Project VELAIA

On the VELo cycling for and around gAIA


Tag Archive for 'life'

End of news on VELAIA.DE

  • english
  • german

My dear readers,

as you might have noticed, I don’t post any more on this travelogue of my great tour around the world. There’s still more than a month missing to the end of the trip in La Serena in Chile, where I finished together with my father at the beginning of December 2008.

Even if I want to, I can’t continue the writing, as writing about the adventures of a single day in sufficient depth took me about 2 hours for the English version alone. Then another 2 hours for the German version and some more time for picture post-processing and uploading.  The only thing I can tell you here is that I’ve had a superb time on the salt lakes in Bolivia, the lagunas and in the Atacama desert.

I have to look forward now, get to grips with the hardship of the economic crisis where the big tail is probably still ahead and find a vision for my life, how do I want to live it. There will be some lectures in the near future, two at the Special Bikes show on April 25th and 26th and probably some in the area where I live. If you’re at the Special Bikes show, come over to the lecture or meet me at the exhibition - I’m very curious myself about all the new inventions and talking to so many interesting people there.

I will start a weblog under www.BikeLust.de where I plan to keep everyone updated about what’s going on in my cyclist life, about new ideas and issues that are on my mind. I’ll try to spread the word about living in a sustainable and environmental friendly way and at the same time having a wonderful time. I’m cycling on a bike, taking the trains, eating vegetarian and trying to save energy, water and resources. Why? Well, it used to be because of my ideologies, but now I’m so used to it and to all the advantages that come with it and I have a really beautiful and happy life, that I don’t want to change. No way!

There are still a lot of things that I can and will do better, like for example avoiding airplane travel altogether. During the world tour I have made an exception to that because of my limited budget and amount of time and I feel really bad about it. Now I will try hard to stick to these goals of mine. For the planet, for all the interconnected species,  and for myself! Quality of life, that’s what matters to me. People matter to me. You matter to me!

I’ve come upon this wonderful series of fascinating lectures online, called TED - probably a lot of you have already heard about it. It’s my exchange for television. Now today there’s a TED wish from Sylvia Earle about the Blue Heart of the Planet that I want to share with you. I can’t do much more myself about it except for political lobbying and expressing my opinion, because as a vegetarian  I don’t participate in slaughtering the sea species and I try to avoid, reuse and recycle as much as possible. I have to do a lot more myself in other fields. Maybe you can make a change? And believe me, it’s not hard to be a vegetarian even if you have not cycled 40,000 km over 5 continents :-)

Ok, that’s it from my side. Thank you all so much for following my trip and enriching this great experience. I hope I have given something back with the stories and pictures and that I have motivated at least some of you to make changes for the good of humanity while having a fascinating time yourself.

Enjoy life and riding. Love, Peace and Great Adventures,

Daniel

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Schöne Pfade und seltsame Gesteinsformationen

Als die Nacht gut überstanden war, gab es erst einmal Frühstück. Dabei beobachteten wir ein für mich sehr erfreuliches Phänomen: Jede 2 Minute radelte ein Kind auf Fahrrad ganz in der Nähe vorbei. Alle auf dem dünnen Pfad neben der Straße in Richtung nächste Ortschaft zur Schule.
rock formations

Weiße Felsformationen stechen hervor

Wir hatten uns in dieser Ortschaft eingedeckt, da wir nicht wussten, wie weit es zur darauffolgenden sein würde - und sicher ist sicher! Noch eine kühle, bolivianische Cola für umgerechnet 20 Euro Cent getrunken, konnte es weitergehen. So sahen die Wege aus, wenn wir nicht die viel zu grob geschotterte “Straße” fuhren.

Bolivia: trail mania

Viel Spaß auf engen Pfaden

Und hier nun die Verpflegung Station am Mittag: Vier Frauen aus einem ansonsten ausgestorben wirkenden Dorf, die mit ein paar Styropor-Behältern und jeder Menge isolierenden Wolltüchern aus Eigenproduktion die Vorbeireisenden mit Nahrung versorgten. Das heißt, viel Verkehr gab es hier nicht wirklich. Das Geschäft lief gut, wenn alle 10 Minuten einmal ein LKW seine Staubwolke mit sich brachte und anhielt.

