UNWELCOME BREAKS
by Dave Randle
Whether because ‘tiredness kills’, as the signs have it, or
because it is again necessary to charge up our ravening electric vehicle, we
are more and more dependent on motorway services for our succour and
sustenance.
If not the oldest profession, feeding travellers is a long
established and happily symbiotic activity that, over the centuries, has
responded to the specific needs of our methods of travel.
The Inns that served the pedestrian pilgrims and drovers,
those on horseback and the carriage trade have adapted and survived or slipped
into history on roads that have become byways to the barren non-stop motorways
of today.
Those roads themselves were once the trunk roads of the
country, the primary network connecting vital centres through the constant rumble
of lorries and coaches. Inns and pubs along the way couldn’t always offer much
in the way of parking for these vehicles and were limited in their opening
hours, so ‘transport cafés’ began to spring up offering tea, something a bit
like coffee and food that could be cooked and delivered quickly to fit in with
people’s schedules.
Often regarded as ‘greasy spoons’, they none the less
provided freshly cooked ingredients and chips made from actual potatoes.
More civilised ‘family friendly’ roadside food stops began
to join them - Little Chef and Happy Eater offered similar fare but dripping
free and identifiable from a photograph.
The arrival of motorways brought another element. Motorway
services inevitably have an armlock on the traveller. Once you’re in the
system, you can’t go wandering off. You have to have what you’re given at
prices based on ‘take it or leave it’.
For a long while, at least what you were given was suitable
to purpose. You could normally get a hot meal and the chance to sit and let the
asphalt in your mind unwind. A breakfast or some kind of mid-Atlantic ‘brunch’,
half a chicken with chips and gravy - even a decent pie. If all you wanted was
a tasteless, salt-free egg and cress sarny, you could have that too. And there
was even the option of grilled floor-scrapings in a bun for those with their
hats on backwards.
Not all were consistent by a long way. There was a Granada
on the M1 where I don’t think they ever washed the dishes. And anyone who
offered to buy you lunch at Clackett Lane should have been given an ASBO. But,
when you began to tire of the middle lane, or the Jeremy Vine show came on, you
could usually be sure of some refreshment, some boost of protein, something
heartwarming and substantial to fortify you before you repassed all the wide
loads and logisticians you left behind you before the retreat.
When all my family was gathered together at a safe distance
in Devon, Fleet Services was almost a second home. Ideally placed on the M3 to
celebrate another lifetime on the A303 and the plain sailing of the M25 and M20
in prospect. A man can dream.
It used to be run by an outfit called ‘Welcome Break’ and
very welcome it usually was.
Then, suddenly, we arrived there on a particularly bloody
and hot journey to find the place taken over by aliens. Totally shattered and
levels at zero, we made our way to the accompaniment of irritating music from
one purveyor of toxic chemicals to another. Where once had been dining areas,
now were bare tables occupied by bloodless souls eating crud out of cardboard.
Some had been allowed plastic forks, but all were being treated as if they had
learned their table manners from old PG Tips adverts.
I needed sustenance, and I needed it then, but I almost ran
the risk of sleep or unconsciousness to return to the road to salvation.
How have we come to this? I have since had the misfortune to
visit other disservices on the motorway network no better than Fleet.
At the time, I accepted defeat and, after thoroughly
examining all the available ‘products’, I settled for some KFC chicken. We used
to buy pots of this when we came out of clubs at midnight and had lost all
sense of judgement. They had a cheap deal they called a ‘standard’. I used to
order a ‘substandard’, which was even cheaper and didn’t have one of the more
lamentable ingredients. Never knew what any of it tasted like and usually woke
up the next morning for work with a breaded chicken drumstick up my nose.
All the staff at Fleet are American-speaking Chinese and
very anxious to serve. I could not fault the politeness with which my waitress
(if that’s the word - maybe she’s a grillista)
explained that I was not entitled to a plate, a knife and fork, salt and pepper
or, clearly, anything with which I could do any imaginable damage - even to the
chicken. A drink to go with it was off-the-boil water with a teabag on a string
in a cardboard cup. Squash it yourself, top it up with disgusting see-through
skimmed milk and throw the whole bloody thing in a bin, from whence it will
presumably be recycled into toilet paper.
I shudder to think what visiting French people make of it
all. Their side of the Channel, you can be sure of something freshly cooked and
nutritious almost anywhere, including services on the autoroutes for less than
ten of their strange euros.
Regarding the fare to be confronted in these parts, one
imagines them inquiring: ‘Does one eat it, or has one eaten it already?’
No comments:
Post a Comment