Non-motoring > Cycling Corner - Volume 26   [Read only] Miscellaneous
Thread Author: VxFan Replies: 94

 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - VxFan

***** This thread is now closed, please CLICK HERE to go to Volume 27*****


More pedal power chat.

PLEASE NOTE:-

To try and maintain some kind of logical order of discussion, if you start a new subject then reply to this post and remember to change the default subject header.


Last edited by: VxFan on Sat 5 Sep 15 at 17:18
       
 TC's decision at last. - Pat
Here we are Bromp

www.commercialmotor.com/latest-news/operator-whose-driver-caused-cyclist-s-death-has-o-licence-revoked?

Absolutly the right decision and I doubt it will end there either.

Pat
Last edited by: Pat on Fri 3 Jul 15 at 16:07
       
 TC's decision at last. - Bromptonaut
Cheers Pat. Today's CTC newsletter had same message. Currently on a caravan club site in New forest with iffy wi fi and poor mobile so struggled to post earlier.
      1  
 TC's decision at last. - Bromptonaut
The report on the CTC website is here:

www.ctc.org.uk/news/20150630-regulator-bans-haulage-operators

A linkv to Commissioner Denton's decision is at the end:

tinyurl.com/qzdh887

He concludes with some very scathing comments about the operator and his transport manager and their 'reasons' for failing to attend his inquiry.

       
 TC's decision at last. - Harleyman

>> He concludes with some very scathing comments about the operator and his transport manager and
>> their 'reasons' for failing to attend his inquiry.
>>
>>
>>

I daresay the TC would be somewhat frustrated that this was really as much as he could do.

I would also assume that the vehicles operated pre-dated the need for modern "digi-card" systems; falsification of tachograph records (assuming they were kept at all) is not so easy with the modern set-up.

Traffic Commissioners hate this sort of thing just as much as genuine hauliers do; despite what some might think, much has been done in recent years to rid the haulage industry of the "cowboys" operating at its fringes.
       
 TC's decision at last. - Zero

>> Traffic Commissioners hate this sort of thing just as much as genuine hauliers do; despite
>> what some might think, much has been done in recent years to rid the haulage
>> industry of the "cowboys" operating at its fringes.

At the very least the old bill should have brought charges of aiding and abetting against them.
       
 TC's decision at last. - Harleyman

>> At the very least the old bill should have brought charges of aiding and abetting
>> against them.
>>

Agreed.
       
 TC's decision at last. - Pat
Thanks for the linky Bromp. I have to agree with every word HM says about this.

Pat
       
 TC's decision at last. - Bromptonaut
>> Thanks for the linky Bromp. I have to agree with every word HM says about
>> this.
>>
>> Pat

There's a suggestion on cycling sites that a Hayley Caroline Drummond has sought licences etc using same or similar operating address to those disqualified. Is it really as easy as setting up a new dodgy glazing company (Watchdog passim)?
       
 TC's decision at last. - Harleyman

>> There's a suggestion on cycling sites that a Hayley Caroline Drummond has sought licences etc
>> using same or similar operating address to those disqualified. Is it really as easy as
>> setting up a new dodgy glazing company (Watchdog passim)?
>>

Again, it used to be; well, anyone can apply as long as they hold the appropriate qualifications and can satisfy the relevant criteria. Generally speaking, Traffic Commissioners are more vigilant nowadays than they used to be, and if there is any suspicion of a "cowboy" with previous form for dodginess starting up again they will likely fall on him very hard.

Have a read through of this, it will give you an idea of what hoops have to be jumped through;

www.transportmanagersolutions.co.uk/information.htm
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Focusless
Live on ITV4 now, and also on the website (time trial today):
www.itv.com/itvplayer/itv4
Last edited by: Focusless on Sat 4 Jul 15 at 14:48
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Duncan
>> Live on ITV4 now, and also on the website (time trial today):
>> www.itv.com/itvplayer/itv4

Just finished watching the time trial (prologue?). Seriously unimpressed by the coverage and the commentary. There was so much information that we could have been given, but weren't.

Almost a complete absence of any split times. The transmission seemed to spend too much time looking at the crowd, when we could have been watching the riders.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Bromptonaut
IIRC the coverage on the road is taken directly from French TV. Only the bits to camera and the race commentary are ITV4's. The crowd, scenery and the roadside displays by local communities are, fo many viewers, part of the experience.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Duncan
>> IIRC the coverage on the road is taken directly from French TV. Only the bits
>> to camera and the race commentary are ITV4's.

