Day Seven - Llŷn Peninsula and The Ty Coch Inn



Thursday 12th April 2018


I love a good pub. Just like my Dad, I'm perfectly happy to walk into a nice one on my own and sit in a corner with a pint. In fact, I'm doing that right now as I write these words. So the thought of walking into a pub on a remote and scenic Welsh beach, only accessible by foot, ticked lots of boxes, as I'm sure it does for many. On paper, it's a brilliantly simple and romantic combo of pleasures. Months ago, when the decision was made to tour Wales, the very first place on my list of stops was 'that pub on the beach everyone goes on about'. A combination of a few friends mentioning it in the most glowing terms over the years, and a high profile placing as the third best beach bar in the world had not only brought it very much to my attention, but quite possibly elevated it to dangerously mythical proportions in my mind. I would just have to experience it for myself and see if it lived up to the hype.

You see, I had picked the Woodlands Hall hotel purely because it was the nearest accommodation to this hostelry, which is called the Ty Coch Inn. The fact that the hotel turned out to be so great is one of those bits of pure luck which leaves one feeling very smug. Pub and hotel were in reasonable walking distance, which meant I could have a decent drink there too. I had actually packed one of those LED headband torches in my luggage, as I had visions of stumbling back along the beach and lanes at chucking out time in the dark. However, the friend who knew the place best, Mancunian DJ ledge Paul Hughes (who holidays in the area regularly and is one of the pub's DJs - yes they provide quality music on occasion too!) had warned me that it would close at 5pm as the season was yet to kick in. So I had to make sure I got there nice and early (rattling the doors at midday even...?) to savour the experience in full. No problem.

But there was a fly in the ointment. The previous night, whilst sitting at the hotel's dining room window enjoying my Blue Moon with a view, I started glancing at my Facebook feed and saw to my most pleasant surprise that another DJ friend of mine, Gaz Lenton, was staying with his family at Abersoch, just a few miles south. Well I couldn't let him have complete peace in this remote part of the country, could I? It would be rude not to pop and say hello - especially as Abersoch was another place on the list. It would mean the window of opportunity at the beach pub would be lessened, but for a very pleasant and justifiable reason.

So, plans made via messages, I saddled up on the Vespa after another top breakfast (I could quite happily have a fry up every day..) and found myself on the tranquil Llŷn backroads going the long way round to Abersoch, via the south westerly village of Aberdaron, at around 11am - with a view to meeting Gaz at 12. I never quite made Aberdaron, as on approach I got side tracked by signs for a beach with the intriguing name of 'Whistling Sands'. Very aware that time was ticking away (I hate being late to meet people) my curiosity got the better of me and I decided to have a butchers. I was very glad I did, as it was a cracking little beach, even with the grey weather.


Easily on a par with Barafundle in Pembrokeshire I'd say. Apparently it gets its name (Porth Oer in Welsh) from the strange acoustics of the place, where the sand doesn't so much crunch underfoot, as whine. I didn't notice it myself, but it was certainly a special bit of coast, and a most pleasant bonus.


Nice as it was, it did mean I was running late for my meetup with Gaz... so it was twist n' go to Abersoch. I was meeting him at a pub in the high street, and I had 2 minutes to spare as I crossed the bridge over the little estuary into the village. Phew, OCD boy wouldn't be late... but then I spied a familiar shape and gait sauntering over the bridge. I couldn't believe it - a colleague from the school where I work, here of all places! I yelled at him and pulled over and we had a brief but nice chat. He warned me it was notorious around these parts for bumping into folk you know. He was staying very nearby with his young family and had been sent on a shopping run into town on foot to pick up the raw materials for a Full English, and very kindly invited me to come and join them. Opportunities in Llŷn it seems are like buses - three come along at once! Anyway I'd already had my sausages a couple of hours earlier. So it was a farewell and off up to the pub (The Vaynol) to meet Gaz, only a little bit late.

Gaz is another Black Country boy, but we only met last summer when he and his two mates Danny and Ian invited me to DJ at one of their gigs. They go under the name The Drop In Sessions and do a gem of a night in a small but perfectly formed cellar at Katie Fitzgerald's pub in Stourbridge. It's not a big money making enterprise by any means - they are true music lovers and just want to spread that love. As well as passionate promoters they are also born DJs and play blissed out sunny music on warm Sundays during the summer months in the beer garden of The Fox just outside the town. I've yet to attend one of their 'Fox & Sounds' sessions but I'm determined this year.

