4AM Tama Tuesdays

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My wife and daughter love Natto Gohan, a dish of fermented soya beans, usually served with raw quails egg and soy sauce on rice. Brown and sticky with little tendrils of goo that cling to the beans as you lift them out of your bowl. To me it smells like death and my brain is often unable to suppress a gag reflex when I catch a waft. It’s an acquired taste apparently. The same can be said for cycling in Tokyo at the height of summer: “People don’t cycle during August”, I’m told with great authority, “its too dangerous because of the heat – people die” my wife informs me over a bowl of the  aforementioned bean. She has a point: The hottest English summers start with a comfortable, if not slightly chilly morning but Tokyo couldn’t be further from this. To beat the heat, a five o’clock start is not unusual but its still 28 Celsius and 10km in I have already drained the best part of one bidon.

I’m meeting Al, a University Professor, some 30km from my door along the Tama River. He’s an ex Olympic level cross-country skier and has been climbing the hills in Japan for 12 years. Strong as hell and despite his insistence that we ride together because “we have the same level of fitness”, he leaves me floundering on most climbs. We had met one of the Tokyo Cycling Club’s early morning hill climb sessions lead by Jon: a wiry mountain goat with a lid held together with gaffer tape. Within a minute of our meet up we’d hit the insane ramps and switchbacks on the Tama hills just outside Tokyo. The recovery sections were at criterium speeds and Jon would never be off the front, often racing further ahead to record our suffering for his Instagram account. The highlight of the “Tama Tuesdays” ride is an insane sprint up a thin ribbon of concrete through an allotment. The narrowness of the path means that you can’t zig-zag, overtake or fall back. You just go up and just hope that no one is coming down. Finnish lad, Tom, is another regular and the next time I see him, he is mixing it up with the pros at the Taiwan KOM. But its early in his training and I’m managing to hold his wheel most of the way up and doing a decent job of keeping my breakfast down too. I’m proud of my 11th Strava position on this climb – a massive victory as far as I’m concerned.

 

As I follow the river out of metropolitan Tokyo, the pristine high-rises of the shopping district Futako Tamagawa are replaced with the rusting chain link fences of baseball courts and cement factories. Its early and although there is a cycle path, its shared use and used by the seniors for their morning constitutional. Like me, these wily old athletes are up early to avoid the heat and the crowds: by mid-morning the paths, especially on the Tokyo side will be heaving with dog walkers; baseball teams; at least two 10k fun runs and of course, cyclists. You can pretty much follow the path to Saitama without hitting a gradient above 1%, so its perfect for a leisurely ride – or winter base miles when the air is crystal clear and Mt. Fuji dominates the skyline: a perfect volcano capped in white against a cold blue sky. Its lovely. But now its Summer, and thanks to the humidity, I can barely see the Tama hills on the other side of the river.

Our ride eventually takes us away from the river after which we follow the Tama monorail for a few kilometres. Even in the countryside you never escape the touch of modernism and development. Apparently, Japan has the best concrete technology in the world and after the war whole villages were employed to smother the mountains and rivers in this monotonous grey, protecting the population from land-slides and flooding. The Japanese have learned to live with nature and these brutal interventions: indeed it has become part of the language of the Japanese countryside.

After we reach the the ride’s goal – a nondescript road summit of Mt. Takao we are rewarded with long and fast descent on a perfect piece of tarmac – and quite possibly the longest bit of road without traffic lights in Honshu. This doesn’t last long as the return to Tokyo is punctuated with traffic jams: It’s hot and everyone has their air conditioning on. Sitting on a bike at a junction is unpleasant enough: high noon with empty bidons is something else.

Cutting through town takes an age, I end up on a ramp to the expressway at one point and I resolve that its safer to take the pavement: its illegal, but everyone does it including the police. Riding a bike here seems to absolve you of any traffic violation and every main road here is like London’s North Circular: fast and dirty. You just wouldn’t cycle on it. No one stops for a pint – not that you’d find a pub anyway – but it is just too hot and I’m too filthy and tired. But I’ll be up at 4am on Tuesday for hill repeats.

Thursday’s

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Being part of a new bike club comes with lots of new decisions to make. There’s easy ones like which colours to get printed on new kit?* And medium difficulty ones like choosing which cafe to drink coffee in? And finally at the junction of designing a more accessible ride there’s harder ones like when, where, and at what pace to ride at?

