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How's your day going? Probably better than the guy who cycled through wet paint (+ worst things we've ridden through); Northern Irish police or Team Sky?; Toon Aerts' pre-World Champs' test positive for breast cancer drug + more on the live blog

Live blog? What's a live blog? Dan Alexander is back here, trying to remember how to do one of these...

SUMMARY

No Live Blog item found.

16 February 2022, 17:23
Final call for the worst thing you've ridden through...

Let's start with hub-deep cow shit...because where else would we start...

"For me the worst was having to ride through hub-deep (no exaggeration!) cow shit on an MTB ride in Derbyshire many years ago. It was a route I had used several times, and the bridlepath goes through a farm yard between some cow sheds. It was often muddy or slippery with cow shit, but this time I reckon the farmer must've recently scraped/hosed all of the cow shit out of the sheds and deposited it in the yard. It was horrendous!" Dicklexic recalled.

Kapelmuur said: "I rode over a snake in France, it didn't make much of a mess and it may have already been dead. I didn't hang around to check. I guess this story doesn't have legs."

andystow was awarded the most middle class comment of the day award by another reader: "I didn't ride through it, but on a multi-day gravel bikepacking trip I had a little unplanned dismount/lie down. When I got up, completely unhurt, I felt a cold wet mess on my back. The avocado in my back jersey pocket had become instant guacamole. Luckily I had a spare jersey to change into."

Drinfinity commented: "Frogspawn. Riding through a particularly deep water filled rut on a North Yorkshire moor. My partner was having a miserable ride till then (not a fan of deep ruts), but she was much more entertained after I did the international interpretive dance for 'my boot is full of frogspawn'"

Bawheid has all the gory details..."A weasel. Extruded through the front brake, put me on the floor. Washed off blood and bits of skin ( both) and flesh and entrails (his) in a public bog full of very wary tourists. Joy." Chrisonatrike stole the show with the "pop went the weasel" comment...10/10.

JustTryingToGet said: "Worst thing I've cycled through... the River Thames. Pure stupidity on my part, I'd come down to the meadow and it had flooded, by which point I couldn't be arsed to go back up the road. I thought I'd just take it slow as I knew where the path was. Three quarters of the way through and I thought, 'blimey, those benches look far away'... I reckon I was centimetres from the riverbank. I'll not pull a dickhead move like that again."

Add Chorley and Harringey to the list too... thanks to whoever suggested those on Twitter...

Well, that's an image to take you through to teatime... 

16 February 2022, 17:02
For the cyclist who has everything: a 3D-printed titanium bottle opener from Silca
2022 Silca Bird of Prey bottle opener

Purveyor of high-quality cycling parts and accessories Silca has surprised us all with its latest release: a bottle opener. 3D-printed. From titanium. In the shape of a bird of prey. Tell us that you were expecting that and we’ll call you a fibber.

You might remember that Silca introduced the 3D-printed titanium Mensola computer last year with a latticework structure to keep the weight down.

> Silca unveils £175 super-strong 3D-printed titanium computer mount

The Bird of Prey bottle opener is kind of similar… but it’s more bottle opening related.

2022 Silca Bird of Prey bottle opener

Read our review of the Silca Mensola computer mount...

Made from 6Al/4V titanium, it weighs just 11g, and being bird of prey shaped, it’s ideal for opening bottles fast. You know, for when you’re really thirsty.

What? The price? £38. We’re saying nuffink.

16 February 2022, 16:16
Got £12,674.55 spare? Want to spend it ALL on a cycling holiday? One-month European epic 3,693km "Bike Across Europe"

Here at road.cc we see a lot of expensive things: bikes, wheels, kit etc. You get the picture. There are a lot of people into bikes willing to spend plenty of cash on nice things...but what about a holiday as expensive as just about any bike you could wish for?

"Bike Across Europe" billed as an "epic adventure" from Paris to Estonia via a spin down the Champs-Élysées and aperitifs under the shadow of the Arc de Triomphe, before riding Germany, Luxembourg, Czech Republic, Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. 

Not your usual cycling holiday, but it does promise rolling vineyards, deep forests, medieval villages, historic cities, and runs for over a month between July 2 and August 6 2022. Let's hope you don't want to watch the Tour...

Thankfully the organisers had the self-awareness to miss out the "just" from their press release telling us prices start at $4,006 for eight or 15-day stages of the tour, through to $17,208 (£12,674.55) for the full thing. You could buy the most high-spec Specialized Aethos and have a grand left over for that...

