Saturday 6 August 2011

Northumberland Coastride, Buden Bay to Dunstburgh Castle...



After last weekends Friday bivvy at Holy Island i decided to go have a ride along the Northumberland coast across from the Island and again bivvy then return next morning,
High tide times were all wrong with a 8.15pm high tide but it was a weekend off for me and i have the bivvy bug again and wanted to get away,
Being August it is now the English holidays and i knew the beaches would be packed with folk so i made a plan to ride mid evening to sunset, bivvy from dark to pre-sunrise, pack up and ride out back to the car, this way i should have quiet(er) beaches and solve the problem of a small section of coastal path between the last beach and planned camp site that is marked on the OS map as a footpath,

In England it is of course verboten to cycle on them, so it would have to be a beach blitzrieg/viking raid (minus the rape and pillage) and only my tracks would be left, As it would turn out there were lots of cycle tracks on that 2 short footpath so i don't know why i was worrying...

Everywhere down here on the coast is pay and display but i parked west of Bamburgh where there were no signs and rode down onto the coast at Budle Bay,
with the tide in the sand was soft in places and slow going down on low gears...






Onto the big beach at Bamburgh and there is the most dominating feature of the skyline, Northumberland is famous for its coastline of big beaches and castles, and Bamburgh is one of the most impressive, here i also saw these WW2 coastal defence anti tank blocks painted as dice!...








Further along and some good beach art...


Up on the dunes are two WW2 machine gun pill boxes, two of many i would see...




Another half mile or so of beach to the small seaside harbour and holiday town of Seahouses...


looking out to the Farne Isles...


Seahouses is a busy holiday small town, it has loads of fish and chip shops and there was the roar of a fairground, i pressed on and dropped onto another beach to a lovely wee place with a nice harbour, Beadnell Bay...












Where i was treated to an amazing sunset...




Another shot from along Beadnell beach on top of the dunes...






Then it was a race against the light along Beadnell beach and down to Low Newton-by-the-Sea...








Planned bivvy stop was ahead at the ruins at Dunstanburgh Castle...




Along a path past a complete WW2 machine Gun Pill Box and up below the ruins...




Looks like no ones at home... -:)




Stove on, unpack and have some pancakes and honey with a mug of tea, yum,
It got dark quite quick and being up since 5.30am for work i was asleep in no time...


Up at 4am and packed up pre-sunrise...


As i rode along below the beach holiday chalets to Low-Newton-by-Sea there was the sun coming up between a cloud bank...


It was real quiet and not a soul about...



Onto Beadnell beach and only a friendly dog walker on the whole beach,
there was a nice sky looking across the bay towards the harbour...


And then the sky erupted in a gold glow as the sun popped out from behind the cloud...


Beadnell Harbour...


From Beadnell i took the road the few miles to ride through a deserted and peacefull Seahouses and dropping down onto the beach i enjoyed firmer sand on a now wider beach with the 3/4 incoming tide...






A dead baby Porpoise lay on the high tideline,washed in last night...sad to see...


Offshore the Farne isles glowed in the morning sun...


I only met a few early rise dog walkers from here all the way along the shoreline passing below Bamburgh Castle, and you know what?, everyone said morning and was friendly and All of them put there dogs on leads when i neared,
something a lot of dog walkers don't do here in East Lothian...

Eider Ducks, The UK's heaviest and fastest flying ducks...








Nearing Bundle Bay i caught a glimpse of something i missed riding out, a big WW2 Gun emplacement up above the dunes...








The construction below it i have not seen one before and unsure what it is ...




And that was a great ride, there is another short overnighter bivvy ride to do near here out to Ross Point sometime...


I was back at car for 7.30am and away before the world had a awoken!...
The Dusk/bivvy/dawn ride out Beach Blitzrieg idea worked great and i was back home and unpacked, all cleaned up for 10am!, and by midday it was raining sideways as was forecasted,

Northumberland has a nice scenic coast, though quite soft going at high tide for cycling, the views make up for the effort, also friendly folk, and i have been told much better fish & chip shops!,

The access laws In England of where to cycle are frustrating compared to Scotland`s Open access (with responsibility) and there seems to be `Private` signs everywhere esp around houses and free parking (or overnight parking) is hard to find anywhere near its coast,
Small grumbles for the stunning coastal scenery,
But there is a lack of stuff to see on the big open beaches that we find at home like shells and driftwood and odd things etc washed in on the tides...
I think were maybe a bit spoiled for the variety and often empty coastlines north of the border in Scotland...

4 comments:

  1. Sounds like you had fun. Used the Swiss tool yet??? Is it any good?

    Some lovely photo's again. That gold sunrise shot is special!

    Cheers!

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  2. i did use the swiss tool Al!,
    i should have took a pic!,
    was indeed an amazing sunrise!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I've enjoyed your blog for a while now.
    I particularly enjoyed your video of the trip to Harris and Lewis -- very inspirational!
    I've just bought a Pug and am wondering what racks you have fitted?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi gub, i used Edinburgh CO-OP Revolution MTB rear racks on both ends, there real cheap, aboout £15 each, both have to be offset with spacers on one side to get them central,

    here is a post i did on them;

    http://coastkid.blogspot.com/2009/09/cheap-pugsley-racksmudgaurds.html

    since this i have realised the front casnbe fitted to the top fork mounts using C clamps instead of a DIY metal bracket,

    ReplyDelete