The sun was shining on the beer garden of The Vaynol whilst Gaz and I supped shandy and chatted about how all this was going. Other topics of conversation included : the wonderful Welsh tarmac (how do they do it when the English can't? Is it EU money..?); how he and his wife got married in the church in Netherton which was at the end of the small street where I grew up; the fact that Abersoch had become somewhat of a 'millionaire's playground'; and what Gaz very poetically described as the pleasure of coming to this part of the world with his family to 'just be'.

A positively balmy Gaz Lenton

By 2pm we were both of the opinion that we could've quite happily sat there burning our bald bonces all afternoon but Gaz had a family to get back to (huge thanks to his missis Mel for letting me pinch him for a bit), plus my window for the Ty Coch was diminishing by the minute. Remember, I had to get back by scoot (half hour, easy) and then get sorted for a fairly long walk to reach the fabled pub. I had originally planned to wander around Abersoch and take some snaps but I had to forego this, only pulling over for a split second on the way out for a quick pic which does it no justice.


Was nearly 3pm when I parked the scoot at the hotel. The weather back here on the north side of the Peninsula was not like in Abersoch - it was very grey again. Only two hours pub time left, and a 40 minute walk to tackle first! Popped up to my room to stuff a few things in a bag, and it was completely silent as of course everyone was at the funeral.

Strided off under the directions of Google maps on my phone. After 5 mins I came across what I thought was a helpful map on a notice board, showing me a circular walk which would avoid the roads (I was a bit worried about lack of footpath and the speed of some of the cars on the lanes) and lead me to my destination that bit quicker. VERY aware of time, I gladly took the suggested route and jumped over a stile onto what appeared to be a very pleasant, green, sheepy footpath which followed a stream.



About 500 yards into this walk and I became aware of two things : 1) an increasing awareness that I was headed in the wrong direction; and 2) my trainers were covered in mud and shite. Me Airmax was well ruined though, innit Bro.

I bottled it and turned back. Double the shite on the trainers. When I reached the sign on the road again I had a proper look, and realised I'd taken the WRONG direction on the circular walk - I'd gone clockwise from the 6 o'clock position, to get to 3pm, if that makes sense. Anticlockwise would have got me there 3 times quicker. By now it was now 3:45pm - one hour until last orders. Arseholes!

Marco Polo here strided up across ever muddier fields, with no confidence that I would ever reach this bloody pub, and with the local ovine population mocking me with a combo of indifference and pitiful glances.



At one point, whilst doubting myself again and about to turn back (Google maps was about as useful as tits on a fish) I bumped into a very posh but kindly lady walking her dog. Turns out she was from Knutsford in Cheshire, not that far from where I live. She reassured me that I should carry on, I was nearly there. Goes to show that technology can't always top human interaction - at least not in North Wales anyway.

Past the golf course and I started to see lots of people coming the other way - a good sign I thought. It was a fair old hike to this place I must say, and I was spitting feathers. Over a last hilly bit of cliff and I WAS THERE - The 'Red House'.

A bit like when I got to Tenby, I wanted to do things properly. I practically covered my eyes from the view and impatiently strode into the pub for a pint. I wanted to savour the vista with a beer, that was the point. Sad, I know. At the bar I looked behind me to sneak a glimpse through the doorway..


It was fairly busy but I got served immediately, and I sat outside on the wall with a fine Welsh stout.
For months I'd thought of this moment, bigging it up in my head - usually the kiss of death that, isn't it? I'm a firm believer that the best life experiences tend to be the most spontaneous. That midweek quiet pint with a mate that turns into a corker because you weren't expecting it, is often much more satisfying than that date in your calendar, the one you've been looking forward to for weeks. It's the reason why I don't do New Year's Eve - it's such a colossally depressing communal anticlimax.

So, was I enjoying it? I'll admit it took me a few minutes to settle. I was still hot, flustered, and a bit panicked from the unnecessarily complicated and mucky hike (I should have just gone on the roads). It was also busier than I thought, considering it was a grey midweek school term day (the Welsh schools had finished their Easter holidays by now, although some English schools hadn't) and such an effort to get to. I can imagine it must be heaving on a sunny summer's weekend. There were lots of picnic tables outside but all were taken. I had to sit on the wall which meant a precariously balanced pint. That scourge of all such moments, a kid kicking a frigging football around a few inches from me, made me nervous about smashed glass and why his parents weren't telling him to move away, onto a patch of the mile long empty beach that stretched out before us. Each 'slap' of the leather on the wall had me digging my nails into my palms. It was like being back at work.