Thankfully they're not pretentious enough to market as "cycling in the footsteps of Napoleon from Paris to the Russia border". Ah, right...scrap that...they have. Although, in fairness, part of the 'USP' seems to be visiting "unique historical itineraries"...so fair enough, I guess? Oh, and "quality lodging, fine gastronomy and cultural immersion". We get it, you want to enjoy yourselves...well, I guess you would if it's costing you...

So... anyone want to sponsor me?

16 February 2022, 15:28
For the love of God...not more cycling team music videos

If Astana's not-so-Gangster's Paradise training camp video wasn't enough to make you hate 2022, there's another one...we'd ask which was your favourite, but at this point asking which one you hate least is probably easier...

16 February 2022, 14:38
Egan Bernal is back on the bike (kind of)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Egan Bernal (@eganbernal)

And showing off a pretty terrifying scar on his back too...

The reigning Giro d'Italia champion broke 20 bones in a horror crash while training in Colombia last month, and needed multiple rounds of surgery on his back injuries. After two weeks in intensive care, Bernal was discharged from hospital and is now recovering back at home, with the help of his many dogs...

Bernal was training with a group of his Ineos Grenadiers teammates when he crashed his Pinarello TT bike into a parked bus. The incident has led Tom Pidcock and Chris Froome to raise safety concerns about the bikes...

> Chris Froome calls for time trial bike ban in professional cycling

Talking of Pidcock, he's back racing on the road today for the first time since his 'cross season. Not a bad team for Ineos in Portugal...just a few of the young guns, eh? 

16 February 2022, 14:22
Bikebook: Cycling start-up for finding your best local mechanic
Bikebook

Bikebook is a cycling start-up founded by two friends and passionate riders from East Sussex. It's a website aimed at finding cyclists their best local mechanic, wherever they are located in the UK, and claims to be the "easiest, fastest, and most transparent way to have your bike serviced".

It offers a comparison of services, reviews and prices from local mechanics, and currently has over 280 registered mechanics and has generated over 1,000 bookings.

16 February 2022, 11:27
Puddles, mud, rotting badger carcasses, tubeless sealant? More of your worst things ridden through
Badger - Licensed CC BY-SA 3.0 by Badger Hero on Wikimedia Commons

This really is turning into a Partridge phone-in...earlier on it was "airborne, fermenting rabbit entrails". Now we've got a reader who "popped a rotting badger carcass". Let's get it out the way before lunchtime...

HoarseMann was the unlucky rider: "I once popped a rotting badger carcass, no mudguards, got sprayed in the face. Very lucky I stayed on the bike, it was dark and there was a car coming the other way with dazzling headlights, I was going downhill at 30mph so just didn't see it.

"I knew it was there as I'd spent the last few days timing when to hold my breath to avoid the stench when going uphill the other way. It took a few seconds for the grim realisation of what I'd just hit to take hold. I've had worse as a pedestrian though."

Argos74 has the date etched in his memory: "13 September 2016, riding home through a a quarter mile of one feet deep puddle on a dual carriageway, in the dark, in biblically torrential rain with limited visibility, in rush hour. Got out of the dip in the road and the puddle eased off to only four inches deep, and still couldn't see the kerb so had to take what I estimated was primary for three miles.

"A colleague came off the same night in a 3 foot deep puddle near Manchester Piccadilly. So there's that." Terrifying.

KDee commented: "I tried to ride through some very very thick mud on my mountain bike years ago. It didn't end well, and I didn't get a chance to unclip before I went sideways. Don't know what was worse...the struggle of trying to get back upright (my mate could've helped, but he was too busy laughing), or finishing the ride looking like I'd been spliced with Swamp Thing."

While rct has been cursing tubeless tyres ever since "sitting on the wheel of some guy riding tubeless tyres that have just punctured and the sealant gets thrown all over you and your bike."

Any more?

16 February 2022, 11:40
CAR BACK!

Tell me you're a cyclist without telling me you're a cyclist..."CAR BACK!"

> Know your group riding signals and calls 

Dave Dee's not a fan, for some unexplained reason...

16 February 2022, 11:26
New clubhouse leader for worst thing you've ridden through? A40 cycle lane on a wet day...
16 February 2022, 11:07
A Near Miss of the Day throwback

A road.cc reader got in touch with some strong detective work linking some of their own footage to a previous edition of Near Miss of the Day. NMotD 630 involved a punishment pass driver beeping a cyclist multiple times before driving through close to make a point. Gloucestershire Constabulary concluded their wasn't enough evidence for any action to be taken.

