Lands end to John O'Groats

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jonny jeez

jonny jeez

Legendary Member
Thanks @jonny jeez Great write up. I'm booked to ride LEJOG in September this year, and your posts are informative and inspiring. Need to keep reminding myself to keep getting the training miles in.

Are you riding supported via an organiser or unsupported? I ask because September is when Discovery Adventure do one of their tours.

You'll have a great time, the blog is a very light weight version of what happened, there were so many fantastic moments, so many times when you just felt like this was all you want to do all day...every day.

What's more, every time I go out on the bike I recall the amazing feeling of sweeping down Shap fell, or rolling across the A897 from Helmsdale...or slogging along Loch Ness in the sheeting rain...
 
Great write up. I'm still not going to do LeJog but I enjoyed reading about you doing it :smile: Impressive pics from your phone too and you've a good eye for a pic.
 

Steve H

Large Member
Are you riding supported via an organiser or unsupported? I ask because September is when Discovery Adventure do one of their tours.
I'm doing the Deloitte sponsored Ride Across Britain event in September. A fully supported event with 700 riders. The scary part is its a 9 day event so every day is over 100 miles. I'm hoping for those winds you mention that should come from the SW and we should be able to get some good chain gangs going to share the workload.
 
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jonny jeez

jonny jeez

Legendary Member
I'm doing the Deloitte sponsored Ride Across Britain event in September. A fully supported event with 700 riders. The scary part is its a 9 day event so every day is over 100 miles. I'm hoping for those winds you mention that should come from the SW and we should be able to get some good chain gangs going to share the workload.
700!!...that should be awesome.
If the "fridays" can do it in five days, i reckon you'll be fine with 9, very jealous now.
 

theloafer

Legendary Member
Location
newton aycliffe
@jonny jeez ... Great write up and pics .. have done it twice for my 40th+50th b/days and working on my third :ohmy: but joggle next year for my 60th .... its a dam good ride and is the best way to see our beautiful country...congrats ..:bravo:
 

joggingbob

Well-Known Member
Location
Essex
Excellent write-up, informative and entertaining and with great photos. It is tempting.....
 

Fubar

Guru
Fantastic write-up, very, very tempting though in my head I would do it unsupported (dunno quite why I think that?!?) and I've no idea if the missus would agree to it! But your blog really really makes me want to do it - thanks!
 

Fubar

Guru
Post 5. Preparation.

With thanks (I think) to "Craigs Beginners Guide" over in the US, here are a few rules to help the uninitiated, including me, understand what its like to be a Long Distance Cyclist. I'm not sure its helping to motivate me, but it made me chuckle
...and then sob
Step 1: Get a spaghetti-strainer and several small sponges. Soak the sponges in salt-water and paste them to the inside of the spaghetti-strainer. Place the strainer on your head. Find a busy road. Stand by the side of the road and do deep knee-bends for 8 hours. This will acclimatize you to a day’s ride.

Step 2: Take some sandpaper and rub your rear-end and the insides of your legs for about 20 minutes. Rinse with salt-water. Repeat. Then, sit on a softball for 8 hours. Do this daily.

Step 3: Each day, take two twenty-dollar bills and tear them into small pieces. Place the pieces on a dinner-plate, douse them with lighter fluid and burn them. Inhale the smoke (simulating car-fumes). Rub the ashes on your face. Then go to the local motel and ask them for a room.

Step 4: Take a 1-quart plastic bottle. Fill it from the utility sink of a local gas-station (where the mechanics wash their hands). Let the bottle sit in the sun for 2 or 3 hours until it’s good and tepid. Seal the bottle up (kinda, sorta) and drag it through a ditch or swamp. Walk to a busy road. Place your spaghetti-strainer on your head and drink the swill-water from the bottle while doing deep knee-bends along the side of the road.

Step 5: Get some of those Dutch wooden-shoes. Coat the bottoms with gear-oil. Go to the local supermarket (preferably one with tile floors). Put the oil-coated, wooden shoes on your feet and go shopping.

Step 6: Think of a song from the 1980′s that you really hated. Buy the CD and play 20 seconds of that song over and over and over for about 6 hours. Do more deep knee-bends.

Step 7: Hill training: Do your deep knee-bends for about 4 hours with the salt-soaked spagetti-strainer on your head, while you drink the warm swill-water and listen to the 80′s song over and over (I would recommend “I’m a cowboy/On a STEEL horse I ride!” by Bon Jovi). At the end of 4 hours, climb onto the hood of a friend’s car and have him drive like a lunatic down the twistiest road in the area while you hang on for dear life.

Step 8: Humiliation training: Wash your car and wipe it down with a chamois-cloth. Make sure you get a healthy amount of residual soap and road-grit embedded in the chamois. Put the chamois on your body like a loin-cloth, then wrap your thighs and middle-section with cellophane. Make sure it’s really snug. Paint yourself from the waist down with black latex paint. Cut an onion in half and rub it into your arm-pits. Put on a brightly colored shirt and your Dutch oil-coated wooden shoes and go shopping at a crowded local mall.

Step 9: Foul weather training: Take everything that’s important to you, pack it in a Nylon bag and place it in the shower. Get in the shower with it. Run the water from hot to cold. Get out and without drying off, go to the local convenience store. Leave the wet, important stuff on the sidewalk. Go inside and buy $10 worth of Gatorade and Fig Newtons.

Step 10: Headwinds training: Buy a huge map of the entire country. Spread it in front of you. Have a friend hold a hair-dryer in your face. Stick your feet in toffee and try to pull your knees to your chest while your friend tries to shove you into a ditch or into traffic with his free hand. Every 20 minutes or so, look at the huge map and marvel at the fact that you have gone nowhere after so much hard work and suffering. Fold the map in front of a window-fan set to “High”.

Oh aye, and this is funny as... :laugh:
 

Ajax_Gaz

Shut up Legs!
Location
Cardiff
Just spent a while reading through your adventure. Really well written, captured the highs, lows, emotions and just a fantastic journey! I've got my own challenge in a couple of months but would love to do LEJOG one day too.
 
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jonny jeez

jonny jeez

Legendary Member
Just spent a while reading through your adventure. Really well written, captured the highs, lows, emotions and just a fantastic journey! I've got my own challenge in a couple of months but would love to do LEJOG one day too.
I hope you do, its been one of the most enjoyable achievements of my life so far...and I don't say that lightly.

What was your challenge..was it the L2P?
 

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
Thanks for this Jonny. Its a great write up with great photos and loads of useful information.

Jannie and I are thinking about it for next year but it will be a slow bimble over 3 or 4 weeks as we get distracted easily.

You have created a lovely memory for yourself. Whats next in the pipeline because it sounds like you have caught the bug?

Which camera were you using?
 
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