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Good to have you along @Redlight you were a great companion and brought much to the group. Thanks for coming. The Fridays does have a reinvigorating effect, I think it's a combination of the mutual support, adrenalin and endorphins, not to mention the banter which is excellent.the London-Edinburgh-London
Southend, perhaps?there's a small chance of a ride on November 3
It was lovely! Sustrans niggles apart it's a ride well worth doing...just don't ride down from London to start it!That looks lovely.
Ha! I feel honoured to be asked, but I'm not going to get time for such a venture just yet....Great pix, @Fab Foodie - these are the sort of distances you'd be doing if you were training for a long ride. F'r instance, London to er, Scotland and back?(Asking for a friend, you understand.)
Mmmm Sarfend you say? I have a score to settle wiv Sarfend...Southend, perhaps?
As @Redlight may have seen on the other place, there's also a London-Pompey night ride on October 20, run by Hummers & likely to feature a number of LEL veterans.
Apropos of nothing but the mention of the Christmas ride reminded me, I have an idea for next year's theme....
You total star sir!@AlexB As discussed at breakfast, a route from Bognor to Pompey https://www.plotaroute.com/route/489670 should work pretty well.
With electric assistance you could get cold at times. When pedalling the body creates extra warmth so you don't feel the cold until you stop.Great pics!
I have to ask, in preparation for myself and my OH to join one of these rides next year, is it, you know, the done thing (ahem) to join in on an ebike?
This is most probably the only way we ( one of us, I won't say whom!) would be able to join up!
With electric assistance you could get cold at times. When pedalling the body creates extra warmth so you don't feel the cold until you stop.
Better put on some warm clothing or wire in some electric heated gloves.
Like this . . . . .I'm struggling to picture you in any sort of hat, let alone a 'bent deployed as one.
ETA - Top boggle for thinking outside of the box.
Like this . . . . . View attachment 371748
Here's how a taller person, such as @arallsopp, handles a lighter bike (although he did get an oily arm).Yeah, didn't really work. The whole bike wants to tip forwards, and the funky folding steerer wants to dangle downwards - which is no good for negotiating gates - or with some extra persuasion, occupy approximately the same space as my neck.
There's a photo of me doing the same manoeuvre with the Streetmachine somewhere. That actually worked, as the balance point is right in the base of the seat and the USS handlebars don't get in the way. I just needed a spotter to tell me what the back end was doing, and someone to operate the gate. Which worked out to be slightly easier than passing 24kg+bag of HPVelotechnik's finest German overengineering over a fence when most of the people involved have no real idea where the centre of mass is and the bike is covered in oily bits and non-structural grabbable-looking things.
If I was a several of inches taller, I wouldn't need the spotter.