"The driver could have given you more room but you have not had to take any avoiding action. We can speculate about why the driver beeped their horn at you but they have made you aware of their presence and waited until the incoming traffic had cleared before they overtook," the reply stated.

This is where today's clip comes in...

The road.cc reader told us: "Turns out approximately a month after that article [NMotD 630] was published, I came across the same vehicle also beeping at me and telling me to get in the cycle lane whilst waiting in a queue of traffic. This was again in Cheltenham and the vehicle still had no MOT (22/09/21).

"There were three cars ahead in the queue but the front vehicle was positioned to the left of the lane blocking access to the filter box - but of course (as like the previous article), the driver knows better!"

16 February 2022, 11:02
But cyclists...NSFW edition + Jesus wouldn't have parked like a bellend

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you the single greatest headline the internet has ever seen...

Unbelievably, it's not even the best thing I've seen this morning...

16 February 2022, 10:50
Sixth place Toon Aerts' pre-World Champs' test positive for breast cancer drug
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Toon Aerts (@toonaerts)

 Belgian cyclocross racer Toon Aerts has tested positive for a banned breast cancer drug during an out-of-competition test taken ten days before last month's cyclocross world championships.

> History maker Tom Pidcock solos to rainbow jersey at cyclocross worlds

The news was revealed by Aerts' team, saying their rider tested positive for a banned substance on January 19. Aerts told Belgian outlet Sporza that he will do "everything I can to prove my innocence and clear my name".

Aerts tested positive for breast cancer drug Letrozole, his B-sample will now be tested, but the positive came ten days before he finished sixth at the UCI cyclocross world championships in Arkansas.

If the test result stands Aerts will be stripped of his sixth place, as well as several wins and notable results from the winter's racing.

"Yesterday my world turned upside down," Aerts said. "I received a letter from the UCI that no athlete wants to receive in his career. I was informed that an abnormal result was found in my urine sample, which was taken during an out-of-competition check at my home on January 19th.

"I am currently in the dark as to how this could have come about. The product 'Letrozole Metabolite' was found in my urine sample. A product that I had never heard of until yesterday and do not know how it got into my body."

Letrozole is used to block estrogen in the treatment of breast cancer, but also has performance-enhancing properties if an athlete wants to boost testosterone production by preventing breakdown.

"Anyone who knows me a little knows that I have been against any form of doping all my career and have always done everything I can to set an example as an athlete," Aerts said.

"I will therefore do everything I can to prove my innocence and clear my name. Pending the analysis of the B sample and further investigations, I will not comment. I would urge everyone to respect this and to give me and my family the time and opportunity to get more clarity first."

16 February 2022, 10:24
What's the worst thing you've ridden through?

What's the worst thing (you've ridden through)? That's what, in full Partridge style, I'm asking this morning...inspired by the poor cyclist who rode through white paint...RIP black kit.

I mean, I did set myself up for this one...

What's the worst thing you've ridden through, road.cc reader 'the little onion'? "Keighley". Right. Fair enough. Never been, I'll take your word for it...Rendell Harris was thinking along the same lines, but gave a 'shout-out' to the Kent town of Erith...

OldRidgeback is still scarred from their pungent problem...

"As a kid out for a ride on my shiny new Puch many years ago I was so enjoying my cycle ride that I didn't notice the sticky wet dog mess on the ground. Luckily the mudguards stopped this from being sprayed all over my back but I did have to clean it off the brakes later on. And I didn't have access to a jet washer. That was a learning experience."

Shake said: "Cycled through wet tar, that stuff did not want to come off my bike."

SimoninSpalding has gone for "airborne, fermenting rabbit entrails". There's four words you never thought you'd read..."Afternoon of day two, riding the Way of the Roses, this fen-dwelling boy was thoroughly enjoying riding along the Vale of York (level ground at last!) when a long deceased lagomorph on the other side of the road was driven over by a car causing the rotten innards to be ejected across the road and sprayed up my legs and all over my bike.

"The only bright spot was that I smelt so bad that my riding companions insisted I sat at the back of the group so that they didn't have to smell me. The landlord of the guest house we stayed at that night gave me a bit of a look when I walked in though."

That's a story and a half...

