FNRttC Bristol to Barry Island Friday 5th May 2017

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

ianmac62

Guru
Location
Northampton
IMG_1487.JPG
IMG_1488.JPG
IMG_1489.JPG
55A56D5D-1062-4D9A-A411-9DC7309FBD71.jpg
Splendid ride, excellent company! Well done, @User482!

The lovely people at Pizza Express Bristol Harbourside didn't mind latecomers who didn't buy anything but sat down, used the loos, and put on an extra layer. It wasn't a mild night for May. College Green a good meeting place. And the climb up Park Street surprised me as I had been dreading it and it turned out to be very straightforward. Then over the Clifton Suspension Bridge - another tick! The Avonmouth bridge was lovely too - and the way there through little lanes and some sort of village waterfront was excellent. I'd been over the Severn Bridge once before (in the same direction too) but this time we pedalled on the "wrong" side of the road - or so it seemed to me - so another tick!

I was surprised by the flatlands around Newport - never expected that! And at that point @Flying Dodo lent me a rear light (schoolboy error on my part). And for a midway break that café was unique in so many ways! Great conversations with several people meant that, helped by a lovely tailwind, the miles flew by. On to Cardiff and a tourist stop at the Millennium Centre and my first ride over the barrage at the head of Cardiff Bay - another tick - enlightened by local knowledge expounded by @EatSleepRideRepeat. And on to Barry Island: funfair, sea-front café, promenade, public toilets beside a climbing wall and Gavin & Stacey.

Then @Flying Dodo explained some of the complexities of advance tickets to me and I was on an Arriva Wales train (oh the warmth!) and, while the hardened drinkers sought out the bright lights of Cardiff, I was swiftly on my way to Birmingham chatting to convivial strangers. A well-executed change of trains at New Street saw me back in Northampton before 1 p.m.

Really good - thanks again, @User482!

P.S. I was going to add, "We'll see you next year!" to @StuAff to welcome Portsmouth to the third tier but it applies to the ride: "We'll see Bristol next year!"
 

Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
I had a couple of weird sleep deprivation moments, when reality ceased to make sense.

On meeting @Flying Dodo at Cardiff station I noticed that he had a bike with him (you know one of those things with two big wheels). I was overcome by panic that I should have such a thing with me, not recognising that the folded up thing with small wheels that I was trundling around with was a bike.

Then after getting home I made a valiant attempt to watch the Giro and woke up to see some football on TV. I spent a while seriously wondering if it was real football or a computer simulation. I fell asleep again without coming to a conclusion.
 
OP
OP
U

User482

Guest
“I can almost see the appeal.”

When they publish the history of the FNRttC , this 3am endorsement from my wife, on her first ever night ride, is going to feature prominently on the dust jacket.

This ride had a long gestation, going back to 2011 and the inaugural Cardiff-Swansea ride. Destinations were considered and dropped as too far, too hilly or lacking easy access to trains. Babies arrived and time went. Fast-forward to 2016, a family day at the seaside in Barry Island and the penny dropped: this was definitely something that could be made to work. Possible routes were plotted, ridden, discarded, re-plotted and re-ridden. Magor services was discarded in favour of a local café whose owner quite staggeringly answered “yes” at the first time of asking. I wanted a ride that would speak of its place, and what better way to do that than ride its bridges.

So, to the beginning: for the first time ever I was able to take a pre-ride snooze, not leaving home until nearly 11pm for an amble to Pizza Express and rendezvous with the pre-ride meet-up. A short cut through by the Cathedral, on to College Green and time for the safety briefing and official departure. Col de Park Street may have mixed reviews at the very beginning of the ride, but it transported us to the quickest and most spectacular exit from the city via Clifton Suspension Bridge: London peeps may be surprised to learn that we were in North Somerset at 12.20.

We descended to the mouth of the Avon, crossing via the motorway bridge, and the biggest climb of the night through Shirehampton. From there it was quiet lanes, following routes very familiar to locals, and out to meet the estuary. Rain briefly threatened in defiance of the forecast, but soon blew through. A splash and dash at Aust services then onward to the Severn Crossing (which actually crosses the Wye too), eerily quiet as it was shut to traffic, and into Wales. Some sketchy lanes, a short climb and a nice, easy-rolling section all the way to Magor with the wind at our backs, as having ridden up one side of the estuary, we rode down the other.

Shortly before the stop, the FNRttC system broke down: I had sent an advance party to the café to make serving the food easier, but part of the group got detached and lost their way due to a lack of waymarkers. I was just remembering that there is no phone signal in the area, and preparing to race after them when I saw headlights in the distance. Speaking of waymarkers, if you want to ride at the front with me, you need to take your turn when asked. The guilty parties know who they are.

It went pretty well at Goldcliff. Wendy dispensed hot food and drinks with efficiency and enthusiasm, and most were taken by the charming collection of kitsch paraphernalia and the wind chimes. Warmth was somewhat lacking, but in my view it easily beats the alternative of the motorway services

Out into the dawn and through Newport, following a last-minute route change due to roadworks on the A48. That meant missing out on my fascinating talk about the wonders of the Transporter bridge, which will have to wait for another time. Having negotiated some perfunctory urban road and the bridge over the Usk, it was onto St Brides Rd, which made up for its sketchy surface by being quiet and completely flat. By this point I realized that an absence of mechanicals and a strong tail wind was going to have us at the finish about an hour before the café opened, so the pace was slowed, giving riders the opportunity to study the craters and speed bumps that bedevil the route into Cardiff.

From there it was down to the splendid-looking Millennium Centre and across the barrage with Flat Holm and Steep Holm visible in the distance. Up through Penarth and the final five miles were at best functional: I have a plan for a more scenic route to the finish. Arriving at Marco’s Café (graced by the man himself) a little early, we admired the fine promenade and beach, and then devoured coffee and bacon baguettes, though the lack of warm shelter did take its toll on many of us, and arrangements were hastily made for drinks in Cardiff.

