Thanks Abs for another excellent bit of organisation (and bringing an extra bottle for me!), and to everyone for a splendid day out. My Garmin data (for the route alone) is
here- 14.3 mph rolling average, top speed a mere 33.8. Pretty damn good I think considering all the climbing, and I was a bit more cautious descending than some of the others..given my, ahem, chequered history on that, particularly in Surrey, that's probably for the best!
A bit of a lie in compared to the Leicester ride- up at 5 for 6.32 train. Got everything ready, so I thought, ate, put the bag on the bike...made the train...realised bottle cages were empty. Whoops! Sent Abs a text to say I was on my way, and that I might be a bit late due to last-minute shopping trip. She kindly offered to take an extra bottle for me, which I'd augment with a trip to Tesco near the Arch. Train was bang on time, and made it just after User, I saw him turn in. Nipped in to Tesco for a couple of bottles of something or other- Powerade Cherry on special offer, so that's what I went for. Ian arrived, photo call..and then we were off.
Like Abs, I thought the pace to Gomshall was pretty remarkable, but the conditions were pretty much perfect. Not too windy, overcast (apart from the sun damage, I don't perform too well in the heat), and we all were keeping an excellent pace. Abs might have been feeling all those maladies, but she wasn't showing them in her turn of speed. Ant was doing well despite the wonky wheel, and User was winning a heroic battle with 19 missing gears and a malfunctioning freewheel
. It was much easier with a compact double and 12-25

Shere Hill was a good work out, but for me at least (with the right gearing and both bike and body working OK), it was pretty straightforward. Still glad for that most excellent lunch stop afterwards, that was a great choice. Steak and Ale pie was delicious and a good carb reload. Onwards and upwards we went. Pootled my way up Box Hill at 8-10 mph- again, straightforward enough, though I'm sure the Olympians will be hurting a bit on the last couple of laps. The pace stayed pretty high on the leg back north, I'm not surprised Ant flagged considering his earlier exertions. Six of us got back to Hyde Park, where Adam took his leave, before the rest completed the lap, after navigating our way round the bureaucratic nonsense of the Marathon route. It shouldn't take that long to set up....but for some reason it does. Stayed with Ian, Martin and Ross till Waterloo Bridge, and made the next train to Pompey with five minutes to spare. Back home 6.35.
And tomorrow, another 87 miles or so (56 mile route on the
Wiggle New Forest sportive, and I'm planning to ride out there- another 31 miles or so). Won't forget the bottles this time!
Roll on May!