Tuesday 14 July 2015

Andy Pendred's Magnificent 7 - possibly the most epic guest blog ever


Before I let Andy's words do the talking I just wanted to introduce this frankly epic guest blog. I know I'm given to over excitement but this is one time where my words are truly justified. I was honoured to share 200 miles of the D2D ride with Andy, for most of us it was the height of our cycling achievement, for Andy it was training for this oh and of course puncture practise! I hope you enjoy this, I definitely did!

Triple 7 Tour 27th June to 3rd July 2015
7 countries, 700 miles in 7 seven days
Our plan was to cycle from Thrapston to Franche Comte in France to meet my parents who were on holiday there & to travel back with them, travelling through England, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland & France.
Our route was mapped & loaded onto my Garmin. Rack, panniers, bar & seatpost bags fitted & filled with the essentials & we were ready to go. Although neither Sam nor I had any experience of touring the ride averaged at 100 miles a day so how hard could it be?
Day 1 Thrapston to Harwich. 104 miles  https://www.strava.com/activities/334160255
I’d prebooked all our B&B accommodation & first night was to be aboard a Stena ferry sailing overnight to Hook of Holland. The weather was fine as we set off on familiar roads to Huntingdon where we joined a cycle path taking us to St Ives  & then alongside the guided bus route to Cambridge. All went well with a lunch stop at Clare then passing through the village of Cavendish which has been named after Sam’s cycling hero. The rest of the ride went really well riding mainly on country lanes & we arrived in Harwich where we watched our ferry sail in whilst eating some of the best fish & chips I’ve tasted. We boarded the ferry, showered ,changed & went on deck with a well earned beer as we set sail for Holland.
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Day 2 Hook of Holland to Vijlen. 142 miles https://www.strava.com/activities/335020358
The weather was still fine which was great as we had 140 miles to do but a headwind all day counteracted the flat route through Holland and Belgium. We hardly went on a road all day & when we did it had a dedicated cycle lane to ride on. All the road surfaces were smooth tarmac & put our home roads to shame. We cycled down past the massive docks of Rotterdam & over numerous purpose built bridges taking cyclists over major roads & railways. We came to a big river which Garmin said we were to cross but there was no bridge so after much head scratching we noticed some cyclists going into a glass fronted building which turned out to be a bike lift which took us down to a purpose built 2 lane bike tunnel under the river to a lift at the other end which took us back up & onto the cycle lane again, impressive stuff!  Holland was a strange place to cycle through, it seemed like a massive version of Center Parcs with all the bikes tracks & waterways. We passed the expected windmills & crossed two more rivers via small ferries. Our only problem (apart from the first of 3 punctures on the trip) was we were going slower than we expected. As we got to the end of the day hills started to appear & Garmin decided to send us on some very gravelly trails which slowed us more & we arrived at the B&B just before 9pm and knackered which a meal & a beer soon fixed. 
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Day 3 Vijlen to Luxembourg. 117miles https://www.strava.com/activities/335637226
Today’s ride through Belgium & Luxembourg was tough. The threatened heatwave had arrived & trying to drink enough was a problem we were to have for the rest of the tour. Not long after starting off my front tyre burst & we fitted an old spare we’d brought along.  Added to this was the climbing, it started as soon as we set off & never eased off until 90 miles into the ride. One massive climb from Eupen in Belgium saw us meet up with a German guy who cycled with us up to the highest point in Belgium at 700m – I hadn’t realised Belgium was as high – it even had a cross country ski station! Then came the hills of Luxembourg which I can only describe as Rutland on Steroids. It just seemed like a never ending series of sharp climb after sharp climb with no time to recover on the short downhills. The reward for all the climbing was the scenery – gorgeous all the way. We managed to find a bike shop in Belgium with possibly the most unhelpful person possible, I bought a new tyre & tubes but he didn’t want paying by credit card, then he didn’t want paying by debit card only cash which he reluctantly gave me a receipt for – I thought asking for a club discount wouldn’t go down well. To counteract this we were followed & stopped by a van driver who told us the road we were on turned to off road & he directed us onto a purpose built cycle route along a disused railway which made up for Belgian Bike Shop Man. It was 8pm when we arrived at the Youth Hostel we’d booked (yes they do take in old blokes too). It was basic but clean, but 22 euros each for a twin ensuite room, 3 course dinner & breakfast you can’t go wrong.

