U
User10571
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Hah! 

Yes -five of them if I counted right. They started runing parallel to us, then luckily jumped over the fence into the trees rather than heading our way.And did everyone see the deer around Stanstead?
I saw the deer, and I saw a good sized rat on the towpath.Yes -five of them if I counted right. They started runing parallel to us, then luckily jumped over the fence into the trees rather than heading our way.
Did anyone see the fox standing about a foot from us in a park later on, just after we'd left the towpath?
I saw the deer, and I saw a good sized rat on the towpath.
I tend not to ride on the towpaths at night after a clubmate told me about doing it once and having a succession of rats jumping past his front wheel. I don't fancy the clean-up job if one went through my spokes!I saw the deer, and I saw a good sized rat on the towpath.
I'm not sure about it being better in reverse: London is a fine destination; you'd need to think about an Arrivée along King's Parade or something rather than the station! North to south worked for me - quickly out into quiet roads, the sense of putting miles behind us quickly early on, then the pleasures of the Essex lanes & a few undulating challenges with a grand view of the lights of London from High Beach. Plus for many riders an easy homeward journey.it would work better in reverse, but simply following the Dun Run route out of London
We have gone to a lot of effort on the website to ensure no one can be identified in the pics - not everyone likes having their pics on the internet. And in the two outdoors-in-the-country photos, apart from a couple of faces, everyone is unidentifiable as either white or male. They could all be lady eskimos. (We all know who they are from their stance and their bikes, but a random observer wouldn't.)They are fantastic - website material, except that they are a bit white and male yet again, which can't be helped this time.
Reminds me of the first time we rode back from Doncaster. In the depth of the night, somewhere along a cycle path around Stixwold, there were hundreds of rabbits (literally) diving in all directions. It was like a scene from a movie and to this day I'm not sure how we made it through without a rabbit in the spokes. And yet, when we went the same way earlier this year, not a single one.I tend not to ride on the towpaths at night after a clubmate told me about doing it once and having a succession of rats jumping past his front wheel. I don't fancy the clean-up job if one went through my spokes!
Reminds me of the first time we rode back from Doncaster. In the depth of the night, somewhere along a cycle path around Stixwold, there were hundreds of rabbits (literally) diving in all directions. It was like a scene from a movie and to this day I'm not sure how we made it through without a rabbit in the spokes. And yet, when we went the same way earlier this year, not a single one.
I have the same situation on the cycle track between A10 and A149 at the Hardwick junction. A fringe benefit of my Axa HR bottle dynamo whining is that it gets the rabbits moving before I get close enough for them to be a problemsomewhere along a cycle path around Stixwold, there were hundreds of rabbits (literally) diving in all directions
Both directions have their attractions, but a full-size Fridays group would be getting into London an hour or more later than we did, when the traffic will not be quite so light.I'm not sure about it being better in reverse: London is a fine destination; you'd need to think about an Arrivée along King's Parade or something rather than the station! North to south worked for me - quickly out into quiet roads, the sense of putting miles behind us quickly early on, then the pleasures of the Essex lanes & a few undulating challenges with a grand view of the lights of London from High Beach. Plus for many riders an easy homeward journey.
But I do agree that the Dun Run route would be a better escape. Your route from Mott Hill (the descent from the forest) & eventually along the river was fine for 14 of us but had too many twists & turns, not to mention the towpath & associated risks & puddles, for a larger group. It worked well too as we knew we were closing in on breakfast, and were quite early. At the start of a ride from London there is some urgency to get on with it: to escape the bright lights & emerge in the dark country with the big sky; not to fragment at lights & obstacles & junctions, particularly with a larger group which the ride deserves.
There's 24 on the corner outside John Lewis, some outside the college opposite (which may be full, depending on time of year - not sure if it's private, too), 32 on the corner of Parker's Piece behind Pizza Hut (plus a fence along that side), 230 in Rutland Cycling's place under Grand Arcade (but it doesn't open until 9am on Saturdays), then dotted in banks of up to 30 up St Andrews Street and Hobson Street. All the other really big cycle parks in that area seem to be private college ones.The stands just down from The Regal probably only has space for about 15 bikes, so are there any others which might be possible?