Happy with a roster of smashy rides into Epping every Tuesday and Friday, all complemented with trademark 500km weekends / epic rides every six or eight weeks, it was time to add something weekly that was more accessible.

By the time six of us sat down, for pizza and beers, those more creative than me had already figured out that with winter closing in and light at a premium, a place like Regents Park would work well. OK, great. Now for the detail. For those who are comfortable spinning up and down hills in Epping at an average of 40 kmph, or ‘clicks’, for those of a military bent, spinning around the relatively flat Regents Park at 30 clicks average is quite nice and relaxing. So the ride is chilled for some, but for others it is a fast and hard session.

Good. Agreed. 30 clicks average.

So far we have turned up every Thursday for two months. Meeting at Surgeon’s corner at 06.30 and spinning around the park (which is lovely in the morning light) until 07.30 we then head into town to a coffee shop to chat shit, drink coffee or tea, and mainly laugh quite a lot.

We are not alone. Lots of other riders enjoy turning their legs before work. I guess we differ in being as happy in the rain as the sun. We also make a point of going anti-clockwise which for some reason is not the norm. We all try to wear the same kit (‘which looks cool’, I keep telling Tom). We think it’s cool when there are ten riders, and equally as rewarding when only two riders make the effort. Nobody gets dropped. And everyone is welcome.

Today was a great example. Riders from Pretorius and Vicious, Rapha and Hackney cycle clubs, joining 6AMCycling regulars. As a special treat Chris from fixed crits specialists, DEFI, had invited David Morgan from breakaway_photography to capture what we are putting together. Admittedly, it is a work in progress… David joined a group of six, while another six were spinning around the park about half a minute ahead, and crucially for a lens slut like me, just out of sight. Doh!

Don’t say, ‘chilled and chatty laps on Thursday, y’all?’

Do say, ‘30 clicks av. on a Thursday followed by great coffee and some good chat**.

 

*All thanks to Lesley for designing all our awesome kit.

** ‘Good chat’ is relative, of course.

words by the E man . Pic by breakawayphotography

First 25 TT

My first 25 mile Time Trial.

Oof! I have just completed my first 25 mile cycling time trial. An absolutely British affair. Sign on at Thunbridge Town Hall from 7am and start racing at 8am by riding South down the A10, dual carriageway, to a roundabout signalled well by marshals in high vis. And back up the A10, North, to another roundabout signalled again well by marshals, and then return to the start/finish line.

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Tunbridge town hall is very similar to every town hall I have ever been to in this country. Clearly underused, cold, and a wee bit drab. But, staffed by lovely people who do it for the fun of getting up early on a Sunday morning 20 times a year. The F10/25 Time Trial, hosted by Norlond Time Trial Combine (Eastern / Hertfordshire) put on what can only be described as a feast for when you finish. By the time we had got back after an hour of solo riding, at around 9am, the town hall was complete with a spread of triangular white bread sandwiches, cakes, mini sausage rolls, grapes (unexpected), and tea and coffee.

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Around 30 riders competing today, all having paid £8 online via cyclingtimetrials.co.uk or CTT to those in the know. All hopefuls in varying degrees of pro, slippery, wind-cheating kit, representing local clubs from around North and East London. Some independents with no club allegiance. But in the main, the tell-tale garish colours of local club colours brightened up the grey morning.

The time to be aware of for your first 25mile TT is ‘over’ or ‘under’. Over, or under, an hour. Sixty minutes. Sixty minutes of riding on your own up and down a road with only your own thoughts to keep you going. In new money this equates to travelling at an average of plus or minus 40 kilometers per hour, as 25 miles is exactly 40 kilometers. Giving you the magic tipping point. I was, with a GPS device, able to measure duration of riding, speed, average speed, and distance travelled. What I was not able to measure was Heart Rate, Power, or Cadence. With the tools I had, I aimed firmly for a target of ‘under’ knowing that by around half way I needed to have an average of 40kmph and some change, and then hope that I hadn’t burned too many candles of power to be able to continue at that rate. As the distance travelled increases, the feeling of having achieved something increases, but crucially the average speed becomes harder and harder to move in a positive direction. If, after 5km the average is 35, moving it to say, 37, is quite doable by simply riding for a kilometre or two at 39 or 40. But after travelling for 20km, moving from say, 38km to 40.1kmph average is much, much harder.

