Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Walking the Streets of Derry Going the Wrong Way

They say that walking is good for helping people sleep.  Well, if that’s true, then I should pass out easily and sleep well tonight as I put in three hours of intense walking today, mostly going the wrong direction, and another hour touring the Walled City of Londonderry.

The day began with advice received yesterday from locals on which way was north.  They had no idea, but assured me that the direction in which my finger was pointing was, in fact, the direction of the City Centre.  And so began my first attempt to walk to the City Centre.  I hiked down the hill from the university to the Strand Road and turned left.  Fifteen minutes later, as I ascended a hill that never seemed to end, I stopped to rest at a bus stop for folks going the other direction.  There, I met a lovely older woman named May who, after a short chat, informed me that 1) I was no longer on the Strand Road; 2) the City Centre was in the opposite direction of the way I was going, and 3) I was in luck, because a bus would be arriving soon at that very stop and it could take me to the City Centre.
 
And so it did.  Sort of.  The bus stopped at the bottom of the steepest hill I had had the pleasure of walking so far.  I was hoping the bus would take me closer to my destination, but when the driver shut off the engine, and all of the passengers, except me, exited the bus, I knew I was out of luck.  Not being exactly sure where I was, I asked the driver for directions to Bishop Street.  He pointed up the hill and assured me that near the top I would find Bishop Street.  And he was right.

Arriving at the Peace and Reconciliation Group office, I apologized for my tardiness while humorously describing my morning’s antics.  My supervisor was understanding and provided me with several points of advice should I ever wish to try walking again.  Apparently, I missed the finer details of his advice as my walking home trip in the afternoon turned into a two-hour endurance test combined with a refusal to bail myself out by calling a cab or taking a bus. 

Specifically, after slowly and carefully navigating down the steep hill away from the City Centre, I turned right and began enjoying a leisurely walk along the River Foyle.  I was delighted to get my first real look at the Peace Bridge, but decided I would walk it another day as I didn’t want to tire myself out for the walk home.  Ah, the irony.  After about 30 minutes of walking, I noticed a sign indicating that I was on the Foyle Road.  This wasn’t right.  I was supposed to be on the Queen’s Quay (pronounced quee).  It was time to pull out the map and review my progress.  As you may have guessed, I had gone the wrong way.  And so, I turned around, walked back past the steep hill leading to the City Centre, past the Peace Bridge, and onward the rest of the way home.

In my next installment, I will explain (and provide a video) about the city’s extensive use of roundabouts, and how everyone who drives them has no problem, but for newcomers, they can be very disorienting.  I really believe this is why I turned the wrong way.  The bus ride in, which included going through a number of roundabouts, must have messed up my sense of direction.  That’s my story anyway and I’m sticking to it.


Perhaps the main thing I discovered today was that the locals drive cars everywhere they go and, therefore, consider everything to be close and convenient.  What they don’t seem to realize is how different the experience is for someone traveling on foot.

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