The Imperial Century A Month Challenge Chatzone

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ianrauk

Tattooed Beat Messiah
Location
Rides Ti2
Well, that June's qualifying ride done and dusted.
A ride down to Ashford in deepest, darkest Kent for a veggie brekkie and cuppa.
It was fabulous weather today. Very mild early this morning with a bit of a tailwind giving me a helping hand riding south east, the wind becoming a bit of a nuisance for the return, via the the very lovely Wye Valley and rolling pilgrims Way.
So, scores on the doors.
100 miles for the day. No extra Eddingtons this time.
Imperial century month #175 in a row.
Imperial century #354
Back on the cycle commute tomorrow.
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The M20 road and rail bridges crossing the Medway
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13 rider

Guru
Location
leicester
Well it's the 2nd of the month and I've completed my imperial ton ride for June 😁. I'm away the last 2 weeks of June so that limits my chances ,was all prepped for yesterday but didn't fancy battling the headwind home as the forecast had less wind today I changed the day . 113 miles my longest ride for quite a while from Leicester out into the Vale of Belvoir and around the back of Grantham and back . Wind didn't make it to tough coming back but was wilting near the end the last hill to home was a bit of a grovel
 

robjh

Legendary Member
June's ride done on Saturday 7th, when I did the first of the duo of 'Anglesey and Back' 300k audaxes, which run over two days, part 1 (this one) going north from Chepstow to Menai Bridge, and part 2 on the Sunday heading back south to Chepstow. It is a variant of the better known Brian Chapman Memorial 600k audax, but allowing a bit more sleep at the halfway point.

It was a tough ride in both directions, but I felt it more on this part with a morning of heavy showers, and a whipping wind that was more head- than tail- and made some sections a real slog. Most of the 3900m of climbing were packed into the first half, including the killer 'Machynlleth Mountain Road' out of Llanidloes, although even the supposedly flatter sections could pack an unexpectedly steep % here and there. The scenery on the route was impressive from start to finish, but these weren't the best conditions to enjoy it. Nonetheless, the twilight climb up to Pen-y-Gwryd and sweep down the Llanberis Pass were pretty memorable and made up for a lot of toil* to get there.

I started at 0500, and arrived at the Menai Bridge control at 2300, so 18 hours for 195 miles / 314 km. The sleep on a mattress in the Scouts Hall was bloody awful, and I set off again at 0600 for another 300k, but that's another ride (and a superb day).

78th consecutive month with a 100+ mile ride, and 166th imperial century ever.

* don't take my moaning too literally. It was good type 2 fun, and I am now convinced I had a brilliant, if challenging ride, and would do it again

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Nearly there : the Menai Bridge at 11pm
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Rickshaw Phil

Overconfidentii Vulgaris
Moderator
June is done. Not enough recent riding to keep the legs in shape, did it between 2 work days and with winds gusting into the 30s but it is complete. 105.1 miles to Lake Vyrnwy and back. The wind wasn't fun on the way out and the cramp wasn't fun on the way back. There was me thinking that June would be one of the easier months. :laugh:

The ride report is here: https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/your-ride-today.173254/post-7442377

And here are some of the photos that didn't make it into the write up:
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footloose crow

Veteran
Location
Cornwall. UK
At the very last minute......102 miles and 1970m of ascent today.

Unlike the rest of England, Cornwall is not having a heatwave. We have a humid, grey capped sky which is uncomfortably warm but not sunny and was only going to get to 25c today. Despite this relatively glacial temperature, I managed to consume a gallon of fluid over the ride (4.5 litres in two big bottles filled twice plus a chocolate milk).

Another trip to Lands End which was relatively quiet today. There was a burst of traffic on the lanes between 4.30 and 5.30pm on the way home which is what we call 'rush hour' down here. Apart from that the only close passes came from cars with London registrations. I am only recording the facts here - not damning everyone who lives in London. Thirty per cent of Londoners don't own a car after all.

The clouds sat low on the moors, even St Michael's Mount lost its top. Occasionally the sun would burn through and temperatures shoot up. Sometimes the mist would thicken and I would need the bike lights on.

A steady ride on familiar lanes, trying to stay in the moment and not try to race against my previous times. Time is not on my side - a 65th birthday this week. Not so much getting faster as limiting the decline. Despite my decrepitude I did the ride in under eight hours which was a faster time than the last time I did it, although now I can't remember if I went the same way and Strava is being unhelpful about it since I cancelled my subscription as I no longer wished to know how many people in my age group are faster than me.

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13 rider

Guru
Location
leicester
At the very last minute......102 miles and 1970m of ascent today.