To cut a long story short. I managed it, completing the course in under an hour. Bosh!

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And to the finish. The scene in the town hall was cut short by another peculiarly British scene. Radios chattering in with news from marshals on the course of ‘a rider down’. Followed by ‘rider hit by lorry’. Followed, amazingly, by a guy arriving with ripped kit, cuts and bruises, and a pretty dazed look in his eyes. How the authorities think it is ok to let us ride on a dual carraigeway amongst HGVs and vehicles travelling up to and over 112kmph is bat shit crazy. Bat shit crazy.

Massive thanks to Sam, who drove me and him up from London to the start. And congratulations go to him for his PB today.

Words & Pics by Ewan Crallan

Quick Questions for Steve Gullick

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Steve Gullick pic by 6AM

If you don’t know who Steve Gullick is, let me help you. First of all he’s a better mate than photographer, which is saying something when you google his name and check out some of the moments he has captured. Nirvana, Sonic Youth, Beck, Bjork, Neil Young, Depeche Mode, Mark Lanegan, Pearl Jam, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Richard Hawley, The Progidy, Spiritualized, The White Stripes,…the list is almost endless….oh… and his landscapes are pretty sweet too, whether shot using 5×4 film or on his phone, the results are always pretty ace.

Too be honest Steve has been a bit of an inspiration for 6AM. I know he’s got nothing to do with cycling ( although he does own a push bike ) but it’s more the “do it yourself” attitude that he has. To do things that have integrity and worth. Just check out his book Nirvana Diary or any of the his band Tenebrous Liar’s five albums, the artworks are things of beauty.

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Pic by Steve Gullick

After a few days of trying to come up with some slightly interesting questions to ask Steve I decided that getting my buddy Lee, who’s a photographer and big fan of his work to do it, might be a bit easier. So here’s a mix of mine and her questions. Thanks Steve !

If you could use one camera and film, what would that combo be and why ?

Leica R6 / Summilux 50mm F1.4 and Tri X.  Size / reliability / quality / familiarity.

Favourite photographer ?

Sir Don McCullin

Is there any one pic you’ve taken that you are most proud of ?

Hmmm – interesting question – there’s a few – but I’ll go for Jason Spaceman on Mt Etna

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Jason Spaceman Mt Etna.  pic by Steve Gullick

Who bought you your first camera and what was it ?

Mum and Dad. Practica MTL3

Do you have a well organised archive and if so, do you organise by genre, date or alphabetically and sometimes do you re-organise it just for a laugh. Or is your storage a shambles… ?

Negatives by date, prints alphabetically…there’s a lot of it so chaos isn’t really an option. My records are organised alphabetically – I’m open to suggestions for a better way. Genre isn’t an option as that’s too subjective.

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Kurt Cobain pic by Steve Gullick

Have you ever had a cock up with the film or camera on a job or have you ever lost your work ?

All the equipment was stolen from the back of the van during a Tesco’s sandwich stop once – That was a drag.

Do you keep your pinhole cameras or make a record of them ?

Only used them twice – The first time was during a Headswim session… we loaded drink cans with 5×4 film & binned the cameras after use. The second time was with a purchased camera on a Richard Hawley session. I gave that camera to Richard.

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Bjork pic by Steve Gullick

How did you get started and which band was your first job ?

I photographed all the gigs I could sneak a camera into and started shooting sessions for fanzines in the 1980’s – I did a lot of stuff with The Levellers early on which indirectly lead to me working for Sounds ( a weekly music paper ).

Do you struggle to shoot a band or artist if you don’t like there music ?

Not anymore – If creative people are choosing you to take their photograph, that’s a great honour.

Do you have a secret pseudonym to shoot naff stuff ?

I may have done – I have definitely used  Sven Gillette and Hank Schnappmann for comedic value.

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Josh T Pearson pic by Steve Gullick

And last but not least, what’s your favourite live album ?

Live Killers by Queen,  Summer in the Southeast by Bonnie Prince Billy,  Live and Dangerous by Thin Lizzy.

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Steve Gullick. Tenebrous Liar. pic by 6AM

Many thanks Steve

Check out his website here                                                                          http://portfolio.gullickphoto.com/albums/iz0Hrc/portfolio-57

His phone book is available here                                                                            http://gullickphoto.com/phonebook.html

His band Tenebrous Liar here                                                                         http://www.tenebrousliar.com/

Questions by Lee Milne and 6AM

Three Hundred? Three Hundred, Three Hundred.

