8:15 am - I am driving daughter’s colleague to school ( a favour), up a country lane. The builder’s wagon in front starts turning right, then stops. A car following is now right behind. The wagon reverses. My hand on the horn gets no result. I just sit and watch the front of my Skoda Yeti get crunched.
One of the “followers” lives in Arnside and I get a lift in a car rancid with the smell of three border terriers. Daughter, spare keys from home, and a lift back to the car combine to complete the day.
The start of the track is to the right of this bridge |
Looking up Long Sleddale to Gatesgarth Pass. Red dots mark my descent route |
"Followers" cars well up the track. Red dots show my descent route again - it was much steeper than it looks |
The track up to Gatesgarth can be seen, top right, and the point where I turned off up the righthand skyline ridge |
Tarn Crag summit*, Windermere apparent ----------------------------------------------------- |
*Extract from Wikipedia:This is one of four such pillars built during the construction of the Haweswater aqueduct. Below Branstree and Tarn Crag is the first section of the pipeline carrying water from the reservoir toward Manchester. The tunnel, some 1,300 ft below the summit, required 250 tons of gelignite for blasting, and when constructed in the 1930s was the longest such pipeline in Britain. It emerges into Longsleddale below Great Howe, where the spoil can still be seen.[1]
he Artisan, a name that contains some inverted snobbery, surely? No cosy-cosy mention of a pot of tea there so it's clear you were disturbed.
ReplyDeleteGiven your mixed feelings about accepting help from a red-in-tooth-and-claw man why don't you go round to his place at night and slash his tyres? To tell the truth I've always wondered how easy it is to do that. Seems like hard work.
An ectopic pregnancy is one that occurs in an abnormal position or in an unusual manner or form. Clearly that doesn't preclude a knee though you'd have to check up on the symptoms. Why not get one of those litmus-paper tests from the chemists before you jokingly refer to this subject again.
Good to see that you are again engaging in things which long experience tells you not to!
ReplyDeleteSorry about the car - how bad was the damage? Your knee not the car is more important!
ReplyDeleteMaybe better to go back to walking the lanes to give the knee a chance, semi-medical advice.
From your pictures the weather up there looked better than down here.
Good couple of days passed but things look bleak again - off to Spain in a couple of days to see if I can help out with their economy.
JP
RR - I'm happy to report there are no further symptoms although the contents of the gin bottle seem to have reduced again.
ReplyDeleteWe already have an arsonist in Arnside, setting fire to cars and trash bins, and police activity is at DEFCOM 10 so your plan may be a bit risky at the mo.The last incident was the burning of a specially adapted car belonging to a disabled couple staying at a local hotel.
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Welshpaddler - Thanks for that - long experience has a lot to answer for.
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Bowlandclimber - Car damage was hardly visible, but the insurance estimate is £834.
The knee has settled down a lot over the last ten days, often running at the same temperature as the other one with virtually no swelling. Whilst I had discomfort on that descent it has settled down since, but it still has a fair way to go overall. Thanks for your advice which I know is wise, but as Welshpaddler has identified my "long experience" seems to be getting in the way.
I do love the way you continued with your day in the face of a crunched car. What a delightfully uplifting post.
ReplyDeleteHow can it possibly be £834 does that include a new knee?
ReplyDeleteFor proof please provide pictures,of the car not the knee!
That was some day Conrad! Your descent route looks a bit hairy, with or without a bad knee. I'm very fond of Tarn Crag and the various streams which drain it - it's one of those under-rated hills on the edges of the Lakes which many people seem to ignore, more fool them.
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