Luckily him and his parents pissed off very soon, as in fact did quite a few others. It was now gone 4pm and the pub would close by 5. Plus it was getting gradually more grey. As the porter started to be enjoyed, the place started to work its magic. It was misty but mild and without a breath of wind. I was snugly comfortable in my big coat and couldn't stop just staring and snapping photos.


The sea was like the clichéd millpond, and the views had the peaceful, dreamlike impressionist quality of a Turner, or Monet.


I looked around at the people that remained and they all had similar, wordless expressions of contentment on their faces. There was an infectious sense of complete relaxation coupled with an acceptance that this was indeed a special place. Yes, the pub is undoubtably a great pub, and would be no matter where it was located - friendly staff, good service, fine beers, great cosy yet quirky decor. But this was more than a pub, it was a small fishing village (Porthdinllaen) in the most stunning natural harbour, with views of mountains across the bay. Apparently, the village started to be developed back in the early 19th century when the bay was considered the perfect location for a major ferry port, with crossings to Ireland. Luckily for us Thomas Telford's London to Holyhead Road meant that they instead ruined a chunk of The Holy Island and this place was left alone.


A lady with a scouse accent arrived and stood next to me with her 5 year old son with an expression of wonder. She popped in to get half a lager and sit on the wall a bit too, saying to her lad 'don't tell Daddy we found a secret pub and Mummy had a beer will ya?'. She got it, completely.

It was nearing 5 and I was in no hurry to leave, even if the pub was closing. But I got in for last orders anyway... only to be told that the pub was staying open until 8pm! I was overcome with emotion... both joy and regret - all the panic of the day geared towards the supposed 5pm closing! The rush with Gaz, the walking through dung. I would have a word with my mate Hughesy about that. Speaking of whom, I chatted with the landlord Stuart about Paul, who had been here only a few days before. When he found out I was from Stoke it was 'Oh, only down the road, you'd be here in no time for one of our DJ sessions' and I found myself already thinking about a summer return to come and enjoy some tunes here too.


Despite the late opening and feeling almost rooted to the spot outside the pub, still taking it all in, I started to get a bit chilly. I am famously nesh (a Stoke On Trent term for 'a wimp in the cold'). The air was turning from muggily misty to just this side of damply drizzly. So I went inside for a bit and enjoyed the roaring fire. After a while I realized how hungry I was and thought I should get back to the hotel for scran, before it started to rain properly. So, a massive thanks and farewell to Stuart, his great staff, and the Ty Coch, and I set off along the beach to Morfa Nefyn. I was avoiding the boggy sheepshite at all costs. Sure enough, fat drops of rain started to stain the sand at the exact moment I set off. I didn't care one bit, it was a wonderful stroll and I kept looking back at Porthdinllaen as if I'd somehow never see it again. Silly really, as I'm sure I will.


By the time I got to the road (which it turns out had a very safe pedestrian lane after all, separate from the road, and CLEAN - grrrr) it was chucking it down. So earphones in and best foot forward and I was back at the hotel in no time.


I hung my soggy jeans up to dry in the room, bagged up the soiled Airmax, got changed into some dry stuff and went down to dinner. I had worried that I would be the only person there for them to cater for after the funeral, when they could really do with some much needed space, and I had offered to go elsewhere.  As it turns out though, they had a pre-booked event on in their function room - a spiritualist, a medium, call it what you will. I know...  a few hours after Nerys had said goodbye to her father. 'Not exactly the most appropriate given the day's events' she observed bravely. But it had to go on, and the audience no doubt will have been completely unaware that the folk serving their drinks had been through such a sad day. I myself was still treated to another lovely meal and great chat courtesy of Nick.

This was my last day proper of the trip, and it had most certainly not disappointed. North Wales had definitely redeemed itself for the somewhat dodgy hands it had tended to deal me in the past.

(Click here to read the final part...)


© Rich Lane 2018


Day Six - Tenby to The Llŷn Peninsula



Wednesday 11th April 2018


Ok so this was the biggie, taking in most of the length of West Wales. My final hotel of the trip was situated deep into the Llŷn Peninsula (that sticky-outy bit just underneath Anglesey), one of the more remote areas of the country. Why there? Well you may not be entirely surprised to learn it was mainly down to a pub (more about that though on Day Seven).

Another great chat with my Tenby landlady Patricia over the fry up, this time about the town's scooter rally, which was less than a month away - doh! I gave her my farewell and thanks for looking after me, particularly given her sad family circumstances of late. I was soon out in the car park in full waterproofs, Vespa packed, hitting the road at 10am. It was another damp grey morning, but mercifully wind free.

