In praise of the short ride

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I don't really end up doing many shorter rides. I used to, but living 20 miles from work means that I don't often have the evenings free. Commuting is often my shorter ride.
 

Jimidh

Veteran
Location
Midlothian
If I have a spare hour I'll either take the CX or MTB for a spin. I have a nice 15 mile route in the Pentlands which has a couple of good climbs and a technical descent to finish. Perfect on a nice evening after work.
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Very familiar with 'Family TT's'. Right on the Peaks here, and start hitting hills within minutes. A nice 90 minute ride is Romiley, Marple Bridge, 'Col du Mellor', New Mills, Hayfield, Chunal climb, at top over to Charlesworth, down into Broadbottom, climb out then a choice of a longer climb or up the infamous Gorsey Brow, then a steady 5 miles back home. It's 26 miles or so, 2600ft of climbing and takes about 1 hour 45.

Other rides are out round the lanes near Middlewood, Higher Poynton, The Brickworks, Moorside Hotel, Disley and back. Again 25 is miles and similar climbing.
 
My average ride time is 50 minutes. I only extend it when I have an aim and I tend to get bored and fed up around the 5 or 6 hour mark. It has been ever thus.
 

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
A good post.........nice idea.
There is a ride from my house (in north Warrington) that is 12-16 miles and definitely NOT for a road bike. The first mile is through housing estates then I go between a golf course......a of mile of road with houses on one side and farm land on t'other........1 mile down a traffic free lane....around a big roundabout junction of the M62 then down a rough farm road for 3-4 miles. Then back again. TBH that does break your rules (if I do the full route) but I can cut it short.
There is also a nice 10 mile loop that follows the first one for 3 miles then branches off through roads which are semi-rural.......very nice.
 

tatr

Senior Member
Living in the city means it is a 12 mile ride each way to the closest bit of countryside, so to get a decent percentage of nice riding I need to go for at least 60 miles / 3 hours. This is why I hugely object to more urban sprawl.

On the "wife TT" front a loop Waterloo-Elephant&Castle-Blackfriars-Parliament-Vauxhall-Waterloo on a Boris Bike mostly on the new cycle lanes is actually great fun. My goal is to break an 18mph moving average when the new lanes are fully finished which will be hard even on the newer bikes.
 

2IT

Everything and everyone suffers in comparisons.
Location
Georgia, USA
So, what's your favourite short ride and why? It can just be a few minutes long, but I'm going to put an arbitrary maximum limit of 1hr 2 minutes, which is the personal best for mine.

Mine is a 2.8 mile figure 8 about 2 miles from the house. I can repeat the 2.8 going one direction and then the other. Usually keep my eye on the watch to see if my loops are getting faster or slower. Mini-time trials making up a larger one. What's great about short rides is that they can be rather automatic which means you don't miss many days.

Scenic too with a military academy to pass and then down to a turnaround at the lake. Then a steady climb of 4-7% for a mile before a flat section with light traffic and bike lane. Followed by steep curvy downhill in the shade with squirrels and sometimes a dog or deer. Short up hill and then run down to the lake. Figure 8 back up the short steep uphill that goes from 5% to 14% and then back to 5% before the flat and then downhill past the military academy and to the lake.

Have been riding this for awhile and the hill training has helped me stay with the A group in local club rides. A couple intense short rides during the week are well worth it. Don't miss them. Make them automatic.
 

tatr

Senior Member
18 mph on a Boris bike?

Could somebody drug-test that man please?

Sustained top speed on the flat 20mph and I have Strava to prove it ^_^

(I'm not superman - they've changed the gearing on a few of the bikes. Still pretty spinny though.)
 

Moodyman

Legendary Member
Most of my cycling is either the commute (28 miles daily) or 50+ mile weekend rides (rare). So it's usually Lycra and road bikes.

Today, I went into town to run some errands on my 90s MTB and wearing normal clothes and shoes. It was only 4 miles round trip but lovely not having to change and just pootling along.
 
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