I usually join the road at Zennor and cycle west past Yew Tree Gallery which never disappoints with the beautifully chosen and displayed paintings, ceramics and jewelry, Gilly coaxes her organic vegetables from the thin soil and has a perfect bed of old fashioned flowers around her house.
Before the gallery there is a barn with such a proudly carved kneeler stone and worked granite door surrounds that it must have started life as a much grander building.
Further on there are barn doors, little houses and the old Working Mens' Institute at Bojewyan
As the road gets nearer to St Just you get into real mining country with barren spoil heaps, half ruined mine workings and terrace after terrace of mine workers cottages. Geevor was the last working tin mine in West Penwith and when it closed in 1990 the community was almost destroyed by unemployment, since then the mine has reopened as a popular museum employing many of the men who sweated underground, it is more than a museum as you come away understanding how mining was not just a job but a way of life.
I cycled the road again today in bank holiday mist (sorry, forgot the camera) with visibility down to about 50 yards but it was still a delight. I continued on though St Just past the fogged-in airport and, as always, saw things I had never spotted before, a well half hidden in the grass verge, two converted chapels within only a few hundred yards of each other and the chapel near Escalls decorated for Harvest Festival. As I waited for a gap in the traffic I said my normal silent prayer at the Friends burial ground lying unnoticed at the busy road junction. On through Sennen and then back towards St Buryan, always within smell of the sea but the mist was so thick I got to Mousehole before I actually saw the sea. Back though Newlyn busy getting ready for the fish festival tomorrow, on to the paper shop in Penzance and up the last five miles to home. Forty miles and one of the best ways to buy the Sunday paper.
4 comments:
Great post Peggy - how lovely to be reminded how beautiful our coast is. I drove to Totnes and back yesterday in thick fog both ways - so disappointing as I was looking forward to the views!
Not long to go now....
D x
Dear P
This is a wonderful post to look at from far away from home - really brings me the feeling of the road and the buildings and the stones and the sky. i know you are all suffering badly with the mist and rain - I really hope the next month will bring back blue skies and sunshine and soft days when you can cycle without it being a battle. See you soon in Paris! I think you'll make the £4000 no problem - everyone is rooting for you. un beso Kate
Hello Peggy, Thank you for another excellent post with great photographs. I love reading your stories and discoveries. I know the people who live at Tarvis Vor so I shall direct them to your blog on Great Uncle Charles. I am sorry that I will be unable to attend your Trythall tea party to wish you on your way in person but I hope you have a great trip! Well done so far and Good luck! love Kate Burford
Thanks for these beautiful photos. It's been a while since I've been along the north coast road, but you have inspired me to go there again as soon as I can (even if I'm in my car rather than on my bike). You always make cycling seem so magical...
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