"Cycling & Mopeds" was even more interesting - used to read my Dad's copy.Cycling (before they added 'Weekly') was the cycling magazine. Event reports, results, interesting articles about touring and other stuff, and cryptic small ads in the back.
"Cycling & Mopeds" was even more interesting - used to read my Dad's copy.Cycling (before they added 'Weekly') was the cycling magazine. Event reports, results, interesting articles about touring and other stuff, and cryptic small ads in the back.
Why - ? because it didn''t appeal to the obsessed cyclists.How do you manage after 100 miles then, on an excursion which does not include going home every 40 minutes? @YukonBoy 's long rides are probably 1000km+.I bring one bottle of water for every 10 miles. If I do more than 20 miles I will leave an extra water bottle outside my house so I can stop and pick it up quickly and continue on my ride.
How do you manage after 100 miles then, on an excursion which does not include going home every 40 minutes? @YukonBoy 's long rides are probably 1000km+.
I stopped buying mags. altogether, just got fed up of trying to fight through the silent mob of homeless page flippers who hang out in newsagents shops during the dayI occasionally flip through these ridiculously expensive magazines on the store bookshelves, then invariably decide not to
.
.I stopped buying mags. altogether, just got fed up of trying to fight through the silent mob of homeless page flippers who hang out in newsagents shops during the day.
Sorry Rusty.

...of Razzle while he was distracted reading Cycling & Mopeds."Cycling & Mopeds" was even more interesting - used to read my Dad's copy...
I'd love to see table tennis as the next "New Golf". I've been playing TT almost as long as I have been racing TT's. In my local league, when I started in 1971, there was 9 divisions, but over the years with small industries declining and firms shutting down and TT clubs closing, last year we were down to just 3 divisions. And with the current lockdown restrictions, there will be even less teams taking part in the forthcoming winter season.Once upon a time the writers in cycling mags were lifelong cyclists who'd been there, done that, got the T shirt. Most now seem to be kids straight from college who happened to pick a cycling magazine to write for because it is the fashionable thing to do. They lack any depth of knowledge, have little idea of the history of the sport and write articles padded out with all the latest buzz words lifted from the sales brochures.
They could just as easily be writing about games consoles or table tennis, and probably will be if either of them become the next "New golf".