CityCyclingEdinburgh Forum » Commuting

The "I had a lovely ride today, thankyou" thread

(2685 posts)

  1. fimm
    Member

    I took my shiny new mountain bike out for a spin on Saturday morning - round by Threipmuir, up The Exponential, Green Clough, Maiden's Clough, down to the top of Kirkgate, round to Clubbiedean and the singletrack there, over Warklaw Hill, home.

    Beautiful morning, beautiful views, plenty of people out (but not so busy as to be a problem). Bike is lovely (I rode it down stuff I've never ridden down before, which is interesting).

    "I hope you didn't get your nice new bike all muddy ;-)" said my mother. Sorry, Mum...

    Posted 3 years ago #
  2. steveo
    Member

    All mtb should be muddy or about to be! That's a nice route, this your first mtb?

    Posted 3 years ago #
  3. fimm
    Member

    @steveo, my mother was joking.

    Not my first MTB, but my first good one. I have been riding an old frame that used to belong to Mr fimm; it has 26" wheels and is quite heavy; the new one is in the modern style of 27.5" wheels, much bigger tyres and a very different geometry. Much lighter too.

    (On the other hand, that old frame is what Mr fimm rode when he did Strathpuffer solo....)

    Posted 3 years ago #
  4. steveo
    Member

    That's okay, so was I :)

    I've recently got a modern mtb and I always thought my (decent at the time) was fast can't believe how much better the bigger wheels handle stuff!

    Posted 3 years ago #
  5. gembo
    Member

    Those cleuchs now I am not say8ng they are the best cleuchs in the world but they are in the top 1.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  6. acsimpson
    Member

    I rode to and from Coldingham last week, remarkably enjoying a tailwind in both directions. With the tailwind forecasts I decided to go for speed over scenery. I largely followed the A199 from Musselburgh to Dunbar with a nice detour past Hailes castle as I find the A199 from Haddington to East Linton to be too busy. I then followed route 76 to Cockburnspath and up over Coldingham Law for the only big climb of the day.

    I was so pleased that I managed to break the 3 hour barrier that I kept going to the Union Bridge to wish it happy birthday before winding my way back to the village via other pleasant river crossings and country lanes. Including Hutton Mill Bridge with a recent(ish) memorial to a wartime training tragedy.

    By this weekend the wind had turned to give a steady easterly so I reversed my route. The Coldingham Law windfarm confirmed the forecast with the welcome sight of the turbine fronts so I put my head down to see what I could achieve. somewhere around Musselburgh I had my average speed up at 20mph but sadly the motoring infrastructure of the city slowed me a little. I arrived home a shade under 2:45 having been stationary for just under 5 minutes.

    That's a lot more numbers that I would normally put in a ride report but it was interesting to see just what I* was capable of. To compensate I had a mid week adventure but I'll report that on a veloviewer thread.

    *The wind and I

    Posted 3 years ago #
  7. gembo
    Member

    Went round the reservoirs then up beech ave then red road to West Kip and back along rig road tonight. Dodged the rain Was fab.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  8. gembo
    Member

    Midges frightening up at the Borestane tonight road goes straight to the grouse butt now. Dem birdies are for it tommorrow

    Posted 3 years ago #
  9. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Low light, low wind, high humidity. The fiends are in their element.

    Beware this weekend.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  10. gembo
    Member

    Packing liner gloves long sleeve shirt and long trousers for the top

    Posted 3 years ago #
  11. Frenchy
    Member

    I did 60km worth of laps around Braid Hills today (Lasswade Road, Braid Hills Drive, Comiston Road, Frogston Road).