If the weather had been better I may have been tempted to go a longer route around the very tip of Pembrokeshire to take in Fishguard or even St Davids, but as it stood I was anxious to break the back of what was already a long day's riding. Leaving Tenby I didn't fancy the satnav's suggestion of going back east a bit to Carmarthen, so instead I headed towards Haverfordwest and up through Cardigan (Aberteifi) towards my midway point, the seaside resort of Aberystwyth.

It's testament to how the beauty of Wales was spoiling me that what would, on any other day, have been a lovely scenic country ride was now feeling like pretty standard stuff, and I didn't really stop for photos on this first half of the journey, despite some views of distant small estuaries and a brief section over wet, misty moorlands. At one point a flock of sheep was being herded up the main road by a couple of farmers and their dogs, resulting in a standstill for a good 15 mins, but I must say it was quite a nice reason for a traffic jam for once, and I enjoyed watching it.

The approach to Aberystwyth started to hug the coast a little more and I popped down into the town for the briefest of coffee stops at a seafront caff around lunchtime. I parked up next to an identically coloured machine, a Ducati - making the Vespa seem like the homely, curvy cousin of a brasher, more glamorous Italian. But somehow I liked to think you could tell they were related.


Not wasting any time after my caffeine injection, it was back on the horse. From here on the scenery got ever more impressive as Snowdonia loomed. The beautifully maintained Welsh roads were as ever a joy to ride on, drivers were generally not right up my jacksie, and very slowly the weather improved as the miles ticked by. There were also beginning to be some seriously ominous looking mountains looming either side.


After another petrol/coffee stop at some services outside Dolgellau I hit a crossroads which gave me the choice of either following the satnav further north through the depths of Snowdonia, or following my instincts and heading west on the smaller coastal road past Barmouth. I was soon very glad that I did the latter, as the views from the road, which hugged the northern shore of the Mawddach Estuary, were amongst the best of the trip.



The route from here up to the start of the Peninsula wasn't completely new to me (unlike virtually all of the Welsh roads covered so far) and although beautiful I didn't have the fondest memories of the last times I visited, nearly 35 years ago. Firstly, just north of Barmouth is a caravan park at Tal-y-bont where I was invited to stay by a primary school classmate and his family during a half-term heatwave in the mid 80s. Sounds idyllic, right? Well for a start, I got badly sunburned, and sleeping in a small tent made for some very uncomfortable nights. Plus it turned out that despite having very kind parents who thought we were best mates (and us both having a similar sense of humour) the fact is that a lot of the time we just didn't get on and wound each other up. And we were in each other's pockets 24/7 - even sharing the tent. Couldn't wait to get home!

Just a mile or two up the road from this is Llanbedr, which a year before that had coincidentally been the location of a particularly unpleasant primary school trip. Partly this was due to falling foul of the head of year, resulting in me being grounded at the Youth Hostel for days at a time. I can't for the life of me remember why I was in trouble, but I was somewhat of a gobshite even aged 10, so no doubt I deserved it, despite feeling VERY hard done to at the time. Secondly, it was at this precise moment that my lungs decided they were going to have their very first asthma attack, which hit completely by surprise during the night. Medication was sought from the cottage hospital next day, which was a big physical relief, but it was deemed sensible for a parent to come and collect me ASAP. My poor Dad had to drive there and back in a day from The Black Country, not exactly a short schlep. About the only fond memory of that one was of my Dad, who was a six and a half foot, twenty four stone ex rugby playing deputy headmaster, towering over the relatively miniscule head of year when they met, much to the amusement of the other kids who were convinced he was there to straighten him out. Disappointingly, only pleasantries were exchanged. The asthma has never gone away since of course, but kept very much under control with minimal medication, enabling me to keep fit and active. But it's still a pain in the arse.Well, not literally, but you don't want to hear about my Emma Freuds, I'm sure.

So with these mixed feelings about two decidedly pretty yet personally loaded places behind me after Llanbedr, it was onwards up past Harlech and its spectacular castle.