Bolivia women

Imbiss Stand an der Hauptstraße

Denn das Klima war trocken, Sonnenschein, dünne Luft. Da zog jedes größere motorisierte Vehikel seine Staubwolke hinter sich her. Wir Radler durften entweder Staub inhalieren oder mussten kurzzeitig anhalten … denn Luft anhalten und zugleich weiterfahren, daran war in diesen Höhen wahrlich nicht zu denken!

stone church

Steinerne Dorfkirche auf Bolivianisch

Plötzlich fanden wir uns in einer sehr skurrilen Felslandschaft wider, die sich über mehrere Kilometer unserer Fahrstrecke hinzog. Nur für die Straße wurde richtig Platz gemacht, selbst wenn sie sich noch immer in Schlangen-Kurven durch die Felslandschaft zog. Prima Klettermöglichkeiten für Entdecker aller Couleur gab es hier und ich nahm mir natürlich alle Zeit dafür - eine willkommene Abwechslung zu den langen Stunden im Sattel.

recumbent in the rocks

Skurile Felslandschaft am Abend

Das Zelt wurde mit prima Ausblick, windgeschützt und mit Sichtschutz vor den Blicken der ab und an Vorbeifahrenden errichtet, direkt neben einem Wegstück der ehemaligen Straße. Mit fast allen verfügbaren Spannseilen gesichert und “ruhig gestellt”.

camp in the rocks

Bei der alltäglichen Camping-Routine

Danach hieß es nur noch Kalorien bunkern und die überwältigende Landschaft und Atmosphäre auf sich einwirken lassen:

sun rays and dark clouds

Der Blick zum Rande der Hochebene

camp in the rocks

Camp inmitten der Felsen

Beim Nachverfolgen der Route bin ich diesmal auf einige Probleme gestoßen. Die Karten-Kacheln bei Google Maps waren leider nicht höher aufgelöst, so konnte ich den Weg nicht gut verfolgen. Ich hoffe, dass ich im nächsten Beitrag wieder Witterung bekomme. Bis dann.

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(2008-12-29): Good and bad news …

Hello everybody!

Golden Gate Bridge Shadow - Headers for Project VELAIA website under www.velaia.de

Some of you might wonder, what’s going on and why there are no news, no updates, almost like at the best times in remote areas in Tibet and South America.
Well, I have had a wonderful Christmas time with my mother Martina, my sister Verena and her boyfriend Andi. I played games with my father and even got a new laptop financed with kind support of my mother! Thank you Mom, thank you a lot!
Additionally to these wonderful Christmas presents (back with my family) I got another not so nice present, that I’ve had over Christmas before: the gout. So I’m kind of bound to the house and haven’t been on the bike (except half an hour home trainer) since my arrival :-(

Snake on asphalt - Headers for Project VELAIA website under www.velaia.de

Website Updates: My motivation to do anything active has suffered a lot and the problems I’ve encountered while getting the website running under Wordpress 2.7 (the version you see right in front of you) in the (almost) same old style have caused quite some headaches and long nights. Additionally to the new website there are more “Header Images” now, so you’ll see a bigger variety of  images at the top of the page when visiting. The latest pictures are all taken from images of the New Zealand and USA legs of my tour, covering countrysides, bike culture, nation flags, architecture, wildlife and of course the joy of cycling. There are even some which I haven’t seen myself “live” on the website yet because I haven’t reloaded enough :-)

Nationalities of the USA - Headers for Project VELAIA website under www.velaia.de

The sidebar/navigation bar on the right side of this website has changed a bit and I’m happy to have the box with the latest flickr-pictures back online. Just click one of the pictures and it’ll take you straight to the corresponding flickr page where you can view it in high resolution.

Now I’m almost fine again and the better weather outside will hopefully get me on the bike within a day or two, so I can visit relatives and friends - a thing I wanted to do right after coming back … now I shouldn’t miss the second perfect opportunity: the new year.

Dream world sunrise reflections - Headers for Project VELAIA website under www.velaia.de

And while I’m at it, I also wish you a Happy New Year 2009. Don’t let the (financially) bad outlook for 2009 discourage you! I see it as a signal to all of us to review the way we’re living. Maybe many would even be better up with a little bit less on the materialistic side but on the other hand much more of social interaction, time for themselves an fodr their loved ones. See it as a chance!

