Tuesday, 30 July 2019

Longtown Way Round 300 - 27 July 2019

I saw this ride in the calendar later into the season than most of my planning.
I'd already ridden the Tyneside 200 and 600, and had entered the late season 400 a few days before the 600. With failing to complete the Scottish Borders SR series and an Ecosse SR Series dependent on fitting the Twilight 600 DIY in before the seasons end I realized the 300 would allow me to complete the Tyneside SR series.

The route was designed as a relatively gentle loop of the border, starting off from Ponteland and riding up to Alston Moor before plunging down to Longtown then winding over the border to Newcastleton for the only other "big" climb of the day over to Hawick followed by a valley spin in Teviot Dale towards Crailing where it picked up the regular route to Wooler via Morebattle; finishing with a bumpy ride through Northumberland to Ponteland via Alnwick. It looked ideal for the wind down before PBP, it looked an enjoyable day out and I dared to whisper, it looked fairly easy... So I signed up.

The forecast had been wet, very wet, in fact it was impossibly wet, 18mm of rain over 3 hours in the middle of the Scottish borders? Nah you'll never get "that" much rain in a maritime climate and it's warm, so I packed for light to moderate rain and set off down the road after work.

The Hardy Few
Andy hauled a large stack of brevet cards from his bag and proclaimed he had 61 entries, a scan of the room confirmed there was going to be a lot of riders DNS. I counted 16 present but there was apparently another 6 lurking somewhere.
The forecast was thankfully showing a more reasonable 3mm at worst, admittedly still wet enough to be unpleasant but skin's waterproof and the temperature was to be in double figures all day!

By some measures I'd hardly ridden since the 1000, just a few short local rides mostly of the steady paced form, trying to keep the fitness ticking over without overdoing it.  Summer had arrived and the heat was destroying my sleep pattern, in the hotel  I hung off the end of the bed trying to catch the blast from the large industrial fan as well as some sleep, it wasn't particularly successful.






I dithered at the start, and set off near last on the flattish run towards Corbridge, I know this road from earlier in the year and expected to be skimming along at a decent flat land pace, I wasn't I was struggling to hold over 20km on a road that I've ridden at 27kmh in a pack, my heart rate wasn't picking up either, well rested as I believed I was I should easily lift my HR into the 170s on the climbs and have to force myself to back off but I was stuck in zone 2, was it the lack of sleep? Was something else wrong? My ears had blocked up during the week and my rhinitis was restricting my nose breathing and sense of smell.
Could it be a cold coming on?  I worried as I climbed through the rain towards Alston Moor.

Yeuch
In Hexham I passed another rider who was hunkered down behind an electrical cabinet trying to shelter as best as possible from the rain as he fixing a puncture.
As I left town the rain seemed to ease but the further world was obscured by a light mist, further numbing my senses.  The rider passed me not long out of town and disappeared into the mist as it closed in with elevation.  I saw a rider in the distance, a dark silhouette in the whiteness, they got closer, I was catching!  My mood picked up, I can't be riding that badly if I'm catching someone.
As I got closer I realized it was the tandem with Peter and Amanda on it, on previous flatter rides I've generally been just ahead of them on the road, was the climb balancing things out or was I just starting to wake up?






I climbed into the mist, eventually a county march sign stood out at the side of the road proclaiming my entry to Cumbria, a larger sign behind it advising I was on Alston Moor, the hill eased and then flattened.  The mist was close, the air was closer, I was warm but soaked and about to start the descent on wet and greasy roads into Alston. I cawed canny possibly too much, pulling out of a couple of over length braking lines a tad late and discovering there was probably enough grip to corner a bit faster, but there was no need for speed now.

Alston Moor

Alston was different from what I'm used to, other rides I've done have come down from Yad Moss or up from Slaggyford.  The descent eased and then a sharp ramp took me past the "other" petrol station and then over the junction for a short descent to the Audax petrol station.  There was a lot of bikes still sitting there so I realized I couldn't have been that far behind after all, there was even a good bunch of riders eating and drinking outside.  I started looking for Robbie's bike, I found it sans-Robbie, he can't have been that far ahead at all I thought.  I entered the shop and made a beeline for the hot food cabinet, dripping my way through the shop if there was anything warm left I wanted it; John and Robbie were stood there eating pastries trying to dry off, a futile effort as they were only going to go back out into the rain.

I took a sausage roll and danish pastry, nearly forgot my receipt thankfully the shopkeeper knows the score and reminded me I needed one!  When I left the shop it had dried out and the sun was threatening to make a showing.  John and Robbie reappeared as I finished my brunch, and suggested I try and stick with them on the descent.  I set off with some hope I would manage to keep up on the initial rise but they disappeared into the distance and I needed a quick comfort break anyway.

I know the descent to Longtown well, it's not as good a plunge as it feels it should be as there's a sharp descent with tricky corner that drops a good amount of the hill very quickly before levelling out and then there's the descent from Hallbankgate to Brampton which is broken up by the Level Crossing and the Brampton bypass.  A train whizzed by as I approached the crossing but in the wet I wasn't chancing it on crossing the lines and slowed to a crawl to take them square on which requires a dive across the lane, the driver of the car behind seemed to understand.  I also missed a gap on the bypass and had to wait a bit.

The glut of riders that had been in Alston were now standing outside the pie shop in Longtown, but I'd just had a hot pie of sorts so went for a Spar sandwich, Robbie wanted a better receipt so came round to say hello, he'd been there 10 minutes.  They set off again, though only Robbie took the advertised route thanks to him planning to ECE the 315 to 400 afterwards and so needing to stick to a mandatory route.

New roads are always good and this ride presented some new ones, rather than take the A7 out of town we took the country roads over Longtown Moor, the roads were smooth but greasy and I was cawing canny again, a tricky series of hairpins in the woods that looked like they would be fun in the dry were taken with the utmost caution, I picked up a follower along here, I expected him to pass me on the way into the corners by he stayed behind and then dropped back on the climbs, the road wound its way to the Kershopefoot crossing of the Liddel water into Scotland and then rolled into the border village of Newcastleton.

I've been here a handful of times before, on two occasions it was passing through to get to mountain bike trails, the first of those times Al and I were heading for Kielder and the second it was to the Newcastleton "stane" in the motorhome to meet Alex.  I've also been on holiday here, twice staying at a caravan park at the old station, back then I remember every shop appearing to be proprieted by a Ewart, now the shop ownerships appear to be more diverse, but there was no light eminating from any of them despite the doors being open.
However at the Spar and Post Office the staff were standing outside, the rain was off but so too was the electricity, I got a timed post office stamp as a substitute for a receipt and opted to carry on rather than faff with change for a bottle of water. Hawick isn't far.