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Day 4 Luxembourg to Strasbourg. 117miles https://www.strava.com/activities/336284309
Today saw us head into Germany and finish in Strasbourg, France. The climbing looked to be better than yesterday, with some good chunks following rivers & canals but the temperature was rising with a high of 39oC. There was some great riding along the River Saar & Saaabrucken looked an interesting place. I was struggling with the heat, sweating buckets, craving cold coca-cola & not wanting to eat anything which in turn was leaving me tired earlier into each day’s riding. Needless to say Sam was taking it in his stride, leading me round, navigating & managing to outwit the Garmin by keeping us on roads when it wanted to take us off road. I also had the only crash of the tour today in Germany, clipping a kerb which fortunately saw me sprawl across the pavement & not into the traffic and torn bar tape, scuffed paniers & my pride were the only casualties! The scenery had started to change with it looking more mountainous as we headed through the Vosges National Park into the centre of Strasbourg passing the EU Parliament building on the way – which was deserted as it was Brussel’s turn to host those hardworking MEPs. Our B&B was in the old centre of Strasbourg which is a beautiful city which we wandered around in the evening, eating at a pizzeria, before stopping for late night biere et frites outside the cathedral – nothing but classy nosh for us! 
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did Sam lose a bet to have to wear those shorts?
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Day 5 Strasbourg to Hirsingue 99miles. https://www.strava.com/activities/337114266
The B&B we stayed at was excellent (as were all of them) Thankfully the breakfasts were massive with cereals, ham, cheese, yoghurts, bread, cakes & fruit crumbles! Washed down with juice, tea & coffee we made the most of fuelling up as it was so hot we didn’t feel like eating during the day. Today’s ride looked relatively easy with a gentle ascent for the whole route but temperatures hit 41C making it another slog along the Alsace wine route which was lovely taking us through the vineyards but at the same time brutal as there was no shade. Along the way we had the Vosges mountains as a backdrop & thankfully we weren’t going up them. We followed the Rhine for a while taking opportunities to cool off in it when we could. The buildings started to change & we saw loads of timbered houses which Alsace is famous for & also nesting storks on the rooftops. Towns of note were Colmar & Mulhouse with their old timber buildings & cobbled streets. We headed on to the village of Hirsingue to our B&B where we actually did get some classy nosh at a traditional French restaurant although washing it down with coke & beer perhaps let us down a bit!
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This was looking to be our toughest day yet, heading into the Swiss Jura Mountains with the heatwave set to continue. We left Hirsingue fuelled by another big breakfast and started climbing & basically carried on climbing all day. The temperature hit 40C & it became a case of stopping at every opportunity to get some cold drinks & refill our water bottles which were heating up quickly & drinking 40C water is not nice to say the least. At around 30 miles into the ride my legs went & it became a case of just trying to keep them turning. Sam did his best to drag me along but as anyone knows when your legs have gone you just have to plod on at your own pace so Sam ended up going ahead & waiting for me to catch up. We managed a couple of stops for food & the essential coca-cola fix. Mid afternoon the heat finally caught up with Sam as well  & we both stopped for half an hour in someone’s carport half way up a mountain to try to cool down a bit. The only problem was as soon as you stopped any breeze you got from riding stopped & the sweat just ran off you. We topped a couple of ‘Monts’ & usually we’d stop for a photo but we couldn’t be bothered so kept on pedalling. Places to refill water bottles became non existent & we resorted to dunking ourselves into water troughs & even filled the bottles