
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Finland

seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from Belgium
seen from China
seen from Belgium
seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Philippines

seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom
seen from India
Ham Sandwich - part 2
7th December
Chichester to Pevensy
I am dry as I wake and pack. The drizzle sets in as I hit the road. I prefer it this way round.
I stop under a tree for first breakfast. Stood at the side of the road, apple in hand, a cyclist then a car pull up to check I’m ok. Yay - people.
I take second breakfast at Barham Coffee Bar. “The best coffee in Barham!” - Barry, customer. I wonder if there’s much competition.
I creep. I creep through the flatlands towards Littlehampton. Rustington is cobble-oplis. Every building is made of cobbles. I’ve never seen anything like it, as on I creep.
I hit the sea at Worthing, where carrion crows rule the beach. I follow the prom - sea, salt, shingle - lovely.
As I head East I see an ever changing face to the edge of this island.
Worthing - old fashioned sea side, formal, but relaxed. Lancing - quieter, and more personal. Gone is the grand prom, the beach creeps into the land, for those who live nearby to enjoy.
Shoreham-by-Sea is a port, steep heaps of aggregates, dry docks, and unlabelled sheds holding unknown cargos. Don’t ask. Zig zag through the quais, steel walkways creaking. Cycle signs disappear beneath the barrage of “Private. No Access.” on spiky palisade gates. The correct route is the only way available, offering the merest glimpse of another world.
Hove hoves into view. “Don’t cycle on the prom. DO NOT cycle on prom. NO CYCLING on the prom. Seriously cyclists - you can fuck off now. NOW.” I peer into the distance, two, maybe three, people visible on the whole expanse. I cycle on the prom. The only hazard are the heaps of pebbles thrown up high by Desmond a few days before.
Brighton swaps bowling greens for funfairs, but the anti cycling force remains strong. I sigh and carry on.
I slide out of town, realising too late I’m high above the sea. Fuck - it’s not just Beachy Head I need climb. I quietly curse the Seven Sisters, wishing she’d been an only child. I am rewarded the Roedean, disguised as a prison, fences reaching beyond retaining walls. The best cliff top views are saved for the headquarters of the Blind Veterans association, adding insult to injury, or a beacon of hope?
Rottingdean offers a a forgotten prom, clinging to the base of ivory cliffs, now glimmering golden with the sinking sun.
Peacehaven high, Newhaven low, then the cyclists’ lush version of the A259 twists along to Seaford, where they are busy rebuilding the beach.
The Final Sister, my nemesis - Beachy Head, glows ominously. I take in the beauty of the chalk from beneath, then fire myself up for the road the Eastbourne.
The Climb:
1&1 gears. Tick.
Fully fuelled with sugar. Tick.
A back catalogue of inspirational music in my cranial jukebox. Tick.
“Can’t Stop Me Now, cos I’m having a good time, Can’t stop me now…”
I glimpse Cuckmere Haven - the first haven to deserve the name. The elegant meanders slowly swirling through the plain, a vivid mirror of the orange sunset cutting through the gloom. I catch my breath - wonderful.
“Moving on up, Mooooving on up…”
The sky gets darker, the cars pass closer. I ride down the middle of the lane, so I can only be overtaken when the road’s clear. Seriously.
I sink suddenly to Eastbourne, fingers straining on the brakes. A grin cracks my face. Elation. “Can’t take me Down, can’t take me down…” I’d finally triumphed cycling over the South Downs. They’d been the dark demon looming large at the end of the day, making every mile won a mile closer to the dreaded. Every cafe, every photo, every map-check mere procrastination.
Yet for all that, the ride up the Downs was far easier than the flat roads leading there.
Cyclists need hills. Without a challenge there can be no success; no serotonin, no adrenaline pumping us up with joy. We need to push ourselves to go forward, to make it worth going forwards. And to freewheel back down, squealing with delight - again, again!
And it makes those fish and chips earnt.
I sleep in Pevensy Recreation Ground. No Camping. Paths of deep mud squelch between nettle islands. I settle down in the stinging patch, easing my exhausted body onto the soft ground, safe in my bivvy cocoon.
8th December
Shingle and Sheep.
Hastened away by fear of an angry vicar defending his precious public space from vagrant cyclists, I shelter in a bus stop to repack away from the steady rain.
Dawn blurs in through the fallen clouds. No glittering sunrise, only a vague sensation of darkness losing out to a new day. The flat landscape of ditches, reeds and sheep adds to the beautiful bleakness.
Bexhill on Sea. I admire the new landscaping of the prom - though the miniature planted gardens feels too intricate (and high maintenance) for a long prom, they are playful and engaging. The De La Warr Pavillion, something I’d longed to see, but a disappointment in the flesh. A good Art Deco edifice, but I was expecting too much from the hype, giving myself dreams of the unimaginable, leaving reality with no choice but to fall short.
St Leonards rolled past, with still no sign of an open cafe until Hastings town centre. They were still cooking pastries and moving tables when I arrived, but they gave me sustenance, conversation, and a place to warm up while the rain cleared.