The 30km over Wauchope into Teviotdale shows just how remote Newcastleton is, a stones throw from the border to the south, another hill pass takes you to Langholm to the west, north east is another road over Wauchope that takes you to the road between Hawick and Carter's Bar at Bonchester Bridge.

The Northbound climb of Wauchope was a river, water streamed across and down the metalled surface presenting pretty patterns to distract me from the climb, in parts it follows the old Border Union railway with many of the bridges, tunnels and viaducts still intact, arguments are being made to reopen the line, but counterarguments are made that a line from Galashiels to Hawick and on to Carlisle effectively goes through nothing and linking to Berwick or Newcastle would connect more of the borders population.

Climbing Wachope at Whitrope summit
As I climbed under a bridge I thought I saw a Leyland National bus sitting on the embankment, as the abutment cleared from my field of vision I saw a tatty old Mk3 Carriage and then other railway machinery.  The "bus" turned out to be the experimental Pacer style single carriage Diesel Railbus RB004 a small group hoping to turn the lonely Whitrope summit into a "Waverly Route" Heritage centre.







On the descent the road joined the Slitrig Water which was in spate, a brown torrent tumbling towards Hawick to join the Teviot which was in similar state.  On the descent I remembered the local motorcycle racer Steve Hislop, 39 Isle of Man TT races, 11 TT wins and first to beat 120mph plus plenty of other races and palmarés, and then I remembered where I was and who I was with when I saw the news of the helicopter crash that killed him.

I wasn't sure of the layout of the town and I seemed to pass the wrong end of the High Street, I carried on in hope that there was a suitable Supermarket, thankfully I was soon spoilt for choice with a Lidl, Aldi and Sainsbury's on the road out of town.  I opted for the Sainsbury's and had a quick look in the café which was lacking a decent food selection at this time of day, so it was off to the sandwich cabinet which didn't inspire much, but the bakery still had some decent wares left so I had a high tea of pastry and chocolate beside my bike.  The rain was still off but the sky was threatening.

The road to Wooler
I was sweltering in my showerproof and arm warmers, but I could see more rain in the sky so I kept it on.  The country road out of Hawick soon links to the regular Borders route from Ancrum to Morebattle via Nisbet, Robbie appeared from nowhere behind me, startling me for amusement before shooting on.  He had gone to Morrison's and waited an age for a lacklustre cooked meal, I realized I hadn't sat down since leaving Ponteland.  Now that may sound daft, I'm sitting on my saddle on my bike all day, but my feet are still working, they are still stuffed into wet shoes, in wet socks and being asked to push against a small contact patch, I needed to put my feet up, but out here in the countryside, in the wet and wanting to get back at a reasonable time, there was no chance to rest.


At Morebattle I checked to see if anyone had gone into the Templehall, but not a bike was leant against the wall. At Town and Kirk Yetholms people milled around outside the pubs as the rain was still off but no bikes were to be seen. 
I crossed a bridge as a flock of cows exited their field and surrounded me, I kept pedalling in the hope they'd part, some stopped, others looked for an exit, but others kept running.
I thought back to being surrounded by cows on a footpath near home and how terrifying they are, then of the time my brother and his driver met cows mid-rally stage, and the state of the car that hit one a few minutes later.



I kept going at a gentle pace, hoping the 3 cows still ahead of me would find a way off the road, one's bowels decided they needed evacuated thankfully not directly in front of me.  I looked back and saw another cow following, starting to run.  My bowels metaphorically evacuated in dissatisfaction with the situation, and then thankfully a gap appeared in front of me as two of the cows thought they saw a way off the road.  I gave it a kick and they were soon behind me, I started looking for a house or farm to report the cows to, I didn't see one.  A car approached and I waved at them to stop... they didn't but they had their window down so I shouted "Cows" at them and hoped the driver didn't think I was shouting abuse.

The excitement abated and I followed this well travelled road into Wooler where I decided it was tea time, despite the late hour the co-op was well stocked and the staff member on the counter was curious as to where I'd been riding, he was suitably impressed with the fact I'd ridden from Newcastle and that I'd set off at 7am, I suspect he doesn't know where Longtown is but seemed unfazed by my reckoning that I'd get back around midnight.  I returned to the bike where a couple of locals were looking at it discussing my set up, though they never asked me any questions.  I considered sitting on the only bench in sight but it was soaking, even though my chamois was also soaked I didn't feel like adding any more wetness to it, my feet would just have to ache a bit longer.

The main road out of Wooler was quiet, signs teased a distance to Newcastle shorter than I knew I had to go and I soon turned off onto minor roads across country to Alnwick, more roads I know from other rides, the hill profile had a couple of small bumps then a big one, I knew the big one was the climb out of Alnwick, and knew it was only big because it was all that was left on the ride.

I stopped to get a cash machine balance print out at Alnwick as another rider locked his bike up to go shopping.  I knew I didn't need anything more than I was carrying with only 50km to go and I kidded myself I could get some speed up and treat this last bit like an evening ride after work.

I was now in the busiest traffic of the day, and even then it was pretty quiet, the odd hot hatch driver hammering it up the hill in 2nd to impress the easily impressed on their way to McDonalds.

Darkness
It was getting dark now and the wet roads made visibility tricky under tree cover even though my lights on.  I lost rough bits of road in the shadows, dry patches altered my vision, my night glasses steamed up irreversibly. Hearing, Smell, Taste and Vision all inflicted, my sense of touch was still working though, my hands and feet hurt from being asked to work in these conditions.
Shillbottle never ceases to confuse me, I always manage to take the wrong road, but never go the wrong way; I corrected the error by turning round and then getting confused again by the two roads round the central common; before realizing where I was and that I do this every time.

I was alone in the dark, the roads were empty, the air misty and wet, I couldn't hear the rustling of the trees or the wildlife, I started to worry about deer.  I realized that the nights are drawing in, it was hardly 11 and it was dark and noted to check what time it gets dark at home now.  My hope of returning by midnight was slipping, but the maths kept me entertained as I rode.  I got confused again, I couldn't remember if I needed to control in Morpeth or not, I nosed the bike into a bus shelter to avoid getting my brevet card soaked as I confirmed I didn't need to.

The bypass was surprisingly quiet and I got straight over the roundabout, down the hill and nothing tried to pass me, a handful of taxis were darting around as I started the climb out of town; 300km ridden, 16hrs 20m, not what I'd been hoping for.

15km back and it's practically flat, 40 minutes to midnight, I just need to average 22kmh but I can see I'm too slow, that flatness from the morning was clearly still present and I got back to the hall at 8 minutes past midnight.  Robbie was sitting there and straight up said he wasn't doing the ECE, and then suggested rather than drive straight up the road we should try phoning the airport hotels to see if there was a room; thankfully there was.

