The Lakeland Motor Museum

 
An extremely successful start to the week when a surprise in the post brought our Algerian visas!  After initially contacting a number of Algerian tourist agencies and UK visa agencies, we've spent months worrying after scaremongers told us we'd be lucky to get them within a month of posting them and no way could we get post dated visas!  So after writing to the consulate with an explaination of the drive: change of drive direction, political situation along the North African route etc, they've kindly post dated our tourist visas for 25th July...so a big round of applause for the Algerian Consulate!   
Bit behind with these photos from the Lakeland Motor Museum in Cumbria, but...better late than never!  A fascinating museum set close to Lake Windermere and well worth a visit. 
Great little gem in the lakes with a detailed exhibition on Sir Malcolm and Donald Campbell, the father and son team who between them captured 21 world land and water speed records in the Bluebird series of cars and boats. Donald Campbell was tragically killed on nearby Coniston Water in January 1967, whilst attempting to break his own water speed record.   The museum holds Donald Campbell's Bentley in the signature Bluebird blue!

Some amazing pictures of the original Hardknott Pass - pleased we had an easier time getting over or didn't require the need for any horses!

Donald Campbell's Bentley stole the show for Tony with the signature Bluebird colour and the addition of a legendary bluebird.





Great little museum and well worth a visit!http://www.lakelandmotormuseum.co.uk/

Camping it up...!


The All Important Camp Shower!


Really wanted the scary penguin!
Our new clockwise route means we'll be driving the European section first and this includes the prospect of spending many nights under canvas early on. In preperation we're now scouting around outdoor shops on a regular basis, not only for compact equipment, but useful items that are wallet friendly and practical.  It's very easy to be drawn into the world of camping and before you know it you've got a room full of mini dust pan and brushes, mess tins, jerry cans, camping mirrors, collapsable washing-up bowls, pop up laundry baskets, head, table and pocket lights, plastic dinner services complete with salt and pepper pots and a 4 sided toaster!  All great in a camper van but not suitable for life in a Morgan...!  

However, our favourite recent purchase is the camp shower, not only a great name that'll bring a smile each time we use it, but a highly technical piece of kit that we'll fill with water...and...yes...strap to the back of the car..!   After a couple of hours driving and an extremely scientific combination of soaring Med temperatures, bright sunshine and a black plastic bag, we'll have 20 litres of shower water!  All this for the bargain price of £4.99.

For space saving we've each a rather clever knife, fork and spoon that all clip neatly together (aluminium grey), a set of 3 stackable non-stick cooking pots (matt black), a compact camping kettle (grey), 2x bowls, 2x small plates and 2x large plates (black) that sit nicely together, 2x stainless steel coffee mugs, a dynamo camping lamp (matt black) which not only looks pretty cool but cuts down on having to dispose of batteries along the way and a rather impressive expandable water carrier that is completely flat when empty and slowly pops open as we fill it up - sadly only available in white!   

A bit of luxury can be found in the form of our air bed and electric pump that'll plug neatly into the cigarette lighter, ensuring we won't need to spend evenings blowing up a double airbed!  We splashed out on an air bed as were not stooping to levels so low as sleeping on rolled up mats.  They may have been considered character building in the girl guides or boy scouts, but are so thin you can feel an ant move!

Luggage has almost given us sleepless nights as we've spent an amazing amount of time, not only looking for something waterproof, robust and easy to clean, but we needed to make sure each bag wasn't longer than 50cms, they fitted the colour scheme and most importantly won't shout from behind the seats -  expensive!

Luxurious leather travel bags would no doubt look absolutely stunning strapped to the back of the Mog, but we've no intention of driving through remote villages waving bags that look as if they cost the average person's yearly salary.  This strong as an ox pair cost a very reasonable £40 all in, which means we can afford to give them a bit of a beating, plenty of sand storms and some strong desert sunshine.

