Your ride today....

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wafter

I like steel bikes and I cannot lie..
Location
Oxford
Today's outing was precipited by a dearth of eggs and the desire for something different to the usual utility ride.

Once the caffeine had finally embued me with the impetus to push past the lingering grottyness I was out on the Fuji into the bright "breezyness".

After a steady ascent through the woods I found myself in Boar's Hill, with it's fine view over the city :smile:


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I recall taking a very similar picture in the same location about seven(!) years ago when I'd just got my Boardman; only for the wind to blow the bike over, damaging the shifter as it hit the deck :sad:

Despite today's uncompromising wind I thought the Fuji would be pretty much immune to such a fate given its much greater mass and the fact I thought I'd propped it up pretty sturdily; however this proved not to be the case. Luckily this time the day was saved by my cat-like reactions - catching the bike by the top tube as it fell.

Any semblence of smugness was dispelled by the sobering thought that I'd not have been so lucky had this occured when I was actually taking photos and not stood right next to the bike...


From here it was onward past the scout camp before descending back into the valley and doubling back on myself to an extent to push out towards Cumnor.

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Getting chilly in just my base layer from having stood still for a bit, I eventually donned my buff which made things palpably more bearable - if doing nothing to address my streaming eyes and nose.

By the time I was close to the historic source of the precious I'd pretty much had enough - cold from the relentless wind and fatigued from having to constantly shift my weight to tack into the wind and react to the gusts to prevent them from pushing me all over the road.

Quelle surprise, despite allusions on the net that the egg business was still going five years after I last visited when I was living in the city, arriving at the house where I'd previously scored reveled neither eggs nor the shed that once housed them.

I pushed on to the farm itself; heartened by the familiar sight of hundreds of chickens roaming free behind a new set of gates that bore a sign with directions to nip around them to access the "egg shed"; however this turned out to be a cruel sham as for the second time today neither shed nor eggs were discovered.

After leaving increasingly pissed off with proceedings I nipped into the shop at the sprawling Milletts farm. This visit was jinxed from the off as they had zero obvious bike parking so I lashed it to another bit of infrastructre, pulled my buff up over my mouth / nose and headed inside. Being a Saturday it was heaving with people not paying attention along with their screaming kids... I did discover eggs from the farm in question but they weren't particularly cheap and by that point I'd had enough of that environment so had an apple outside and left.

I pushed on in a big loop past Abingdon and back to the city - a decent chunk now at last with a tailwind. Picked up a few bits in the centre then headed home along the tow path; negotiating various "windfalls" along the way and trimming some dangling brambles which earned me a "good man" from one passing chap :smile:

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About 32 miles - glad I went out but probably more glad to get back and cut off all contact with the outside world; barring that filtered through my broadband connection..
 
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My Saturday ride was postponed to Sunday this week. 4 of us were out for the first half to the Hotel Cafe in Oundle. Despite this, it included my mate who took the picture.
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2 went straight home (including that guy) but my semi-retired mate and me went on and quickly decided we'd extend the ride to avoid that. At which point I was glad I had only done a Sweetspot Threshold session yesterday.
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Rickshaw Phil

Overconfidentii Vulgaris
Moderator
Another late one from me: 25th of September. @gavgav had invited me for an evening ride the day after my century. I said yes but warned that I might be a bit slow after the previous day. I was a little late getting to the meeting point. We soon got going and I found that the first couple of miles had loosened the legs up pretty well.

We did our usual roundabout route up towards Heathgates then out to Uffington at a nice brisk sociable pace. The evening light was lovely as we headed through Upton Magna and on towards Atcham. There was a driver who wouldn't overtake us for ages - something that always makes me worried as I don't know how they are going to behave when they do come past. The car had L plates on so we forgive them on this occasion.

At Chilton Larches a loose dog called Mabel came darting out into the road causing some emergency braking. Gav thought that she didn't seem very friendly. I thought she was just not very bright.;) Just as well we weren't in a car.

The northerly wind had eased a bit by the time we turned into it which meant that we could enjoy the flowing section through Betton and back to Weeping Cross.

Enjoyed that and the legs felt great considering the mileage they'd done over a couple of days.