Sunday, 14 July 2019

Fort William 1000 - 5th to 8th July 2019

Schiehallion from the Caravan, what better a view to relax and recover to?
I've taken myself to my parents' caravan on Loch Tummel, looking out on a majestic view of the loch and Schiehallion beyond, I can still feel the shape of SPD-SL cleats in the balls of my feet, in my hands I can feel the imprint of my bars which I've held onto for 50 hours out of the last 71 riding and the friction burns of my slightly oversized gloves on my hands where dry skin flakes off.  My legs don't ache too much and I walk around with reasonable ease suggesting I've prepared myself well for this with the amount of riding leading up to this point.
Other than the occasional walk around the caravan to cook or take a photo of the mountain beyond I've limited my exercise to putting DVDs in the player and lifting books from the table, I'm in static recover mode, this is the last big ride before the big ride in France.

From now except for a 300km in Northumberland and a 200km DIY my hopes are to find some speed, lose some weight and improve my climbing, I also have to do a complete checkover and repair of the bike, there's only four weeks until I'll be boarding the sleeper to London to start the journey to Ramboulliet for Paris-Brest.

Prior to the Blackpool-Glasgow 600 ride last year I entered a Blackpool-Fort William 1000, I realized at the time that if I wanted to do the 1000, which I reckoned would be a "good idea" prior to PBP then it made sense to enter before I was reminded of the horrors of the B7076 through Dumfries and Galloway.  That road is known for it's washed out tar leaving the aggregate sticking out and slowly but surely shaking you and your bike to pieces.

Touristing on the sea front
Robbie and I met up on the train to Edinburgh on the Thursday, a happy accident as my original plan involved booking space on an Aberdeen Scotrail service as a back up to hopping on one of the unbookable Arbroath trains.  I can do this from Leuchars because an Off-Peak Return is only marginally more expensive than advanced tickets; unfortunately I forgot that I would be travelling on the Thursday only remembering as I approached the station to collect the tickets.

Last minute fettling at the dinner table
A quick phone call to Scotrail the following day in the remote sales cooling off period and I was sorted with a ticket for the earlier XC train that Robbie was on; at Edinburgh we picnic'ed on the platform as we waited for the Trans-Pennine train towards Manchester Airport and watched the airport bound passengers arrive with their flight cases and happy moods. After a change of train at Preston we arrived at St Annes-On-the-Sea early enough to go for a quick explore before discovering that Robbie's new seat post needed friction paste in the mechanism, thankfully we caught the local bike shop just in time and he sorted that before a distinctly average tea at the pub.

At the Scout Hut people arrived through the evening, many were staying in the accommodation there and others who were staying in nearby hotels popped in to say hello, a couple from Colorado riding a tandem with asynchronous drive-train piqued curiosity as they hurriedly set up their navigation devices with mapping and route.

In the morning the hall was packed with breakfasters by the time I was up and about, the 8am start was sociable though this would mean riding through or dodging rush hour traffic on the way north.  An Irishman had lost his wallet and passport, people offered to help him out on the way north but he had decided to pack at Paisley, though I don't see why as I'm sure people would have seen him through and being Irish he doesn't need a passport to be in England and Scotland anyway.

Waiting for the start
I had been discussing route options on YACF and decided on a slightly longer route out to Carnforth than the route sheet based on the Lakes Velo Easter Arrow Route that I knew would be reasonably quiet, when we set off I was near the front with Robbie and Aiden and I was waiting to see how many riders would carry straight on at the lights for the route sheet's suburban route and how many would turn off to skirt through the countryside; of the riders in front of me only 2 carried straight on, a sudden feeling of responsibility briefly crossed me before realizing that they couldn't all know about the bridge toll.


In the group we hurtled through the Fylde countryside and onwards to the north but somewhere near Glasson Dock Aiden made a call to pull over and let the long line of traffic behind us past, the front of the group pulled in but the message wasn't passed down and the back hurtled on, I pulled over having realized what was happening and the group was split; we carried on at speed but I was now on the back of a small group, a sharp rise put space between us on the way into Lancaster and I was on my own, the traffic lights and traffic only helping to make the gap bigger.

Climbing Shap
As I left Lancaster a second group started to pass, "Big group passing" was the call, "I'm getting on if I can" was my response, I wasn't letting this go to waste; a good sized group towing me to Carnforth was just what I needed, my pace was back to being decent however they pulled off towards Tesco.
I carried on, preferring the truck stop shop for my control. I passed Aiden and 2 other riders who had chosen the town bike shop as their control, the owner was appreciating Aiden's Barrow Trike as I passed.




At the truck stop Robbie was just leaving the shop as I arrived and he said he'd hang around for me, I grabbed food as I was already feeling the need to eat and set about eating it, Robbie hadn't realized I would be doing this and decided to set off alone as I tucked into a chicken wrap and coke.

The lump between the Gareloch and Loch Long
I set out from Carnforth alone, occasionally faster riders said hi as they passed, traffic was heavy in Kendal and I crawled round the one way system cursing myself for forgetting that the town centre pedestrian zone allows cycles.  The climb of Shap started, more riders were around me and we exchanged greetings but continued at our differing paces, I remembered the landmarks from Blackpool-Glasgow, the first crossing of the power-lines, the false summit and rapid descent into a dip past a house, then the final climb first passing under the power-lines again followed by the summit telephone relay station that's now a glamping pod.  Robbie was there waving me down, he looked terrible.

He told me he'd stopped twice on the climb and had just woken from a 10 minute nap, I suggested he may have bonked, the pace was high and I'd needed to eat at Carnforth whereas he'd bounced it, I suggested he'd better get down to Penrith and try eating.  We set off together and stopped at Shap where the shop was doing a roaring trade to hungry and melting cyclists, he still looked terrible, we carried on down the hill and I started dropping him on the undulations, this isn't right.  I was realising that he was possibly ill but didn't want to say it, effectively telling someone they need to pack the ride is very different from letting them realize for themselves so I felt I had to avoid aiding his decision unless absolutely necessary, as we approached Penrith I told him to find a tea room and demand the finest cakes in the whole world getting the "Withnail and I" reference all wrong.

Ben Arthur (The Cobbler) and Ben Narnain
from the approach to Arroachar
At Penrith the traffic was heavy again and I was glad I'd spotted a cut round the side of town when mapping, though I hadn't spotted a flatter route to Carlisle than over Heskett that Aiden had shown me but I couldn't figure out how to get to it which was rather annoying as I know the road from rallying. The long drag up started and when I finally reached the top at High Heskett, I was hungry again and the heat of the day was causing me to drink more than I expected.  At Carlisle I took an unscheduled stop at the Truck Stop for another wrap and coke.  I knew Gretna wasn't far but I wasn't really planning to eat there knowing I would now be able to get to Lockerbie truckstop (nearer to JohnstoneBridge) with only a quick bounce at Gretna.

