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Well, I have been proper poorly since the last
ride and I had already decided beforehand that I would give
this ride a miss. Although I was feeling an awful lot better
(thank you for asking!) I just didn’t have enough strength
in my legs to push a pedal.
I had gone in the car to the Railway Inn, Killay just to
say hello and to make my excuses. Numbers were greatly diminished
– only seven. Trevor was apparently not well and Des
was out collecting the tags from the Audax route which was,
unfortunately, cancelled last Sunday. Des had been trying
to contact Colin to tell him to get everyone on their way
but it seems he had been trying to phone Colin’s old
mobile number. The message eventually arrived via Ken Bowden
who had turned up in his slippers (and his car, of course).
So off we all went, the group to Pennard via Welsh Moor,
me back home and Ken back in his car and slippers to luxuriate
with his paper in front of a warm fire.
Bless, bliss!
But although Ken seemed very relaxed and laid back as he
headed for his peace and tranquillity I could see that, like
me, he was mildly troubled.
You see, the group was leaderless!
I was very concerned all morning, Welsh moor can be very
tricky this time of year and someone has to keep Colin in
check. Would we ever see them again? They do say ‘cometh
the day, cometh the man’. Perhaps it will be true today.
I did hope so!
As lunch time approached and with my concerns still festering
I decided I just had to go along to the lunch stop at Pennard
just in case a rescue mission had to be organised. Normally
they would be there by 12.30 but there was no sign of them.
Oh dear!
I had parked my car in the car park where I would have a
good view of the café (well, there’s no point
in worrying in discomfort!) when this silver-grey car glided
regally into the space to my left. The driver turned off his
engine, checked the handbrake and wrote a few notes in what
appeared to be a log book of sorts. Then his hand reached
for the door handle. The door opened, his legs swung out,
he stood up and promptly disappeared from view.
This was a very tall man indeed!
I slid my window down and shouted. “Get in Trev!!”
For it was indeed he.
“Hello Lou,” he said as he slid the passenger
seat back as far as it could go, sat down and expertly folded
his legs in front of him. There he sat with his head bowed
as if in reverence.
“I was very worried about the group, they’re
leaderless this morning.” He said.
“Me too!” I said.
“I passed Ursula and Chris by the school but there
was no sign of the others” he said.
“Oh gosh” I said in a worried fashion. “That
means that the men will be on their own. How will they manage?”
“Quite” said Trev “well, we’ll just
have to wait and see.”
So we waited.
“Does this roof come off at all?” said Trev,
gently rubbing a crick in his neck, "this isn’t
a convertible by any chance?”
The girls appeared at the café before I could reply
so Trev started on his extrication procedure – sheer
poetry in motion!
“Hi Ursula, hi Chris” we said in unison.
“Hi boys!” they said as if we were mere striplings.
Then Ken arrived on his bike.
“I was very worried about the group, they’re
leaderless” he said
“Me too!” Trev and I said in unison.
It turned out that John Bastion was the man who had come
to the fore on this day and had had a plan in his mind of
a route to end all routes. But confident girls don’t
need to prove themselves so Ursula and Chris had chosen a
more direct route.
A man in green oilskins approached and took off his helmet
to reveal a beaming face. As one we all quietly thought. “I
know this man, wasn’t he an old friend?”
“What do you mean old?” said Bob Smith, for it
was indeed he. “Don’t forget I can read minds.”
My mind went back about eighteen months to when I first started
riding with the group. In those days there only seemed to
be seven out at any one time but never the same seven. However
there did seem to be a permanent nucleus of three –
Trev, Colin and Bob Smith. As the weeks went by and I gradually
got to know everyone these three kept reminding me of ‘Last
of the Summer Wine’. The three main characters were
there present in these three fellow riders and I couldn’t
help breaking into a little grin every now and then. I didn’t
realise this at the time but Bob Smith was such a loyal rider
that he won the shield for the most regular rider of that
year and I had the honour of being the official photographer
at the presentation. Coincidentally that took place at Pennard
just about a year ago.
And here’s a reminder of that time
Ah nostalgia – who said it was a thing of the past?
Anyway back to the present and look sharp because Trev is
on the move!
“Scuse me, scuse me,” he was saying as he jostled
his way to the front of the queue, “man here needs to
be fed!”
And so it was that we three sickies sat together and had
our lunch while the rest of the group, when they eventually
arrived, sat outside in the warm February sun.
The next thing, I expect, they will be insisting that we
all carry hand bells!
We were admitted back into the fold eventually and I learned
that John had taken the group across Welsh Moor, through Cheriton,
up the steep hill opposite the Britannia Inn, through Burry
Green to Scurlage, through Horton, Penrice, Park Mill and
up Sandy Lane to Southgate and Pennard.
That was quite a ride and I really think John should be awarded
a BLOMIT medal (Born Leader of Men in Training) for his efforts.
Another of our crowd (who mercifully does not need to be mentioned
in this report) is the current holder of the BLOM medal. This
unmentioned person had better look sharp or his elevated status
may be short lived.
And here follows an interview with John Bastion BLOMIT.
LS “Hi JB, tough ride today – you certainly put
the lads through their paces.”
JB “Yeah sure LS. It was tough but I have been dreaming
of having a BLOM for quite a time and I felt today I could
really show the promotions board what I am made of.”
LS “And what are you made of JB?”
JB “Well LS, that has to be slugs and snails and puppy
dog tails of course but, seriously I have to thank the lads
because they were behind me 100% completely and all the time.”
LS “Yeah but you did let them catch up with you every
now and then.”
JB “Oh yeah LS. I quickly learned that a leader is
no good without his team and it’s importantly essential
that all of us stick together and aim for one goal, although
I know this isn’t football and, if it was, one goal
would hardly be enough. No, no the lads did good. It was a
really steep learning curve for me and a really steep climbing
curve for them.”
LS “Yes quite. So were there any thoughts going through
your mind during the ride JB?”
JB “Well yeah as it happens LS, I must say I was rather
glad you weren’t on the ride because I was sure you
would have had something to say about my routes.”
LS “I didn’t know you dyed your hair JB.”
I left him patting his golden locks and rejoined the others
at the table. Trevor arrives and pulls up the chair next to
me. Slowly he folds himself into a seated position –
at 7 foot 3 this man really is tall. He absentmindedly taps
his gloves on his knee and I can’t help noticing that
he has worn holes in the fingers. Not only is this man too
tall for his own good his fingers are, it seems, too tall
for his gloves.
A man approaches with two young lads in tow. Trev sees that
the man looks weary and says.
“Hello Don, how are things? You look a bit tired.”
(Don is a member of the Easy Riders cycle group that ride
on a Sunday.)
“Hello Trev,” says Don “yes we had a difficult
ride on Sunday. One of your lot turned up, I can’t remember
his name but he was like a pied piper and took us up the hill
at Baglan, past where he lives and over into the Afan Valley.
At the lunch stop he told us he quite regularly does Baglan
to Birmingham before breakfast. He was awesome, just wish
I could remember his name.”
We know who he was but he’s not getting a mention this
week.
So there!
My Away Day next week – St Clears to Crymych. Be there
please or face the consequences – remember the pen is
mightier than the sword!
Lew Spokes
PS Sorry this is a short report but, after all I wasn’t
on the ride.
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