at one trough when we were virtually out of water. By 7pm we started to climb the last Mont at Travers – 1200m at the top, but after half a mile I cracked & knew I couldn’t continue. We had an executive meeting & decided to get a train from Travers to our hotel in Sainte Croix and as the next day was only 50 miles we’d do some extra then to make up our 700 total. So onto the train which went for 2 stops then transferred to a bus due to line works & on to the end of the line where we’d catch another bus to Sainte Croix – simples! Not quite. When we reached the end of the line we had a 30 minute wait for our bus so decided to grab a quick salad at a restaurant. After our nice refreshing salad we waited for the 8.30 bus asking a bus driver if we were in the right place & assured that we were. 8.45 came but no bus & I started to wonder – Swiss stuff is always reliable so a late bus didn’t bode well. 9pm still no bus so time for another executive decision. We reset the Garmin for our destination the next day & decided to follow it in the hopes of finding a hotel en route. Surprise surprise the route took us up another climb by which time it was about dark & I was starting to wonder about sleeping rough in the mountains –what joy. Sam was apparently planning to ride through the night but I think that would have finished me off! The good thing was the temperature had dropped & made the climb easier & then we had a cool, nervy,dark descent down the other side into Les Verrieres. We asked at a garage if there was a hotel & they pointed us in the right direction. We arrived at the hotel just  as the owner was shutting up for the night but she soon sorted us a room & before we knew it we were tucking into a huge plate of charcuterie & frites washed down with coke & beer – result! A really tough day ended on a high, it looked like we would complete our challenge.
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Day 7 Les Verrieres to Le Frasnois. 42miles https://www.strava.com/activities/338387299
We woke once again to another boiling hot day & the last thing I wanted to do was get on my bike. It didn’t help by Sam telling me I looked like I’d been in hospital with the weight I’d lost – needless to say Sam had taken it all in his stride & was eager to get going. After stuffing down a traditional French breakfast of croissants, bread,coffee & juice I was feeling better & as we had only 40ish miles to do we set off at a quick pace. The first 20 miles was flatish so we were feeling good as we headed through the French Jura – a great area that has everything scenery wise – forests, rocky mountains,waterfalls & lakes – and great cycling roads with very little traffic. At around 30 miles we stopped at Foncine Le Haut for our first proper lunch of the trip – 3 courses , wine (we did swap the wine for coke – honest!) & coffee for 12 Euros. Refuelled again we set off to finish & reached the 700 mile point at a viewpoint looking across the gorge of the River Chevry.  The heat was once again relentless making you gasp for breath all the time but we were nearly there, one long steady climb left to the finish at Le Frasnois at 800m. As we came to the finish mum & dad had hung out balloons & a banner to welcome us & were hoping for us to finish arms aloft a la Tour De France but I was so shattered I just headed straight into the garage to collapse in the shade!
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So we’d made it, a trip that turned out to be much tougher than I ever imagined. Whether I’d done too much beforehand with a hilly 100 & the D2D 200 in the previous two weekends or whether it was just the relentless heat I’ll never know. What I do know is that I’m chuffed to bits to have done it. Nearly four years ago Sam pestered me to buy a bike to go cycling with him. Slowly but surely I got the hang of it, cycling with Sam & my uncle, eventually mustering up the courage to try riding in a group which gave me more confidence. Joining the C&D gang has been brilliant, keeping me cycling all year in all weathers. So a massive thank you to Sam in particular, & to the C&D riders, you’ve helped me to do stuff I’d never have thought I could do & I’d encourage anyone to give cycling a go.

