Thursday 20th
August – 29th. Exploring the
Channel Islands.
Poole to Guernsey
Home commitments
meant we couldn’t leave till well into the afternoon. With the tandem packed in
the car we left for Winchester where we stayed the first night, not too far
away from Poole where we caught the ferry. We were able to visit our next door
neighbours of more than 10 years ago and they kindly looked after the car - parking is very expensive and hard to find
in Poole. From their house it was mostly cycleway by the sea to the ferry.
We learnt that 70% of visitors to the Channel
Islands go by air and though we were lucky with all the crossings we did this
holiday we wouldn’t want to go by sea again. You can travel overnight by Condor
Ferries with a cabin on the Clipper from Portsmouth, the older boat or in seats
on the Liberation from Poole, which looks smart and is new this year. The
Liberation, though looking like a catamaran which should give it extra
stability and being twice the speed of the Clipper, rocks even when static in
dock. When the sea is only a little choppy the motion is greater than what you
would normally expect. It is better to stay in the aircraft style seats though
we did walk about a bit. It was evident that most of the ship’s cabin crew
found the exaggerated motion uncomfortable too.
It was a lot cheaper
to go with bikes -£90 for one trip between us (bikes are free) whereas with a
car you pay for the passengers and £100 for the vehicle. Bob had the sat nav
with him and the boat averaged 35 miles an hour which is a good speed.
The Liberation left
Poole at 3 pm and then it was 3hrs to Guernsey, where we got off, then it
carried on to Jersey for another hour. It would leave again around 9 pm for
Guernsey and then Poole arriving about 3 in the morning. The time varies as it
continually sails back and forth until it breaks down or there is a problem.
We liked the safety
rap on the video and it certainly made you listen.
There were lovely
views of first Alderney, still in the Channel and then Herm as we drew close to
Guernsey both of which are in the Atlantic Ocean. Sun -shine was a bonus in an
unsettled week. A toddler asked her grandpa what the yellow bits in the sea
were – the sea was really sparkling!
At Guernsey we were
let off the boat quite quickly and we arrived at our hotel not long after 6. It
was a short walk away. Our tandem went in a garage just off the main shopping
street and Moores Hotel was handy for shops and restaurants. This felt like a
really happy place to work and we enjoyed our time here. Breakfasts were
wonderful, especially the red fruit compote. Our room had air-conditioning
which we only needed a couple of days as the wind moved up several notches and
the rain made it cooler.
SARK
Saturday we got up
really early, missing what would have been our first breakfast in order to get
a really early boat to Sark, 8 am.( early bird at £24 each) This was a
mistake as we couldn’t have a boat back till 4pm and we were ready to go back
after a few hours. The boat filled up with a noisy football team and some
others who looked like they might be doing some sport like cricket. We moved
outside to be kinder to our ears! It took about an hour across, passing the
Barclay brothers castle hideaway on the next door island. It seems that they
have quite a say in how Sark is run owning hotels and properties there too.
Just outside the
harbour we passed a huge, anchored P and O cruise ship. Apparently there is one
there most days during the summer and they boat in large groups of tourists who
help boost the economy in Guernsey. We hired bikes and went all around the
island. It isn’t possible to take a path round the coast but we walked to its
extremities. Sark is beautiful but precipitous. We only saw one place where you
can swim- down a steep, slippery path to a cove a long way below, near the
bridge to Little Sark.
The first thing we
did on Sark soil is to have a bacon sandwich which we really enjoyed in the
little harbour cafe. We walked through a cave like tunnel to a protected
harbour and saw how clear the water is. The sea was a gorgeous blue from
viewpoints! A lot of people took the tractor taxis that pulled trailors of
visitors up the hill( and it was a slow puff - making walk for us!) where
eventually there are houses and shops. We hired our bikes form Avenue. They had
gears that worked and they looked in better condition than the other Company’s.
Ours cost £7 a day each but mine was awkward and I have never looked so drunk
in the saddle, it wobbled so much, so a day was too long! The road is very
stony. Traffic is just bikes, horses and tractors.
We set off north,
parked the bikes against a wall and walked down some bramble ( the tiniest ever
blackberries!) and blackthorn edged paths to a seat overlooking steep drops
down to the sea across to Herm and Guernsey. There were plenty of butterflies-
small coppers, red admiral and others we couldn’t identify. There was a clay
pigeon shoot advertised and shooting started while we were there, though we
could only hear them. There were paths that seemed to go further to the edge of
the cliffs but they seemed to peter out and I was too chicken to risk it.
