Spiderweb
Not So Special One
- Location
- North Yorkshire
A 31 mile loop today on my old winter steed. Fab ride and a beautiful day.
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A geological ride - what a refreshing take on a familiar subject. I have been doing a number of meteorological rides of late, where I sample sun, rain, wind and hail all in one day.What a great day for cycling! The forecast was for patchy rain and very strong sout-westerly winds. Neither appeared. Instead it was breezy, alternately grey and blue skies and just spiffing.
I went for a geological journey south of London.
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Over the North Downs (Titsey) over the Greensand Ridge (Crockham Hill) over the Ashdown Sands (Ashdown Forest) Turned around with the South Downs in view (Ringmer). Stopped for coffee in Lindfield (Field & Forrest cafe) Back over the sandy middle (Turner's Hill) over the western remnants of the Greensand Ridge (Bletchingley) and back up and over the North Downs (Ganger's Hill)
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(clockwise loop)
As I often do, I took the train for the last 10k home, as it's a dull suburban trudge. Turned out to be sensible as I watched a massive hailstorm from the train window.I have been doing a number of meteorological rides of late, where I sample sun, rain, wind and hail all in one day.
A geological ride - what a refreshing take on a familiar subject. I have been doing a number of meteorological rides of late, where I sample sun, rain, wind and hail all in one day.
I too have been doing some meteorological rides this year. There was the wet one, then the really wet one, then a quite damp one followed by three more wet ones.
Today I introduced one of my clubmates to winter audaxing. He's a much stronger rider than me, but he said it was the toughest ride he'd ever done. It wasn't the terrain (which was reasonably flat), but the weather. Drizzle to start with, followed by ever increasing persistent light rain. All of it cold. By the time we finished the 108.7km "Windrush Winter Warm-up" audax, my jacket weighed at least twice as much as it did at the start ... as did my hat, my gloves, my overshoes ... everything. I lost count of the number of times I squeezed the rainwater out of my gloves, and my feet were soaking wet. The cold got to us both, and Rich was visibly shaking by the end. Neither of us could produce a convincing signature on the brevet cards at the finish. Thank goodness for all those lovely volunteers with regular mugs of hot tea at all the control points.
A very slow time of 6 hours 59 mins for my 67.6 miles today .... partly because of the cold, and the need to warm up at the rest stations, and partly because of a couple of punctures. We were sitting nicely in the middle of the leading peloton at the 15 mile mark, only for Rich to have a blow out as he went over a piece of flint. Wave goodbye to that crowd. After about 10 minutes another big group passed us, also never to be seen again. We got moving again eventually, and reckoned we couln't be more that 5 minutes adrift of the second group when we came across another rider with a puncture in Standlake. I of course offered my help, and unfortunately he accepted it! Two inner tubes and another 20 minutes later, we finally hit the road again, and only ever overtook about 4 or 5 other riders all day.
As ever, beautiful scenery and some lovely villages (I can recommend Minster Lovell near Witney, and Little Barrington near Burford). This was the route:
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Sadly no photos, as my camera was as steamed up as I was. Despite the grim weather, this was an enjoyable ride in good company. I think Rich got the audax bug, despite the cold. My lovely "flatnav" was in a real state by the end, with my route sheet soaked through and falling to bits View attachment 335463
Well, I've finally done it .... I've done more that the basic one qualifying ride a month for the Metric Century-a-Month Challenge. (Maybe I won't be the Lanterne Rouge this year!)
May all your rides be drier than this one.
Cheers, Donger.