Chapeau!

Editors final note:
Andy that is a magnificent addition to my blog, thank you so much for sharing. You are an inspiration. I hope one day that Sam Lindsley and I will go on an adventure like this.
Happy Pedaling



Sunday 12 July 2015

From Rothwell to Brigstock Country Park with Sam


What a difference the right time of year makes! I tried to do this route with Sam in February 2014 and it was a disaster! February 2014 Mudfest! So it was with some reservation that Sam agreed to attempt this route again. One of the big things to say is that it's really improved, not just because we've had a good dry spell but also because the Boughton Estate have graveled roads that were previously just mud-tracks. Sam rode really well on what can be quite challenging terrain. He made a rookie error of trying to put his feet down when being bounced off rocks and he paid for this by smashing his cadooberries into his handlebar stem. To Sam's credit he got back on and he learned from this by picking better line but also sorting wobbles out without taking his feet off the pedals.


On the road out of Rothwell

Cycle path at Glendon Industrial Estate

For the amusement of others

Heading into Weekly Woods

Lovely new gravel road on the Boughton Estate

Into Geddington

Heading up to the cross

Info

Looking back at the ford

Sam finds a Maserati

More info

Jelly beans and juice at the cross

Geddington Chase

Pedaling hard

Tree stop plus a geocache stop

Much more fun in the dry

Well earned hot chocolate

Shortly after this pic was taken Sam and I had to run for cover as the heavens opened. Lucky for us our ride was done for the day. He's asked when he will be able to join C&DCCC I said by about 14, the way he's going it may be a lot sooner!

Happy Pedaling





Saturday 11 July 2015

This weeks cycling blog

A bit of a quiet week for me cycling wise largely due to it being a bit of a busy week Family wise. For those who don't know my daughter, Niamh, broke her clavicle (collarbone,) when she fell during the hurdles at an athletics event. Yesterday she had an operation to pin and plate her injury. All good service from KGH as the consultant at fracture clinic made a decision on Thursday and she had the procedure the very next day. Niamh was looked after very well by the nursing staff (Nurses rock,) but unfortunately the doctors let us down a bit. Having arrived at KGH for 07:30 on Friday, prepped and ready for the procedure a different consultant proceeded to have a conversation in front of Niamh about how he disagreed that the procedure needed to happen. Our little girl who may look older but is in fact just twelve burst into tears. After some stressful conversations it was left to us to decide whether to go ahead or not. That's not great care and there will be a complaint. It is however done now and we're hoping for a good recovery and then Niamh can get back to scorching tracks all round the country. Hopefully she won't be asked to do the hurdles again! The last thing to say is that Skylark at KGH is a very nice ward and a credit to our NHS.

Broken Niamh

So back to cycling. On Sunday I took Sam for a spin around he cyclocross track at the bottom of Rothwell Rec. Here's the route and there's a video of how he got on.








With Niamh needing lots of looking after I couldn't ride today due to taking Sam to his Saturday morning sailing at Pitsford. As he sailed away I took the opportunity to have a 29r ride around the reservoir. I've always felt that Pitsford and in particular Brixworth Country Park are a fantastic resource for the county. There's something for everyone here as the 7 mile circuit is popular with walkers, runners and of course cyclists. It also has a stack of geocaches if that's your thing. The fly fishers were out in force today and of course there was the sailors. My aim was to do four laps but after bumping into a mate and his kids and having a good catch up I stopped at three. Besides the Test match had started and there's nothing more satisfying that beating Australians at cricket. As I type the Aussies are 6 down, so there's lovely! As per usual riding my bike filled me with joy and I'm sure people think I'm a bit deranged as I grin away. Who cares, I love cycling. I'll let the pictures do the rest of the talking.

Dam

Sign to let you know where you are

Well maintained track, beautiful surroundings

Lots of families out

Sam is sailing one of those white dots in the distance





What a great week it's been for sport, Wimblebore aside. The Tour de France has been excellent. I really feel for Tony Martin who has done a 'Niamh,' to his collarbone. Really nice bloke who deserved a few extra days in yellow. The usual drama of 'when will Cav get a stage win?' Ended yesterday when he got revenge on Andre the Giant Greipel and of course Team Sky have a British rider in the box seat as Chris Froome already wears yellow.

Ok so now for a new feature in the cycling blog. Many of you have been asking about my Dad's special blue product, the energy drink that we loved so much on D2D. This video shows you how it's made. Apologies to Chris and Andy, this may affect sales...




 Happy Pedalling

Saturday 4 July 2015

Great week of cycling culminates in another C&D Cycles club ride


Summer has decided to turn up in Northamptonshire in spectacular style. We've had mid twenties most of the week and on Wednesday the mercury peaked at 37C, that's hot wherever you are in the world. Only mad dogs and Englishman go out in the midday sun but at other times it has been perfect cycling weather none more so than my early morning rides.

