presta
Legendary Member
How early is early?Does no one ever contemplate leaving early just in case?
How early is early?Does no one ever contemplate leaving early just in case?
How early is early?
Things are not always quite as newspapers report.I know you are joking but I did read of a, to me ridiculous, case where a farmer was held liable when his cows trampled and badly injured or killed a walker. Cows aren't really un unreasonable hazard to encounter in a field
Things are not always quite as newspapers report.
I know of two cases where people have faced serious charges when cows trampled and killed pedestrians, both reported as ridiculous in tabloids.
The first was when a fire engine tried to hurry up cows on the road by using their lights and sirens. Predictably the cattle stampeded and a human death resulted.
The second was a farmer trying to hurry up their cows with a similar result.
The details matter.
I know you are joking but I did read of a, to me ridiculous, case where a farmer was held liable when his cows trampled and badly injured or killed a walker. Cows aren't really un unreasonable hazard to encounter in a field just like one might encounter a cliff if climbing Ben Nevis and walkers should be prepared to react appropriately if they get a bit frisky, particularly if you have a dog with you as cows tend to intensely dislike dogs.
To be fair there is that, and I may well be ill informed on the details. And I concede you could just be unlucky even though if I am fairly relaxed around cows, though once got cornered by bullocks and had to wave my anorak at them to get past. A friend was quite badly cut up in barbed wire trying to escape them after being chased, but on getting home all bloody and in tears, instead of the hoped for sympathy her country-raised fiancee's comment was "You stupid girl, you should have waved your arms and shouted 'shoo!' at them".
Sheep are my limit. I won't enter a field with horses or cows. Can result in some interesting detours.
Quite a difficult one tbh. The southern side of the A6 is a bit more naff. But Cumbria is a very nice section indeed, and you've got the Peak District too.
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The A1, at 637 km, would be an epic journey, although obviously you need to allow the old route (Great North Road) for it to even be possible. And still end up with a lot of nasty sections of dual carriageway.
The A2 - mostly dual carriageway. My interest in it is Watling Street, which allows - no, requires - older sections where feasible.
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The A3 - mostly nasty. You get the Surrey Hills, but avoiding the Hindhead Tunnel is an additional faff.
The A4 - Mostly a very nice ride, some hills, but a well engineered road. 200 km, so a challenging day out. Time it right so that you do London-Reading at a quiet time of day, hopefully Bath-Avonmouth falls at a quiet time too.
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This is local enough to me that it would be my go-to road to one-shot one of the nine.
A5 - Watling Street again. Busy and nasty sections again, but I think you could make it work. Awesome in Snowdonia.
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A7 - Short and sweet, 150 km. Absolutely gorgeous, and low traffic. Nae bother.
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A8 - The shortest of all at 69 miles (nice). The old road is required, since in a lot of places it's entirely replaced by the M8. Sections are just grim.
The A9 - Very varied, a 450 km epic. If you allow the old road, it avoids the nastiness through the Cairngorns, and lets you focus on the scenery.
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I had these chaps following me once... I think they were some distance away when I started to cross the field.
Several decades ago I was touring in Dorset with a friend. For some long forgotten (and probably stupid) reason we ended up wheeling our bikes across a field. I looked behind me and to my horror a load of cows had appeared and were following us in single file. We stopped. They stopped. I have no Idea what was going on. But we lived to tell the tale.
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I had these chaps following me once... I think they were some distance away when I started to cross the field.
I was once crossing a field on a public footpath with 2 mates to visit a crag we were carrying bouldering crash pads which would have made us look large. There were several cows in the field who started to move our direction in a rather an assertive manner. Shouting and waving the pads at them discouraged them so we legged it over a wall to get away.
More recently a friend got trampled whilst walking with the dog in the Yorkshire dales.