The Brittany Ferries Seacat left Portsmouth at 8:30 am and arrived in Cherbourg at around 11:15 am local time (1 hour ahead in France).
En route I noticed that before we'd lost sight of the Isle of Wight, the Cherbourg Peninsular was just visible on the horizon.
It was a flat calm crossing, under blue skies and all boded well.
As a teenager I'd stayed in the small village of Bricquebec with my family on a couple of occasions. The weather had always seemed hot and sunny on the Cotentin Peninsula then, and today was no exception. I took a slight detour, not having been back there for several decades, and found the small hotel we'd stayed in, now a Bistro Restaurant called La Taverne.

What was a sweeping, raised green in front of the hotel was now a large car park. I recollect, one Saturday, as I peered out from my bedroom window, an old grey Citroen 2CV and trailer pulling up on the road to the other side of the green, immediately opposite. Pigs were unceremoniously wrestled to the ground on the road, had their testicles removed which were thrown and left in the gutter, and the pigs loaded back on board. No pre-med, no anaesthetic, nothing but a knife! Their frantic squeals made me feel particularly squeemish at the time! I've no idea whether it was a vet carrying out the 'operations'. It wouldn't (I don't think) have happened like that at home...would it?!
From Bricquebec I had to put my foot down somewhat if I was going to make any distance today. Somehow on these sort of excursions you develop a rather enclosed, detached mindset. If you were to count the miles you probably wouldn't start. Doing this alone, as opposed to being with my own family, would have probably already raised an 'are we nearly there yet?' by one of my daughters. On this occasion I was a free agent, no responsibilities other that to myself, and no one to bore to death other than myself!
I took the decision that all the beautiful French harbours I was bypassing would be visited on the way back.
I found myself skirting round Bordeaux at around 7 pm after several hours of motorway driving with just one stop. I wasn't too bothered about where I stayed overnight as the journey proper didn't start until I arrived in Spain. However I contemplated Arcachon as a likely possibility. The motorway lead into Acrachon. There were fast BMWs, Mercedes and Porsches passing me at what seemed to be double my speed and I got a bad feeling about going any further. It looked attractive on the map, and relatives had stayed there, but it wasn't what I was looking for even if it was just for one night. So I ploughed on southwards, leaving the motorway and heading towards Mimizan and Leon on a good straight Roman 'B' road.
I passed through dense forests and contemplated a 'wild' camp, but all tracks were either inaccessible by the presence of restrictive notices or just so deeply furrowed and sump crunching that I didn't want to take the risk! I was turning round at one spot and a French car pulled up alongside mine. A rather weather-beaten middle-aged woman got out and asked if I needed any help. I asked if there was a camp site near by and she directed me to a municipal site near Ychoux. She made me repeat (in French) her directions, which I stumbled though as best as I could, and she gave a warm smile in response. It really isn't easy picking up on a language that's lain dormant in some part of your brain since the last visit to France!
I arrived at C. des Forges at around 8:30pm, pitched, enjoyed a quick supper heated up on the Coleman's, and that was the end of my first day. 522 miles logged.