The roll in to Carlisle was at commuting O'Clock, not ideal in any way but I managed to cut through the traffic ok to get to the service road beside the motorway, at Gretna other riders were tucking into food and I briefly contemplated buying food here, a quick visit to the shops and I was grabbing an ATM receipt muttering words to the effect of "feck that I'm not paying a fiver for a fecking sandwich" though I may have used the bad F-Word.

The A83 approach of Glen Croe to the Rest and Be Thankful
The B7076 has a bad reputation with Scottish riders, it's mostly built out of the old dual carriageway and in many places the surface is as old as when that was dualed in the 1960s, the result being that the surface is pretty knackered, in some spots particularly on the south facing climb the sun has over the years melted out the tar from around the aggregate meaning you're constantly dropping your wheels into the gaps between stones.  You can find smother lines however, the shoulder  doesn't have any aggregate in the surface layer and in some places despite the road being all but deserted the other carriageway was retained and made cycle track and somehow still has a good surface. 

Thankfully the motorway services are roughly 20 miles apart so knowing I was only 30km from Johnstonbridge services, I knew I was less than that from O'Neils truckstop just south of there, the hour and a half to two hours it should take to get there was also looking like perfect timing for tea and I set off wondering what would be on the menu.

The sun was still beaming down on my back, overheating me and burning my peely-wally Scottish arms when I got to O'Neils, I made a bee-line for the café and to my delight was able to order Steak Pie with vegetables for a delightfully low fee, I then set about sorting out the bike for the next stage topping up with water and sweets to get me to Paisley.  As I got stuck into the steak pie a bunch of VC167 riders arrived who passed comment about my rate of eating, their food was only just arriving as I left.

Inverary
As I climbed the surface suddenly smoothed out, piles of gravel built up off the wheel tracks, normally surface dressing is dreaded by cyclists but here it was bliss, what was once the worst part of the road finally gave some respite from the bar rattling proud aggregate. It's less than 20 miles to Abington almost all uphill, up Beattock is not so much a tough climb as a long one, crossing from Annandale to Clydesdale through the forests around Harthope. At Abington services I ate again, I knew I was well down on calorific intake already and there was another two days to go.



The B7078 takes over the mantle here, crossing the muirland between Abington and Lesmahagow, the surface in places is just as bad, but at the same time the cycle track on the old carriageway is mostly good except for the accumulation of stones, moss and other annoying crap.  After the brief climb onto the muir from Abington it's a rapid descent to Uddington and then a gentle climb past Happendon services and the run into Lesmahagow, from there it was a haul up to East Kilbride in the dying light through Strathaven which should never have the "ath" pronounced.

Bonawe
On the muir before EK my Wahoo froze, I'd suspected it was coming as I could see the slow down in response on page changes, it was unfortunate that it happened in one of the places I needed it to navigate so I stopped and initiated a reboot and recovery. EK proved not to be as bad on the periphery as it's made out to be, the route was comprised of roundabout after roundabout and then a nadgery descent to Thorntonhall, this was where I discovered my electrical fault.  Rounding a corner at speed in the dark my light flickered then dropped output to daylight mode, I reached for the switch on the backup and carried on, I fiddled with the wires and figured out that the connector had a loose wire, my soldering failing me again!

The ride through Glasgow at chucking out time was less eventful than I feared and I rolled into the Paisley control just before 1 am. I cleaned myself up a bit and went to bed, the plan being to see how I felt at 3am, I struggled to sleep, waking regularly but not feeling awake enough to carry on, when my alarm went at 3 I knew I needed longer, a strange fit like shaking passing through me not from the cold as I was warm, I took another hours sleep.
This would be where I defined how much time in hand I was working with; the control closed at 0759 so I had arrived with 7 hours in hand, the 13.3kmh minimum average required for a 1000km brevet easily beaten.

Connel Ferry Bridge, the falls of Lora below
I set off at 5am with 3 hours in hand, through the deserted Saturday morning streets of Renfrewshire, past the airport, getting confused by the access to the Erskine bridge with 2 other riders, one of whom got confused by the route on the other by the route off, both thanks to the poorly signposted closure of the downstream track and diabolical way it joins a zig-zag footpath into a park below.
I rolled through Dumbartonshire on the cycleway while others took advantage of the deserted dual carriageways, I spotted a McDonalds and was disappointed after drooling over the thought of pancakes to discover that it was drive through only at 6am, though the sign on the wall telling people they would be banned if they overstayed their welcome or returned after they had left was surprising for this more affluent area of Greater Glasgow.

I carried on, despite the light breakfast at Paisley I was hungry, very hungry, although my sense of smell is knackered I could pick up the waft of the in-store bakeries at the co-ops I passed with 7am openings, I couldn't really wait at the door for them. eventually and at the last chance in Helensburgh I found a 6am opening Tesco Express with added bakery waft, I dumped the bike against the AdBlue and logs and launched myself to the bakery before feasting on Pain Au Chocolat and Hazelnut Croissants in the forecourt.

Approaching Glen Coe
Soon I was riding past the Faslane peace camp and past the high fences and barbed wire of MOD Clyde, home of Trident and the Nuclear submarines that are chocolate teapots until someone is mad enough to initiate M.A.D.
I nearly missed the turn for Arrochar, plunging down a hill towards Garelochhead and roundabout gave the turning away from the Gareloch, away from the madness of nuclear war and up a great big lump of a hill and then down onto Loch Long, riders from the Trans-Alba rode towards the madness, at a pee stop I checked the progress of riders I knew, I thought I might overlap with Steve Scott if lucky but he was still a long way away.

I reached Arrochar at half-8, the lumps I'd already ridden seemed to have sapped some energy from me but nowhere was open, Glen Croe was about to come, the road felt quiet, I ducked into the toilets at Ardgarten as a chance to judge the road as much as the break, it still seemed quiet. I passed the access to the "Old Military Road" or to me the "Rest and Be Thankful Hill Climb track", where famous locals such as Jackie Stewart and not so locals like Raymond Mays once pitted their cars and car handling skills against the gradients and turns, the quietness of the main road seemed preferable to lifting over the gates and trying to drag my tired body up the final gradient.

The modern road sits high on the slopes of Ben Arthur, unfortunately this hillside is dynamic and in recent years a number of landslides have closed the road resulting in a length detour via either the Dunoon and Portavadie ferries to the west or by Glen Ogle to the east, work is ongoing to minimise the risk and at the road works I let everyone behind me past it was only 4 or 5 cars at that point, but as I climbed I was aware of a lengthening queue, the works making the road narrow enough that there was no where for me to pull over and stop, and whats worse I was struggling away in the single digits.  I started to hope the burger van was in the car park, I struggled on, the workers held the lights and as I reached the summit I pulled into the car park and kept riding until I was at the burger van.  I wanted a Venison burger, but it would be 15 minutes, so I settled for Beef and then I rested and was thankful.
The summit is called the "Rest and Be Thankful" due to a stone erected at the summit by the military work party who built the lower road in 1753 which instructed travellers to do so! A replica is now to be found in the car park.

