bluenotebob
Veteran
- Location
- central Brittany, France
Not sure if I’m going to get out on my bike today – I’m suffering from facial neuralgia (possibly brought on by cycling into a very chilly north wind yesterday). I was up at 2am swallowing an enormous amount of paracetamol to kill the pain. If I don’t go out, it’ll be the first day I’ve missed in over two months – but if I do go out, it won’t significantly affect these stats for week 22.
Week 22: two HMCAM rides + 9 more local rides over 30 mins; distance cycled 235.21km
Weeks 1 to 22: total distance cycled 5528km
Here’s an alternative to the photo I posted on Friday in the HMCAM chatzone … Katie-Mae on the rigole d’Hilvern, north of St Gonnery. It’s taken me 7 years to work out how to get to St Gonnery .. but I finally found a way (a 30-minute drive in the van then roughly 22km on the bike). Now I’m intent on exploring the land between St Gonnery and St Caradec – and following the rigole is a perfect means of doing that. As I wrote in the other thread, it’s delightful cycling .. wooded, almost pan-flat and it wriggles across the countryside. Essentially, it’s a ditch carrying water from the lake at Bosméleac to feed the Nantes-to-Brest canal between the Oust and Blavet valleys. It runs for 62km and was built between 1832 and 1836. I think the oak and plane trees that line it are of a similar vintage. Wish I was back up there today …
Week 22: two HMCAM rides + 9 more local rides over 30 mins; distance cycled 235.21km
Weeks 1 to 22: total distance cycled 5528km
Here’s an alternative to the photo I posted on Friday in the HMCAM chatzone … Katie-Mae on the rigole d’Hilvern, north of St Gonnery. It’s taken me 7 years to work out how to get to St Gonnery .. but I finally found a way (a 30-minute drive in the van then roughly 22km on the bike). Now I’m intent on exploring the land between St Gonnery and St Caradec – and following the rigole is a perfect means of doing that. As I wrote in the other thread, it’s delightful cycling .. wooded, almost pan-flat and it wriggles across the countryside. Essentially, it’s a ditch carrying water from the lake at Bosméleac to feed the Nantes-to-Brest canal between the Oust and Blavet valleys. It runs for 62km and was built between 1832 and 1836. I think the oak and plane trees that line it are of a similar vintage. Wish I was back up there today …