16 February 2022, 10:12
Dave Bails-ford's Team Sky or Northern Irish police? New uniform gives us flashbacks to mountain trains and Froome dominating the Tour

It appears the Police Service of Northern Ireland is adopting the marginal gains philosophy in the fight against crime...wearing a very Team Skyesque mid-10s black aero outfit...no Rapha or Castelli here, unfortunately...

Matteo Tosatto Froome (c) Team Sky.jpg

Luke Rowe would make a decent bobby, I reckon...

Luke Rowe (picture courtesy Team Sky).jpg

At least the PSNI is maximising its aero potential, look at the state of their counterparts at the Garda's uniform...

16 February 2022, 08:43
How's your morning going? Probably better than the guy who cycled through wet paint

It's a mild Wednesday morning. I reckon more than a few of you deserving winter commuters got caught out by the balmy February temperatures and found yourselves scrambling to remove layers at the lights.

You know what they always say though...better to have layers to remove, than layers covered in paint...(I am aware nobody has ever said that in the entire history of the English language, please don't leave too may angry comments)...

That's one way to give your shoes that box-fresh glossy shine back...

Maybe someone has been out painting bike lanes again? Although, now I think about it, don't ask me why they would be painting them black...(EDIT: I've woken up enough to realise the paint is the flaky white spots...told you I hadn't done a blog for a while).

> Councillor who said she’d paint (now removed) bike lane black slams “ignorant” people who painted it back

Amusingly, when the Old Shoreham Road lane was removed last year, it quickly reappeared thanks to the handiwork of a mysterious infra vigilante.

The makeshift markings were painted where the lane used to be, and rattled good old Cllr Dawn Barnett, who furiously told local press the lines needed to be removed and those responsible prosecuted.

"Wait a second," one Twitter user said..."Can you confirm or deny if this furious councillor, is the same furious councillor who threatened to paint out the cycle lanes on Old Shoreham Road."

Wonderful.

To bring it back to the poor lad who did ride through paint (and to channel my inner Partridge)...what's the worst thing you've ridden through? Paint? Leaking sewage? *insert poorly infrastructured town*? A puddle you didn't think was that deep? Worse?

I can't imagine Dulux does much for your drivetrain...

Dan is the road.cc news editor and has spent the past four years writing stories and features, as well as (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. Having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for the Non-League Paper, Dan joined road.cc in 2020. Come the weekend you'll find him labouring up a hill, probably with a mouth full of jelly babies, or making a bonk-induced trip to a south of England petrol station... in search of more jelly babies.

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71 comments

Avatar
JustTryingToGet... | 2 years ago
8 likes

Worst thing I've cycled through... the river thames. Pure stupidity on my part, I'd come down to the meadow and it had flooded, by which point I couldn't be arsedto go back up the road. I thought I'd just take it slow as I knew where the path was. Three quarters of the way through and I thought, 'blimey, those benches look far away'... i reckon i was centimetres from the riverbank. I'll not pull a dickhead move like that again.

Avatar
Simon_MacMichael replied to JustTryingToGetFromAtoB | 2 years ago
3 likes

JustTryingToGetFromAtoB wrote:

Worst thing I've cycled through... the river thames. Pure stupidity on my part, I'd come down to the meadow and it had flooded, by which point I couldn't be arsedto go back up the road. I thought I'd just take it slow as I knew where the path was. Three quarters of the way through and I thought, 'blimey, those benches look far away'... i reckon i was centimetres from the riverbank. I'll not pull a dickhead move like that again.

I used to live right by the Thames in Oxford (Wolvercote) just before I started writing for road.cc and there are two stories stick in my mind. One, a teenager who was riding in Port Meadow when it was flooded, he went over the submerged river bank and drowned. Then there was an older guy who was riding along Godstow Road towards Wytham when it was flooded, he crashed and died in hospital.

(Picture below is about the worst I ever saw it round there).

I live in West London now and often ride along the Thames at Chiswick and Richmond. The road or path along the river is regularly underwater (spring tides can be spectacular down this way) and it amazes me how many people will risk tiding through a foot or even more of fast-moving water rather than take a longer route round.

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Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
5 likes

Excellent windscreen sign; reminds one of the old story about a porter in a certain Cambridge college: "I'm sorry sir, this parking is reserved for Jesus only."

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hawkinspeter replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
2 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

Excellent windscreen sign; reminds one of the old story about a porter in a certain Cambridge college: "I'm sorry sir, this parking is reserved for Jesus only."

