75 mile Reliability ride

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Did this today.....
With no real training or proper preparation...

Had to Bail at Stock as would not have made the Hanningfield Checkpoint before it closed...due to mis reading the Routecard finding myself in Hylands Park then having a Puncture from the Smashed bottles I just did not see in time.

Still make it back to the finish and although it wasn't the full route the mileage had crept over 75Miles and Riding time was 5hrs 37mins total time with stops 6hrs 42mins. I was impressed with those times.

Also impressed with the organisation and the other riders this will definetly be going on the Must Do Again List.
 

Tynan

Veteran
Location
e4
phew, home

we arrived on time but didn't allow time for checking in and coffee and toilet so can't have started before 9

took the very first turning wrong, followed by another couple who passed us and then turned back and gave my Etrex a very accusing look, I hadn't managed to get it going at that point, it was just recording, nothing else

3 miles out after riding across the raised path across the swolen ford I foolish hopped the curb back into the road and landed the rear wheel squarely on what must have been an horrific pothole hidden under the water, or a rock or a mine

shortly after the tyre was flat, while removing the tyre a ding you could get your thumb was found, I suinted at it with some doubt, as it turned out it was fne as long as you dind;t want to use the back brake, that made a noise like hittig the frame with a hammer without slowing the bike down, good in a way as the wheel is very tired and I'd have had it rebuilt this week but for funds

so, tube in and pumped up, only it's not up, clearly that's a repaired tube with more than one hole, bah, all apart again and up again and away, at a rather funeral pace, the lady wife's airy estimate of her flat average of 15mph was with hindsight wishful, we make check one with seconds to spare, hope springs

then we see we have 15 minutes before the next check closes and it's 10 miles away, tsk, they were good enough to call them and clearly they waited but they drove past us, with apologies, when we were a few miles short, oh well

we make check 3 at the town hall, looked like a nice village hall to me, three very nice old buffers were clearing up but sorted us two cuppas and a banana each and then threw in four more bananas for luck

we made check four again with seconds to spare but deserted but for dozens of bananna skins, oh well, a quick picture of a irritated and disappointed wife in front of the appointed check point and away again

we get round but there was a very near bonk drama which I was slow to see coming but just rescued by force feeding of fruit jellies and peanuts

the last hour ridden in darkness, not ideal when the last serious instruction, read under passing street light word by word was 'count the roads, take the seventh right'

the sram route holder was excellent, although in front of the bars would have been better

what of the etrex I hear you say, brilliant, it plain saved me twice when we were bowling along on a lovely surface and nearly sped past very discreet turnings and by the end when I was getting hacked off and it was gloomy, it absolutely got us back, at one point the lady wife as good as refused to ride further and I managed to prove that we were only 2km away from the end, money very well spent, I doubted once or twice because of the figure of eight route doubled on itself, the compass salved any fears on that score, and it of course counted those right hand turns for me

and much back light going on at the end

anyway, nice route although a dank, damp and gloomy day did rather depress the atmosphere, I swear I've never seen so many barns and grass triangles in my whole life, the route sheet was very good, as ever, some of it needed reading closely, I'd forgotten that every single extra word is in there for good reason, the people we actually saw at checks were good 'uns, I think Barry of Dunwich Dynamo fame did our forms at the starts

washed and dressed now and heading to the sister in law to collect our kids and eat a doubtless cracking dinner she's kindly laid on for us

I'm fine barring the usual slightly sore nethers and a sratched thumb, erm start at 9ish, got to the end 30 mins past the cut off, but we got round which works for me, doubtless the extrex has lots of details stored away, thankfully it's in km so our average speed looks respectable, my regular comp had it at 11mph which tallies with our long hours in the saddle I suppose

two dead or at least very sleepy badgers and the front half of a very dead fox spotted
 

stevevw

Guru
Location
Herts
3 miles out after riding across the raised path across the swolen ford I foolish hopped the curb back into the road and landed the rear wheel squarely on what must have been an horrific pothole hidden under the water, or a rock or a mine

shortly after the tyre was flat, while removing the tyre a ding you could get your thumb was found, I suinted at it with some doubt, as it turned out it was fne as long as you dind;t want to use the back brake, that made a noise like hittig the frame with a hammer without slowing the bike down, good in a way as the wheel is very tired and I'd have had it rebuilt this week but for funds

so, tube in and pumped up, only it's not up, clearly that's a repaired tube with more than one hole, bah, all apart again and up again and away, at a rather funeral pace, the lady wife's airy estimate of her flat average of 15mph was with hindsight wishful, we make check one with seconds to spare, hope springs

You should have rang Rox for a spare wheel :thumbsup:
 

ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
what of the etrex I hear you say, brilliant, it plain saved me twice when we were bowling along on a lovely surface and nearly sped past very discreet turnings and by the end when I was getting hacked off and it was gloomy, it absolutely got us back, at one point the lady wife as good as refused to ride further and I managed to prove that we were only 2km away from the end, money very well spent, I doubted once or twice because of the figure of eight route doubled on itself, the compass salved any fears on that score, and it of course counted those right hand turns for me

and much back light going on at the end
Welcome to the GPS club!

I prefer to use a headtorch for illuminating my GPS at night. I discovered that I can get oncoming drivers to dip their headlights by pointing the headtorch straight at them and flicking it down a couple of times - most of them take the hint!

Sounds like a good ride.
 

Tynan

Veteran
Location
e4
it's nice to be in the club, there was enough attention needed to the route sheet using the basic track without waypoints to keep things interesting

I understand the use of checking the map and adding waypoints as necessary now, where junctions were at narrow angles or in rapid succession in villages it was a bit uncertain

I did have a torch in the pannier and some tape to lash it on in case we had to finish in the dark but it was only the last 45 minutes in the proper dark so I went with backlight and street lights, and of course grim singleminded attention to getting the bloody ride finished

yes, I've always fancied a head light, they're always very noticeable when i see them on others
 
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