Day 17 Cumbria to The Fylde

Day 17 – Cumbria to The Fylde

The Bull’s Head in Milnthorpe was a good choice. I was welcomed warmly, given a space for the bike in the courtyard and shown my room which was up a couple of flights of stairs which was the usual struggle with two panniers and a battery. However the room was a good size, the bed very comfortable and the shower adequate. As it was only about 4pm when I arrived I had plenty of time to wash everything and hang it to dry by the window. I pootled about for a bit and went down to supper at 7. ​​ A table had been reserved and leek and potato soup, chicken casserole in a cheese sauce with (wonder of wonders) seasonal greens and potatoes and an unnecessary sticky toffee pudding sent me to bed feeling a bit bloated. I also had a couple of pints of good IPA, the first proper ale​​ since Inverness. This morning breakfast, included in the price of £75, was cooked and served by the landlady and very good it was too. ​​ 

The weather forecast was not good, strong winds and showers throughout the day. I set off at 0942 and went across to the Morecambe Bay coast, surprised by the steepness of some of the early climbs. ​​ I dropped down to sea level at Arnside, looking across the Bay to Grange-over-Sands where I had been yesterday

The tide was rolling in rapidly as I climbed up a steep hill to Arnside Knott and back down to sea level round the corner at Silverdale. ​​​​ I headed on to Carnforth with occasional squally showers spoiling the journey. ​​ I took shelter on more than one occasion, and the camera didn’t feature for much of the early journey.

Next stop Lancaster where I got a bit lost before joining a rough canal path which deteriorated so much that I diverted onto the nearby road

The wind was howling as I made my way south through Cockerham and on to Pilling where I stopped​​ at a bus stop to eat a bar of chocolate and rest for a while. ​​ The roads were straight and I was caught up in road dressing which gummed up my tyres for a while.

My original plan had been to cross the River Wyre at Knott End as​​ it​​ disgorged into the sea​​ at​​ Fleetwood​​ but the ferry was unreliable so I decided to go and make the crossing at the first bridge which was about five miles upstream. ​​ By the time I got there the wind was so strong that I had to GOAP over the bridge for fear of being pushed off the narrow cycle way.

I was now at the northern end of Blackpool and hit the coast at Norbreck

From now on I was on cycle paths all the way to my destination at Lytham but I still had to contend with very strong winds which were blowing me sideways. ​​ Past Blackpool North Pier, looking out for trams

 

And the iconic Tower

 

 

And Pleasure beach on which we have had hours of fun as a family when we lived in nearby Lytham for five years

Rounding the corner, so that the wind was helping, to St Annes-on Sea, full of hotels and retirement homes and finally on to Lytham, with its windmill on the Green, where I am staying the night with a friend.

The wind has been a pest,​​ and I​​ can only​​ hope that it drops away for my final leg tomorrow to Chester. ​​ The forecast is for more rain but I’ll trade that for less wind

 

 

 

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