Flat is a series of pieces on some trips I made into the heart of East Anglia with a little bit of music listening thrown in for good measure along the way. This is the first part of what will comprise seven posts and it covers driving up from Woodford in Essex to Felixstowe on the east coast of England.
It was a trip I had been meaning to make for a while but just hadn’t the chance, in fact it had taken me years to do it, dunno why, a straight through the heart of Essex ride into South Suffolk and then all the way to Felixstowe on the east coast. I was out of the blocks by 10 in the morning, with How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful by Florence + The Machine burning onto the hard drive of my Toyota Prius. Yes, my faithful old Prius, a car I had bought brand new, the only time I had ever done so, and which had now done over 84,000 miles in what would soon be coming up to nine years of proud ownership.
Once out of Woodford I drove straight up the M11 to Stansted just past junction 8. A few years ago it seemed like I was going up to Stansted quite often, every other month in fact, but over the course of time all that had tailed off considerably, now it was probably over 10 years since I had last been there. How time flies, whilst I hadn’t, or at least not from Stansted. I had driven past it plenty of times in that period though, usually making my way up the M11 to either join the A14, A11, A1 or to just go to Cambridge, so it was familiar enough territory.
It was a fine Friday, not deep blue skies but light blue skies with high clouds warm and bright, the land looking dry, early June in what was possibly going to be a long, hot summer. The choice of Florence + The Machine for the car ride had been a direct consequence of buying their How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful album after seeing them support The Rolling Stones at the Olympic Stadium in London back in May. Bought it at the HMV Store in Stratford Westfield, yes, bought Florence on one of those HMV 2 CDs for 10 quid special offer bundles I was so fond of and which I have indulged in so many times over the rollin’ years. Now I was in the process of playing and burning it onto the Prius hard drive, on which could be transferred over 100 CDs of music, something that I always thought was pretty cool, although of course in terms of how music’s currently consumed, is now tremendously outdated.
In that regard I had brought along a couple of other CDs to burn for the trip, Vessel by Twenty One Pilots and Def Leppard’s classic 1981 album High n’ Dry, this one being freshly re-mastered and taken from out of their CD Collection Volume One box set which had been released at the beginning of June and which I had just recently purchased. Needless to say I had filled up all the space on the Prius hard drive many moons ago, but the great thing about it was that albums could be deleted once I got tired of them, thus freeing up space again to stick some new stuff on. All in all these three albums would be more than enough for me to be getting on with as far as the listening to music in the car was concerned whilst making my way up to Felixstowe and then back down again.
Made fast progress up the M11 with there being no major incidents to hold things up, within 25 minutes I had filtered onto the A120 and was soon flying past Stansted. It was not that busy on the dual carriageway stretch, all was clear and driving on it was like a dream. A bit of a surprise to be honest, and I realised it must have been around 20 years since I had last driven on that part of the A120. Back then it had not been a double lane affair and driving it had been a bitch, stop start all the way, with the pinch point place of Great Dunmow being particularly painful, all in the days when I had a lot less patience than what I have now, or at least what I hope I have now. This time it was a different story and in the best possible way. As I headed due east towards Braintree, with open skies above me and clouds beginning to break into the blue beyond, there was nothing to stop me from going as fast as I liked, well apart from the fact I was driving a Toyota Prius of course, and not an Audi.
Continue reading “Flat: High & Dry In South Suffolk” →