Janet Gogerty's Blog: Sandscript - Posts Tagged "peter-scott"
Sandscript on Tour
Sandscript on Tour
It has been a great weekend of sport, or there has been ‘nothing on television’, depending on your point of view. Football, Wimbledon finals, Grand Prix, which I don’t count as sport and the start of the Tour de France.
When I was a child, cycling back from Brownies one summer evening, speeding down my favourite hill, a near disaster occurred. At the bottom of the hill was a T junction, I took the right turn too wide, there was a screech of brakes and the doors of a red sports car flew open to reveal an irate couple who asked which school I went to. Foolishly I told them the truth, stupidly I related the incident when I got home, convinced I would be mentioned in morning assembly and my parents contacted by the headmaster. I had let the school and Lord Baden Powell down. I was not mentioned in assembly or called to the headmaster’s office. I could have kept quiet about the whole incident. Those were small quiet roads, I was unlucky a car happened to come along at the wrong moment, I’m sure the event was not as dramatic as I recall. It was not the only mishap on that hill. On a similar evening I fell off my bike before I even got to the bottom. An ‘old’ lady came out and invited me into her house for first aid. I knew I was not allowed in strangers' homes, but she seemed kind and wouldn’t take no for an answer. In her tiny sitting room the television was on, ‘Look’, a nature programme with Peter Scott; this reassured me I was safe. She bathed my grazed knee with Dettol, then I raced home at top speed to avoid explaining why I was late. When I returned to this place as an adult I was astonished that my hill was merely a gently sloping road.
Anyone who has ever ridden a bike can appreciate the terror and thrill of riding downhill and sympathise with the hard slog of riding uphill. We can enjoy the Tour de France from the comfort of an arm chair. The people of Yorkshire had a closer view as the race started in their beautiful county; as the commentator repeated endlessly, people had turned out in their thousands, or was it millions? In the run up to the event locals had been painting their sheep in the colours of cycling jumpers, creating bicysculptures and renaming the pubs in French. At home we enjoyed the added spectacle of viewing Yorkshire from the air; ancient abbeys, patchwork green fields with drystone walls and narrow roads winding and dipping. Each year I have the rules explained to me, but never understand. This is not a simple race of who comes first, but three weeks of varied terrain, too many cyclists, complicated team work, a points system and the awarding of different coloured jumpers. But that does not matter to television viewers; there is the scenery to enjoy and the spectacle of riders sweeping downhill, gracefully rounding bends and occasionally crashing. There were also the young Royals to observe and a preview of the baby sized yellow jersey that would be presented to Prince George, for less effort on his part than for the real sportsmen.
It has been a great weekend of sport, or there has been ‘nothing on television’, depending on your point of view. Football, Wimbledon finals, Grand Prix, which I don’t count as sport and the start of the Tour de France.
When I was a child, cycling back from Brownies one summer evening, speeding down my favourite hill, a near disaster occurred. At the bottom of the hill was a T junction, I took the right turn too wide, there was a screech of brakes and the doors of a red sports car flew open to reveal an irate couple who asked which school I went to. Foolishly I told them the truth, stupidly I related the incident when I got home, convinced I would be mentioned in morning assembly and my parents contacted by the headmaster. I had let the school and Lord Baden Powell down. I was not mentioned in assembly or called to the headmaster’s office. I could have kept quiet about the whole incident. Those were small quiet roads, I was unlucky a car happened to come along at the wrong moment, I’m sure the event was not as dramatic as I recall. It was not the only mishap on that hill. On a similar evening I fell off my bike before I even got to the bottom. An ‘old’ lady came out and invited me into her house for first aid. I knew I was not allowed in strangers' homes, but she seemed kind and wouldn’t take no for an answer. In her tiny sitting room the television was on, ‘Look’, a nature programme with Peter Scott; this reassured me I was safe. She bathed my grazed knee with Dettol, then I raced home at top speed to avoid explaining why I was late. When I returned to this place as an adult I was astonished that my hill was merely a gently sloping road.
Anyone who has ever ridden a bike can appreciate the terror and thrill of riding downhill and sympathise with the hard slog of riding uphill. We can enjoy the Tour de France from the comfort of an arm chair. The people of Yorkshire had a closer view as the race started in their beautiful county; as the commentator repeated endlessly, people had turned out in their thousands, or was it millions? In the run up to the event locals had been painting their sheep in the colours of cycling jumpers, creating bicysculptures and renaming the pubs in French. At home we enjoyed the added spectacle of viewing Yorkshire from the air; ancient abbeys, patchwork green fields with drystone walls and narrow roads winding and dipping. Each year I have the rules explained to me, but never understand. This is not a simple race of who comes first, but three weeks of varied terrain, too many cyclists, complicated team work, a points system and the awarding of different coloured jumpers. But that does not matter to television viewers; there is the scenery to enjoy and the spectacle of riders sweeping downhill, gracefully rounding bends and occasionally crashing. There were also the young Royals to observe and a preview of the baby sized yellow jersey that would be presented to Prince George, for less effort on his part than for the real sportsmen.
Published on July 07, 2014 10:57
•
Tags:
2014-tour-de-france, brownies, cycling, drystone-walls, look-with-peter-scott, lord-baden-powell, peter-scott, prince-george, tour-e-france, yorkshire
Sandscript
I like to write first drafts with pen and paper; at home, in busy cafes, in the garden, at our beach hut... even sitting in a sea front car park waiting for the rain to stop I get my note book out. We
I like to write first drafts with pen and paper; at home, in busy cafes, in the garden, at our beach hut... even sitting in a sea front car park waiting for the rain to stop I get my note book out. We have a heavy clockwork lap top to take on holidays, so I can continue with the current novel.
I had a dream when I was infant school age, we set off for the seaside, but when we arrived the sea was a mere strip of water in the school playground. Now I actually live near the sea and can walk down the road to check it's really there. To swim in the sea then put the kettle on and write in the beach hut is a writer's dream. ...more
I had a dream when I was infant school age, we set off for the seaside, but when we arrived the sea was a mere strip of water in the school playground. Now I actually live near the sea and can walk down the road to check it's really there. To swim in the sea then put the kettle on and write in the beach hut is a writer's dream. ...more
- Janet Gogerty's profile
- 19 followers