All the best, Love, Peace and Great Adventures,

Daniel

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Day 605 (2008-12-19): Mission accomplished, back home!

  • english

In Rüsselsheim I had an early breakfast together with my friend and host Jürgen, then he suggested that I should prepare a lunch package and gave me a hand full of bananas for the way. The day before he showed me a wonderful route through the hilly area called Odenwald. The route should be as short as possible, contain a minimum of height meters and little traffic of course.

Carfree shed equipped with Leitra velomobile, Birdy folding bike and other bikes by you.

Then I started at 7:30 am, outside the weather was warmer than the days before, maybe 3 to 5 °C, the streets were wet and drizzel fell from the cloudy sky. The yellow light from the street lights reflected in the wet street and also in the low hanging clouds. This caused a feeling well known to the people in the northern and central parts of Europe ,the feeling of having to leave the cozy security of a climatized home.

On the road to Darmstadt there were cars everywhere. The shoulder of the road was often pretty wide so I felt saver than riding really close to the cars. I often switched to the cycle/walking path when available but realized time after time that this alternative was in at least 50% of the cases a mistake, either slowing me down through massive detours or leading to dead ends. Having to cross the street in break of dawn didn’t increase my security in traffic either.

Reaching the city of Darmstadt I reached this important “kilometer stone” of my journey, symbolical for the successful end of the tour: the number 40 000 appeared on my kilometer counter. Mission accomplished! I could have missed the display of this number easily, there was no “magical feeling” or any other kind of signal from either the environment or my body, just the usual feeling of being packed in enough warm layers to master the last stage in winter Germany. My super VDO MC1.0 kilometer counter also didn’t give any signal at all: no beep, no vibration (as other devices would have done these days), no letter of congratulation or nice sentence from the tiny device mounted beside the 26″ rear wheel. Just a normal moment in a middle sized German city in another way too warm winter. Nobody took notice!

kilometer counter displaying the distance cycled in the last 600 days by you.

I was happy. Happy when looking back to this so rich part of my life, happy when looking at where I was now and happy when looking into the future. The smile appeared on my face again and the pedestrians passing often got infected when I greeted them kindly and smiled back.

Continuing towards the natural park Odenwald and slowly gaining in altitude on the way towards Reichelsheim I started to recognize the familarity of the landscape and architecture. These now brown, forest covered hills with the tiny villages, small streams leading downwards from every valley, the farms and wood processing plants, the cellar door sales from local farmers advertised near the road and of course the timber framed white-black houses or houses covered with tiny timber plates. This is the area I had explored for years on the mountainbike and in my early childhood together with my grandparents and relatives. This felt even more like home than the European way of life I already felt very familiar with during the last two weeks.

"Fachwerk" house in the Odenwald, Germany by you.

Cycling down from the “Wegscheide” crossing towards Hirschhorn was nice and fast riding and arriving at the bottom I reached the Neckar river. The water that flows down from somewhere in the Black Forest and passes my home only 50 or 60 km upstream. This navigable river led a lot of my cycling tours, it was always there with the lock in my home town Gundelsheim and sometimes even heavy floods. From now on I knew the route by heart, I’ve probably cycled it at least a dozen times and even more often from Eberbach, the town only 11 km from here.

first time  back at the Neckar river in Hirschhorn by you.

I chose the slower version, following the cycle path, to get to Eberbach and switched over to the B37 road that later changed into the B27 near Mosbach and brought me to Gundelsheim just at dusk time. Nice time for the finisher photo in front of the castle Horneck, after 40 115 km. I took all the time to put the tripod on the cycle path, adjust the camera settings and get the shot. I had the time, I surely was not in a hurry this evening. A lot of cars passed me in their hurry to get from A to B really fast and enrich the lives of their passengers. They are several times as fast as I have been during the last 600 days. What do they gain? What do they lose?

Now I visit this place where I’ve spent so many years of my life, the house where I had grown up in, the street where I had learned cycling and the center of my little world until a few years back. A strange feeling in my breast.

Daniel arriving back in Gundelsheim after a 40.000 km bicycle tour over 5 continents, 20 months by you.