It's not all about me though. On Tuesday evening I popped down the hill to see the kids cyclocross racing organised by KCC on Rothwell rec. It was great to see the young riders enjoying themselves and kudos to KCC for putting it together.
More details here - http://www.ketteringcyclingclub.co.uk/goride_news.asp

Other club members have been putting it in this week too. The C&DCCC presence at the KCC time trials continues to grow. By all accounts our riders have received a warm welcome and are enjoying these competitive rides. None more so than out very own club founder and C&D Cycles shop manager Andy. Biggest kudos of the week goes to Andy and Sam Pendred for their epic continental tour. I'm lookign forward to more about this from Andy and a guest blog has been promised!










To the main event of the week. Due to good weather the usual Saturday club ride was lengthened to nearly 40 miles. A very large number of riders gathered at the shop and two groups were formed, the quick group and what Andy referred to as the 'beginners,' group. I'm sure that Tony Talbot and I who are DOUBLE CENTURIONS are not beginners (that's not our combined age before a cheeky wag has a pop.) It's an unfair name for the group of people who prefer not to smash themselves to pieces in a testosterone fueled speed fest. That being said it was with much bemusement that Big Steve led the banter bunch, one because he is incapable of going that slow and two because he didn't actually know the route! Jonesy and I shared the tail gunning duties, mostly because Jonesy had to tell Steve where he was going!



Predictably it wasn't long into the ride before we were asking Steve to slow down. In response to this and in a flurry of industrial language he opted to do the rest of the ride in his granny ring. Unfamiliar gear, familiar result as per usual we were left in his wake!

Out on the road we had some people dropping off the back and Simon (who joined me in Rothwell and rode home with me too which was nice,) and I did our best to keep dragging them back in. The truth though was soon to hit. Andrew Clark, a fellow Saints fan, had issues with his leg. It finally went all together in Thrapston and he described it as if his knee cap was trying to come out of the back of his leg. Eventually we had to break our club code of conduct and leave him behind with Ken, however his mate Neil rode home to get his car and we now know they were picked up. Here's Andrew's message:

"Hi Richard, yes Neil picked me up at 12.15pm. Showered and relaxing at home watching the TDF. Thanks for asking about us. I have never had leg cramps like that before. Muscles just locked up on that hill. Couldn't bend them for a while. Muscles still sore now." - OUCH!

Action on the road

Bridge over the A14 at Brington

No idea

Big Steve shows the way

Jonesy

One day I will own this bike

Steve gets new bars with Di2 changers - watch out TTers!

He's suitably impressed

Andy looks as if he may have enjoyed that!

Rich is rather fond of Steve's Boardman!

This was a great route. I had a weird ride. My energy really fluctuated and I have arrived home exhausted. I fell asleep watching F1 qualifying!!! I'm not sure what this is about. It might be the hot weather or the extra work I did at the back. Or it may be because I'm trying the 5:2 diet again. Something to keep an eye on I think. I'm also sore again. Despite a liberal application of vaseline my shorts have opened up the chaffing I got on D2D again. Ouch!!! In better news I've gone through two pairs of gloves in the last two weeks as they keep splitting on the seam at the base of my thumbs. Despite some banter about 'operator error,' the shop have replaced both pairs without quibble. Once again great service from C&D Cycles.



I also looked dreamily at the Giant Propel I'd really like to buy. It's just a dream as we don't have the funds right now but I really like that bike. Luckily for me C&D customers seem Boardman crazy right now so it's not selling fast! At that point Andy told us he doesn't like the wheels on it. We had a superb technical lesson about spoke lacing and why those wheels are slightly lighter than others but will flex more due to their spoke pattern. We also discussed noisy freewheels as opposed to the silent type. Now those clicky freewheels do apparently create friction and therefore roll less than the quiet ones but, and this is the big news they engage much more sharply than your quiet hubs meaning power is applied more directly when the cyclist pedals. Quite a lesson, so many thanks Andy.

Here's a bit more wheel advice from Bike radar:


Right, I'm now typing this whilst watching the start of the Tour de France. This year Le Tour starts in Utrecht with a 13.8km time trial. I'm guessing anyone reading this blog will love the tour. I'm hoping for an Alex Dowsett first stage victory and then after that the drama will just unfold. Froome has another shot at the yellow jersey and the Manx Missile, Mark Cavendish should add to his stage wins and hopefully a really good shot at the green jersey with Marcel Kittel not participating this year.

Happy pedaling.