However, there was one last town that I had to pass through which had yet another tale to tell. Exactly two years previously myself, the wife and kids had to endure an Easter weekend in Porthmadog. I say endure, not because there was anything wrong with the town or area, but because Storm Katy decided to hit North Wales, which meant the four of us stuck in a family room in the Travelodge - which it turns out, has no restaurant or bar, and is placed in a charming bijou spot between a scrap metal yard and an industrial estate. We abandoned any plans to visit nearby sights like Portmeirion or the Ffestiniog Railway, and spent much of the weekend cooped up watching Rising Damp repeats on the telly. Nobody's fault of course, just a bit disappointing, especially as we don't get away often. It was nice to spend some time together all the same, but it did make me promise never to book a holiday for us all in the UK again unless it was at very short notice, and with a favourable weather forecast. This was a shame as one year previous to THAT we had our best UK weekend break ever, in Llandudno - sunny, warm, lots to see and do. It had all but cured me of my aversion to North Wales too, based the aforementioned childhood bad luck.

So in my life, North Wales had been a bit of a pig three out of four times, and wonderful once. How would it decide to treat me this time?

Passing Porthmadog with a slight wince, you'll be glad to know it was finally off with the emotional baggage, and I was soon entering The Llŷn area. The roads here were the best of the trip, in terms of being straight, smooth, fast: exactly what was needed after so many hours in the saddle. I just wanted to get there now. That said I couldn't resist a quick stop for a snap of painter's favourite, Criccieth.


I arrived at the Woodlands Hall Hotel in Edern just after 5pm, which I thought was not bad going considering the distance, the vehicle, the detours and the stops. I unloaded the Vespa in the secluded and peaceful car park and headed in.


The landlady Nerys showed to me to my room and said that her husband would be in the bar for drinks and evening meals from 6. I was starving so after a quick wash and brush up was down on the dot, where landlord Nick was indeed ready to serve me with a draught pint of Blue Moon - which virtually brought steam out of my ears, it went down so well. Whilst being a very genial host as I looked over a menu, he did tell me some bad news : Nerys had lost her father a few days before, and had not long been back from the chapel of rest today. The funeral was tomorrow. I was doubly sad and shocked that a) this was such a similar situation to the last hotel and b) Nerys and Nick were both able to go about their business all the same, and reacted so warmly to their guests - just as Patricia had in Tenby. It really hit home that the trade they were in must be one of the most unforgiving in terms of allowing time off for such life moments - guests would still be coming, and had to be catered for. Luckily Nick's Mum and Dad, who used to run the hotel themselves, were at hand to muck in too but even so I was in awe of their ability to carry on under the circumstances.

Of course as soon as I knew I offered to make myself as invisible as possible - go out for a meal at a local pub that evening, brekkie somewhere nearby tomorrow etc but Nick wouldn't hear of it, and before long I was sat at a window with a fantastic view of the mountains, eating a superb fresh meal that Nick (a highly trained caterer and teacher of cookery) had prepared himself. Before long the food, Blue Moon and long ride conspired to droop my eyelids, and it was off to bed, happy that I'd have another whole day to explore the area on scoot and foot tomorrow.





© Rich Lane 2018

Day Five - Rest Day, Tenby


Tuesday 10th April 2018


Another day of no riding. Tomorrow was going to be the big one where I tackled almost the entire length of the country, so I felt a bit of battery recharging was sensible today.

Up with the lark, and it was indeed grey and wet looking outside. Downstairs to a superb full English and a nice chat with the landlady, Patricia. She told me all about the Iron Man Wales competition, which is hosted in the town every September. The hotel is apparently filled with participants (mentalists?) and supporters from all over the world, all here to 'enjoy' this toughest of triathlons. It involves a 2.4 mile swim off the beach, then straight on a bike (in the car park behind the hotel, apparently) for a 112 mile ride around Pembrokeshire, and then to top it off, a full marathon. All in a day. Just hearing about it made me want to go back to bed.

The hotel, Ashby House, really was very lovely and I'd definitely recommend it. The downstairs lounge area looked inviting as a potential base for my rain-avoidance today - cosy, plush, classy - almost like a Gentleman's Club. However, by the time brekkie was over it looked like the rain had at least stopped. So I thought I would hit the streets of Tenby with my camera and just wander...

I had only seen the South Beach side of this little town so far, and had no idea what was round the corner of the headland I had photographed yesterday. Time to find out. Despite overcast skies I was absolutely blown away by how pretty Tenby is. I would suggest it may be the most 'perfect' seaside resort in the country, in terms of providing a cultural template of what we want from a holiday in a quaint coastal fishing village : a small harbour, great beaches, dramatic rocks and pretty coloured houses . It reminded me of childhood books depicting the seaside, particularly Rupert Bear annuals. The few hours I spent exploring took in every inch of the North Beach (which was virtually deserted now the weather was less perfect) and the fascinating back streets and alleys of the town, which were crammed in behind a castle wall. It was one long extended happy attack, and I'm afraid I got a little trigger happy with the snapping...




