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Author: Rob Ainsley

WoR 3: Ripon to Pocklington

Posted on 14 April 201021 February 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Another cold-nose night in the tend, though the rest of me was toasty. Again, I’d had just about enough dozing episodes to not wake up feeling cheated. It was another sunny but chilly morning. The route was all flat now but, despite the lack of anything vertical to be manouevred round, it was never straight:…

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WoR 2: Settle to Ripon

Posted on 13 April 201021 February 2021 by Rob Ainsley

It had been a very, very cold night. I had to wear all my clothes and draw the sleeping bag up and round my head (as I now realised it was designed to do). I managed to doze just enough, and was all packed up and ready to go by half eight. There was nobody…

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WoR 1: Morecambe to Settle

Posted on 12 April 201021 February 2021 by Rob Ainsley

I’m one of the first people to be cycling the Way of the Roses (WoR) (it’s April 2010 as I write this; it’s only just opened officially) and I’m riding it for an article for Cycling Plus. The WoR is a recent addition to the list of Coast to Coast routes, and runs 170 miles…

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Gloucester: What a bore (the Severn’s)

Posted on 2 March 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

It was the year’s only five-star Severn Bore today, a remarkable natural phenomenon that’s ideally visited by bike. So I did, all in the name of route research. The bore is a tsunami-like wave caused by particularly high incoming tides being funnelled up the narrows just south of Gloucester. Like a 168 bus overtaking you…

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Quirky London 22: George Inn

Posted on 22 February 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Where is it? One of the quirkiest, and best, pubs to cycle to in London is the George Inn in Southwark, just south of London Bridge. What’s quirky about it? The George is just about the city’s only surviving coaching inn, and only one with surviving galleries: the capital’s pubs were virtually all refurbished from…

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Quirky London 21: A bit of Cambridge

Posted on 21 February 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Where is it? Ely Place (right), parallel to Hatton Garden off Holborn. What’s quirky about it? This immediate area is an exclave of Cambridgeshire in London, technically part of the Diocese of Ely. Exclaves are fascinating – Gibraltar, that bit of Russia round Kaliningrad, the Old Soke of Peterborough, and this. Down Ely Court, a…

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Quirky London 20: The centre is a horse’s bum

Posted on 20 February 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Where is it? Trafalgar Square, at the top of Whitehall, at the statue of Charles I, just under his horse’s bum. What’s quirky about it? It’s London’s very centre: the point to which a ‘distance to London’, notionally, is measured. It’s the origin of the national roadmap; England’s kilometre-zero. The point used to be marked…

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Quirky London 19: Follow a ley line

Posted on 19 February 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Where is it? Trafalgar Square, Strand, and ultimately to Arnold Circus. What’s quirky about it? It’s Strand Ley, one of the many lines of mystical forces across London and Britain identified by Alfred Watkins. He noticed that whenever there were two points of great, ancient spiritual significance – Glastonbury Tor, say, or Lord’s – they…

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Quirky London 18: DIY Skyride

Posted on 18 February 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Where is it? Constitution Hill and The Mall, by Buckingham Palace. What’s quirky about it? Every Sunday, these two grand thoroughfares are closed to traffic. So, if you enjoyed the London Skyride last year, you can recreate it without the 65,000 pesky people on bikes getting in your way, or the marshals telling you not…

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Quirky London 17: The Old Kent Road tank

Posted on 17 February 20102 April 2021 by Rob Ainsley

Where is it?Between Page’s Walk and Mandela Way, off the northern end of Old Kent Road, on a triangular patch of grass. What’s quirky about it? It’s a real T-34 tank. Part of the fleet used to crush rebellion in Prague in 1968, it was bought and installed by a local property developer in frustration…

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e2e.bike > Articles by: Rob Ainsley

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