https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/hedgyharry
Before we start on Day 4, let’s talk about dinner on the evening of Day 3. We stopped at a beautiful hotel in Washaway, called Trehellas hotel. Immaculate grounds and a fun little cottage room. The type of place you would take your other Half for a romantic weekend away. We booked dinner early, 6 pm, in order to get the first order of the night in. The restaurant was well presented and had a pleasant farmhouse atmosphere. Harry’s first comment of the evening - “why do I have 3 knives, 3 forks, 2 spoons and two glasses on the table”.
I explained what the various knives and forks are were for and how he needed to be on good behaviour. 5 minutes later he was showing off his napkin folding skills to the waiter, Conner (thanks you for the donation and being so nice to Harry). He followed this by balancing three forks linked with a tooth pick on the salt cellar.
Harry second observation is priceless. On the wall there were various pictures and painting of wine and he said. “That’s pure marketing, they only place the pictures there to make you drink lots and lots and lots!”
Anyway he ordered his CB burger and chips and he rated the triple fried chips an “A”. I opted for something greener and enjoyed a goats cheese salad.
Prior to departure Harry and I got to speak to a lovely lady called Lily from the media. She was in charge of stories from social media that had a feel good factor. She managed to hold Harry’s attention for a good 35 minutes before he wondered off to sit in the shower watching videos on extreme table tennis shots.
Off we went and it promptly started to rain, jackets on, we soon hit our first dilemma of the day. Do we cycle down the massive hill, ignoring the signs that said road closed at bridge? Or do we follow the detour signs and add a few miles? I let Harry pick, “well daddy it’s a 50% chance we can get through, so let’s risk it, after all that’s what an adventure is about.”
Down and down a steep gradient we went. As we approached the Helland bridge (an ancient monument) we saw the road blocked! Massive slabs of concrete blocked the way - for cars only haha we squeezed through. Good call Harry.
The next bonus of the Day was getting more of the Camel trail, we had a heated debate about if it was uphill or downhill. This is what Cornwall has done to us, we can’t tell the ups from the downs anymore. Ps. It’s uphill…..
The next question of the day was why is it called the camel trail. Our guess is that it’s next to a river called the camel? But if anyone is more knowledgable please post in the comments.
The camel trail lend us to the first and only cafe stop of the day. We stopped at the Snails pace cafe and bike hire shop. We met lots of lovely people and Harry handed out flyers left right and centre. Thank you ladies for looking after us and thank you to Nick from the bike hire section for a quick bit of bike maintenance. One of the ladies we spoke to is starting her own JogLe journey soon. Let’s hope we cross over in Scotland somewhere and say hello again.
Now came the meaty part of the day. The climb to Bodmin moor, 560 feet of climbing over 2.5 miles. It was long, hard but very satisfying. We looked for the Beast of Bodmin moor, but only saw some terrifying cows. We stopped at the top for a radio interview, huddled behind a stone wall.
The next section was really fun and fast. I’m not going to tell you what speeds we hit as mummy would not be happy. Well it was fun until we hit a savage crosswind with horizontal drizzle. Then we turned left and the crosswind turned into a glorious tailwind. We flew down the tracks for miles, we passed by the town of Davidstow, and Harry them spent considerable time telling me the names of cheese he did and did not eat. Cheddar, melted cheddar, mozzarella, mozzarella stick, melted mozzarella, Dutch cheese…….it went on for a while. The conclusion is - yes to all cheese in all forms, just not blue cheese or stinky cheese.
We then cycled through the town of Titson, however, this prompted nothing from Harry. Much to my disappointment- still to nice and innocent.
The home stretch was very hard, Harry’s previous best distance was 32.6 miles. Today we topped 38 miles (my bad I got lost). Harry got a lively surprise close to the hotel - the Devon signpost. It was then ruined 1 mile later with us returning to Cornwall. “That’s not fair Daddy, I was enjoying Devon.”
Thank you to the media for helping to publicise Harry’s mission! The donations today were wonderful.
Harry’s view: I spoke to lots of people in the radio and newspapers industry today it was very fun and they were lovely, They all really care about hedgehogs too. Guess what I have a new personal best on my bike, I managed to cycle 33.2 mph. I have started writing a song about our journey he’s the first verse.
“ up and down the hills we go, with Cornwall starting very slow. The Sun was blazing, the downhills were amazing and onto Devon next we go.”
I will give you verse two tomorrow.