Come lunchtime I certainly wasn't hungry after the huge breakfast, but I was getting a little thirsty... so I settled on The Buccaneer Inn which had its own micro brewery (called Harbwr) out the back. The cask ales they make are suberb, and by 1pm every table was full of folk eating, so I guess they are doing something right there too.



I ended up vacating my corner table to allow a family to eat, and sitting on a barstool I found these plaques which made me smile. 'Titch' is my family childhood nickname too, especially in Wales. It's because I'm the youngest of four siblings (Gareth, my host on Day One, is the eldest). Enquiries with staff revealed them to be commemorating three local fisherman legends who had propped up the bar for so many years that they were now part of the furniture.


After scribbling up my notes the combo of writer's cramp, sea air, and one ale too many conspired to make me sleepy, poor dab. What the hell, I thought, I'm on holiday - so it was back to the hotel for that ultimate indulgence, The Afternoon Kip. Bliss. Wake up early evening and it's time to eat, so off to a place I had clocked earlier - an award winning pizzeria called Top Joes. Now, spending a fair bit of time over the years in Italy I have inevitably become a bit of a pizza snob, but I'm pleased to say this was as good as I've ever had in the UK. The plain, salted slices that came with the starter were particularly ace. And ice cold Moretti in a proper glass, too.


Whilst tucking into my dessert of affogato, the sun suddenly lit up the street outside for a few seconds. So bill paid, I decided to go back and grab the camera again for a last saunter. I had perhaps got a little over excited as it wasn't exactly blue skies, but they were certainly less leaden than before, and I found myself undertaking a long walk to the very end of South Beach at dusk.








I'd got quite a sweat on beneath my armoured parka by the time I got back to the start of South Beach, so before the steps up the cliff to my hotel I nipped in to the South Beach Bar, which had been heaving in yesterday's heatwave, but which I now had completely to myself. Sat outside with a delicious Welsh porter, it was mild, still, and quiet, with just the sound of the waves coming out of the gloom. It really felt like I was on holiday, and was the perfect end to my lazy day getting acquainted with this gem of a place. I made a promise that I would be back before long, to introduce the family to its many treats.


Despite the hour's snooze earlier, I was off to bed at a respectable hour as I had potentially the most challenging day's riding to contend with tomorrow...

(Click here for the next part...)

© Rich Lane 2018

Day Four - Blaengarw To Tenby


Monday 9th April 2018


A real sense of excitement this morning - sunshine! Nothing like clear blue skies and the promise of the seaside to get you up and out early doors. That said, it was a very sad goodbye to the hospitality of Lloyd, Delyth and the girls, but off just before 10am with the Garw vally looking even more stunning in the bright light.

Rather than taking the shortest route south to Bridgend and then west along the main road, I took Del's suggestion and went back up through the next valley to the west, heading towards Pontrhydyfen, a small village famous as the birthplace of heroic welsh boozehound Richard Burton. My sister Liz and I were always brought up to believe we were named after the troubled alcoholic megastar couple (cheers for that, Mum & Dad...) so it seemed fitting somehow. It was a scenic ride all the way, and at the entrance to the village are both a viaduct and aqueduct, the latter of which is long since filled in, but provides a dramatic view of the river valley below.


I didn't really stop for too long anywhere on the way to Tenby as I was very aware that substantial rain was forecast for all of South Wales tomorrow, with things clouding over from later in the afternoon. I just wanted to get to my destination on dry, safe roads, but still be able to see a few sights. The morning sunshine really was an unexpected bonus. From Pontrhydyfen it was a gradual lessening of the steep Valleys landscape as I got nearer to Swansea and the coast via the town of Neath, which was lit up by the sun in a most flattering way as I approached.

Sunshine on Neath (Sorry...)

Nothing much to report after Neath really - the outskirts of Swansea were predictably stop-starty with lights and roundabouts and passport seeking traffic heading for the much signposted DVLA headquarters. I certainly didn't get a view of the city at all sadly, save for retail parks and some fairly grand leafy suburbs. I had hoped to get some sort of panorama looking out to sea and The Mumbles (I think Twin Town was playing on my subconscious) but the satnav wasn't interested in sending me that way.