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Doesn’t matter which way you spin it. Three hundred is a massive ride. It’s a massive ride in Summer and it’s a massive ride in winter. They wanted to do it in November, which is basically winter in the UK. Well, fuck it, I was promised  chilli and beer at the end…..so I was in !

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I think the count was 12 to start with. And I know that 8 of us finished it. I also know for sure that everyone deserves kudos for even thinking about it. After about two hours I knew I’d worn the wrong clothes. It was cold. After 5 hours I was certain that I’d need more clothes. My arms just hadn’t improved beyond painfully cold. Thankfully there was a planned lunch stop in a real nice cafe / bike shop, and after double eggs and double everything I bought an emergency Nalini baselayer and off we went. By the way, that took my baselayer quota to 3. All underneath a winter Gabba, a gilet, a snood, and a winter hat. OK, now all that was cold were my legs.

 

Now for the good bits: The serene fog and morning mist which hung in the air as we rolled over yellow, brown, burnt, toasty coloured leaves; The dipping sunset as we crested the approach to Maldon (of sea salt fame) beside the reservoir making us almost blind with its low intensity; the camaraderie within the group pulling us together; the most goddam scrumptious chilli and beer at the end, of course; Lunch; Sweet rice cakes from Jonny and savoury bacon and egg rice cakes from Ben; and finally Saul for agreeing to do laps of Stoke Newington after 296km so that our Garmins would read 3 at the beginning!

 

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Pic by Glenn Hutchinson

 

Thank you so much to Tom and Lesley, aka 6AM. Please can we do another one soon?

PS I’d really appreciate nobody mentioning how bleeding useless my front light was. Thanks. E x

 

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Pic by Glenn Hutchinson

Words by Ewan Crallan

Pics by 6AM

Greggs rules !

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Finding A Wheel (chain gang chatter)

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This was going to be about a guy in his mid thirties with little affinity or experience of riding a bike other than teenage trips to friends’ houses, going from being a part time cycling commuter to a racer hooked on the thrill of pushing themselves to win.

Don’t get me wrong it will include that journey, but I think we all know that while that might resonate with you either directly as someone with a similar experience or because you know someone  like it, such a piece would be a bit, well, dull.
Worse than that it’d be difficult for it not to come across as a self aggrandising not so subtle humblebrag from cycling-is-the-new-golf-Johnny-come-lately, the kind with an excessive focus on expensive kit and a relentless stravafication of the club ride. I loathe the thought I could be perceived in that way, although I do admittedly tick several of the requisite boxes….

So grab yourself a recovery shake and let’s get into the personal back story. It’s 2011 and with Sunday football no longer possible thanks to a twice reconstructed left knee and consequently an expanding waistline, I sought a way to get the weight down without abandoning a penchant for beer and cake. So I started riding to work and realised I wanted to do more than a few miles a day, so a year later I upgraded from a hybrid to a road bike (not a racer as the red Raleigh I’d had a kid had been called).

Keen to give myself a goal I entered 2013’s RideLondon and through umpteen solo rides out to Surrey, I developed a love for losing myself geographically and in thought while physically pushing myself to go further faster. Ultimately, I finished RideLondon in 5hrs and perhaps overly pleased with myself stayed off the bike through winter and then after moving home and decorating it wasn’t until autumn 2014 that I found myself back in the saddle.

With a few 50km solo rides out into Essex under my belt, I felt confident enough to join Cycling Club Hackney. It started with being dropped on the shorter club ride, then dropped on the no prisoners Writtle ride but with the help of early morning solo rides each week I’d plug away a bit more and get a few more kilometres before being dropped, and then I was able to hold my own and then finally I was taking some admittedly limited turns on the front.
And if you’re out of breathe reading that poorly punctuated sentence then you know how I felt on those club rides!

Bouyed by progress and intrigued by the talk of crit races and assured by club mates I’d be strong enough, my dormant competitive spirit flared and I signed up for my first race at Lea Valley Velopark.  I promptly abandoned ego deflated less than 30mins into it.

But I plugged away, and much like the club rides, I made progress. I watched others and learnt race craft – well mostly how not to unnecessarily flog myself. By the end of the summer I had a couple of top tens in the bag and with the field shrunk by a miserable few days of rain, I won a race and secured Cat 3 status.

