A flatlander in the Welsh mountains

Hairpin turn ahead

Hairpin turn ahead - L L Melton

I grip the steering wheel on the wrong side of the car, driving on the wrong side of the highway. It’s my first experience driving in North Wales, and I’m finding the hairpin turns to be more than a little hair-raising.

Contrary to the popular saying, knuckles don’t really go white: they stiffen around the steering wheel on fingers that seize like claws. I’m so close to the craggy mountain that my shoulders involuntarily seize up in a shrug to keep the rock face from scraping against the side of the car.

By the side of the highway in Wales

By the side of the highway in Wales - L L Melton

When we stop at a rest area and look back (left photo), it seems the highway has no shoulder room either.

Saskatchewan highway

Saskatchewan highway - L L Melton

Not what we’re used to on the TransCanada through Saskatchewan (right).

Still, the North Wales highway is in good condition. No potholes to swallow your tires, as we sometimes find at home, and very little in the way of garbage and litter on the roadsides. If the mountains unnerve me, it’s likely because I’m a flatlander by nature. On the other side of the car, past my daughter’s calm figure, I catch glimpses from time to time of the steep drop from the mountain highway past the cars that shave by us. Barely enough room for two cars to pass. I can’t help but wonder what it’ll be like once we leave the main highway.

Everything is moving too fast: the cars going by us on the right (instead of the left), the signs, the time on our three-week trip “overseas.”

That’s the tone for our first trip to North Wales. Getting used to the narrow highways was only the first part of the journey for me. It stretched me in ways I could never have imagined. The result? Travel articles, a young adult medieval fantasy novel, and a new perspective on my Welsh heritage.

I’m planning a trip back next year. Flipping through the pages of my journals and considering some of the striking photos we took, I find I can hardly wait. Over the next few weeks I plan to post an article every Tuesday. Many will detail our trip to Wales, as well as our family trips to other places of interest in Canada and around the world. Have you been to Wales? If you care to share your experiences, or comment on mine, please click “Read more” below.

4 comments

  1. Good on you, Marie, for driving on the wrong side of the road! I can’t imagine!

    Heading to the UK (to eat chocolate) later this month, but there’s no way I’m driving!

    Nice to see you blogging. It’s my favourite form of Social Media. Such fun to establish a sense of community and get a true dialogue going among friends and like-minds.

    • mepowell says:

      Thanks Doreen. You’re an inspiration! Good luck in the UK. I can hardly wait to read your experiences – and go back for more of my own next spring!

  2. Wales is fabulous. I’m glad you’re going back. My husband and I were there a few years as part of a couple-month trip around the U.K. We were back in March 2010 for the Travel Media Association of Canada conference and now we’re going again this September.
    This fall our plan is to do a two-week hike along the Wales/England border. It’s called Offa’s Dyke Path and looks wonderful, with B&Bs or Inns to stay at the end of each day’s walk. We won’t have to worry about the narrow roads that way :)

    • mepowell says:

      Thanks Colleen – Wales is fabulous isn’t it? I’ll tune in for blogs about your Offa’s Dyke trip. I’m using that area in a new novel I’m working on now, so that’s very timely. And I hope to see it myself next spring as well.

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