IIf yesterday was a day of mixed blessings, then today was a day of highs
 and lows. It all started rather well with blue sky's and broken clouds.
 Shortly down the road we were greeted by regular packs of colourful 
MAMIL's, all telling us we were going the wrong way, they obviously new 
what lay ahead and at this point we didn't. Oh sorry, MAMIL it stands 
for, Middle.Aged.Men.In.Lycra :-) Shortly after this we turned off the 
the A82 onto a lovely little roller coaster of a road north of a Loch, I
 forget the name of, oh it was Loch Lochy . This was fab for a few miles
 then the road turned into a gravel road that made yesterday's tow, path
 seem positively smooth. We did however see a stoat shoot across the 
road in front of us, it's black tipped tail disappeared into a hedge. 
The road (well track really) got worse and more hilly, and we had at 
least another 7 miles to go ( In hind sight it would be better to stick 
to the A82 if on a road bike)  and the gravelly descents were pretty 
hairy. Clearly my road bike and smooth tyres were not built for this 
kind of terrain and my route for this little section had turned out to 
be a little suspect. I was just about to turn round to apologise to 
Colin for the dodgy road, to only be greeted by Colin's big cheesy grin,
 the shopper, clearly in its element! The only bonus to the route were 
more spectacular views, Ben Nevis for one, including snowy top. By the 
end of that 10 mile off road, as we came past Neptune's staircase (the 
locks photo), my spine felt like it had been shaken apart so badly and 
then reassembled in the wrong order! Time for tea and cake, Fort 
William. And yes, no flat tyres ( thanks mum x) What came next was main 
road all the way on the A82. I was just about to say how very good the 
traffic, especially the lorries , were being, giving us lots of room and
 waiting to pass etc when I was nearly taken out by a tourist and his 
caravan! It was that close with the caravan as it cut in, well all I can
 say is thank you St Christopher. As we turned the corner starting our 
approach to Glen Coe, two things struck us. First was the wind, Met 
office states 33 mph head winds! It felt like 60! Clearly I had been 
flippant with the use of the word brutal the day before, as the word 
much better fitted the bill today. The second was the ominous black 
clouds over the mountains. Another stop, some food and full wet weather 
gear, we weren't going to miss the rain today. At the foot of Glen Coe, 
 we stopped, looked at each other smiled that smile that said, we might 
not be breaking any records today but we're going to make it all the way
 to the top no pushing! 8.4 miles of mountain later we did! And from 
pretty much sea level we had climbed 1142 ft! Most of which I could only
 hear hysterical laughter from Colin " ever corner....it just keeps 
going... Aaaahhhh".  At the top I had to have the third PR of the day, 
only needed two the day before. Sorry PR, Paula Radcliffe? Road side wee
 wee, you'll be pleased to know no wet clothing, though that was tricky,
 considering the wind was at full blast on the bleak Rannoch Moor. 
Moving on, well barely, as we were slower into this head wind along the 
top than the climb I think! Struggling to keep 6 mph! The temp was now 2
 degrees and felt like minus 2! My right foot now happily requesting 
amputation. Where was the downhill, we'd just climbed 8.4 miles?  Now I 
knew why the MAMIL's had said we were going the wrong way! There were a 
few small downhills, which unfairly we had to pedal again. To add 
insult, another 3.5 mile climb! Finally arriving at the B&B, after a
 bit of a 2 mile U turn, having missed it, probably through exhaustion! 
Arrived at 18: 14 having left at 08:20 having done another 85.81 miles. 
We both lay on the beds and laughed out loud.....it had been EPIC.
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
 