As I lifted the cover off the bike something tap-tap-tapped along the ground, I couldn't see what it was but determined to get going I unfolded the bike and started rearranging my backpack to make it a bit lighter by sticking bike tools and my one extra pair of sensible shoes into my second bag that had been in with the bike and was now on my pannier rack. I was set to go, I went to push off and ... my front wheel was locked. A quick check revealed not quite the worst but bad enough. The front brake caliper was missing a little screw which had clearly been smashed off in transit and on quick inspection was what caused the tap-tapping sound on the ground earlier. This meant I had to release my front brake completely and do without for the next three days, again no hardship but really annoying when I thought about how I had followed packing instructions to the tee.
Preparing to depart Schipol |
Friday was market day in Hoofddorp so after ten minutes trying to find a spot to lock up the bike I strolled through stalls that were not unlike the farmer's markets back home but with amazing cheeses, Spanish sausages, salamis, loads of fish and seafood in addition to the usual mobile phone accessories and other tat that you see in markets everywhere these days.
No need for words... |
Of course it was absolutely obligatory that I stop and partake of excellent coffee and a custard pastry which I was later told were Portuguese in origin, which was a good decision considering what happened later...
Market day in Hoofddorp |
It also struck me that I hadn't taken any pictures after Schiphol precisely because I had no reason to stop other than once at a junction to get my bearings just before making a right turn towards Hoofddorp. The sheer everydayness of cycling is precisely why I didn't stop; I didn't need to. I didn't need to get off to negotiate stupid barriers on paths, bollards on paths, road signs, street lights and so forth i.e. the usual UK list of rubbish that ticks the box labelled Infrastructure. This is a provincial Dutch town, completely and utterly ordinary, not some grand "cycling city" and yet I could get off a plane from another country, hop on a bicycle and travel from one city to another with no fear of traffic, well not entirely, but for almost the entire journey there was segregation, perhaps not gold standard paths but it was absolutely great to be able to travel at my own pace in absolute safety for the most part.
Bicycle bridge on the outskirts of Haarlem |
At this point I have to admit I was becoming a bit bemused by what I believed to be a lack of signage for bicycle routes. I finally spotted a sign pointing in what I felt was the right direction to Haarlem and picked up a lovely cross country path that crossed several what we might call B-roads on the way to Haarlem. This however was where I made an error of judgement that had a knock-on effect later that, whilst certainly not disasterous, was a salutory lesson that I will come to later. I was feeling a bit peeved with the lack of signs on the bicycle route so switched on mobile data and GPS on my phone and used SatNav for what I expected would be a straightforward run into Haarlem, which it was.