I leave some stuff with my father who had reached home already more than a week ago, the tent and sleeping bag are drying in the cellar now. I shortly check the interior of my youth, my room, the kitchen and living room. A lot of memories are connected to these places, but I don’t feel like I had lost them, I don’t feel like I had missed them.

I start riding again and pedal up that “long” uphill from Neckarmühlbach to Siegelsbach; the high-brightness front LED lights are flickering when I reach the really steep parts with more than 10% gradient. I choose to take the even steeper shortcut towards Siegelsbach … and master it … of course. I am trained and motivated. Cycling through two smaller villages I reach Fürfeld and find the new home of my mother and sister immediately.

20 months no see! I park the bike at a bush beside the house, I ring the bell, I jump behind the bush! My wonderful sister Verena opens the door already expecting me, so I’m not very successful with terrifying her even only a bit! Now she’s falling me in the arms. I’m happy! During the trip there had often been a big distance and times with bad communication when the facilities were just not there. But now I’m back, back in a different NOW, but back with the people I love! I meet Andi, my friend and the longtime boyfriend of my sister, and my mother Martina only 45 minutes later when she comes back from work. And after lifting up the loaded recumbent bicycle many stairs I’m trained and able to pick her up. Even our dog Sydney is happy after shortly “talking turkey” with me :-)

A beautiful day and a condign and nice finish of the adventure.R

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Day 597 to 604 (2008-12-11 to 18): Vlissingen to Amsterdam and return to Germany

  • english

At my arrival in Vlissingen it was already maybe 8 o’clock in the evening. I still had to find Wim’s home and the town was much bigger than I had expected!

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

But luckily two young boys helped me to get into the area and then I could use the detailed Google Maps map I had printed at Edwin’s place in Belgium just a few hours before.

With Wim and his lovely wife Marjan I’ve had a really nice time, talking a lot about many things and he even agreed to go for a ride after work with me the following day in really bad, rainy weather, the one where most people prefer to stay under the warm and protecting roof of their home.

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

And when I left on the 13th of December for Amsterdam, he had already organized a place to stay for me, the coming night and taken a day off from work to join me for a part of the ride northwards.

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

He took me to the M5 recumbent bicycle workshop where I got to see the elite of Dutch recumbent builders, where some of the fastest, world record breaking bicycled in the world originated!

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

Together with velomobile and recumbent rider Wim Harwig along the deichs, wind generators and at M5 workshop by you.

(German holiday houses at the Dutch coast with windmills in the background)

Unfortunately I didn’t get to see or go for a ride with his beautiful daughters Rea and Jes which have left for half a year to explore Australia and only send him back reports in Dutch from time to time which the father has to translate into English - what a service!

So I want to thank Wim and his wife Marjan a lot for hosting me and making me feel really warm and comfortable in their wooden house in Vlissingen! You are great and Wim, I definitely have to see your cured Quest one day when you’ll have it back again :-)
By the way: Check out Wim’s really nice and charming posting about my visit.

And the next wonderful thing I saw were the cycling paths in Holland - it’s so much safer and pleasant to ride their compared to any other country I’ve cycled so far. Really amazing and even though I’m riding really slow these days because of all the luggage and ‘unaerodynamic’ addons to my recumbent I could progress much faster than what would have been possible back home in Germany (with exception of the stunning work of Ulrich Lamm over at radweit.de of course).

Rotterdam Europort at night by you.

So I reached the harbour, Europort, in the south-west of Rotterdam by dusk and I still had to cycle quite a way to get to Bram a bit north of Rotterdam - that would have been a lot harder to almost impossible without this level of cycling infrastructure.

Cycling with velomobile rider Bram, proud owner of a new Quest, Netherlands near Rotterdam by you.

And Bram greeted me with open arms, even though I arrived pretty late, totoally exhausted. He told me interesting stories from his cycling life and pointed me towards the computer to update my website before I went to bed - without him the last posting would have been the present one!

Cycling with velomobile rider Bram, proud owner of a new Quest, Netherlands near Rotterdam by you.

The following morning after equipping me with a map and instructions he cycled a while with me towards Amstedam in his shining new red Quest velomobile. He even showed me how he’ll have it painted these days and promised to send me a picture of the result - really funny and creative in my eyes! I’ll keep you updated on that.

Cycling Amsterdam, the city of bicycles, in early winter 2008, super friendly and helpful cyclist Sjoukje showing me the right direction by you.