Loch Achtriochtan, Glen Coe
I waited for the back of a tail of traffic before crossing the Bealach for the plunge into Glen Kinglass, with the burger in me I reckoned I could get away with bouncing Inverary, and as I rolled along Loch Fyne I decided I'd just go to the petrol station; the small shop there had a small selection of baguettes which I made a selection from, however I still managed to spend 20 minutes queuing and eating sweets, I reckoned I'd probably want to eat the baguette at the summit as the haul out of the village is a steep ramp that slowly eases off until you summit near Cladich. 



I was melting in the heat again, and I didn't stop at Cladich but carried on to Bonawe where for the first time ever I was passing through when the shop was open, I bought an ice cream and coke and sat on their bench sneakily eating the Inverary baguette. Checking the Trans-Alba tracker I saw Steve was heading towards Taynuilt where there was a brief overlap as they approached from Oban via Glen Lonan before turning off for a lap of Loch Awe. As it turned out when I checked at Taynuilt I missed him by a few minutes, the main road to Oban is an easy ride beside Loch Etive.
At Connel Ferry the Falls of Lora were just gentle seabound rapids but impressive none the less.


Half midnight at Crianlarich
When I reached Halfway Garage at Dunbeg three other riders were propped against the bags of coal, two were continuing but the other Andy W was packing the ride and was hoping to get a train from Oban.  I'd see him later at Paisley and Lytham as he worked his lift back!
The ride up Benderloch and Appin were as enjoyable as ever, I hopped between the road and cyclepath choosing the shortest flattest route almost all the way until I missed the turn for one part and had an unwanted climb to do.
At Ballaculish I was dreading this next bit, I'd managed to get myself on the A82 leg to Fort William as people returned from their days out for tea, traffic was busy towards the Fort but mostly quiet going the other way, Aiden and Anne were the first riders I saw heading south, followed by a handful of others as I approached Fort Bill, the town is long on approach and no one has ever conveniently opened a shop at this end of town, the big houses and hotels mostly pre-date the developments around the town centre and fort.  Town dragged on, finally I hit the bypass, I couldn't think of anywhere to go other than McDonalds at An Aird, the retail development around the Shinty Pitch.

The two riders from Dunbeg were there, it was only now I learnt they were on the 1200 and working to a more relaxed timescale than I was. I'd reached Fort William after 542km in 34 hours 40 mins, 1840, control closes at Midnight. 5 hours 20 minutes up.  I stayed an hour, 1940, 4hrs 20 minutes up still decent.

Sunrise on the invisible banks of Loch Lomond
As I left McDonalds a rider rolled in, the road was quiet on the way south, I reached the Larochs early enough to stock up supplies in my bag at Ballaculish co-op for the shopless stretch to come and then I set about the climb of the Pass of Glen Coe and onto Rannoch Muir; I've climbed this before, on a wet holiday Monday with two working gears, on a roasting Glasgow holiday Monday in terrible traffic and in the depth of winter when only the locals are around.

It was quiet enough, I stopped for a pee the corner before Jimmy Saville's house, children in a car that had stopped were amused by my Al Fresco micturation.
The rider from McDonalds, Moumen caught up with me here, he told me he'd bounced the control by walking past the queue ordering 6 McChicken Sandwiches and dumping them in his bar bag, I never saw him eat them.  It was getting dark, we rode together past the boarded up house covered in graffiti and through the Study, the waterfall rather timid after a dry winter. 


The glen starts to open out here, the masses of the Buchailles of Etive stand to the right while Rannoch Muir starts to open to the left, the Rannoch Wall on the right, the Rannoch Muir Kings House to the left, rebuilt recently to questionable taste, and then we were out on the Muir.
The old road winds to the south, past Tigh-Creag-Dubh, Telford hardly deviated from Caulfeilds road over the black mount but in the 1930s the road was diverted on a different route, exposed out on the muir it climbs the black mount gently, the summit at 348m not much lower than Telford's route that now forms the West Highland Way.  The descent at first is gentle between the lochs, but it gets faster, and faster then there is a sweeping left hander past a view point and a steep switchback descent to Loch Tulla, my weakness on right handed corners always shows here as I never get the speed or angle right to get round without correction.

Paisley Control
We whizzed though Bridge of Orchy, Moumen didn't realize there was a climb to come before Tyndrum, the road drags back up to 315m before plunging you into Tyndrum, my disc brakes howling as I pulled up to a halt at the water tap at the Green Welly to fill my bottles for the leg to Paisley.  Oddly we weren't the only ones, 40 hours into our ride and just under 618km ridden, just in the time limit for a BRM 600; midnight on the second night, a car pulled up and the occupants waited to use the tap after us.




I told Moumen that I was going to stop at Crianlarich for a sleep, we got there at half midnight, 6 hours in hand, another rider was already sleeping in the waiting room. I got out my bivvy bag and lay on the bench, setting an alarm for an hours time I couldn't risk too much sleep. Sleep came easily lying there on the uneven bench, the alarm went off and I woke with the shakes again and decided I'd need more sleep, I did this again finally setting off at 3am feeling much more awake and better.  I've hardly driven the A82 from Crianlarich south, it's really off route for me.  So I hadn't realised that after the steep climb out of Crianlarich it's a long fast descent down to Loch Lomond followed by a long flat drag, given how easily I went to sleep at the station I'm sure I made the right decision, there was also a distinct lack of other options.

At this early hour the road was deserted, the only sign of life a young lady running between properties somewhere in Glen Falloch, we said good morning and she replied, rather random.
The sky started to lighten as we rode down the Loch, I'd mapped the cycle route and old road and accidentally took one of those routes losing the advantage of the gentle grades of the new road, traffic started to pick up as we stayed on the dual carriageway past Balloch and Alexandria and into Dumbarton we were retracing out wheel tracks now over the Erskine bridge, past the airport and past St Mirren's new ground into Paisley.

High Heskett too early to be a Hotel
We arrived at 7, with 5 and a half hours in hand such was the speed of the last 85km.
Helen on the control told me to take a seat and asked if I knew why, a simple way of checking the mental state of riders this far into the ride.
Andy W was serving breakfast in the kitchen, still in his cycling kit. Moumen asked to be woken at 9 and went straight for another sleep, I'd ascertained while riding with him that he's a fast rider.  I got changed into my last set of kit and prepared to set off, I sat down briefly on a sofa and woke up at half 8.  I set off through the Sunday morning traffic in Glasgow, it wasn't busy but I was slow.