They've a 45L capacity and have the added bonus of hidden rucksack straps...easy to throw on the back and practical to carry around.  They're amazingly strong and don't have any unecessary wheels that could scratch the Mog's leather and, to top it all, are in Tony's tradmark black and grey - absolutely perfect!


Vango's Inflatable Tent Range
- less stressful than a camping divorce
 Already at home we''ve a choice of two tents that are possibilities to take along at the moment, a three or a four man, but we need to dummy run them first - soon!  As most campers are aware the most dangerous aspect of any camping trip is how likely is it that a domestic is likely to arise during the pitching of the tent!  Vango are planning to launch towards the end of May their inflatable tent range - utter genius apart from the fact it's launched after we've sailed!


However we need to invest in a camping stove and as if by some miracle Coleman, have just launched a new range of multi-fuel stoves that rather cleverly run on unleaded fuel. 

Not sure what we'll encounter in North Africa, and that includes their range of gas camping bottles, so this ticks all the boxes.  It's powerful enough for everyday use and small enough to fit perfectly into the box perched on the back of the car.   




Looks a bit tricky to eat with these
 and better remember to unclip them
before we take an eye out whilst eating soup!


 
A peg-less not leg-less washing line

Official Press Release

Around the Med in a Morgan” – May 2011 will be a 3 month open-topped non-stop circumnavigation of the Mediterranean Coast in a British built Morgan 4/4 sports car - two drivers, very limited equipment, no trailer, no vehicle back up or even spare tyre! Departing from the UK we sail to Bilbao before traveling to Gibraltar, and from there drive clockwise around the entire Mediterranean coast, a journey we believe never yet attempted! We'll travel 12000 miles and , political situations permitting, pass through 19 countries: Gibraltar, Spain, France, Monaco, the whole Italian coastline, Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro, Albania, Greece, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and finally back to the Rock!

We'll be travelling open topped to maximize our contact with the environments in which we'll travel, and we’ve made the choice of the Morgan 4/4 Sport as we feel it best matches our idea of what Intrepid British Motor Adventuring should be, recalling those heady and long gone days when mustached youngsters put on a pair of sturdy boots, a pith helmet, and sponsored by their Great Uncle Harold went out and conquered the world! Man (or woman) and machine against the elements sort of thing!

On a more environmental note it also fits perfectly with our ideas of sustainable tourism, it’s extremely environmentally friendly, with a wood, aluminium and leather construction which utilizes very little plastic, and due to it's light weight and small efficient engine gives not only excellent smiles per mile, but a very low 140 g/km CO2 output. Perfect for these days where the world is still our oyster, and we don’t want to cook it…

A little about the team: Tony Hunter is a car designer, having served 21 years in the automotive industry and been employed with Rover, Renault, Land Rover, BMW, Ford, Volvo and Jaguar, and with a portfolio which includes the interior for the BMW Mini, MG-F, Range Rover, Jaguar XF, FAB1 for the Thunderbirds movie, Land Rovers for Tomb Raider, and as K-Tel used to say…much, much more! He's originally from Scotland, but at present, proudly designing for the Great British car industry in Warwickshire. He’s passionate about driving and especially driving open topped British classic cars.  It was 20 years ago on a dusty road through Turkey that the idea “one day” he’d drive around the Med was formed – typically it just took a little while and meeting Lisa to get organised!     
His co-pilot, the tiny Lisa Spratling is originally from Yorkshire, ex Royal Navy and spent 9 years in the Wrens as a photographer, flying in Sea Kings and Hawker Hunters.  Despite her 5-foot stature she’s an avid mountain climber, (the higher the better as it makes her feel tall). She’s climbed and trekked across Nepal and traveled extensively through India, and for many years was managing an outdoor activity company in Slovenia. She's presently in Warwickshire putting the finishing touches to our plans, and where’s she can frequently be glimpsed rambling across the countryside or running behind a Morgan! She loves planning and organizing travel ideas, and believes the only way to go is visit places with bags of character and forgetting about any facilities, which she claims is enough to add an element of adventure to any journey!  