All in all, I think this was a success. I’ve had some nice messages from some riders who had never ridden more than fifty miles, some riders who had never done a night ride, and some riders who had never done either. That’s good enough for me, and if we can find room for it, I think we’ll do it again in 2018.
 

Archeress

Veteran
Location
Bristol
“I can almost see the appeal.”

When they publish the history of the FNRttC , this 3am endorsement from my wife, on her first ever night ride, is going to feature prominently on the dust jacket.

This ride had a long gestation, going back to 2011 and the inaugural Cardiff-Swansea ride. Destinations were considered and dropped as too far, too hilly or lacking easy access to trains. Babies arrived and time went. Fast-forward to 2016, a family day at the seaside in Barry Island and the penny dropped: this was definitely something that could be made to work. Possible routes were plotted, ridden, discarded, re-plotted and re-ridden. Magor services was discarded in favour of a local café whose owner quite staggeringly answered “yes” at the first time of asking. I wanted a ride that would speak of its place, and what better way to do that than ride its bridges.

So, to the beginning: for the first time ever I was able to take a pre-ride snooze, not leaving home until nearly 11pm for an amble to Pizza Express and rendezvous with the pre-ride meet-up. A short cut through by the Cathedral, on to College Green and time for the safety briefing and official departure. Col de Park Street may have mixed reviews at the very beginning of the ride, but it transported us to the quickest and most spectacular exit from the city via Clifton Suspension Bridge: London peeps may be surprised to learn that we were in North Somerset at 12.20.

We descended to the mouth of the Avon, crossing via the motorway bridge, and the biggest climb of the night through Shirehampton. From there it was quiet lanes, following routes very familiar to locals, and out to meet the estuary. Rain briefly threatened in defiance of the forecast, but soon blew through. A splash and dash at Aust services then onward to the Severn Crossing (which actually crosses the Wye too), eerily quiet as it was shut to traffic, and into Wales. Some sketchy lanes, a short climb and a nice, easy-rolling section all the way to Magor with the wind at our backs, as having ridden up one side of the estuary, we rode down the other.

Shortly before the stop, the FNRttC system broke down: I had sent an advance party to the café to make serving the food easier, but part of the group got detached and lost their way due to a lack of waymarkers. I was just remembering that there is no phone signal in the area, and preparing to race after them when I saw headlights in the distance. Speaking of waymarkers, if you want to ride at the front with me, you need to take your turn when asked. The guilty parties know who they are.

It went pretty well at Goldcliff. Wendy dispensed hot food and drinks with efficiency and enthusiasm, and most were taken by the charming collection of kitsch paraphernalia and the wind chimes. Warmth was somewhat lacking, but in my view it easily beats the alternative of the motorway services

Out into the dawn and through Newport, following a last-minute route change due to roadworks on the A48. That meant missing out on my fascinating talk about the wonders of the Transporter bridge, which will have to wait for another time. Having negotiated some perfunctory urban road and the bridge over the Usk, it was onto St Brides Rd, which made up for its sketchy surface by being quiet and completely flat. By this point I realized that an absence of mechanicals and a strong tail wind was going to have us at the finish about an hour before the café opened, so the pace was slowed, giving riders the opportunity to study the craters and speed bumps that bedevil the route into Cardiff.

From there it was down to the splendid-looking Millennium Centre and across the barrage with Flat Holm and Steep Holm visible in the distance. Up through Penarth and the final five miles were at best functional: I have a plan for a more scenic route to the finish. Arriving at Marco’s Café (graced by the man himself) a little early, we admired the fine promenade and beach, and then devoured coffee and bacon baguettes, though the lack of warm shelter did take its toll on many of us, and arrangements were hastily made for drinks in Cardiff.

All in all, I think this was a success. I’ve had some nice messages from some riders who had never ridden more than fifty miles, some riders who had never done a night ride, and some riders who had never done either. That’s good enough for me, and if we can find room for it, I think we’ll do it again in 2018.
Thank you @User482 I really enjoyed the ride and smashed some personal records.

20170506_075133.jpg


I never thought I'd be able to ride near the front as I did for many miles, and I never thought I'd be one of the waymarkers on a couple of occasions.

Thank you for encouraging me to come along. If I can make the finances work I may be seen at another FNRTTC this year.

Hugs
Archeress x
 
OP
OP
U

User482

Guest
Thank you @User482 I really enjoyed the ride and smashed some personal records.

View attachment 351446

I never thought I'd be able to ride near the front as I did for many miles, and I never thought I'd be one of the waymarkers on a couple of occasions.

Thank you for encouraging me to come along. If I can make the finances work I may be seen at another FNRTTC this year.

Hugs
Archeress x
I was surprised when you said that was the furthest you'd ridden as you seemed to take it in your stride. Hope to see you on another FNRttC.
 

Floating Bombus

Well-Known Member
I've just joined the forum to comment on this ride. So firstly, hello! The ride was excellent, I really enjoyed it. The feeling of riding at dead of night in a large group of cyclists on normally busy roads that are so quiet is a wonderful one. Although pretty much everything east of Newport was familiar to me, it all looks – and sounds, smells and generally feels – different at night. There seems to have been some (minor) criticism of the route out of Bristol. Well, it's not the route I would have taken, but it was all the better for that. A large part of the point of rides organised by other people is to take and discover the roads they use rather than the ones you already know. You might like them, you might incorporate them into your own rides; or you might not, but if you don't take it, you won't know. Good to be able to put some names (at least forum ones) to the faces I met too, thanks to this thread.
 
Top Bottom