My second visit to Abington was on 53 hours, 1300, 5 hours up, I've only built up an hour since leaving Paisley, and it's lunch time, the queues at each concession were prohibitive so my ideas of lunch had evaporated from another box of noodles into an overpriced sandwich.


Oggy and Raymond were already here, Oggy was ready to go, Raymond was faffing, I was ready to go, we set off together with a rough idea of sticking together for the descent, I lost them without meaning to on the climb to Beattock Summit.  Then the descent began, I was picking a line on the smoothest tar whether shoulder or tyre track, the heat was getting to me again, I stopped at the truck stop for ice cream and coke as well as a water top up, they were doing Sirloin Steaks for a tenner in the Café.  I queued longer than I'd have liked though a trucker trying to buy something he didn't know the name of and a staff member that didn't normally man the shop didn't help. I took a 30 minute break, longer than I'd have liked, long enough to have had that sirloin!

Somewhere on the Wyre
Not long after the Truck stop I caught a rider who was having problems pumping up a tyre, I lent him my pump and tried to have a quick snooze on my bivvy bag, we then rode together through to Gretna where I accepted I'd need to spend some money on food and then Carlisle, he dropped me on the climb to High Hesket. I decided to take the high road despite the extra climb to see if there was anywhere to rest I found it in the form of a bus shelter at the summit,  I sat out the sun eating a cake from my bag.  I was ravenous again and knew I was going to have to stop at Penrith.



The hurtle into Penrith took me to the first petrol station moments before they started to shut up shop for the night, I raided their shelves with two purposes in mind, feeding me now and feeding me later; my plan was to climb to Shap village and stop at the bus shelter, I could probably have carried on to Kendal but a check of Travelodge prices favoured the bivvy. I got there at 11pm, I sat and picnicked on the cake and juice from the petrol station, and then I slept.  I woke naturally at half midnight having slept through the 1 hour count down timer I'd set; I started shivering again. It wasn't cold at 8c but it felt like a cold shiver this time, the trapped warmth of my bivvy bag lost and my damp sweaty kit really not helping.  I had layered up with long sleeve top and gillet over my arm warmers and I kept these on for the climb, I was soon regretting it and unzipped to avoid needing to stop.

A clear morning sky over the Fylde
I could hear the powerlines above me, I knew I was at the summit, but this side of Shap isn't a steady descent, first the plunge to the house and repeat climb, then the plunge to Garth Row and a caravan abandoned across the other half of the road, and then the plunge into a near deserted Kendal, 0130 Monday, all is quiet, not a pub kicking out, not a kebab shop over run with drunkards, it's Monday morning.  Some kids are wandering in the middle of the road, apparently my bike's shit, I suggested to them that it's me that's shit.




Endmoor is dark between the hedges, 0300 at Carnforth and Oggy and Raymond have passed me as I slept, they're chatting to the cashier in the petrol station, I later find out that the café is shut for a "deep clean", so the hankering for an egg roll wouldn't have been satiated.  I take my time over the stop, there's 50km to go and I've still got 4 and a half hours in hand.

Lancaster is deserted at 4am, I'm delighted, I get through without a worry, the climbs are annoying but it's the last ones of the ride.  Back out into the countryside, with the time I'm making I'm starting to wish I had the direct route back in my Wahoo.  Somewhere on the Wyre I see Oggy and Raymond asleep in a bus shelter, I know my next sleep will be on a mattress.
6am and I'm cutting my way across the Fylde on a route I've designed to dodge the traffic, in some places early starters are on their way to work, I have an issue with a series of cars overtaking as I indicate right on one of the few sections that's on a main road.

O'Neils Truck Stop food
This route is lumpier now than it felt on Friday morning, my speed profile is lumpier, I roll into the scout hut 70 hours and 43 minutes after I left, 1026.4Km ridden, 14.5kmh.
Andy W is there manning the control thankfully now in normal clothes while Andy C sleeps.

As I faff Oggy and Raymond arrive followed by Moumen, I don't eat, I ask what bunks are free and grab a shower before sleeping, I get a good 3 hours.
When I wake the VC167 riders are getting ready to head home, I think for the first time ever I see Aiden not wearing cycling kit!  I hang around and talk to a few riders that are there, Andy C is now keeping track of who's still out on each ride.  I start working out what train I want before heading to the station and for Tesco raid.





There was of course a sting in the tail, when I got to St Annes on Sea Station after a cream bun for lunch and just after I purchased my ticket the station announcement advised of a points failure cancelling the very train I wanted, the next would only leave me with 15 minutes at Preston and then if the points had failed would it be able to run?

I considered my options and finally decided the only one was to ride up the seafront to Blackpool North to catch a train to Preston on the busier line, I made it with plenty of time to get a baguette at Preston.

On the train north I had to apologise to the series of passengers sitting on the tip up seats in the bike space that I had the space reserved and then collapsed in my seat, waking briefly to post on YACF.
At Edinburgh I realized the flaw in having an Off Peak Return, it was Monday and I was there at five, just a bit of a wait for the first valid train home.

I'm rather pleased with how many aspects of the ride went, other than the Wahoo and Wiring issue the bike behaved as best as I expected with a worn chain ring, as things turned out had I tried to change that when I got the new ring I'd have been making a late bike swap as I discovered a fault with the drive side crank arm which thankfully didn't fail on me before I found it.

The focus is now getting a good refresh before PBP, the wires will be fixed it's one of my early bits of soldering on the SON Co-Axial connectors where I didn't quite get how they need to be soldered.
Cranks, Jockey wheels, chain rings, possibly a cassette and although I have two chains sitting not quite fully worn I expect a new chain to go on in the final preparation for PBP.

I stayed at the caravan until I got bored of not doing anything other than watching TV and reading, there's more interesting things to be doing.

Wednesday, 3 July 2019

Argyll Alps - 200 - 29 June 2019

As an antidote to the flatness of Lincolnshire I had entered a hilly ride on the Cowl Peninsula with added time pressure of there being two 20 minute ferry journeys involved in the route, Hall accommodation was available to I travelled down to Gourock on the train after work on the Friday.

I'd prepared the Focus for this by removing all the excess weight, using a light pair of wheels with a spoke count that sees my weight troubling the recommendations and leaving only the top tube bag and the frame bag, the first to carry money and battery pack, the second to carry High5 powder, sun cream and electrolyte tablets with my usual jersey pocket set up of Food, Rain Jacket and Camera on my back. I could already feel the difference from the Genesis in long distance set up as I zipped over the Tay Bridge to catch my train.

