Archive for April, 2009

Easter away

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Packing to go down to Pembrokeshire for a few days I tried to fit the bike into the back of the new car, only to discover that I couldn’t take the bike - and the luggage and have use of the back seats - without removing both wheels. Didn’t have a bike bag, nor any means of protecting the derailleurs from damage or the car interior/luggage from the oil on the chain, so gave up and left the bike at home.

Cyclists were much in evidence throughout Pembrokeshire, having enormous fun on the quiet roads and coastal lanes. I’ll be better organised next time. In fact I’ve now found an ‘anti-shock bike bag frame’ which looks just the job for transporting the bike in the back of the motor, with or without a bike bag. You’ll find it on Geoffery Butler Cycles’ website, click here.

No cycling stories from the week away so you’ll have to put up with some holiday snaps instead… (more…)

Tower2Tower

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Five young guys from the other side of town are also preparing for a London to Paris ride in aid of charity. Read about Sam, Jamie, Nick, Neal and Daniel’s cycling adventures, their quest for Bell End, their special cycling dietary regime, their crashes but, alas, not their crushes on their website.

Reading and riding

Monday, April 6th, 2009

What do cyclists do when they’re not cycling? They read about bikes and cycling in Cycling Weekly, Cycling Plus or any of the other dedicated magazines. And when they’ve read those they read books about cyclists and cycling. Here are three which I have enjoyed recently and have no hesitation in recommending:

bicycle1

Bicycle: The History. Author: David V. Herlihy. Hardback, 2004, Yale University Press

Here is everything you’d want to know about the history and development of the bicycle. Chock-a-block with fascinating information and images.

dancing-uphill1

Dancing uphill: Charles Holland. Author: Frances Holland. Paperback 2007 M&N Publishing

Written by his daughter, this is the story of the first English rider to take part in the Tour de France (1937). Charles (no relation of mine by the way) was a local lad, born in Aldridge in 1908. Of particular note, amongst his many achievements on the bike, is his record ride from Land’s End to Hyde Park Corner, London in 1938, 287 miles in 13 hours 44 minutes, beating the previous record by 25 minutes! An average speed of 21 mph approx. Oh, and he punctured just two miles from the finish, but continued the ride on a borrowed touring bike, which was six inches too big for him!

tomorrow-we-ride1

Tommorrow, we ride. Author: Jean Bobet. Paperback 2008 Mousehold Press and Sport & Publicity. Translated from the original by Adam Berry. Originally published 2004 as ‘Demain, on roule’.

Jean is the brother of the famous Breton cyclist Louison Bobet, the first winner three consecutive Tours de France (1953, 54 & 55). This is an absorbing insider’s view of the 50s and 60s cycling scene, from the era of Coppi to the eras of Anquetil and Merckx.

Copse and Llamas…

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Sun’s out so time to get some real miles under the belt. Fifty miles on Saturday was a good workout and an eye-opener at times!

Climbing out of Kitwell up toward Frankley Beeches my thoughts turned to David Hockney.

Frankley Beeches

Frankley Beeches

Hockney is engaged on a series of seasonal paintings of one particular copse in his native Yorkshire. Well, I read that he arrived to paint the Spring version only to find that the owner had cut the timber to the ground. End of series. So how about coming down to Birmingham David and putting the Beeches on the artistic map? (more…)