A cycling story from 65 years ago!

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I lost contact with my Father for many years after my parents divorced when I was young. So now when I see my Dad he comes out with a stories from his past that I have not heard before. Here is a little gem he came out with last Sunday.

In 1944 my Dad left school aged 14 and was about to start work at a local sheet metal factory that was making shell casings. He was the seventh child from a very poor family in London and his only income came from digging through rubble on bomb sites to get the money out of gas meters.

He and a friend decided to go to the seaside for two weeks. They made two bikes from parts they could scavenge from the local rubbish tip and they made a trailer for one of the bikes from some old pram wheels. The tent was made from the canvas they took from the awning from a bombed out shop.

They loaded the bikes with food and tent and set off with no money maps or means of contact with home, heading for the south coast. The journey from London to Hastings took them two days to cover around 60 miles. They went in the spring of 1944 and their progress was held up by road blocks to let endless convoys of tanks trucks and troops move along to the coast for what they later found out to be the preparations for the D Day landings.

The pram trailer fell apart on the way and they had to somehow load everything onto the bikes. When they got to the coast they surprisingly managed to pitch their makeshift tend right on the coast and used to watch the build up of troops and frantic activity that was going on.

The highlight of the trip was when they looked over a fence that had been build along one section of coast to see a coach full of WAAFs (Women's Auxiliary Air Force) arrive on the beach and go for a swim in the sea. Dad found this a “bit of an eye opener for a fourteen year old” as most of the young women did not have bathing costumes.

After about a week they found they had eaten all their food and so with no supplies or money they set off back to London. As they cycled along they met a local vicar cycling home who on learning of their situation took them home and gave them a hot meal.

Dad seemed to gloss over the fact that he went without food for a day or two and I can only guess that this may have been a common occurrence. He also seemed to think nothing of setting off without a map. With the threat of invasion all the signposts had been removed too.

On his return Dad started work at the sheet metal factory. He will be 80 in December and still cycles once a week along the coast in Spain where he lives. He now had an electric motor on his bike to help with the hills.
 
Great re-collection from OTH Snr, just shows how soft we've become nowadays!
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
OMG, like you mean they didn't have a satnav or a cellphone? OMG! LOL!!!!!! Why didn't they stop at a Little Chef or a McDonalds?
 

Davywalnuts

Chief Kebab Taster
Location
Staines!
Love stories like this..

How simple and joyful life was.. nowadays, I cant be away from an electric point for more than a day or my phone will go flat... how pathetic...
 

tyred

Squire
Location
Ireland
I love these sorts of stories. We have become soft and lazy. Life may be easier but you can't help thinking we miss the spirit of adventure.
 

swee'pea99

Squire
My 13 year old came back from her last Guides meeting pleading to be allowed to go on next year's centenary camp. One week, everything laid on, three meals a day provided - by caterers presumably, the site divi'd up between various 'zones': £400. I'm sure Baden Powell would have approved...
 
swee said:
Yep, Little-LC is going on one of those with the Brownies next year.

Flip side, she did do a camp where they got to cook their own dinner on a fire which she enjoyed far more than she will the thing next year. My brother has also just done a "wild camp" with his cub pack where they made their own shelters on a bit of land they managed to get permission to use for a night, cooked over on an open fire, etc.

And my mother and father in law (late 60s / early 70s respectively) have just come back from a fortnight trolling up the West coast of Scotland. They took a tent, but were expecting to B&B depending on the weather. Luckily, the weather was good enough that they could camp so they headed off down a little road in the middle of nowhere, eventually ending up on the side of an unknown loch.

They knocked on the door of the only house for miles to ask if there was anywhere locally to camp, and the nice lady told them to pitch "anywhere along the loch, help yourselves, there's a stream over there which should be OK to drink" and they had a wonderful few nights camped there on their own just walking about by day with no company bar the cows.

It's still there .. but you do have to go looking for it.
 

arallsopp

Post of The Year 2009 winner
Location
Bromley, Kent
[quote name='swee'pea99']One week, everything laid on, three meals a day provided - by caterers: £400. [/QUOTE]

£400? I got 4 and a half days food, 6 meals a day, accommodation (of varying quality), and a bundled 'white water experience' for only £150. xx(

There was a bit of cycling, mind :rolleyes:
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Had a similar experience at Glenelg, we knocked on the door of Donald the fisherman to be told we could camp anywhere we couldn't be seen from the road in case we attracted more campers and to help ourselves to water from a hidden tap that Donald showed us by the old black house. Luckily it was breezy on the coast so we weren't bothered by midges. My buddy being a grower, Donald was surprised to be presented with a crate of hydroponic tomatoes when we left.

When I was about 12 I went camping in Killarney with the school scouts. We had three army mess tents in a field by the lakes and we cooked on wood from the forest. Halfway through the holiday I discovered that you slept much better if you folded a towel under you rather than just lying on the ground (camping mats hadn't been invented). The gamekeeper turned up one day with a deer carcase, which we butchered and ate until it went smelly. We made rafts and sailed them around the Lakes of Killarney, we climbed McGillycuddy's Reeks and we did camping trips in 2 man canoes. I can't remember seeing a life jacket or a risk assesment yet nobody had any problems. It stayed dry for the full 2 weeks as well. I'll never forget that experience.
 
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