You have to pledge £200 in sponsorship for one of their nominated charities.
That sort of thing bugs me too. I know one shouldn't be critical of "it's for charity" (or is that not question and follow blindly like sheep?

You have to pledge £200 in sponsorship for one of their nominated charities.
No, to do it in 1 hour you'd need to average 56 mph - difficult on those roads even in a car!
It should read 2-4 hours really
Even two hours is flat-out time trial speed.
Well I'm glad there seems to be a consensus that the times here are pushing it a bit too far. Looking at another of their rides they quote an expected 4-5 hours for 126 miles![]()
It would appear that I am not their intended target audience![]()
More likely they don't actually have a clue.
Yes, only to sign autographs and memorabilia.
In fact people who are decent or high cat ranked shouldn't be allowed to freely participate in some events, after all they are potentially doing is stealing someone else's thunder.
My first hundred mile charity ride some bloke done it on a TT machine and completed it when most had only got past the half way mark.
When I done the wrynose or bust event this year, the guy who won it was Andy Wilkinson a RTTC champion with an array of palmares, needless to say he steam-rolled the rest.![]()
I've never done an Audax, though I would like to. The thing that you get with a Sportive that you don't get with an Audax is waymarking - though certainly with Kinross there were maps on the website and you were encouraged to know where you were going. (The other one I've done was on Skye and navigation wan't exactly difficult as there aren't so many roads...)
Do have a go - not many people get lost on audaxes! The route sheets are generally pretty good and, as more people get GPSs, there is less and less need for waymarking and signage.
Oops, I wasn't intending to imply that lack of waymarking was putting me off Audax - it is more lack of time! I don't think I'd have a problem with the navigation (my other hobby is hillwalking so I'm fairly competent with a map (and compass, which I don't think I'd need on an Audax... )) I guess it is just nice to come to a junction and not have to faff with a map.
No-one ever stops to look at a map.
![]()
We had to stop and buy one on our last 200k attempt.
It's certainly a mistake. Perhaps someone put the route into TomTom and forgot to ask for a bicycle route...?
The sportive I did was last year's South Downs one organised by these people and I can tell you for certain that people were not going at crazy speeds! I think my average was about 15 mph.