So as winter approached and keen not to lose the fitness I’d gained, I bought a turbo and signed up to TrainerRoad and set up a pain cave in work’s basement car park. I flogged myself and kept my fitness up and as the better weather returned I found myself feeling strong early in the year – maybe too early but we live and learn.

The race season is now well underway and although the forays into road racing didn’t work out as hoped, I’m back on my home patch at the Velopark and picking up points. I’ve acquitted myself well in the Tour of Cambridgeshire and in July I’m back doing RideLondon and I’ll be able to see how far I’ve come in the last three years.

Come the end of RideLondon, I’ll press stop on the Garmin and evaluate how I’ve done. Yeah, I’ll pour over them good or bad, then check the Strava segments and wonder just how accurate their power estimates are. But I won’t find the measure of myself or a sense of success or failure in the data.

Instead as I lay back in Green Park, trying not to cramp up and wonder what non-pro recovery food I can get down my neck asap, I’ll be thinking about the things that I would never have done if it wasn’t for the simple pleasure of riding a bike. I’ll have been on 200km rides to the coast and back in deep winter, taken on the pave of northern France, gone down mountains in Mallorca significantly faster than I went up them and bikepacked from Maryport to Whitby.

But those experiences wouldn’t amount to half of the memories I have of them if it wasn’t for the people I did them with. Those from whom I commandeered at least 10 inner tubes and attempted to find a sense of humour due to never ending punctures as I struggled around Roubaix, received words of encouragement as I ground my way up Puig Major, and learning on the club run the intricacies of through and off and why you should never wear anything you haven’t earned. Especially if they have a rainbow on them.

So here’s a raised (beer filled) 6am Cycling bidon and a chapeau to the people I’ve met and friends I’ve made over the last couple of years. People I’ve shared bike rides, road trips and #protips with, and in a nod to 2016 felt the sense of community fostered through a kudos, like, tag, groupchat and check in. Because it can’t be often that someone reaches their mid-30s and is able to welcome a whole host of new friends into their life*.

*And NCT classes don’t count obvs.

Words by Neil Coyte      Pic by 6AM

 

 

Rory Re-cycled

I inherited my Dad’s bike in 2011. A hand built steel frame Rory O’Brian that he had purchased in 1959 at the age of 21 (apparently to the dismay of my Grandad who thought such a cost on a frivolous item was unseemly) that cost was approx £100.

 

My dad’s love of cycling took him all over the UK, around the Channel Islands & across to Europe. From the early 60’s up until the late 90’s my dad cycled from Land’s end to John a groats, north to south Devon (not forgetting the daunting Porlock hill). Around Cornwall, London to Essex, Wales, Ireland, & the west coast of Scotland. In 1964 my dad rode to Paris as an avid follower of the Tour de France & cheered as Jacques Anquetil of France picked up the yellow jersey. And Last but no way least was the tour through Western Norway to visit friends in Vos.

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David Steggles aboard the ‘Rory’ (3rd from left) in Maldon, Essex, 1963.

My Dad enjoyed recalling the stories of his cycling youth over the dinner table when I was young & I remember the time that I got sat on the very bike I ride today at the age of 7 & screamed to get off because it was too high & the saddle hurt.

Later on when the touring days were over, my dad stripped the bike back to the fix wheel single speed it is today.

Touring became commuting to work & in his spare time my dad would take part in charity rides. The last one he did as I recall was the London to Southend & one that I was later to organise again in his memory.

In 2006 my parents retired to Devon, a place my dad had always loved cycling around back in the day. By this time the bike had been tucked away in his workshop & I spent many years encouraging dad to restore his beloved bike to its former glory. This became a 6 monthly request for over 10 years, always to the reply of ”yes I must get round to doing that” or “yes, it’s next on my list” the Rory remained garaged for over 17 years!

I’d wanted the bike restored for 2 reasons, firstly I believed my dad desperately needed a hobby & secondly I selfishly wanted to ride it around the parts of Devon my Dad was so passionate about in his youth, and it seemed like the perfect opportunity for my dad to revive his past. Alas this was never to be.

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The ‘Rory’ today. Original bell still intact.