    Turns out to have been my longest ride all year - without ever being more than 5km from home.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  12. minus six
    Member

    good shout that, frenchy

    i've settled into a routine of 40 km daily, seven days a week, rain or shine, no excuses

    just to spice things up, the 40 km must be done in under 90 mins or i don't allow myself beers that evening

    so the final hill climb in the last five-ten mins is usually quite tasty

    don't allow myself to get off the saddle either, that's cheating

    Posted 3 years ago #
  13. minus six
    Member

    the cheating actually comes later in the evening, when i convince myself that the day's rain/wind was worthy of a five minute offset

    Posted 3 years ago #
  14. chdot
    Admin

    “when i convince myself that the day's rain/wind was worthy of a five minute offset“

    Sounds fair.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  15. minus six
    Member

    91 mins 30 secs this morning

    blustery crosswind tho, so a bottle or two of sam adams is on

    Posted 3 years ago #
  16. acsimpson
    Member

    A friend and I both had passes on Saturday so keen not to waste them made the decision to extend our planned long ride.

    We headed out to Alloa and up the Sherrifmuir climb without much incident. It's nice to see that the old pub at the top has been converted in to a house rather than being left abandoned.

    We stopped for lunch in Dunning where we came across the first signs of the storm while munching bridies on the bridge and watching the burn trickle by.
    The adjacent garden had suffered severe damage with one bush almost ripped out by the roots. By chance the old guy who lives in the house came by and stopped for a chat. He has lived there for 42 years and although the water had hit the bottom terrace of his garden a couple of times during flash floods it had never got higher. This time within minutes the water had risen over his garden and up and in his back window, considerably higher than ever before. He seemed remarkably upbeat considering what he had been though.

    We then went up the Dragon climb and descended towards Culteuchar, thankfully we planned to turn towards Glenfarg as the storm had hit hard here too. The road surface at the bridge appeared to have moved a few feet down the hill leaving it blistered and a large mound of rubble at the bottom. The road to Bridge of Earn was presumably worse as it was closed.

    I had routed us past the Glenfarg Tunnels as I fancied a look but everything was so wet we stuck on the road for the lovely long decent under the tunnel approach viaduct.

    Thankfully we then left the hills behind us and wound our way through Newburgh and Cupar and took the Pitscottie road to St Andrews which I expected to be quieter than the main road. Sadly it wasn't had it appeared to have a number of drivers who though overtaking and forcing oncoming traffic the break was appropriate, mostly driving the sort of small cars which some parents seem to like buying their student age offspring. Thankfully the oncoming traffic were better drivers than they were.

    We had planned some chips in St Andrews but it was still mid afternoon so after a rest on a beachside bench we continued south to Lundin Links where the whole village hard turned up at the chip shop. Thankfully Kirckaldy wasn't far away and Rinaldi's served us some excellent suppers for our tea, I don't think it was just the past 200km which made them tasted good although I'm sure it helped.

    Back on familiar territory we climbed up the lovely rural Standing Stanes Road for the last gentle challenge of the day.

    A long write up but at 235km there's no other way to report it.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  17. fimm
    Member

    A mere 80km or so for me on Saturday - after being greeted by Gembo (see the "Spotted" thread) I went out the Lang Whang as far as the West Calder turnoff. Down there and along a lovely quiet back road with shiny new tarmac. Across via Auchengray towards Forth (my mother, who is from Lanark, tells me it should be "The Forth"), before turning towards Carnwath and an iced bun at the Apple Pie Bakery. Chatted to three men from Motherwell who were impressed at how far I'd come! Whizzed back home fueled by the bun and a fine tailwind. Heather on the Pentlands lovely and purple.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  18. gembo
    Member

    @Fimm, sounds like you went up Pointless Road? Lovely new tarmac, goes to pretty farm and back of Harburn Golf Course, then on to the wind farm then back down to Dog Trust Road.? Hope not too much rain, we had been soaked earlier

    Posted 3 years ago #
  19. fimm
    Member

    @gembo, that's right. A very useful road if you live on it, of course, and I got myself another Veloviewer square...

