proclaimed: “Every man needs two women: a quiet home-maker, and a thrilling nymph” – so pray let us all meet again soon.
Daniel Bowen.












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