Across Continents

Ken's Blog

Hardy boys

October 11th, 2011

On the bookcase a small collection of Hardy Boys adventure stories. I’d always liked the one where a car is forced to swerve off the road using a large mirror. The driver fooled into thinking he’s about to collide with another vehicle. And a book entitled "101 Places You Gotta See Before You’re 12!". I’d asked Aidan, in whose room I was staying, how much progress he’d made. Couple of years left.

P1060698

I was spending the night with a young family a little distance from Terrace. Travis, Karen and three energetic young boys. Aidan, Seth and Ben. Ten, six and four respectively. Lots of questions. And a thorough introduction to Harry Potter Lego. Things had definitely moved on since the simple brick. I’d mentioned having a small moon buggy made of the stuff. Came as a little kit. But it was clear space exploration was no longer the thing.

obpostlogo

Share

Breaking and entering

October 11th, 2011

Breaking and entering from Ken Roberts on Vimeo.

Ken stays with a family near Terrace, in Canadian British Columbia. Never a dull moment…

obpostlogo

Share

Professed innocence

October 10th, 2011

Did, enquired Gregory, I work for MI5 or MI6? I smiled, assured him no. Bit of an odd question I thought, because, whether you did or didn’t, the answer should always be the same. No. Just like the sort of thing you’d often find on visa applications. Are you engaged in terrorism? Tick yes for a full body cavity search.. Tempted to pose my usual teaser, what of MI one through four, the ones you never hear about. But I resisted.

Gregory, wife Sylvie and their young children had just returned from the Middle East. Both were professors. Business and finance. Stopped, as I had done, for a brief coffee in Terrace, the first town inland from Prince Rupert some hundred miles or so back on the coast.

We chatted about were I’d been. Gregory had set up various academic programmes in China and was familiar with quite a few of the cities I’d passed through. Urumqi. Wuhan. And the former Soviet Republics of Central Asia. Spoke, he told me, Russian. Without an accent. Originally from Silesia in Poland.

I’d reached Terrace an hour or so earlier. Ridden around for a while, looking for somewhere to stop for refreshment. But I’d not felt comfortable there. The saw mill had been closed for a while, the place down on its luck. The Dollar Shop. Another establishment offering advances on pay cheques. A few homeless individuals sat around.

So I’d decided to head out to where I was staying, five or six miles out of town. Coming across a small coffee shop in what seemed to be a more secure neighbourhood. And with a spot where I could leave the bike in full view.

obpostlogo

Share

River of Mists

October 10th, 2011

P1060696

Towering cliffs and wisps of cloud in the Skeena – River of Mists – valley, between coastal Prince Rupert and Terrace, in Canada’s British Columbia Province.

obpostlogo

Share

Skeena river

October 10th, 2011

I’d followed the Skeena – River of Mists – east from Prince Rupert on the coast, inland to the small town of Terrace. An old trading route discovered long ago by the indigenous – First Nation – people, it cut a straightforward, mostly flat, path through the Coast Mountains towards British Columbia’s Interior Plateau. Today a well made highway and a railway line. Goods trains.

An inspired choice of route. But accidental at that. For it was the only one, save for the ferry south once more from Prince Rupert towards Vancouver close to the US border. I’d been suggested I’d be best heading for Vancouver Island. Better scenery I was told. Maybe, but then I’d end up riding precious little in British Columbia. And I’d not felt comfortable about that.

The river, or the valley at least, had lived up to its name. Frequent rains, rarely heavy, but the air always seeming moist. Not cold, except during the occasional downpour, but little sun until close on the outskirts of Terrace. But none of this really mattered, for the scenery had been quite breathtaking. Wide, gently flowing river. Steep wooded mountainsides. Towering cliffs. Wisps of fine cloud.

obpostlogo

Share

Stumped

October 10th, 2011

Stumped from Ken Roberts on Vimeo.

No bears at Ken’s brief lunch stop along the Skeena river in Canadian British Columbia. Just wasps…

obpostlogo

Share

If you go down to the woods today

October 10th, 2011

If you go down to the woods… from Ken Roberts on Vimeo.

Ken stops for a short lunch break along the Skeena river, between Prince Rupert and Terrace in Canadian British Columbia.. Peaceful spot. No bears..

obpostlogo

Share

Warning signs

October 10th, 2011

Warning signs from Ken Roberts on Vimeo.

Ken discovers a sign warning of bear presence at an overnight stop along the Skeena river between Prince Rupert and Terrace in Canadian British Columbia. But it’s not a deterrent, it’s encouragement. Still to see one of the cuddly critters in the wild… Outside of his tent of course..

obpostlogo

Share

Tough audience ahead

October 8th, 2011

Karen seemed understanding. I’d phoned to explain I’d be a day adrift. Reckoned on a hundred miles or so to her family home on the outskirts of Terrace. Headwinds permitting, feasible in a day. Just. But she and her husband had three young boys, eager to meet me. Turning up late, departing early next morning would be quite rude.

So I’d settled on covering the ground over a couple of days. Planning to arrive mid to late afternoon so there’d be time to entertain the children. I’d asked the ages. Four, six and ten. Tough audience I joked. She laughed.

obpostlogo

Share
Terms & Conditions of Use | Copyright © 2009-2024 Ken Roberts