Unlike the rest of England, Cornwall is not having a heatwave. We have a humid, grey capped sky which is uncomfortably warm but not sunny and was only going to get to 25c today. Despite this relatively glacial temperature, I managed to consume a gallon of fluid over the ride (4.5 litres in two big bottles filled twice plus a chocolate milk).

Another trip to Lands End which was relatively quiet today. There was a burst of traffic on the lanes between 4.30 and 5.30pm on the way home which is what we call 'rush hour' down here. Apart from that the only close passes came from cars with London registrations. I am only recording the facts here - not damning everyone who lives in London. Thirty per cent of Londoners don't own a car after all.

The clouds sat low on the moors, even St Michael's Mount lost its top. Occasionally the sun would burn through and temperatures shoot up. Sometimes the mist would thicken and I would need the bike lights on.

A steady ride on familiar lanes, trying to stay in the moment and not try to race against my previous times. Time is not on my side - a 65th birthday this week. Not so much getting faster as limiting the decline. Despite my decrepitude I did the ride in under eight hours which was a faster time than the last time I did it, although now I can't remember if I went the same way and Strava is being unhelpful about it since I cancelled my subscription as I no longer wished to know how many people in my age group are faster than me.

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Bloody tourists 🤣🤣
Well done . Under 8 hrs for a Cornish ton is not to shabby at all
 

Rickshaw Phil

Overconfidentii Vulgaris
Moderator
Am I the first this month???:ohmy:

Got my qualifier in on Friday, taking the chance despite the wind being 22mph gusting to 31 during the day. 103.02 miles round south Shropshire, parts of Powys and Herefordshire. 13 mph moving average. 9 hours 32 minutes total including all the stops. It went much
better than last time out!

Ride report here: https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/your-ride-today.173254/post-7449213

A few of the photos that didn't make it into the report:
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robjh

Legendary Member
July's ride done on Saturday 5th - the 'Cambridge Randonnée' 200k audax organised by CTC Cambridge.
A very enjoyable 211k ride around mainly familiar roads in East Anglia, going eastwards as far as Stowmarket before turning back into a headwind for the next 60 miles, which luckily never felt as strong as I would have expected from the wind speed in the forecasts. It was overcast but fairly warm, and honestly a better day for riding than the heatwave of earlier in the week. I completed the whole ride with club mates Will and David - we were well-matched and kept up a decent pace, and it made a nice change from riding audaxes alone. I also bumped into several other familiar faces on the ride.
We finished the 211k in 10½ hours, and my total distance includes rides from and to home at each end of the day.

Distance 146.1 miles, or 235.1 km.
My 169th century ride ever, and 79th consecutive month.

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footloose crow

Veteran
Location
Cornwall. UK
9 July!

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I have been guilty of lackadaisical-ism, laziness and procrastination constantly finding I am too busy to ride a long way until the final day of the month presents an immovable barrier. It is not that I don't enjoy a longer ride because I do, especially afterwards in the manner of a man who has ceased to bang his head against a wall. It is the prospect of pain and nausea and of self doubt and loneliness that makes me seek an alternative way of hurting myself until I can delay no more.

So what is this; a ride accomplished while the date is still in single figures? Time for a second one this month now although my wifely companion and family matriarch may have other views on constantly playing the role of a cycle widow as I disappear at crucial family moments.

The weather was right and last months ride was easier than usual, flatter lanes, a better feeding strategy, a plan to actually stop and rest occasionally instead of ploughing on and pulling 'go longer' bars from my back pocket as I rode. The pedals cannot cease motion. I know not why - perhaps something bad would happen. But last month I tried it and discovered chocolate milk and bananas from village stores, tea and cake from village cafes and the revelation that if you stop and look at the view for more than ten seconds, more and more will reveal itself, hidden details, a relaxation of the freneticism of my own thoughts, shoulders dropping, frown released.

So the memories of that ride inspired this one. I was raring to go. At the last minute a cycling friend said he would like to accompany me too. This was a change. In nineteen consecutive centuries no one I knew had ever wanted to come. I had assumed solitary centuries were the norm. Nine hours of introspective pain management with only your own mind as company. And I know all my own jokes already. And I can guess what I may say next which on a long ride avoiding cars and shops (which is my wont) there is not a lot to say anyway and I have lost the power of speech by the time I am home.

In fact I have been mocked by my cycling companions for my singe minded pursuit of a dubious goal for the last eighteen months, especially in the winter months when any sane pensioner should be indoors on a trainer and not tiptoeing tipsily down gravel strewn lanes in darkness and rain. Do you have some form of OCD they ask to which my unspoken reply is 'probably'.