In hindsight maybe it was a project that would have evoked too many emotions & brought up too many memories as at this point my dad wasn’t able to cycle anymore.
So in 2011 I collected the bike from my dad’s workshop & brought it back to London with the promise to myself that the bike would once again be road worthy & see the light of day. In September of that year, myself, my brother Paul & a group of my closet friends all came together to recreate the last charity London to Southend bike ride my dad had completed. We raised £2000 for Stanmore hospital where my dad had received the best care. It was an amazing day. We wore t-shirts designed by Stephen Burke of Proper East & received sponsorship from my dad’s original cycling buddies from the 60’s. It was a memorable experience & one I think my dad would have been proud of.

Rory O’Brian himself passed away around 23 years ago & his 2 shops were sold on.

(The very one where my dad purchased his bike) in Romford Rd, Manor Park became a grocers & I understand that Roger the mechanic moved to Devon to repair post office cycles. The 2nd shop in Romford became ‘Johns of Romford’ a motor cycle specialist that carried on the Rory O’Brian name until 1966 & are still going strong today.

To this day I cycle my dad’s Rory O’ Brian on a daily basis, it may look a little different today but it still sports the original frame, handle bars and grooved stem from when it was built. It has once again seen the country roads of Essex & north Devon but its home is London now. It gets admired regularly by those who know their bikes & for me personally it’s a daily reminder of my dad and the journey’s he had. I myself look forward to many more adventures on the bike I hold very dear to my heart.

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Written by Nikki Steggles  Pics by 6AM

Nikki is a food nutritionist who lives and works in East London.

website                     nsnutritionaltherapist.uk

email                       nutritiongetsnude@gmail.com

 

 

Circling the Awful Hand

On 13th August 2014 I set out on what I would describe as a character building ride.  I was on a family holiday in South Ayrshire on the edge of the Galloway Hills.  I love this part of Scotland.  It’s where generations of my mum’s family have lived and where my  mum grew up, and I’ve always felt a strong attachment to the place.  This visit was particularly poignant as the symptoms of my mum’s illness were becoming more evident and it was likely to be her last time in Scotland.  I had brought my bike for some long rides (my grandad taught me to ride a bike by the river in nearby Dalrymple) but a few days in to the holiday and the weather had been relentlessly dreek. Apart from one windswept and wet loop to Culzean, there had been little opportunity for riding.  Then, finally on the fifth day, no rain.  Still overcast, but with the promise of blue skies.

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With no wifi or phone reception at the holiday cottage, I used good old fashioned paper maps and some tips from my mum to cobble together an 80km (or so) roundtrip passing through Damellington, St John’s Town of Dalry, Newton Stewart and back up through Galloway Forest Park.  I hadn’t quite got to grips with my new Garmin but brought it along anyway for back up and to record the ride for posterity.

I set off at 10.30am with a plan to meet my parents at The Clachan Inn in St John’s Town for lunch and then continue on and get back to the cottage by 4pm at the very latest. I figured 80km in 5-6hours should be no bother.

I headed off on the B741 through the moorland, farmland and hills to Dalmellington.  It’s a rugged craggy landscape that is both solid and maudlin.  The heavy undulating ground is covered in a deep greeny brown moss and on this mid-summer day the skies were dense and sullen with occasional shafts of light. It felt good to be getting in to my own pace and I was enjoying the wide open space and dramatic scenery.  Past Dalmellington and somewhere along the Casphairn Road between Loch Doon and Kendoon Loch the clouds cleared and I was removing the wintery layers.  How lucky that bright blue skies and warm sunshine should appear just as I passed all those crystal clear lochs.

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I arrived in St John’s Town where there was just time to have a quick bite to eat with my folks, and buy some emergency biscuits.  And off I set  again, a wrong turn up a long steep hill, but hey, what did it matter, the sun was shining and I was doing good time.  I soon reached the southernly edge of the Galloway Forest Park.  Wide open land, big hills, lochs and forest, and usually hardly a soul around.  Except on this afternoon a chap called David greeted me as he emerged on his touring bike from a forest dirt track he’d ridden several miles down by mistake. David was part way through a 1,000 mile fundraising cycle around the UK and we rode together and talked bikes and Scotland for an hour or so before arriving in Newton Stewart.  By this point it was 4pm.  The Garmin had recorded 80km covered so far but from the maps I still had at least a third of the ride again to get back to the cottage.  Oh dear.  I tried calling my folks but there was no way of getting through with no reception.   My dad is a worrier – I knew he would soon be pacing and my mum would be quietly concerned, but there was little I could do besides continue.