Arriving at the borders of Amsterdam in the early afternoon I got picked up by this RBOB (Real Beauty On a Bike), named Sjoukje. I followed her all the way to the center of the city, getting more and more amazed by the unbelieveable masses of cyclists in the streets and this chaos they create that fascinated me a lot and made me smile all the time, sometimes laughing about funny maneuvres in the streets or just about these immense masses of humans on bikes!

Cycling Amsterdam, the city of bicycles, in early winter 2008 by you.

Cycling Amsterdam, the city of bicycles, in early winter 2008 by you.

Cycling Amsterdam, the city of bicycles, in early winter 2008 by you.

I had only little time left, maybe 3 hours in total, and it cost a me quite an effort to take out the camera in these freezing cold temperatures to get at least a touch of the spirit of Amsterdam, a wonderful city for cyclists in my opinion.

Cycling Amsterdam, the city of bicycles, in early winter 2008 by you.

A meeting with other velomobile riders from Almere didn’t happen because the riding conditions in the evening and night were just too cold for my feet and I couldn’t continue even if I wanted so much. So I had to pitch the tent close to a golf club and some new condos close to the bridge to Almere and just beside this funny sign where 80% of the condos had already been “verkocht”, which ist the translation of the German word “verkauft” but at the same time could be a German word meaning something like “miscooked” :-)

Cycling from Amsterdam to the German border, impressions by you.

So now I headed straight towards the German border, sometimes cycling one to three hours into the night and only stopping when the feet had already gotten way too cold.

Cycling from Amsterdam to the German border, impressions by you.

I had the first rotation of my 20″ front wheel on German ground at a village called “Waldfeucht” north of Aachen near Jülich.

And it really felt strange to be back. The number of cars on the road increased immediately and at the same time the number of cyclist fell to almost zero! I felt lonely on the road. And I didn’t see any beautiful girls on bikes any more which could eventually change my direction and make me forget about the path I wanted to cycle before but only got to smell the congestion clouds of the ugly cars of (maybe some) beautiful girls inside the cars - oh, poor me! I felt miserable, I even thought about making a 180° turn, but this time I simply couldn’t.

And to not mention only the bad things about getting back home, I went to a bakery the very next morning and bought some fresh brezels and 750 g of the tastiest sunflower bread I have had in over a year, the only sunflower bread I have actually had in over a year :-)

From Jülich to Remagen, blitz ice and first Brezel with apple juice by you.

Combined with some (cheap) apple juice bought from a big German supermarket chain I had found a good energy supply for the cold temperatures and sometimes even rain.

And two days ago the temperatures were below zero in the evening and suddenly rain set in, creating a unrideable road surface. I was lucky to find a nice even surface behind a farm shed and pitched up the tent.

From Jülich to Remagen, blitz ice and first Brezel with apple juice by you.

I had a cold, cold night with almost no sleep and everything felt wet or cold, really uncomfortable. And additionally the night was sooooo long. So I was really happy to know that Jürgen Eick in Rüsselsheim would provide me with a warm and dry bed the following night.

Cycling up the Rhine river in winter time by you.

Not only the bed but much more the hours long conversations with Jürgen about all topics cycling, renewable energies, sustainability and even more inspired me to go fast along the Rhine river cycling path. But soon I realized it would be impossible for me to reach Rüsselsheim before midnight and the weather got worse and worse with frightening clouds getting darker the further I cycled south.

So to not break my word I decided to jump on the train. Not an easy decision of course but definitely the right one, as I arrived at about 6 o’clock in the evening, just right for dinner together with Jürgen.

Tea time in Rüsselsheim by you.

He already held a few books ready for me and with every new topic we discussed he put at least a new ‘must read’ book out from his big book shelf onto the table. I could try his new trekking-bike and he demonstrated his etrex VISTA HCx Garming GPS device. I was really happy to visit him the second time on this tour after cycling together with Jürgen and Carl Georg, inventor and builder of the Leitra velomobile, in April 2007 at the very beginning of the journey. Thank you very much, Jürgen!

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Day 595 to 597 (2008-12-09 to 11): From Paris to Vlissingen

  • english

After 2 years of cycling back to the aviation museum in the north of Paris by Velaia (ParisPeking).

