Somerset Levels

May 31st

44 miles

344m climbing

Cumulative distance  289 miles

 

The clue is in the name….

Most of today across Somerset was indeed very flat making for quite a relaxed day with only one fairly mild climb up the Mendips at the end

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Somerset Levels – instead of fences each field has a drainage ditch- plus resident swan in many

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We started out along the Bridgewater Canal which was great cycling on touring bikes with slightly wider tyres- a road bike might struggle a bit with the slightly loose rocky surface . Although not as easy as cycling on tarmaced roads the fact that it was completely level more than compensated and we whizzed along nicely, . we were surprised by the number of WW2 pill boxes along the canal- it doesn’t seem to be the most obviously strategic thing to defend , but we see on Google that it was part of the Taunton Stop Line- a defensive line built across the west country to stop Nazi advances from the West. We hadnt noticed but all of the bridges had been fitted with cavities to take demolition charges as well .Something of a poor relation to the Maginot line but they must have been scary days.

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WW2 Pill Box alongside the canal

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Less sombre were scale depictions of the planets in the Solar system dotted along the path every few miles. . Sustrans commisions public sculpture and claims to be the longest linear art gallery in the world – do Chinese State Railways have any sculptures I wonder.

 

We met a couple of  friendly cyclists from Wigan doing Lands end to John O’Groats , they  were unencumbered with luggage having recruited some family members to drive and carry their kit. they had planned some really long days but like us had found the hills in Cornwall and Devon challenging and were having to shorten the days a bit.

We had done a quarter of the distance by mid morning and  had a leisurely  coffee at the Bridge Cafe in Bridgewater – excellent. we then left the canal but still had quite a lot of off road along old railways- the surface was slightly rougher but being traffic free makes it very pleasurable.

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Unusual signpost in Bridgewater

The longest section was on the Strawberry line – a disused railway used to transport strawberries  grown in Somerset to Bristol .

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Tunnel on the Strawberry Line

 

We had bread and cheese sat on a grassy verge untroubled by any traffic and then carried on to Cheddar- we contemplated taking a detour up  Cheddar Gorge itself which would have added a few miles but thought better of it when we saw the amount of traffic (that’s my story , rather than the 16% gradient)

 

We carried on and into the Mendips by a rather less steep route, again partly on old Railway lines and then through Axbridge – a small village with some lovely medieval buildings.

 

Tonight we are camped on a small site near Clevedon, it’s a popular spot for coarse fishing and good facilities- but noisy from the nearby Motorway. It is raining but we are tucked up in the tent doing our social media duty

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Our home for the next few weeks – small but cosy , and the view from the front door changes each day

 

snailcycle

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One thought on “Somerset Levels
  1. Viv

    Hi Gayle and Martin, loved catching up with your blog tonight. My favourite bit would be the Stawberry Line. A good visual diary would be the daily changing view from your tent each morning. It’s very cold here at the moment and rather dull. You’re not missing any nice weather in Derbyshire. Take care of yourselves.
    Sleep well. Viv

     

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