After Swansea it was motorway speeds on the fast moving A48 until Camarthen. Once again the Vespa coped with no problems, but it was not the most relaxing way to scoot. I would have ideally gone a gentler route, but I was increasingly aware that the sun was STILL blazing, and how good would it be if I arrived in Tenby whilst it was still sunbathing weather..? It's ironic really, as originally the main purpose of the trip was to enjoy the rides, without a deadline other than reaching my shelter by the end of the day - getting there should be more than half the fun, so to speak. Yet here I was getting a bit stressy and impatient to just get from A to B, just like I do every day commuting by Vespa. In fairness though, I always get like this when it's sunny. I hate the thought of wasting sunshine. It's rare in Britain, and as someone whose complexion hasn't been exactly flawless since he hit double figures, I also instinctively want to use it as nature's medicine for my poor old Randolph Scotts.

(I have had this notion since childhood that we shouldn't have set Bank Holidays in the UK, where the weather is almost always shite exactly when we don't want it to be. Instead, we should just have 3 or 4 potential 'Sun Days' each year. The concept is that when all available, trusted weather forecasting organisations predict that tomorrow is going to be a scorcher, all channels of telly and radio will be interupted (at, say, 7pm in the evening) with the following broadcast : 'We are sorry to interrupt this program, but we have some news from Buckingham Palace' and no less than Her Madge Queen Liz herself will grant every man, woman and child in the UK the day off tomorrow. Can you imagine the collective euphoria? There is NOTHING more euphoric than a short notice day off work, let alone in a heatwave. It would be like a national Snow Day with sunburn.

Yes, I know we'd have to iron out a few creases. Like who looked after the ill in hospitals, manned the petrol pumps, and served the lager in the beer gardens. And yes, part of me does realise that it could turn into The Purge with flip-flops. But don't Bank Holidays, as they stand,  already pose these problems - only with invariably bad weather?)

Anyway, here I was ON HOLIDAY AND IT WAS SUNNY and I was damned if I wasn't going to grab some of it without balaclavas and parkas and crash helmets on. So it was wide open throttle all the way down to Pembrokeshire, which was a very fast road until almost the very end. It rather sneakily doesn't show you the sea until you are about a mile away from Tenby itself (well, certainly not today with the hazy visibility anyway), which all added to the excitement when it finally happened.

I had never been anywhere near this part of the country before, and as I got into Tenby, following the satnav to my digs, I was beaming from ear to ear to see that the hotel was pretty much right on the sea front, at the start of the sweeping South Beach. And it was STILL hot and sunny, and only just gone half twelve! I actually forced myself not to look at the inviting views too much until I was parked up and checked in. A large carpark right behind the charming Edwardian BnB meant that the scooter was within earshot if the alarm went off in the middle of the night - one little worry could be crossed off. I practically ripped the luggage off the bike, carried it all at once (in arms, between knees, and in my teeth) round the corner to the hotel front door with visions of a swift change into shorts and onto the beach within 10 mins. I get to the door and swing it open. Or at least try to. It's locked. There is a note on the door. My heart sank. It contained the four most stressful words in the English language - 'Back In Ten Mins'.

Now... I have always had a problem with this. I appreciate that people need to nip out and close up shop for a multitude of valid reasons, but why is it always ten minutes? And more importantly, ten minutes from when? For all I know it had been there since last Thursday. Why doesn't anyone ever put the time of their departure on there, to give some sort of chronological context? I was standing there in an impromptu heatwave wearing gear that was designed to keep me warm in a Snowdonian winter. Carrying a week's worth of luggage. After a pretty long ride, and with the sun mocking me - 'you know that I'm gone the moment you get your shorts on, don't you, Dickhead?' 

AAAAAAARRRRRGGGHHH!!!!!!!!!

I managed maybe 4 minutes before I dropped the stuff in the porch and rang the hotel number, just to let the landlady know I was here, should she be on the end of a mobile. I heard the reception phone ringing just behind the glass. Knackers...

I started to compose an email, there in the street (yes, I know...). Just then a kind voice asked 'can I help you' and the landlady was there walking towards me, true to her word. It had been all of 6 minutes. A very nice, friendly lady who I soon found out had sadly lost her mother a couple of weeks before, and had popped out for a few minutes as she was still sorting through her Mum's things. I felt, of course, ashamed of my selfish impatience when I found out. I can be a truly terrible human being sometimes.

