I was lucky enough to be in Dunkirk at the same time as a Dunkirk Little Ships excursion to town. It is the 85th anniversary of Operation Dynamo. I had noted the event as I scanned UK news but hadn't really processed what that meant until after my Friday 23rd May bike ride I heard repeated blasts of a ship's horn; of course, the boats would be in harbour. The expanse of boats; 74 were planned. My alarm call. Papillon LLANTHONY Included in the fleet were a couple of Thames barges and one was offering impromptu tours. The same barge under sail. A light atmosphere with most boats crewed by people in Yatch Club costume drinking chilled Chablis. Summary information here and a link to the Assiciation of Dunkirk Little Ships (ADLS) here .
I always squeeze as much out of a tour as possible and ultimately that leaves me feeling a bit frazzled. I usually have options and seldom do more than I want. The main pleasure for me is the cycling and I try to maximise distance covered just for the fun of it. 40 miles a day has worked well on a generally flat route with hills and shorter days in the middle week and no tent or camping. This is a photo I took of a large billboard advertising a trade electricals outlet; not sure of the message here but I encountered it at the end of a tiring day. The Ardennes along the river Meuse is a flexible location as road, rail and cycle paths run up and down the valley and then you have interesting rides with some hills but nothing extreme I think an altitude of 450m was as high as I got and the Ardennes is rolling forested hills rather than mountains and certainly nothing above 700m. Charleville-Meziere is a good base for day rides and for day trips on the train to places like...