We went back for the
bikes and rode to a little shop where we bought delicious peaches. Their
homemade lemon curd was very tempting but didn’t fancy its chance on this rocky
road. Here we met a lady, an anthropologist, who arrived here 40 odd years ago
and after meeting her future husband at a whist drive decided to stay. She had
once had a mobility scooter but crashed it and now rides a motorised pushbike
that looked far too cumbersome for her to handle. She seemed quite a character.
We rode down to the
duck pond and then up by vineyards to the Monument. There were flying ants
everywhere with clouds of insects around the pinnacle. We felt too itchy to sit
in the sun here for long. Later we passed our rowdy fellow passengers, playing
their game of football in proper kit with what looked like a club house in the
grounds- serious stuff!
We headed out to
Little Sark. The roads have been full of rocks but here the track was smoothed
out dry mud and it led to the narrow La Coupee Bridge, spanning across the 2
islands. Cyclists had to walk their bikes at this point and the views again
were stunning though not perhaps for anyone suffering from vertigo.
We passed the hotel,
La Slabonnerie and the Tea Gardens travelling on as far as we could go, past
what looked like self catering holiday places. We ended up cycling on grass
until a wooden barrier told us the rest of the island this way is private. It
was back to the Tea Gardens, obviously part of the hotel, where we had a light
lunch and marvelled at the unusually marked Jersey Tiger Moth ( we identified
later at the Visitor Centre back in the village. We never saw one again, even
on Jersey!)
The air was getting
heavy with stormy weather approaching and the last thing I wanted was to push
the bike( that I couldn’t wait to be rid of) up any more hills but it had to be
done to cross the bridge again. It was busy around the visitor Centre. There
was a small area of craft and second hand sales and a marquee selling cream
teas- the whole island was involved in a cream tea competition that encouraged
tourists to vote for their favourite. Slight snag here as there is a limit to
how many cream teas one person can consume to be able to compare. We voted at
the visitor centre which sadly had little of interest though the lady there was
able to help us put a name to our butterfly photo.
It was slow peddling
behind the workhorses pulling their tourist load. The road was too narrow to
get by easily. It was good to see them rather than tractors, which create dust
and are very noisy. The bike shop was closed when we got there so we leant our
bikes against the wall like everyone else and hoped that was OK. The Post Office could boast a gold post box from the Olympic Games for the medal won by the Dressage winner, Carl Hester.
In the centre of the
village you could only have a drink at the pub if you bought a meal so we
walked back towards the harbour where at the top of the hill there was a lively
Local. It was playing really loud music, even
in the garden ,where we sat under an umbrella with just the first drops of rain
falling. Bob enjoyed his exceedingly bitter beer but with dark clouds
gathering I was getting anxious about the boat journey back. We whiled away an
hour then took the footpath down the hill instead of the road now busy with
tractors. There were many more people than came over with us so they had to put
on the larger boat. The trip back was better than expected , being still and mild but Guernsey was shrouded in mists.
After hearing bad
things about the Barclay brothers who own the Telegraph as well as hotels and
properties on Sark it was good to hear that they possibly helped save the
fishing industry here. I don’t think it compensates for them ruining lives for
immense profits on Sark though. They don’t even live in their castle on the
next door private isle of Brecqhou which apparently if you stay in one of their
hotels for at least 2 nights you can book a tour.
Sark uses oil for
electricity which makes this 5 times more expensive than the mainland, said
some locals. They have suitable waters around them to generate from the sea and
talks are just beginning to that end.
Back on Guernsey we
had a lovely set meal for £12, with their garden vegetables ( maybe!?) at the
Pickled Pig and we thought the staff very friendly and accommodating.
Next we decided to go
on a circular bus trip-we just didn’t get off at the end of the line- for £1.
This gave us the lie of the land and we met some friendly people. Apparently
all the derelict greenhouses we were seeing are due to changes in EU
regulations and where you would have seen, as we did in the 80s, glass houses
full of tomatoes, now only a few are in use having lost out to the Dutch
market. We loved the look of Grande Roques -perfect for sun set watching and
decided to go to Herm next , before the predicted bad weather, leaving the
tandem in the hotel garage yet another day.