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Je suis perdu.

A small touring diary about my tiny adventure of two months in Europe on a bicycle

Col de la Croix de Fer, Altitude 2067 meters

The airline lost my luggage for the trip! Can you help?

Monday, August 4, 2008

Pyrenees

Hello Everyone,

A couple of days ago, I pushed into Spain! Crossing the border gave me the sense of being knocked out and not knowing my name. Again. One side of a river - France, the other: Spain and it's a totally different world. I went west until I hit a part of the road I couldn't ride a bike on and went, "Hmm". It was around 21:00, so not much more riding could be done, anyways.

Luckily, there was a Hypermarche and a campsite, so I got some food (bought a map!) and made camp.


I looked to see where the Guggenheim was in relation to myself (about 9km from San Sebastian).

It was about 150kmm away.

So. One, long day there, one day at the museum and then, a day back to the border... hmm.

I opted to skip this little side leg, in the hopes that if I do have extra time, I can spend it in Amsterdam with friends. And three days is a lot of time on my time scale right now.

So, the next day, I got up and went back East right to the border and then... South! into the Pyrenees! I'm currently in a town called, "Oloron Ste-Marie" and have already toppled a few, smaller mountains. Before me are 4 big ones, 2 of which I may get to today, or just got to the base. Getting pretty tired in the legs there, so we'll see. Slow going, as it's, well, it's a mountain range.

Really excited to be here, though as this is the type of terrain I've been looking for.

Last night, I must have looked a wreck, getting into camp at the base of the Col d'Osquich, as a couple with their son from another tent came by and offered me... wine! And then more wine, and then dinner! Which was incredibly kind of them, as I was just about out of all food but the bare essentials of a few pieces of crummy bread and peanuts.

Beautiful campsite, overlooking the mountains, small and quite friendly campers as well. My thanks to that family - in the morning, the son even gave me a cup of coffee. Over and above!

Some photos:

From the day after surfing:

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that's the tan line. And those things that look like muscles aren't - it's all sinew, tendons and bone.


Here's the first, "mountain" I was able to climb. That's 169 meters, I might add...

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Right now, I'm in the Basque region of... well, the world - it's almost a country within another country, complete with their own language, called, Euskara:

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Depending on what you're looking on and where you are, it'll be the only language of whatever you'd looking at. It's very funny when you see advertisements, completely in Euskara. Lots of trucks are labeled in this language - and almost all use the same exact typeface. The weekend I rolled through seemed to be festival weekend and I got caught up in many a festival celebrating the culture

Here's some more:

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"Francia" is Spanish, the other text is the Euskara version of, "France". Yes.

Some more type - one of those graffiti messages:

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Notice, "Niggaz" is feminine. I'm trying to figure out if, "rap game" means, "to play rap", or if it's a term for doing some freestyle rapping.



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A local cafe with a signed photo of 5 time (Spanish) winner of the tour de France - Miguel Indurain "The Alien"



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A giant sculpture on road N121 in Spain.


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Another mountain top'd!: Col d'Ispeguy - 672 meters - still a baby. The view from the top was incredible, though. The ride down was scary as... all hell. There were all these warning signs at the top that basically says, "you're... gonna die" and then they stop and the road twists and turns - no safety anything after that.

Oh! The view:

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Today, I was riding up another mountain and there was text, painted on the road itself - no idea which language this is:

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I bet it says, "Take it easy, champion" or something like that.

And the top:

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Another baby.

Alright. Away I must go. Wish me luck!

4 Comments:

OpenID easychaironfire said...

Bablefish gave me "niggaz in the rap range somi it only for l' money and notoriety"

August 4, 2008 11:34 AM  
Anonymous nikki said...

I like the tan lines, they show that you put in the extra effort in surfing.

and the view photo is really beautiful. the sky is so blue i wouldve likely fallen off of my bike and any one death turn to look at it.

have you seen the triplets of belleville? I picture you coming back looking like one of the bike riders in that. all leg muscles and appetite.

good luck with that whole mountain range thing!

August 4, 2008 2:30 PM  
OpenID Mair said...

Mountains!

I reckon it says, take it easy, lorries.

August 5, 2008 1:32 AM  
Blogger Justin Europe said...

@easychaironfire - that's so awesome.

@nikki - have you seen the triplets of belleville? But of course! I'll be looking like that - I have the nose! But I'll be bearded and I need a little old lady with a whistle to follow me.

August 5, 2008 3:06 AM  

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Ne vous inquiétez pas.

I feel like a chump to have to ask you this, but this is my sad, sad story:

My touring gear was lost on the plane trip from Denver, to Paris France. Merde. I've had to re-purchase my panniers, tools, clothing, a lot of my bicycle accessories and all my camping gear (tent, sleeping bag, mat). Because of this, I've completely blown my budget for the trip. And, I'd like to eat for the next two months. If you enjoy people that just get on an airplane and go roving about without a map or a itinerary and like what I'm writing about, well, I could really use your help. Can you spare a couple of bucks and help make sure I make it home OK? Here's a PayPal link:

It's for $5. If you'd like to set your own donation, you may do so by sending fund to: personalpaypal@skazat.com. I will love you forever. Or at least the next pain chocolat you allow me to purchase for petit dejeuner. But seriously. Thanks a ton if you can help this silly traveler out.