    I didn't get rained on at all.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  20. gembo
    Member

    Took advantage of the beautiful summer evening to cycle up to the shoulder of west kip then down and along the rigg road then out to Buteland and the spot beyond listonshiels when I fell off from standing with @IWRATS (Swiss Tony moment) and then loupes the fence and took the varied surface forestry track up to the knee of East Cairn. Was lurvely.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  21. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Great hybrid riding @gembo. Probably better with a middle chain ring but what can you do?

    The Swiss Tony Moment. Good.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  22. gembo
    Member

    @IWRATS yes, - see my email you have not yet responded to - i will swap you @sheeptpoucher’s back wheel for the middle chain Ring in Your garage? Do not tell @Urchidaidh of the cross chaining ad vice but went up both braes in the non slipping granny

    Posted 3 years ago #
  23. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Chumed my pal round the Seven Hills, he running me cycling and filming. Hard to keep up in parts, especially Craiglockhart. Lovely ride, lots of ladies out running with blonde ponytails in the sunshine which was nice.

    Saw a rat on Calton Hill and met a guy in Ravelstone riding an MTB with a properly pringled front wheel. Had hit a car so just took the front brake off. I directed him to The Bike Station.

    My pal did 2h13 so I owe St Marys Music School £35. Lovely day out, but I was pressed for time and did not drink and got dehydrated. Silly billy.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  24. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Also got told off for cycling wrong. Way round Arthur's Seat.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  25. steveo
    Member

    Not a bad cycle! Good time from your mate.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  26. Greenroofer
    Member

    Up early this morning to see if my fitness is improving or deteriorating. Out on the Lang Whang, Tarbrax, turn off just before Carnwath, Biggar, Broughton, Talla, Gordon Arms, Innerleithen, Granites, Braid Hills, Morningside, Craighouse Hill.

    Weather benign - the Great Scottish Public were out in force enjoying it. Saw many bikes, of all kinds (not just men in lycra) and people doing leisure activities (camping, mainly) in all the laybys and parking spots between Talla and the Granites, in a way I've not seen before this year.

    Passed two freshly-dead rabbits and one freshly-dead pheasant by the road, and was sorely tempted to take at least one home with me. Also a potato. Also saw a squashed red squirrel, which was sad.

    103 miles and 6,700ft of climbing in eight hours. Judging by the way I now feel, my fitness is deteriorating. My GPS says I need to take four days off to recover...

    Posted 3 years ago #
  27. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Gravel-curious, now roadkill-curious?

    Posted 3 years ago #
  28. gembo
    Member

    @greenroofer, tough par cours today - the wee cafe in the old station house at Cadrona is good but would have been a Little detour for you today. When we do Talla we come back via Peebles Meldons (camping there has exploded). Chapeau.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  29. Frenchy
    Member

    I was reminded last night that last August I spent 5 days cycling to my parents' house in Aberdeenshire, stopping on the way to climb Cairngorm.

    Obviously adventures like that are a bit tricky at the moment, but I decided to have a mini-adventure today, since the weather forecast was amenable.

    So I cycled out to Gifford, then up Redstane Rig. Then I got off my bike and walked to the top of the highest Lammermuir - Meikle Says Law. It was a beautiful walk, lots of heather about, the sheep were in conversant mood, I spotted a heron three or four times (or, possibly, three or four herons), a few dozen grouse and a couple of buzzards. Trampling through the heather at one point, I disturbed a hare, which sprang up and gave me a fleg.

    On the way home, I stopped at Yester, got off my bike again and walked to Yester Castle. Another lovely walk, even with all the dubs, and the castle itself is really lovely - well worth a visit (but bring wellies if it's rained in the last six months).

    Clocked in at 80km of cycling, easily (and slightly embarrassingly) my longest ride of the year. The last ten miles were pretty hard going.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  30. gembo
    Member

    @frenchy another bold adventure.

    What do you take as antidote when a hare flags you?

    Posted 3 years ago #

RSS feed for this topic

Reply »

You must log in to post.


Video embedded using Easy Video Embed plugin