Sometimes the trail is a bumpy road
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Martha Marino
PART 3: FRUSTRATING FIRST DAY
DAY 5: STRASBOURG TO SAVERNE
On bike trips, I always look forward to getting up in the morning
and knowing all I have to do during the entire day is to glide along
a quiet canal with the sun on my back and a breeze on my face,
feeling at one with the world.
But today wasn’t anything like that. Rain poured down from a
dreary, gray sky, and I couldn’t find the Marne canal. Imagine! It
was suppose to be near Strasbourg’s European Parliament and the World
Court (Conseil des Hommes), but with so many waterways crisscrossing
at the same place, I had no idea which one it was.
The passersby I asked didn’t know either or thought they did and
just guessed. Three times they directed me up and down the same
canal. Finally, I became discouraged and just stood beside the road
wondering what to do. Shortly, an elderly man came riding by on an
old, rickety bike. He looked like he might have an idea where I
wanted to go. “Excuse me, sir,” I shouted. “Do you happen to know
where the Marne Canal is?”
“Yes,” he answered, rattling off a string of directions,
impossible to follow. He repeated them several times, and when he
realized that I “wasn’t getting it” or that maybe I had a mental
handicap of some kind, offered to show me the way. He used to be an
English lawyer at the World Court and knew the area well.
Together we cycled along highways, beside waterways, over bridges
and under bridges -- a route I would have never found on my own. At
last we reached an intersection of canals. “That’s it,” he said,
pointing to a towpath on the right. I thanked him for his help and
started on my way.
The first part of the canal ran through a busy, industrial area
but later flowed through the peaceful, bucolic countryside that I
love. Trees hung in an arch over the rippling water and an occasional
boat floated by. About noon, I spotted a small Vietnamese restaurant
near the shore. To escape the drizzling rain, I darted in for a quick
lunch and ordered “le menu,” a bamboo shoot salad and chicken with
rice -- a good choice.
When I returned to the canal again, the surface of the towpath had
changed to dirt. By the time I realized that the paved section had
been switched to the opposite side, there was no way to cross over,
so I crept along. Unexpectedly, I came to a steep downgrade near an
overpass, and while braking to slow down, slid on the loose gravel,
crashing to the ground. “Dang!” I shouted (censored version), as I
lay beside my bike. I wasn’t hurt but had bent the h--- (more
censorship) out of my rear reflector and back rack that now rubbed
against my tire. I trudged along until the next bridge, then crossed
over to the paved towpath where I flagged down some bikers who helped
repair my rack. This event, I hoped, would end my day’s troubles. But
it didn’t.
As evening crept in and the shadows of the trees lengthened, I
realized how tired I had become. Generally, I don’t cycle 50
kilometers in one day (30 is my max), but there were no campgrounds
between Strasbourg and Saverne. My last 10 kilometer were grueling.
My “buns” ached and, at times, I felt I couldn’t sit on the “saddle”
another minute. To elevate my spirits, I fantasized about having a
sumptuous dinner in a cozy restaurant, sipping a glass of wine -- a
dream that unfortunately never came true.
At 7:30 p.m. I rolled into Saverne. To my dismay, the morning’s,
frustrating saga began again. Instead of searching for a hidden
canal, I was now looking for an unknown campground. Not a soul had
ever heard of it, even though I told everyone I asked the street
address.
Generally, a municipal campground is signposted near the main
square. While I was searching for a sign, a lady in a parking lot
began talking to me. She was anxious to tell me about her recent trip
to the States where she had shown her paintings in an art gallery.
During our conversation, I mentioned that I was looking for the
municipal campground.
“Oh, I know where it is,” she added. “It’s up in the hills near
the sports club. I can take you there, but I don’t have room for your
bike.”
As we contemplated about what to do, a man walked by with his dog.
She explained my situation to him, and he generously offered to go
home and bring back his car. “I can put her bike in my trunk,” he
said.
When he returned, we loaded my saddlebags and duffle bag into her
car and my bike into his. In a caravan, we chugged up the hill,
turning and zigzagging block after block -- a route so complicated
that I would have never found it by myself.
That night, as I lay in my tent listening to the pitter-patter of
raindrops on my roof, I felt relieved to have arrived and grateful
for all the people who had helped me on my way.
Next episode: Beauty and Romance
* This is the third of five pieces on Marino’s travels by bike.
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