Before leaving paris I created a sign for informing the people on the road about the world tour. I had already purchased some transparent plastic sheet and brought a cupboard box home from a Indian shop.

I put the following text on the sign:

New sign at the back of my recumbent - AROUND THE WORLD, www.velaia.de 40.000 km by Velaia (ParisPeking).

So now the bike looks like this from behind:

New sign at the back of my recumbent - AROUND THE WORLD, www.velaia.de 40.000 km by Velaia (ParisPeking).

And the first few days after cycling like this I definitely have realized a change in the behaviour not only of the motorists but everyone who reads the sign. It somehow lowers the hurdle to get in contact with me, it gives the people a topic to talk about, ask questions or give comments - I really like it!

One of the great opportunities it has created was the meeting with Celia, her son Melvin and Jessica. When she passed me in her car on the way back home and read the sign, she turned around and asked me “Do you want a bed for the night?”. I replied “Why not!”, and followed her car back to Saint Vaast de Longmont. There I could practise my French a bit and had a wonderful warm and cozy bed for the night. A BIG THANKS for this openness and the great hospitality!

Friendly hosts Celia with son Melvin near Senlis, France by Velaia (ParisPeking).

Friendly hosts Celia with son Melvin near Senlis, France by Velaia (ParisPeking).

That’s one of the things I love about touring cycling: Most often I have no idea during the daytime where I’ll spend the next night. But I’m always optimistic and if I don’t find anything, I just keep cycling until I find something - it’s really that easy.

If somebody (authorized) wants me to go (which I’ve never had so far), I’d continue and find another place - the philosopher (AKA dog) always finds a place to sleep. The next night after a really cold and winterly day with a lot of snow on the French roads, I was lucky again and found a nice “train stop house” to spend the night in. The bed was not that soft and unfortunately I didn’t have company at all this evening … but no reason for complaints. I spent a quiet, warm and dry night:

Hotel train stop near Douai, northern France by Velaia (ParisPeking).

With the magical sign facing backwards I could have probably also gotten a bed in the following habitation this night, but I prefered the one shown before for obvious reasons! :-)

French castle near Douai by Velaia (ParisPeking).

In the border region to Belgium as of a sudden bicycle paths appear and in Belgium this gets a regular sight. This immediately remembered me to the last time I’d come through Belgium at the beginning of the tour. And even though I had a lot of rain and snow these days and almost always cloud covered skies I still enjoyed the ride a lot, I enjoyed the people, the familiar European architecture, even the supermarkets filled with all kinds of goods which I didn’t have all these long and exhausting months in South America.

Bike with reflections in the wet street, fields in early morning fog in the backgound by Velaia (ParisPeking).

Cycling in Belgium another before unseen thing caught my view and I almost couldn’t believe my own eyes:

BROODAUTOMAAT - automated bread from the box in Belgium by Velaia (ParisPeking).

I could understand it perfectly, but if I had written “Brotautomat” like the Belgish did in this case (”BROODAUTOMAAT”) I surely would never have made it to the final exams (Abitur) at (torture-)school!

Church/Dom and city life in Tournai, Belgium by Velaia (ParisPeking).

Then I was about to arrive at Wim’s house in Vlissingen. Only problem: It got dark, I still had 40 km to go and not a clue how to get there.

That’s when an angel on two wheels passed me and the magical sign did a wonderful service to me again: Edwin, on his way back from work - on the bike of course! - took me back home, print me out the way to a ferry and checked whether that would take me over the water from Breskens to Vlissingen. He also printed a high detailed map of Vlissingen for me. Without his help I probably would never have reached Wim’s home that evening with my own power. Gracias mil vezes!

Edwin helps me to find the way to Vlissingen by Velaia (ParisPeking).

And you might think that was enough magic for the day … but no way! Yet another time I got witness of the magical kind of karma of my “sign creation”: The captain of the ferry bringing me over to Vlissingen spotted the sign and came over for a short chat and to invite me to the bridge. Amazing, almost incredible! So I got some really interesting information while we went our way through the heavily crowded channel - a lot of giant tankships there!

Ferry to Vlissingen - at night with the captain on the bridge! by Velaia (ParisPeking).

Again a BIG THANK you to everybody who helped and/or invited me these days!

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