But there it was. Ian outside Waitrose with a coffee in his hand and an immediate departure trying to keep up with his caffeine inspired sprinting up the first hill.

So where were we going and what was the weather and what did we eat and what did we see? Some form of revelation perhaps? A story told of a ride from beginning to end in a logical way? Time is an illusion and my memories this morning are not linear or organised.

I wanted to go back to Bodmin Moor because I enjoy the emptiness and space, the big skies and the very quiet lanes, the lack of people and cars, the opening horizon as you climb the steep flanks of the moor, this granite intrusion into a coastal county. I love to ride from sea level to the highest hills in Cornwall and survey the monarchs of Bodmin Moor, the stegosaurus ridge of Rough Tor and the armadillo scales of Brown Willy, our highest summit. I am somewhat obsessed by riding here and wanted my new centurion friend to share that with me.

I have discovered two things on this ride. Most people, it seems, on a long ride like to STOP. They like to eat proper food. They dislike crushed malt loaf from a sweaty back pocket. Secondly, some people, and Ian my new centurion is one of them, dislike the concept of 'rough stuff'.

So we rode from Truro to the Fowey river and crossed on a ferry and saw the Daphne du Maurier home, which is an important detail because lunch would be at the Jamaica Inn but that is still a long way ahead of us and there are many miles of uphill to come from here and in the first thirty kilometres we have already done 600m of sweaty hill climbing. I like crossing rivers and going on ferries and today we will cross the Fal (twice), the Fowey (several times) and the Camel which is most of the bigger rivers down here in the far south west tip of Britain although none would be remarkable in another place being small and weedy and often hidden except when bridges cross or in this case a ferry because we next to the sea.

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East of the Fowey Cornwall becomes quite Devon-ish which is to say that the hills are more reasonably graded and it is possible to follow ridge lines which give views in all directions and as the effort is less I have time to lift my eyes from the stem where they like to rest on an uphill and view the slowly changing scenery. At this point it is possible to see the sea, a turquoise glint on the horizon, and the St Austell Alps, white boned quarries and spoil heaps. At one point in this ride we are sure we can see Dartmoor too, a purple bruise on the horizon , simmering in the heat.

Did I mention it was hot? Ian has only two tiny bottles and it is necessary to stop and replenish more frequently that I would like as I have two litre bottles weighing me down as I have done this before and know that you need a lot of water. By the time we have spun down from the heights in a breathless, hands off the brake, descent into the madness of summer time Looe, Ian also needs a coffee. We push our bikes through the crowd until we can find an empty table and surrounded by the regional accents of Britain, except for Cornish, we try not to listen to the conversations around us and instead Ian, who was a commercial pilot, explains to me how safe aircraft are which I am disinclined to believe.

And now, I announce, the climbing begins, at which point Ian looks disconcerted. And argues all the way from here at sea level to the top of the moor that we are going the wrong way and that the GPX track I gave him is not pointing the way I am going. My Wahoo and his Garmin are not in the same place at all. We grumble our way up following the course of the Fowey as it descends from the moor faster than we are moving up it.

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But I love the moor. Surrounded by fresh air and nothing else. Apart from the scar of the A30 and a distant bee drone of traffic at times as it spilts the moor in two. We actually follow the old A30 at one point which is a single track road now running parallel to the A30 and no wonder no one enjoyed getting here in the olden days crossing the moor on this road which faithfully crosses every contour line to explore each hollow and dip and then climbs up to the next ridge line for a better view.

To get across the A30 is a task. It is fenced and four lanes wide plus a divide made of thick hedge. It is not possible to simply scamper across and we need to find the only moor road that crosses and to do that, as I explain to an incredulous companion, means cycling along a foot path which is no path at all but simply a piece of sheep nibbled moorland and broken drystone walls that will lead to another road that will cross the A30. Ian is unconvinced and points out that his bike and tyres were bred for tarmac as indeed it says on the bike "Specialised Tarmac" but conceding that there is no option we wobble and wheel our bikes across stiles and gates and sheep shoot and rocks until the promised lane does appear.

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Only sixty kilometres left now and slowly they go. More plunging dark lanes through the cloaking woodlands until we emerge like two explorers, weather beaten and exhausted onto the flatlands of the Camel valley. Not that flat it appears. But no matter because we both know the way home from here and it is simply a matter of pedalling on and ignoring the insistent complaint from where the saddle pinches my bottom, but not in a flirtatious way.

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And so another ride is done and I do not think Ian will come again and that is both sad because his company made the ride easier as it stopped me thinking my own gloomy thoughts about how much further is it but also I quite like the solitude and introspection of a long ride alone too.

This morning I am wondering about a second one this month. Procrastination and delay will scupper that.
 

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