Hall before the start
When I got to the hall a number of the Borders riders were staying over, as was a rider who had reversed my journey of the previous weekend by coming up from Lincolnshire and a Highland rider, the other Highlanders perhaps proving to be a bit soft having booked into a hotel.
Despite the hard floor surface, sleeping mat and makeshift pillow I got a decent sleep and woke up raring to go and sat eating breakfast with bleary eyed riders around me, the number of riders in the hall slowly increased until there was around 45 riders ready to take the start at 0715.  The earlier time as chosen to allow us to catch the first ferry of the day at 0730.

All aboard for Cowl
Robert gave a briefing before setting us off and I was soon leading a group through down town Gourock towards the Western Ferry pier at McInroy's point.  I felt good, setting what I consider to be a good pace for me on flat ground at 30kmh.  Rather than bump up onto the pavement to get to the pedestrian gate I took the long way round and pulled a large group of cyclists into the HGV bay of the ferry line up as the ferry arrived on it's first trip of the day from Cowl.  We were soon loaded on and sailing over the Firth of Clyde.





Bound for Ardentinny
We disembarked the ferry and I wasn't for hanging around here either, I managed to get myself on the 2nd row of the group on leaving Hunters Quay and sat there as we flew along the banks of the Holy Loch still holding around 30kmh towards Sandbank, no CalMac ferries were in reserve at the Marina and we were forced to stop at the junction with the main road from Dunoon as a solitary car was crossing out path.  At Cothouse we stuck to the coast and turned back down the other side of the Holy Loch which turned us back into the wind but didn't affect our speed, as we rode through Kilmun the ferry that berths there overnight was getting underway to join the service. 

The road undulated gently in places as we continued our unrelenting hurtle towards Ardentinny where we had to get the name of a house with a well placed nameplate that meant we didn't need to stop. I knew what was coming, the road climbed gently and then the 20% sign appeared at the side of the road, a very advance warning of what was coming, some riders rode round me, the gradient increased, more riders passed and soon they were strung out ahead of me on the hill and I was near the back of the pack.

More riders passed and soon they were strung out ahead of me on the hill and I was near the back of the pack.

Having ridden the hill before I found I had a decent memory of it, knowing what was coming and where it was hard, I set a pace and ground it out, around me riders got off to walk, another waited for his riding partner to catch up, I stayed in the saddle and kept going. I summited and started the descent, the same riders climbed with descended around me, some faster, some slower, but we soon found ourselves in a small group as we rode along the shore of Loch Eck and into Strachur and along Loch Fyne.

Along Loch Fyne
Although it's not flat we were able to hold a good pace along Loch Fyne on a gentle climb, one of the riders had packed on the North Coast 600 due to injury and I started chatting to her after enquiring about recovery.  I was waiting for the junction at the "Tinkers Heart" that would signal the start of the next hill proper although it started on the Loch Fyne road at St Catherines, the zig zagging climb of the B839 is the tough part, 110m of it in 2km, and then a plunge, down into Hell.
Or at least Hell's Glen, actually a miss-identification, Gleann Beag being the map name the other Gaelic name is Glen Iarainn, meaning The Iron Glen. Hell's Glen actually refers to Glen Ifhrinn elsewhere in the vicinity

Hell's Glen... Ish
The descent of Hell's glen is steep and tricky, zig-zagging through woodland on a narrow single track road, in the small group the riders that rode ahead of me did not surprise with Bob in the lead.
The gradient eased and the pace dropped, the heat in the woods was uncomfortable for me and I knew what was to come, over a bridge and a signpost pointed the way to Lochgoilhead, no post pointed the way to the Rest.

Gleann Mor is the map name, the more famous name is "The Rest and Be Thankful" though this should only apply to the car park at the summit it is generally given to the A83 climb and the "old military road" once a Sprint Hillclimb track where locals such as a young Jackie Stewart and established international aces once demonstrated their craft, that climb is more correctly Glen Croe.

Again I knew what was coming as I set up Gleann Mor, the heat felt oppressive until a gap in the trees gave me a blast of the cooling wind before the trees enveloped and sheltered me again, I had set off at a decent pace for me but the gradient on this climb increases as you gain height, mostly imperceptibly until the road lurches to the right then left while ramping up to 13% before starting to ease back off at a similar rate to the increase to summit with fantastic views down Glen Croe. The new A83 high on he slopes of Ben Arthur and the old down in the base of the Glen, with the hillside mobile regular works are needed to keep the A83 safe and the old road has been resurfaced for emergency use in the event of a landslide.

Glen Croe, the "new" A83 high on the slopes of Ben Arthur and the old road down in the base of the Glen, with the hillside effectively mobile regular works are needed to keep the A83 safe and the old road has been resurfaced for emergency use in the event of a landslide.
The road descends to the car park at the Glen Croe Summit, but Robert and Mick had set up the control in a lay-by at the Bealach an Easain Duibh the pass that links Glen Finglass to Glen Croe and the start of the descent, a car boot full of water, bananas and flapjacks. Perfect.

I took a bit longer than the rest of the small group to set off, I had a second flapjack stuffed in my face and I wasn't risking dropping it.  I set off in pursuit and caught then at the corner where the Bealach turns into the Glen, my speed relented slightly as I knew there was a junction coming, it came faster than one of the riders expected and all I could manage was a "Ho Left!" to warn him as I swung from the deceleration lane into the new road.  We were back on Loch Fyne and heading West, a small lump over to the Tinkers Heart junction split what was left of the group and I got into matching pace with Anne, I said I was wanting to stop at the Café at Strachur as I reckoned I'd be hungry before the next control.

This was another section where a good pace could be held, and after a climb in the woods we rolled at good speed into Strachur, no one had stopped at the pub, no one had stopped at the shop, no one had stopped at the Bistro, but where's the Café we were soon out of town. (The bistro is the Café). The road started to climb at a reasonable gradient and I dropped Anne, I dropped my pace when I realized it was too long to go as hard as I was but I was on my own for now.  I was now heading for the Clachan of Glendarule where Robert and Mick would be with what was left of the water, bananas and Flapjacks.  I don't remember them passing so I don't know how they got there ahead of all the riders.  But first there was a good long descent to rest on, I was going to need this.

As I pulled up at the control a rumble sounded above, "That's no thunder is it?", "Nah it's a plane, I've never heard thunder with a turbo fan whine".  Anne and a couple of other riders caught up again as the rain caused the control to be adjusted.  Deckchairs launched behind the flapjacks and everyone huddled under the tailgate waiting for a downpour but the rain stopped as quickly as it started.  Now it was time for the climb we'd all been waiting for.

Approaching the toughest section of the Ballochindrain Climb
The OS can't make their mind up what this is called; in some records it's the Bealach Maim, in others it's got the name of the farm Ballochindrain which is what the locals call the climb. But just to be annoying someone has when producing the newer 1:25 mapping has named the farm Bealachandrain.  What ever the name this climb is a beast, I descended it once hanging onto my brake levers the pads stinking as I tried to avoid clipping either the grass in the middle of the road or going into the fence.