19.8 miles at 13.5 mph average. 794 feet of climbing on Strava. Enjoyed that.

A few snaps taken at Atcham:
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As an aside: I've also finally had time to write up the Coast to Coast ride. It's here if anyone is interested: https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/whitehaven-to-tynemouth-c2c-aug-sept-2025.306221/
 

Donger

Convoi Exceptionnel
Location
Quedgeley, Glos.
Back out on the Beast today to check the calibration of the trip computer after pumping up my front tyre. Did my staple 20 mile ride out to the bottom end of Frampton on Severn and back and it ended up recording 20.02 miles. Quite a stiff head wind on the way out and a nice little push on the return leg. Now time for a long, hot soak.
 

geocycle

Legendary Member
Windsurfing! The challenge rides were praying on my mind while watching Storm Amy yesterday so I hatched a cunning plan to turn the 20 mph wind forecast today into a virtue. I picked an easterly route that kept close to the railway line offering various bailout options if needed. The out route took me to Ingleton and the back road to Clapham. I stopped briefly to admire the waterfall and was strong willed to avoid the newish cycle cafe there. From Clapham I took the familiar back road to Austwick and looked across to Penyghent on the way to Settle. I visited the Naked Man for a quick sausage roll before cracking on up The Hill. It is one of the tougher ones on the Way of the Roses beginning with cobbles out of the town then two very steep ramps up onto the moors where it climbs steadily for another couple of km. The descent to Airton and then the undulating road to Skipton were all completed in the dry with a strong tailwind. Northern rail provided transport back west where it had rained most of the day. 81 km with 1211 m of climbing.

Pictures of Clapham falls and Penyghent,

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After being battered by Storm Amy over the weekend, yesterday was a still day in Brittany – barely any wind at all – and I headed south from Mauron on the V3 Voie Verte. Chilly under the trees to start with at around 11C but it had warmed up by the time I’d I dropped down to the Oust valley, south of Ploërmel and I could swap my woolly hat for a baseball cap.

In places the surface of the Voie Verte was a litter of chestnuts, acorns, leaves and small branches and my road bike wasn’t particularly happy. It would have been an easier (but slower) ride on my gravel bike … perhaps next time. Using small roads that ran parallel to the Voie Verte wherever possible I made good time down to Questembert (Bel-Air) – the end of the 52km tarmac section of Voie Verte. I’d deviated to stop and photograph le Chapeau de Roche on the way south – a standing stone and, a couple of hundred metres further east, a jumble of large stones that may, perhaps, have been part of something larger such as an allée couverte (chamber grave).

Headed back north from Questembert before leaving the Voie Verte to explore the south side of the Claie valley, passing the delightful chapelle St-Barthélemy and then through the hamlets of Chaumusset, Mocpaix and la Landelle, before re-joining the Voie Verte at la Tayée.

Picked up the mildest of tailwinds as I left the Claie valley and was grateful for that as I cycled the remaining 35kms back to the van.

110.65km in around 7.5 hours (less about 45mins of drink/food/photo stops)

The very still river Oust at Bagotais with a group of cyclists heading SE on Eurovelo#1

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The standing stone at le Chapeau de Roche

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The chapelle St-Barthélemy

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Cavalol

Legendary Member
Location
Chester
The last leg of our (my mate and I) staggered ride from Barmouth to Chester today.
Train to Gobowen, then a very pleasant and relatively easy 30 miler back to Chester. A bit cold (despite 3 t-shirts and a light jacket) but got warmed to soon enough.

The route was great, mostly quiet lanes/back roads and through some very small villages, which were lovely places to cruise past. We will definitely come back this way on the tail end of a longer route one day. No real dramas, though the road from Farndon back to Chester via Aldford was the usual horror show at times with idiots in cars and vans trying to overtake in stupid places.

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Out to Connington for a recovery lap or two, down the Old A1 there's traffic but round by the Connington Village and Airfield there's virtually no traffic (the surface is a bit broke up though) and the road west from Holme back to the Old A1 is lightly trafficked with what traffic there is throttled by an ECML level crossing that be down for 15 mins.

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This evening was a short utility ride,

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