We’ve adopted as the theme of the project, ‘The Great Race”, intending for it to inspire a lot of the style for the journey, though possibly without of course completing the trip in the all white attire used by Tony Curtis due to limited laundry facilities! Lisa will however be attempting to emulate the feisty sex appeal of Natalie Woods, both to keep our Tony on his toes, and for charming uniformed officials at difficult borders!

In keeping with this spirit, we’ll be reducing our luggage to the barest minimum, taking the minimal amount of clothes, (whilst retaining of course enough appropriate ambiance!), and only bringing appropriate space saving technology, a small electronic notebook, Olympus digital camera equipment, and a digital pad instead of travel books, but no GPS or "SatNav", and very limited camping gear. 

Accommodation we use along the way will be of character and specially chosen to add an air of period on the road style, and we’ll be coastal camping wherever possible, both to avoid street parking the Morgan and of course add as much as possible to the adventurous nature of the project!

Our intention is to write, on our return a book, which will include photographs from the trip and illustrations sketched along the drive. It’ll be based on the people we meet due to the head turning appeal of the Morgan, and we think we've chosen the perfect car in all aspects for lots of positive attention.  It's a fun, lovable, British icon, and everything we take in it will be compact, classy, stylish, British-made (where possible) and practical, an absolute perfect match to the car.

Our drive will also hopefully raise some awareness of two UK charities – Macmillan and Dove House Hospice. Our returning fund raising aim is to auction off a number of limited edition prints, photographs, sketches and personal items alongside odds and ends we collect along the way.

We started planning early, as in addition to the miles of red tape involved in Visas and Carnets we want to create some great publicity and ensure we have the right equipment for the job, due to the traveling conditions (we really do intend to be roofless all the way!) and limited space in the car

We're both very dedicated and working hard on this and aim to include in the build-up and during the drive, a range of companies or societies interested in being sponsors and we think it's a fantastic opportunity to advertise, and a great publicity opportunity.  Our website is live, and we're keeping everyone up to date every step of the way with Twitter, our newly started blog, and our excellent and very popular official Facebook site linked from our home page with some well known motoring friends and experts in the design industry,

This isn't just a mad idea, a luxury trip or extended holiday, we're both professionals in our early 40s and this is the result of a 20 year long driving ambition which will very soon become reality, an exciting first attempt to drive this unique route, in a much loved and unique car.  


Lisa Spratling and Tony Hunter

Yorkshire's Hidden Racing Gem - A Sneak Peak at Ginetta...!



Saturday the 26th February brought grey skies, a slight chill in the air and drizzle…but always the optimists we headed off towards the M1, (initially going in the wrong direction towards London…!) with a flask of coffee, scarves, hats, a blanket from myself and of course…the roof down.! 

Large rain drops bounced off the windscreen as we hit the Fosse Way and this was followed by lots of “it’ll clear up soon” “at least it’s not TOO cold” “isn’t this fun?” “oh no.. lights are going to change...we’ll get wet” and other such snippets of chit chat that we tend to indulge in when we’re trying to convince ourselves, and everyone else that stares at us in utter amazement...that driving with the roof down whilst dressed like we’re about to head off on a Shackleton expedition is perfectly normal...! Why on earth doesn’t everyone travel like this?












Open-topped motoring was conjured up to avoid motorways but withlimited time on our hands we made our way up the M1 and less than 3 chilly, grey hours later we arrived in the sleepy Yorkshire town of Garforth, the home of Ginetta. After a brief stop in a local supermarket where I jumped out to ask directions (yes...always a good idea chaps!)

I then proceeded off to find the Mog – which meant the next 5 mins were spent walking up and down the car park looking for the smallest car among the world of Saturday morning shoppers, and quickly realised, we're onto a bit of a loosing situation when it comes to getting reunited…we're both impossible to spot over other cars!