Checked in, contents of the two roll bags dumped on the bed, thermal long johns off and shorts on. Stuffed a beach towel and my camera in to the smaller of the two bags and practically sprinted to the end of the road and let out an audible 'yes!!'. This was the view I was greeted with:


I couldn't quite believe it. Surely this was a trick? I strided off down the steps to the South Beach, only stopping for an ice cream on the way. Yes, you heard right - an ice cream. It was gloriously hot weather, with not a breath of wind. Found a beaut of a spot, a real sun trap under the cliffs, and I was soon feeling that contentment that only comes from the warm orange glow behind closed eyelids that signifies holiday sunbathing. I'm afraid it was so hot that I even indulged in a spot of what my Scottish friends would term 'taps aff'.


I kept sitting up to look around. A huge golden beach under blue skies, families playing with frisbees and making sand castles. It felt like I had scooted to The Algarve rather than West Wales in April. I rang the wife and Delyth to let them know I had arrived safely, and both reported that the weather was manky where they were. Guilt kicked in. It was so hot here a few people were actually swimming. I even went down to the shore with a view to diving in myself, but one splash of the water on my big toe caused enough instant icy pain to remind me that summer was a long way off, and that this was still Britain, after all. The swimmers weren't daft, and had wetsuits on.


I was quite happy to just exist there on the beach for a good couple of hours, but even then something started to niggle me. How long would this freak weather last? And what meterological price would have to be paid for it further down the road? I had booked two nights at the hotel and so had a whole rest day in Tenby to look forward to, but I planned on touring around Pembrokeshire a little tomorrow, maybe even make it down to the UK's smallest city, St. David's. So I checked the forecast : constant, heavy rain all day, and starting to cloud over this evening. I decided that I would have a rain check tomorrow, loitering around the lovely hotel and maybe a pub or two in the town, reading and writing up notes for this blog in my little notebook. But I should really make an effort to squeeze at least one sightseeing visit in this evening before sundown. So I hauled myself back to the hotel for hose down, and suddenly relised I was starving hungry and would have to eat before setting off again. So around 6pm I was tucking into to this bad boy, which all in with a beer was around a tenner. The perfect seaside tea.


Then it was back on the Vespa to try and find Barafundle Bay, which was apparently a little over half an hour away, and had topped a poll as the best beach in Wales. It had to be done, but I was up against time. It was getting ever cloudier, and I really wanted to get there before sunset as it involves a coastal path to reach the location. I didn't fancy stumbling around a sheer clifftop in the dark. Most of the way there was on a glorious road known as The Ridgeway which was fairly straight and fast , and had views either side which reminded me somewhat of similar roads in Central Italy, where the wife hails from. Despite my hurry I just had to stop and take a shot of a view which somewhat spooked me out - what looked like a huge futuristic industrial settlement on the horizon, which resembled a scene from a post apocalyptic sci-fi, or even the Emerald City from The Wizard of Oz.


I can only guess it must have been part of the busy Pembroke Dock? I shrugged it off and headed on with the satnav's guidance, looking for a place called Stackpole Quay, which was the nearest parking location to Barafundle. I got lost. The satnav was sending we to the village of Stackpole, not the Quay. The light was fading. I had to ask directions from some walkers, but the folk were Southern tourists and although perfetly charming, absolutely no help at all, sending me the wrong way. I eventually stumbled across signs for it and arrived, parked up the Vespa, and practically jogged on up the cliff path to try and get to this fabled beach before sundown, if only to take a snap and turn back. To borrow an image from Tubbs in The League Of Gentlemen, the fiery orb was already weighing very heavy in the sky. Not that you could see it for the increasingly ominous clouds.


On the cliffs I encountered lots of wise people coming the other way, who were deserting the beach before dark. The Pembrokeshire Coast is a National Park, and I could see why. Rugged, dramatic, breathtaking.


A sweaty 15 minutes later and there it was - 'The Best Beach In Wales'. Not exactly drenched in sunlight but still wildly impressive, and with a beautifully secluded, remote atmosphere.


A set of steep steps took me down to the sands, which I had to myself save for a young family just finishing up for the day. I had brought my travel tripod with me so I set up for a selfie, with the clouded sun just about to disappear behind the dunes at the back. The moment I was ready a weak ray of sun just lit up the beach for a few seconds before disappearing for the day.


Although sad I couldn't linger for longer due to encroaching darkness, I was at least glad I'd seen it, experienced it and snapped it. So it was down with the tripod, off over the cliffs and back on the Vespa following a slightly different route to Tenby. I arrived back at the car park happily tired and ready for an early night. There was still time for one more somewhat gloomy pic of the place on my tour which was furthest from home, and the little vehicle which had delivered me there safely.




© Rich Lane 2018