He drives a Honda, but won't talk about it

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
1 like
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markieteeee replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
10 likes

Not parking related but this is my favourite Jesus graffiti

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JustTryingToGet... replied to markieteeee | 2 years ago
9 likes
markieteeee wrote:

Not parking related but this is my favourite Jesus graffiti

Avatar
Argos74 | 2 years ago
3 likes

13 September 2016, riding home through a a quarter mile of one feet deep puddle on a dual carriageway, in the dark, in biblically torrential rain with limited visibility, in rush hour. Got out of the dip in the road and the puddle eased off to only four inches deep, and still couldn't see the kerb so had to take what I estimated was primary for three miles.

A colleague came off the same night in a 3 foot deep puddle near Manchester Piccadilly. So there's that.

Avatar
HoarseMann | 2 years ago
6 likes

I once popped a rotting badger carcass, no mudguards, got sprayed in the face. Very lucky I stayed on the bike, it was dark and there was a car coming the other way with dazzling headlights, I was going downhill at 30mph so just didn't see it.

I knew it was there as I'd spent the last few days timing when to hold my breath to avoid the stench when going uphill the other way. It took a few seconds for the grim realisation of what I'd just hit to take hold.

I've had worse as a pedestrian though.

Avatar
Awavey replied to HoarseMann | 2 years ago
5 likes

I dare to ask, but if no one else will, what could possibly be worse than rotting badger carcasses sprayed in the face ? It's not a Victor Meldrew dead hedgehog as slippers style moment is it ?

I feel relatively unscathed that I've merely been crop sprayed a few times.

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HoarseMann replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
7 likes

I merely mentioned it to retain some balance, but since you ask...

As a young child on a caravan holiday, I was walking back from the site shop eating a bag of sweets when I noticed a workman furiously plunging the elsan disposal point. Before I could think the sewer must be blocked, a rodding point cover that was immediately in front of me blew off with the pressure build-up, sending a fountain of faeces and elsan blue straight up my front and yes, over my face and hair.

Covered in this unsavoury and surpisingly viscous colloid, I ran back to our caravan, where I had to try and call for my parents help and explain what had happened without opening my mouth. 

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Captain Badger replied to HoarseMann | 2 years ago
4 likes
HoarseMann wrote:

I once popped a rotting badger carcass, no mudguards, got sprayed in the face. Very lucky I stayed on the bike, it was dark and there was a car coming the other way with dazzling headlights, I was going downhill at 30mph so just didn't see it.

I knew it was there as I'd spent the last few days timing when to hold my breath to avoid the stench when going uphill the other way. It took a few seconds for the grim realisation of what I'd just hit to take hold.

I've had worse as a pedestrian though.

A little respect please. Aunt Fanny is still sorely missed.

At least we know what happened before the funeral now I suppose. We'd all assumed it was the squirrels....

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KDee | 2 years ago
3 likes

I tried to ride through some very very thick mud on my mountain bike years ago. It didn't end well, and I didn't get a chance to unclip before I went sideways. Don't know what was worse...the struggle of trying to get back upright (my mate could've helped, but he was too busy laughing), or finishing the ride looking like I'd been spliced with Swamp Thing.

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hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
4 likes

Who wants a nationwide network of cycling infrastructure?

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2022/feb/16/cycling-charity-launches-ambitious-plan-to-boost-uk-wide-path-network

Who wants it to be done by Sustrans?

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mdavidford replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
6 likes

Even their graphic for the plan is barely useable, which isn't encouraging.

Existing / planned routes are blue; ambition routes are, er, other blue...

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hawkinspeter replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
7 likes

mdavidford wrote:

Even their graphic for the plan is barely useable, which isn't encouraging.

Existing / planned routes are blue; ambition routes are, er, other blue...

Are the highly ambitious routes the ones where you have to be ambitious to try using a road bike on them?

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vthejk replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
4 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

Are the highly ambitious routes the ones where you have to be ambitious to try using a road bike on them?

If NCR 41 near Leamington is anything to go by, ambitious to ride on them at all.

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hawkinspeter replied to vthejk | 2 years ago
7 likes

vthejk wrote:

If NCR 41 near Leamington is anything to go by, ambitious to ride on them at all.

