Challenging three days researching cycle routes in Cornwall. Weather forecast lies, train delays, missed ferries, bike mechanicals, looming pandemic. Good beer though, and fab hospitality from the lovely Katy. Ups and downs, then. Rather like the geography.
Category: Route research
Bury St Edmunds: Who was Clare Castle?
Splendid day researching cycle routes with Nigel in friendly Suffolk. Definitely not Home Counties here. Everyone smiles and says hello to you.
Oxford 2: Time travel
More cycle route research in and around Oxford, my alma mater. It seems like only yesterday I was here, naive, foolish, and barely engaged with the real world. That’s because it was yesterday, on my first day of research.
Oxford 1: Cotswolds
Day researching cycle routes west of Oxford. Bright and breezy but cold and wet, and only a little lumpy. But that’s enough about me.
Newcastle: Bridges, tunnels, cake
Day in Newcastle on my disposable folder researching routes and facilities, ie tunnels, metro, cake.
Petersfield 3: Cricket, sharks
Final day investigating cycle routes in Hampshire. We visited the historic home of cricket, Broadhalfpenny Down, which excited me very much. Sorry for mentioning religion.
Petersfield 2: Butser busters
Another very nice half-day cycling the South Downs, on the East Hampshire Cycle Route. We got back to the hotel just as the heavy rain started, as forecast accurately by the Met Office. As opposed to the BBC website, which was hopeless as usual.
Petersfield 1: The Treachery of Images
Ace day researching cycle routes in the South Downs, down Hants way. None of your Northern mud here. It’s posh Home Counties mud.
Ladybower Reservoir: Red sky at night
Our annual between-Christmas-and-New-Year ride round Ladybower Reservoir, but I’m calling it ‘cycle route research’ to make it tax-deductible. Fine weather and a spectacular sunset which, it turned out, had to be best viewed from the Yorkshire Bridge Inn.
Saffron Walden: Cake stop
Cycle-cafe article research in Saffron Walden, which sounds like a singer-songwriter rather than a well-to-do Essex town. It has a Wetherspoon, a Waitrose, a castle, and quite a lot of cafes. Something for everyone, then.