The Jerwood Gallery stood gleaming on the shingle, black clapboard still a little too pristine to fit in. Glimpses through locked glass doors gave me incentive to return. A laminated “no Jerwood” placard still hung from a fisherman’s hut opposite, faded in sun of summers past. Too little, too late.
All Saints Street stretched up the hill, a rich mosaic of mismatched houses jammed together, each with its own style and angle. I admired the diversity, a planner would never allow this now.
We rose up to Fairlight as the mist descended over the quiet roads. Break pads wore thin as we sunk back down to Pett Level. Space passed by, open stretches of shingle, bounded by the ocean one side, fields of sheep on the other. I was alone in the expanse - just me, Charlie and the weather. I sang a song on how to cheer up an unhappy friend. “So I’ll take you down to Winchelsea, and we’ll dance upon the shingle sea…”
The harbourside led me up to Rye, past decaying warehouses back to civilisation. Jempsons - a local supermarket - offered journey staples of Rye bread and Ham, and Sussex Scrumpy - cheese with cider. Yes.
Excitement hit at Camber Sands - a Pontins! Real, live Pontins. “Welcomed to Jollity Farm. You will be happy here, you will.” The joy was so determined even the kerbs were multicoloured.
Lydd, Romney and Dymchurch sped by in a haze of grasslands, sheep and juncus ditches. I followed Hythe’s sea front for as long as I could before the cliffs rose up to steal me ease.
Googly - noun. A curveball, an unexpected, difficult situation. For example when Google Maps directs you to take a fully laden touring bike a steep, narrow, muddy footpath. With steps. Many steps. Bad Google.
Lifting the seat stay with every riser, holding the brakes to stop us both sliding back to beginning, I heaved Charlie up the scarp slope of the Downs. The top brought elation, having beaten vertigo, the rain and gravity by replacing common sense with brute force and stubbornness.
I was rewarded with a gorgeous ride, gently rolling hills, woods, and St Ranigunds ruined abbey. This fell sharply away to Kearnsey, or “River” as it was helpfully signed. Said river waterfall through windows and doorways of a ruined watermill, walls barely higher than the lintels. The crumbling edifice had become part of the river once more.
Googly, part 2. A gap that requires me to empty my panniers, then refill, and try to start with no momentum on a near vertical old road, strewn with lumpy rocks and slippery leaves. Again, the North Downs had me defeated.
Crossing the A2 - slipping between crash barriers, waiting for a gap in the roaring lanes of traffic - took me on to the Old Sandwich Road, the former highway converted into a cycle route. Faded lines disappeared beneath the leaf litter. The path flowed gently towards my destination.
16:55 - Sandwich. 17:00 - Sandwich closes.
I eat my Ham Sandwich in the market square, my bike becomes a table, panniers a plate, for my celebratory feast. I’ve eaten a pack of dirt already this trip.
I stink. Sweat, mud, and happiness. I really stink.
Recipe for Adventure: Ham-Sandwich
Find Ham. Vital. Find someone inspirational to look after you and help you find Ham.
Feel the salty sea air clasp at your face; smell the warm smoke as wood burners fight off the winter; see the pigs in their natural habitat, in the open grasslands, cosy in their own world, unaware of their tasty fate.
Climb some hills. Get in the easiest gear, don’t look too far ahead, and sing your way to the top. Squeal with joy as you summit; grin, jaw aching, as you take in the view and freewheel back down. Get the adrenaline pumping, burn some calories, and find the top of the world.
Roll along the deserted proms. Dodge the storm berms of sand and gravel, thrown up over the walls by Desmond. Watch golden sunlight cast glory over the cliffs and turn the sea into a glistening maelstrom of beauty.
Lose yourself in the shingle. Wide, crunching expanses extending beyond the horizon. Feel alone, feel free, a moving point lost in an infinite landscape.
Hit the docks. Gangways and walkways, closed off - private, no admittance, spiked fences reaching for the sky. Forbidden spaces filled with jostling ship builders and crane drivers. This world is half grey, under monotonising paint and a sprinkling of undisclosed industrial dust; half orange and yellow - hi vis, danger, look at me - I’m important.
Find greenery. Lots of greenery. Love it. Live it. Wake up in dew soaked nettles, smell the chlorophyll, the freshest salad you can find.
Wash greenery - rain. Rain is good for this. Lots of rain.
Experience quaint towns vying for the chocolate box cover. Corfe, Rye, Winchester, and a hundred thatched and cobbled villages, scattered across the countryside like beacons of delight and disbelief.
Find Sandwich. Put it all together, the steady motion going on, going forwards, the bread holding it together, keeping it together. The fillings - the highs, the lows, the wonders and surprises.
This Ham Sandwich is four days in the making, a unique combination of weather, people, landscapes and experience. It could never be the same again - and who would want it to be? Every journey is another story, a new adventure waiting to be discovered.