The UK-wide traffic and barrier-free national cycling and walking network (NCN) is designed to be suitable for “a sensible 12-year-old travelling along with climbing equipment and a group of experienced Sherpas”

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brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
3 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

mdavidford wrote:

Even their graphic for the plan is barely useable, which isn't encouraging.

Existing / planned routes are blue; ambition routes are, er, other blue...

Are the highly ambitious routes the ones where you have to be ambitious to try using a road bike on them?

The ambitious ones are where you have to be ambitious to use ANY bike on them.

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Awavey replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
7 likes

It's even more impressive theyve written a 55 page document that says literally nothing, just has lots of pictures and things theyve learnt recently which isnt alot it seems, that's some fine NGO work...sheesh, all they need apparently is 2.8billion pounds and 20 odd more years to deliver something.

So I guarantee a subtle name change, or logo redesign comes next.

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
2 likes

Name contest: old version was "Notional Cycle Network" or "National Sign Network".

Looks like the new one will be a TFBTYOPN (Traffic Free Barrierless Twelve-Year-Old-Passable Network).

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
3 likes

Hmm... Sustrans.  They're saying much better things in recent years and certainly some of their people seem to be forward-thinking folk.  Their legacy of giving the nod to rubbish for publicity is pretty concerning.  I was suspicious of their chumming up to local authorities too although obviously you need to make relationships with them and no doubt Sustrans would say "shouting from the outside achieves nothing".

Guardian wrote:

Sustrans, the charity that manages the network, will complete 416 miles of improvements by 2023, and has removed just 315 of 16,000 barriers – the goal of a barrier-free network could take another 150 years.

...so I don't think it's going to be an issue either way.

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
2 likes

A tale of maps - openstreetmap has several different views of cycling infra and they definitely don't brook comparison across nations or even within (e.g. quality and type of segregation if any, volume of traffic, speeds, junction treatments). However it's still instructive.  UK looks great here!

 

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
7 likes

...but zoom in a level - ah.

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ktache replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
2 likes

They still get my monthly dd, could be better, but without them we would have nothing.

Rode along the Thames yesterday and noticed that the start of NCN 5, from the horseshoe bridge to caversham lock has been repaired, a bit anyway, the root bumps had been smoothed and the flood damaged bits filled. But because it's still not deep enough the roots will be back soon enough and with the recent rains and coming storms I can see tha Thames getting a bit high soon.  Though smooth enough for now...

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hawkinspeter replied to ktache | 2 years ago
1 like

ktache wrote:

They still get my monthly dd, could be better, but without them we would have nothing.

Rode along the Thames yesterday and noticed that the start of NCN 5, from the horseshoe bridge to caversham lock has been repaired, a bit anyway, the root bumps had been smoothed and the flood damaged bits filled. But because it's still not deep enough the roots will be back soon enough and with the recent rains and coming storms I can see tha Thames getting a bit high soon.  Though smooth enough for now...

That's what I find most alarming about Sustrans - why are we relying on a charity to be responsible for promoting active travel when we are in a climate emergency?

(Saw a post elsewhere recently that declared that the 20th century was the century of "f**k around" and we're now in the century of "find out")

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
2 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

That's what I find most alarming about Sustrans - why are we relying on a charity to be responsible for promoting active travel when we are in a climate emergency?

(Saw a post elsewhere recently that declared that the 20th century was the century of "f**k around" and we're now in the century of "find out")

UK standard though that?  It's part of our "freedoms" / don't force people to pay for stuff ideology (except most things that the Government wants of course).  Government sends out soldiers somewhere and they get smashed up or traumatised? The Legion have the Poppy Appeal to get cash to pick up the pieces. Social services inadequate? Charities will plug the gap.  Not forgetting that the majority of care is actually delivered by relatives or friends.  I think that can be right in many ways but then they get "kind words" and actual support for them comes from... charities.

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rct | 2 years ago
2 likes

Not ridden through, but sitting on the wheel of some guy riding tubeless tyres that have just punctured and the sealant gets thrown all over you and your bike.   2

Avatar
OldRidgeback | 2 years ago
1 like

As a kid out for a ride on my shiny new Puch many years ago I was so enjoying my cycle ride that I didn't notice the sticky wet dog mess on the ground. Luckily the mudguards stopped this from being sprayed all over my back but I did have to clean it off the brakes later on. And I didn't have access to a jet washer. 

That was a learing experience.

Avatar
Shake | 2 years ago
2 likes

Cycled through wet tar, that stuff did not want to come off my bike

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