D
Deleted member 18083
Guest
Wild Berry Delight.So...what flavor did you get?
I suppose that choice would be more appropriate if I rode an R&M Delite rather than the Homage.
Last edited by a moderator:
Wild Berry Delight.So...what flavor did you get?
@Stefan Mikes would have photographed it. Did you? GrinWild Berry Delight.
I suppose that choice would be more appropriate if I rode an R&M Delite rather than the Homage.
Both sounds can be fun, but both can be dangerous out here, b/c both hide the slippery stuff underneath. Slow and steady.Dipped my ‘toe’ in the snow with old Valle +. Nice crunchy sound but I prefer fall leaves!
View attachment 75998
What a great idea!Many years back, through the Virginia Department of Transportation's (VDOT) "Keep Virginia Beautiful" program, I adopted 8 miles of roads: one paved road, and one gravel road.
Are you trying to say Scotland is bleak? It sure is cold at the moment, not a chance of any cycling yet due to the ice everywhere! I am enjoying my walks though and enjoying reading all the posts here, keep them coming guys! In other news we are in full lockdown for the whole of January due to the new strain of Covid! We can still exercise but need to stay local, I just need the ice to disperse and I will be back out there in a heartbeat!That landscape behind the bike looks really cold and bleak. @RabH would feel right at home there.
When I first visited your country I stayed a week on a sheep farm on a mountain on the Isle of Skye. Defination of bleak, right there.Are you trying to say Scotland is bleak? It sure is cold at the moment, not a chance of any cycling yet due to the ice everywhere! I am enjoying my walks though and enjoying reading all the posts here, keep them coming guys! In other news we are in full lockdown for the whole of January due to the new strain of Covid! We can still exercise but need to stay local, I just need the ice to disperse and I will be back out there in a heartbeat!
I have actually never been to Skye but its my brother's favourite part of Scotland, in the right weather its such a beautiful part of the country! In bad weather it can be extremely bleak!When I first visited your country I stayed a week on a sheep farm on a mountain on the Isle of Skye. Defination of bleak, right there.
Do you have mosquitos as well as all the other unpleasant Australian critters (snakes, spyders, etc.)? The UK and France don't even have screens in the windows, while in parts of the USA clouds of mosquitos hang by the doors waiting to attack.Mrs Bancroft's Chair …
View attachment 76011
Deception Bay, QueenslandThe nineteenth-century matriarch of the Bancroft family certainly chose a pleasant spot to take her mid-afternoon break. Shade! That's what is needed on a summer afternoon!
My photo is taken looking northeast (towards San Diego, CA) with Bribie Island's low silhouette disturbing the horizon; the 1897 photo below was taken in the opposite direction.
On the left, beyond the young fig, is a memorial to three generations of Bancrofts:
View attachment 76019
- Anne's husband Dr Joseph Bancroft, one the earliest medical scientists to make the connection between insect-borne pathogens and human diseases;
- Anne and Joseph's son Dr Thomas Bancroft, a biologist and medical scientist, best remembered for his work in identifying the method of transmission of the mosquito-borne disease filariasis;
- Thomas's daughter Dr Mabel Bancroft, a major in the Australian Medical Corps during World War 2.
The Bancrofts' Home : Deception Bay : 1897
Scotland is a beautiful country - the cities are incredible, the countryside, too. Up north the lands are laid bare as if it had only emerged from a glacial ice age and not the clear cutting logging ravages of past centuries. There is nothing more surreal than sitting on a hillside in Skye overlooking the Hebrides in the distance across the waters, watching a rain storm deliberately make its way down the islands, drenching each island one at a time. Or finding in random cattle fields and off the sides of roads hidden Celtic and early Pict stones, some so small as if hoping to remain unnoticed for several more thousands of years. Scotland off the beaten path is amazing. Here and there a forestry program had planted millions of identical pine trees on the bare stretches of the NW topography, trees crammed shoulder to shoulder to make up for the lack of naturally occuring woodlands. All they do/did is/was obscure the beautiful open views with a shroud of thick, boring green. My opinion.Are you trying to say Scotland is bleak? It sure is cold at the moment, not a chance of any cycling yet due to the ice everywhere! I am enjoying my walks though and enjoying reading all the posts here, keep them coming guys! In other news we are in full lockdown for the whole of January due to the new strain of Covid! We can still exercise but need to stay local, I just need the ice to disperse and I will be back out there in a heartbeat!
Heck, California has mosquitos, snakes, and spiders, as well as bears, bobcats, coyotes, and mountain lions (that have known to attack joggers on urban trails)!Do you have mosquitos as well as all the other unpleasant Australian critters (snakes, spyders, etc.)? The UK and France don't even have screens in the windows, while in parts of the USA clouds of mosquitos hang by the doors waiting to attack.
/ offtopic My family and I really enjoyed our times in Scotland (and a bit in Ireland as well). Been back a few times but haven't made as far as Skye, though.Scotland is a beautiful country - the cities are incredible, the countryside, too. Up north the lands are laid bare as if it had only emerged from a glacial ice age and not the clear cutting logging ravages of past centuries. There is nothing more surreal than sitting on a hillside in Skye overlooking the Hebrides in the distance across the waters, watching a rain storm deliberately make its way down the islands, drenching each island one at a time. Or finding in random cattle fields and off the sides of roads hidden Celtic and early Pict stones, some so small as if hoping to remain unnoticed for several more thousands of years. Scotland off the beaten path is amazing. Here and there a forestry program had planted millions of identical pine trees on the bare stretches of the NW topography, trees crammed shoulder to shoulder to make up for the lack of naturally occuring woodlands. All they do/did is/was obscure the beautiful open views with a shroud of thick, boring green. My opinion.
Of course these are my memories of my visit there over a quarter century prior. I didn't know, as my husband and I and our son stood on the docks at the ferry crossing from the mainland to the Isle of Skye, gazing down at delight at the seals swimming in the water below us, that we were also standing on the threshold of a whole new world about to change around us. There were no windmills on the Scottish countryside as yet which are prominent in @RabH's photos, and the internet was the new kid on the block but still pretty much an unknown to most of the public. Amazon was a young online startup under the genius of Jeff Besos offering books at a discount, and just nervously, that year, stepping up to the bar on the stock exchange at $18 under the name of AMZN. Facebook was still a decade away from reality, and flights from the US to the UK were still booked through a physical travel agency. There also was no such thing as a ebike, either. It was still a pencil and paper/fax machine/mailed letters/35mm world, but only for a few more years.
Maybe one day, when we all emerge from lockdowns and the pandemic stangleholds placed on our social fabric, I will take a trip back to Scotland to do some e-cycling around the Isle of Skye. I'd like to see if what I remembered still remains. I'll take H.V. Morton's brilliantly written 1934 book In Search of Scotland with me in my bike panniers, and at stops for lunch, or merely to wile away an hour on a picturesque hillside, I'll sit and re-read his wonderful stories.
In the meantime I will thoroughly enjoy the Scottish countryside ebike ramblings of @RabH and relish his stories. Even through this lockdown.
View attachment 76032
An old (quarter century) photo from my 35mm camera of General Wade's road through NW Scotland enroute to Skye. This is the road I'd love to cycle someday.
Also a postcard, which is a vivid reminder that I'll have to take all my wet weather gear with me...
View attachment 76034
Exactly !Both sounds can be fun, but both can be dangerous out here, b/c both hide the slippery stuff underneath. Slow and steady.
I hope it happens for you, I would love to do it myself one day! I loved your story about your last visit!I can't wait to go back and cycle that beautiful Isle. And maybe some of the other surrounding islands as well, including Ireland. Bucket List.