Planning 2017 Trip Touring Around France Mainly

Discussion in 'Touring' started by Pete1950, Oct 1, 2016.

  1. This Rolls-Royce chassis was intended to take an armoured car body:

    20170725_114156.jpg

    ... and this is a Tatra V8 limousine, from Czechoslovakia:

    20170725_121410.jpg
     
    • Like Like x 1
  2. This is a whole grid full of pre-WW2 racing cars, mainly Bugattis and Alfa-Romeos:

    20170725_125205.jpg

    ... and another grid full of later F1 cars, mainly with Renault or Peugeot engines:


    20170725_124755.jpg
     
  3. This Bugatti Royale coupe Esders is fabulous almost beyond description:

    20170725_131322.jpg
     
  4. Just to complete the picture, here is a Bugatti rail car in the nearby railway museum. With four Royale straight-8 engines of 13 litres each, it was quick:

    20170725_163941.jpg
     
  5. While many manufacturers like to blazon their own names on their products, others more discreetly settle for initials. Perhaps when Messrs Bollack, Netter & Co chose the call their car a 'BNC' it was the wiser course.

    20170725_130152.jpg

    20170725_120439.jpg
     
    #65 Pete1950, Jul 25, 2017
    Last edited: Jul 26, 2017
  6. Today I plan to ride over the Ballons des Vosges, via the pass of Bussang, down the Moselle valley to Nancy, and head north-west to stay at Peronne on the River Somme. It is close to Thiepval*, which I hope to visit tomorrow, and then head for Ypres. Northern France is pretty flat, much like southern England, so these will be the last mountains I see on this trip.

    * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thiepval_Memorial
     
    • Like Like x 1
  7. I was in Ypres yesterday the whole of the area around the Cloth hall is cordoned off with several big stages they are having a pop concert
     
  8. I rode 300 miles or so across France on Wednesday, and stayed in a delightful "Chambre d'Hote" (which means a bed & breakfast in the owners' home) in Peronne. Now I wish I had stayed more in B&B and less in corporate chain hotels. The trouble is big chains have air conditioning whilst B&B don't. Superb typically French dinner in Antoine's Bistrot.

    Thursday 27 July I explored some little country back-roads around Albert, Thiepval, and Bapaume. There are war cemeteries and memorials dotted around everywhere, large and small. Some are lonely and deserted; some are up rough tracks. I'll try to post photos of a few which I visited.

    These are the graves of a unit of the Devonshires, who were buried in the very trench they had died holding; they hold it still.


    20170727_095932.jpg

    20170727_095703.jpg
     
    • Like Like x 1
  9. This is the Thiepval memorial to those with no known grave. Poppies really do grow there.

    20170727_110815.jpg

    20170727_114159.jpg
     
    • Like Like x 1
  10. A memorial to the Australians:

    20170727_103339.jpg

    and the one to the Canadians, on Vimy Ridge:

    20170727_130742.jpg
     
    • Like Like x 1
  11. The Menin Gate in Ypres, Belgium. It is a public road, with traffic passing to and fro right through the gate.

    20170727_143129.jpg

    20170727_142925.jpg
     
    • Like Like x 2
  12. I also tried to visit Passchendael but frankly it was a bit of a theme park. Very busy and not very dignified.

    May I make a comment about the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. From what I have seen the CWGC does a fantastic job. Every grave and every memorial (and there are many) is meticulously maintained, cleaned, weeded, protected, and kept visible to all comers. This enormous task is carried out just as thoroughly today as it has been for so many decades. The bill is footed by the governments of the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and India. Long may this continue.
     
    • Agree Agree x 3
  13. My tour around France worked out at 2,571 miles (London to London) over 16 days. This averaged 165 miles per day (although there were some days with little or no riding, and others with 300 miles). Nearly all of it was on local (departmental) roads or Routes National. Very little on Autoroutes. French roads are generally excellent, far superior to British roads and almost up to the standard of German ones. Little or no traffic except near cities. Police hardly ever seen.

    The Multistrada DVT 1200S, new in April, has done 4,873 miles so far with no problems. It hasn't missed a beat, everything works beautifully, and I'm loving it.

    The route turned out something like this:
    London to Tunnel
    Calais
    Paris (14 July)
    Normany beaches/Caen
    Poitiers
    Dordogne
    Valleys of the Lot and the Tarn, and the mountains between them
    Carcassonne
    Narbonne beach/Beziers
    Mountains of the Grands Causses
    Millau Bridge
    Ardeche
    Grenoble
    Alps of the Haute Savoie/Morzine
    Geneva
    Haut Jura
    Sochaux
    Mulhouse (Museums of Automobile and Trains)
    Ballons des Vosges
    Epernay (in Champagne)
    The Somme
    Vimy
    Ypres
    Calais
    Tunnel to London
     
    • Like Like x 2
Do Not Sell My Personal Information