The hardest section gets two arrows on the map.  I hauled myself up there matching pace with the others, but I chose to stop, a view I wanted to photograph and a respite I needed, it was only a few seconds but the others were out of sight.

Top of the Beallach Maim
I carried on up the hill, in places the grass was growing from the centre lien, the gradient no longer so viscous allowing better progress, the sky rumbled, the atmosphere was fitting for this tough climb, at times I was pointing the right direction for the rumble to be accompanied seconds previously by a flash in the sky out to the west.
I didn't count the seconds, I only cared that I was away from the lightning and making progress, I recognized the top, it plateaus in the Scottish sense, it's not flat, it's not hilly but the road winds it's way through the land at the top of the hill taking the easiest line rather than the straightest and flattest, and then it was time to descend.

I remembered this side was also a tough climb, not as tough as what I had just done but enough to make me wary of not over doing the descent. At the junction near Otter Ferry the riders I'd lost due to my stop were standing reading the sign for an info control, it seemed to be getting wet so I carried on to shelter and wrote down the answer losing the other riders as I did so.

I was rolling along nicely now, a bit of a climb and a descent, as I passed the junction at Millhouse and spied a café which was just what I needed, I found the faster of the Highland riders finishing off a decent sized lunch, unfortunately I was concerned about time so after my first choice from the "Light Bites" section turned out to have run out I opted for the "Cheesy Beans on Toast" from the children's menu with one critical alteration along with cake and coke.  The rest of the cheese free options on the menu sounded fantastic but I didn't think I had the time.

Another info control was needed to make sure we didn't cut straight over to Tighnabruich taking us down to Ardlamont before making our way up the coast to Kames, where I decided I wanted an Ice Cream... I sat on the bench outside the shop eating a Magnum as a light rain shower passed over and thought back to the day of the Glasgow Commonwealth Games Men's Road Race when I stood eating ice cream in a heavy cloud burst.
Bob and Tracy had made it to Kames and along with some others were eyeing up the Little Kitchen's menu when I passed and then it was down into Tighnabruich, I just zipped through preparing for the Bealach a Chaisteil, as I climbed it I spotted a view of the Kyles of Bute through the trees I told myself I have this photo already and ignored it, the road climbs over a large rock that prevents a coastal route suitable for motor vehicles however the Cowal Way runs along the base of the rock, however the views from the rock are fantastic and as I reached the second view point by resolve to ignore it and keep going was beaten, it is a fantastic view over Loch Riddon and the Kyles of Bute.

Loch Riddon and the Kyles of Bute
A family on a road trip had stopped and were taking in the view, one of the riders I'd been riding with on and off was also taking in the view and exclaimed how amazing it was.
The road plunges off Creagan Dubh and almost takes you back to Clachan of Glendaruel, but the route turned to the right along Loch Riddon passing the junction with the Dunoon road before climbing up and over a small hill to Colintraive on the Kyles of Bute where the rider I'd met at the view point mentioned the uncomfortable reality of riding to a ferry port just to turn around and return back the way they'd come; it was a necessary pain for the distance of course!

Riders on the return as I head for Colintraive
I faffed through screens on my Wahoo as I set off back over the hill to the Dunoon junction and realized the screen was frozen, not wanting to stop but also unsure of the status of it I powered it down and hoped for the best on power up, the recovery process took around five minutes as I climbed the hill and I stopped at the summit to make it easier for me to recover the section from my backup device, if I hasn't entered Mileater I think I might have accepted the missing 2km.






Riders on the return as I head for Colintraive
As I descended I saw a woman standing next to her car with hands clasped to her face having clearly had a fright, I stopped and asked if she was ok.  Fears of the worst were allayed as she revealed she'd just had a blow out and right enough her front left tyre was flat, unfortunately she had no spare, a tin of tyre weld, no breakdown cover and no idea who she could phone. I waited with her while she calmed down and worked out what to do, eventually phoning a friend and trying to explain her location to him, so he could assist.




Tarsan Dam (The one with the outlet)
Carrying on I knew there was only two climbs to go, the first a moderate climb over muirland to Loch Striven, the second similar in gradient but much more impressive with the climb to Loch Tarsan the reservoir with two dams, one that drains to Loch Striven and the other which holds the water back from flooding Glen Lean, along with many aqueducts to collect water from the burns on the hillsides.
I remembered the descent as being a fast descent on rough single track roads, a bit of a challenge however new tar had been laid and it was a thoroughly enjoyable plunge back to the Holy Loch from where it would be flat all the way back.


I was starting to feel peckish and decided that if I passed a shop I would stop and get something for the ferry which I reckoned would be at 1845 giving plenty of time to get there, At the junction in Sandbank the shop was still open so I stopped to collect a drink and sweets.  Skimming along by the loch some kids were waving and cheering from a garden, I turned the corner and there was the "Sound of Seil" moving slowly away from the pier; balls.  The service pattern had returned to 3 and hour so were every 20 minutes, something I should have realized when I saw the ferry tied up at Kilmun.

Missed the boat
I put the bike against the waiting shelter and while digging my sweets out my bag dropped half the packet on the floor. Typical!  The rain came on heavy all of a sudden, I brought the bike into the shelter and mulled over the ride; I'd ridden much better than expected on the hills, maybe I could have put a little more in but I was going to get the ferry a whole hour earlier than I had allowed for, the fast rolling sections had definitely helped with that.







Sound of Soay at Gourock
The rain stopped, and soon after Sound of Soay arrived at the link-span and a local held the gate for me as I wheeled the bike on, I was all set to stand out on deck as we sailed but another heavy rain shower sent me scuttling to cover. We landed at McInroy's point and I set off for the last 3km through Gourock, the roads were soaking with the spray wetting my back, an unpleasant feeling after staying dry all day.  Arriving back at the hall Robert and his family were serving soup and sandwiches; two riders had passed me when I was in the shop and had made the 1840 ferry with seconds to spare.



I had planned the ride based on being full value, but was in the end comfortable, this also meant I'd booked a nights accommodation along in Greenock as I thought I'd struggle to make the last train home but as it turned out I spent the evening photographing a stunning cloudy sunset before spending most of the day waiting in Queen Street station thanks to grabbing the last Advance ticket available!

Greenock Sunset

Further photographs:


Riding to the pier in the morning Sound of Soay having just arrived with the first load of the day

Riding through Gourock

Riding along the Holy Loch

Going backwards on the first climb

Nearing the top of the Rest

This chap has an easy life

Colintraive Ferry Terminal

Riders heading for Colintraive as I return

Rider heading for Colintraive as I return