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The sky had clouded over and the winter gear was back on.  At that point David pointed out that my back tyre was very worn.  There were no bike shops nearby.  After giving David some of my emergency biscuits I left him and Newton Stewart to start the journey back north to Straiton following new directions on the Garmin. The skies opened and the relentless rain had returned.  epic ride 5

Several miles on and I was starting to brick it.  The Garmin route seemed to be veering to the east but the rain sodden paper maps showed a more direct route heading slightly north west which meant leaving the nice smooth road I was on and joining a rough gravelly looking road leading into the forest.  I decided on paper over digital as the route saved at least 10km or so. I was climbing higher and higher (up Tairlaw as it turned out) and into a mixture of forest and moorland.  The cloud was dense and falling, the light seemed to be fading and visibility was poor.  It was gone 5pm and there was still quite some distance to go.  The rain was increasing and suddenly, oh no, not a bloody puncture.  Not even the worn back tyre but the front.  Why had I gone off route? – I was in the middle of nowhere and no one knew where I was.  I hate fixing punctures.  I’m slow at the best of times and I wished I’d replaced my stupid little pump like I’d been promising for months. I did a bodge repair and cautiously continued, cursing myself for being a daft southerner and coming out ill-prepared. And then just like that, the rain stopped, and out came the sun.  I reached Tairlaw Toll and was freewheeling downhill towards Straiton.  It felt glorious.

I finally reached the cottage at 7pm.  132.6 km in total.   My dad was pacing at the bottom of the driveway.  My mum was quietly sat in the kitchen.  She got up and gave me a great big hug.

words and pictures by  Lee Milne

http://www.strava.com/routes/4353186

Here is the circling of the Awful Hand.

 

 

 

 

The Rain Wasn’t Forecast till 11……

Well, this is the first post on the 6AM blog and I’m nervous.

Lets start at the beginning. We’d been talking about ‘doing something’ for a long time. Maybe some bidons, maybe some kit for the summer…I think every time we got on our bikes and went out we ended up talking about ‘doing something’.

I’ve known Lesley coming up for twenty years now. While I was killing myself down the skate park or hurling myself down handrails on my BMX, she was riding her fixie.  From adventures in her homeland of Scotland to couriering in London, she was putting in the miles. I knew this because whenever we’d meet back then, the conversation would quickly turn to the subject of bikes.

Scan 3 copy 2

So fast forward to about three years ago. I hadn’t ridden my BMX in about ten years after having a serious crash. I landed on my head and dislocated my shoulder. I must have bumped into Les in the pub. I told her that I’d gotten hold of my old man’s vintage Raleigh Castorama Team.  For some unknown reason, my dad had decided to spray the gorgeous white pearl frame a matt black without taking off any of the Dura-ace components.  The frame actually turned out to be broken. I thought it felt odd going downhill.

We arranged to meet on a Sunday and head up to Regents Park for some ‘gentle’ laps. I think her idea of gentle was slightly different to mine. It’s hard to cycle slower than you’re used to. I was dropped straightaway and left to battle it out with a guy of about sixty on a ladies bike of the same age. He wore baggy, grey tracky bottoms and a pair of Dunlop Green Flash. I couldn’t lose him!  I think by this time the rains had come and I mean real thick rain. Those grey tracky bottoms must have weighed a ton. My purple ’90’s Carnac shoes were falling apart. I think the water made the twenty year old glue holding the velcro on just dissolve. I was determined not to stop. It was fucking freezing and I was soaked to the skin but still he kept passing me.

After what seemed like three hours (but actually turned out to be one) I saw Lesley coming the other way towards me looking a bit concerned. I think hypothermia was beginning to set in, I had uncontrollable shakes and couldn’t feel my hands or feet……”fuck Tom you O.K ?…….The rain wasn’t forecast till 11!”

The thing is when I did get home, I was on such a fucking high. The shaking eventually stopped but jumping into a hot shower was not a great idea.  The blood rushing back into the veins in my hands and feet was agony.  But that was it for me.  I was hooked…

So for the past few years, I’ve seen Les most weekends (give or take a few) and have had some stupidly early starts and got soaking wet on numerous occasions.  Lips have turned blue, new bikes have been bought, rollers have been toyed with, races have been entered (no points…yet) new friends have been made and all because of a bike….and I still think about the guy in the Green Flash.  It was the hardest ride I’ve ever had.  Hopefully I could drop him now…..maybe, maybe not.  It might have been his first time too.