Ginetta's open day was a great way to have a sneak peak behind the scenes of a racing car manufacturer and this teamed with a donation on arrival, ensured it was a worthwhile fund raising idea. The day was set up as a way of offering some financial support to an extremely brave young man who has a degenerative spinal problem and needs specialist surgery. His friends, employees of Ginetta had the wonderful idea of opening Ginetta up to the public for a charitable donation.  Have to admit that even though am from Yorkshire, am something of a 'car beginner' and in reality knew very little about the company.













During the visit my eyes were opened as these cute little racy numbers are fascinating - amazingly strong, and having one of the highest safety records in the business, which always helps when you've got 14 – 17 years old taking the wheel. They're also feather light, with a body weight equivalent to a Ford Fiesta – and I know which I'd rather drive! What really turns your head though is the sound of the engine which completely knocks you off balance, not a purr but a pouncing growl, a bit like discovering a Bengal Tiger is hiding inside your pet cat!

These tiny tigers offer fantastic cornering due to their flat 'bottoms', aerodynamic undertrays which are very effective at helping to hug the tarmac. When it comes down to the nitty, gritty, they are also, as far as racing cars go, very affordable... if you've a spare £65,000 + VAT to spend! Their low on the road costs are mainly due to the fact that the company and it's fascinating owner are icons in the field of green car production


They're big believers in recycling, which means each separate model has parts that are interchangeable and contrary to what most people think, they are living proof that using local suppliers saves money. They've no expensive shipping costs and having your suppliers just around the corner means they can quickly chase up any delays. It keeps a locally based work force in employment and we got real a sense of pride amongst the workers.


The new G40 is a wonderful bundle of fibreglass fun, and a close up look at the world of Ginetta was a great way to see that the days of  British Motoring and it's Industry are still alive and very much kicking.  The topping on the day's cake was a raffle were six lucky tickets were drawn, the prizes being a spin in either a G50 or a F400. What was heart warming to witnes were the kind hearted adults who gave their winning tickets to the kiddies amongst the visitors. Beaming smiles lit up the tarmac and car interiors as the youngsters clambered in and sped off...hardly seeing above the dashboards..!

The wonder of facebook is a great way to spread the word and this meant that amongst the 200 people visiting Ginetta's open day we met Helen Goff, a Porsche enthusiastic who we initially 'met' on facebook. 

Overall...the whole Ginetta experience was a great event and a fantastic fund raising idea!








 

Clockwise it is then...!

Finally...we're up and running - welcome to the "Mad Med Mog Blog" by Fox Snapdragon (sorry, but needed a fitting name for a female co-driver in a Morgan adventure!)

After a fantastic start on our initial route, the past few weeks has thrown a mighty large spanner into the Morgan works: frustration, hair tearing, sleepless nights!  However...in true optimistic British motoring fashion...we're keeping away from all the political / media doom and gloom, we're still departing in May...just not the direction and route we initially planned.  We're now heading clockwise from Gibraltar and camping our way along the European coast until we reach the official meeting point of East and West - Constantinople and on reaching the Middle East...well we'll just see how we go.

We could have written a book on 'what if's' with regards to the car / operational front (spare tyre...or lack of it, sand storms, "they do have unleaded in Egypt?" suitable head gear, friendly border 'chats' and "where's that piece of paper you had yesterday?" the air bed going flat, lack of my walking boots, 3 months without a hair cut or hair dryer, etc, etc) but impossible to predict 'what ifs' on all fronts....!  If we risk assessed everything, we'd never even cross the English Channel (my god...they eat frogs!) and adventure travel is adventure travel because of the adventures, so we'll drive and camp as much of that stunning Med coast as we can.

First official step - applying for Syrian visas - a really helpful team in the London embassy. Algerian visas are next, Libya we pick-up on the border from our guide and the rest as we go along - 19 countries in all, so empty passports to start and exotic full ones on our return.

Heading up to Leeds and the Ginetta open day this weekend, what a great excuse to explore the Peak District on the way back home Sunday.