Bike trips are a lot like having children. On your first trip you carefully pack the bike in bubble wrap. By the third trip you put it in a box and hope it meets the weight requirements.
Like the last two days we woke up to rain. Had breakfast and by the time we were ready to leave it had clears up so we decided to forge onto Brussels. The start was a slow uphill that ended (almost) in a two mile downhill. Partway through the downhill in Brussels was the Heart of Brussels sculpture There was a half mile hill at the end of the two mile downhill that we decided to walk. But fortunately the last 1/4 mile was flat so we managed to pedal to our destination. Covered about 250 miles over about 10 days. Brussels is the largest town we arrived aft since leaving London. What trip is complete without a relic from a Saint. This is what is left is St Elizabeth. I can’t tell you how many pieces of the true cross we saw. It must have been a big tree. Our boxes arrived from Amazon and we got Sandy’s bike packed up.
Today was a long walking tour of Canterbury Cathedral. On the way to Canterbury Cathedral we stopped at St Thomas Catholic Church. A small church but with relics of Thomas Becket For history buffs Canterbury Cathedral where Thomas Becket was killed. “Who shall rid me of this meddlesome priest” Going back to 1070 the cathedral has undergone construction and renovation for over 900 years. Overall we preferred this to Westminster Abbey. Inside the Choir Stall Stone Pulpit Roof Detail of the Spire After lunch we went to St Augustine’s Abbey. This is the oldest church property in the UK and goes back to 600AD in use until the dissolution of the church by Henry VIII Abbey Ruins
This morning she woke up to cold and rain. Walking out to breakfast we got wet, we decided that a train wouldn’t be a bad idea. Got back, packed, and left for the train station. Along the way we got wetter, but when we go to the train station it stopped raining and looked sunny. Checking the weather app showed no rain for the next four hours so we decided to make a run for it. We quickly made a route from the train station and pushed off. The ride was pretty uneventful. The possible exception would be the airplane on top of the house. By 2:30 we reached our destination for the day. Our speed Was about 3x what we did in the UK. The Belfry in Aalst. Pretty town but much larger than i expected. Wandering around town we found a church alter that was painted by Rubens. Painted in 1630, stolen by the French and put in the louvre in 1789 and returned in 1813
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