Which I thought was poor.


>>The crowd, scenery and the roadside displays by local communities are, fo many viewers, part >>of the experience.


If I wanted an architectural tour of Utrecht, I would have looked elsewhere other than a cycling programme.

How many more days of staring at multi-coloured blocks of flats have I got to put up with?

Grump. Grump.
      1  
 Tour de France 2015 - Robin O'Reliant
ITV's commentary team are as poor as it gets, Phil & Paul get slaughtered on the cycling forums. Best place to watch is Eurosport, £3.99 a month for the app if you don't have a Sky subscription. They have commentators and pundits who actually know what they are talking about.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Bromptonaut
>> ITV's commentary team are as poor as it gets, Phil & Paul get slaughtered on
>> the cycling forums.

Until C4 started the Phil'n'Paul show c1987 the tour got no coverage at all on UK TV. In the intervening years they've turned it into something that draws decent viewing numbers and makes it pay for the advertisers. Some people watch it as much for the 'France Profonde' element as for the racing.

Inevitably, the purists/obsessives will want something different.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Robin O'Reliant
>> >> Until C4 started the Phil'n'Paul show c1987 the tour got no coverage at all on
>> UK TV. In the intervening years they've turned it into something that draws decent viewing
>> numbers and makes it pay for the advertisers. Some people watch it as much for
>> the 'France Profonde' element as for the racing.
>>
>> Inevitably, the purists/obsessives will want something different.
>>
1981 to be exact.

It's great to have terrestrial coverage of the race, but no excuses for P poor commentary. Half the time they seem to lose track of what's going on.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Crankcase
I guess we are the ones they appeal to. I know nothing about cycling, and don't follow it it any way. Outside the Tour, we don't know who,anybody is or any events and certainly, have no interest in bikes themselves.

But we do like the Tour as presented in this show, although only the highlight show. We like the commentary, as its about our level. We like the views of France, and can easily forgive the slip ups because after all the poor commentators are only seeing the French feed the same as we are, and gave to make sense of it on the fly.

And as I always read a bit when the sound muted whenever there's a commercial on TV, I can also get through War and Peace in about two programmes, if we watch it as broadcast.

       
 Tour de France 2015 - John Boy
>> I guess we are the ones they appeal to .... of it on the fly.

That's much the way I feel about it too, except that occasionally I'll watch a whole stage. Sport-wise these guys are my heroes. They make professional footballers look like mummy's boys.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Robin O'Reliant
I watched the Murray match last night. Even though not a tennis fan I felt my enjoyment of the game was enhanced because the commentator knew his sport and the expert punditry by John McEnroe made me feel I was actually learning something about the game and what it took to compete at that level.

Good commentary and analysis are essential ingredients in any live televised sport.
      1  
 Tour de France 2015 - Dutchie
Enjoyed the match also.I have been watching tennis over 40 years.Back to the Bjon Borg days and Boris Becker.

When McEnroe played he was difficult but a top player.Murray has what it takes, keep the momentum going.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Clk Sec
>> I watched the Murray match last night. Even though not a tennis fan I felt
>> my enjoyment of the game was enhanced because the commentator knew his sport and the
>> expert punditry by John McEnroe made me feel I was actually learning something about the
>> game and what it took to compete at that level.

Exactly the same for me. An enjoyable experience, enhanced by the JM commentary.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Robin O'Reliant
>> >>
>> Exactly the same for me. An enjoyable experience, enhanced by the JM commentary.
>>

If you watch the Tour on Eurosport you'll find the same expert analysis from Sean Kelly, much better than the inane cliché ridden babbling from Paul Sherwin, the Andy Townsend of cycle commentary.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Duncan
>> If you watch the Tour on Eurosport you'll find the same expert analysis from Sean
>> Kelly, much better than the inane cliché ridden babbling from Paul Sherwin, the Andy >>Townsend of cycle commentary.
>>

Um, doesn't Eurosport cost money?

I do have this deeply engrained objection to paying money to watch telly. Sorry.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Robin O'Reliant
>> >>
>> Um, doesn't Eurosport cost money?
>>
>> I do have this deeply engrained objection to paying money to watch telly. Sorry.
>>

£3.99 a month if you download the Eurosport app. Well worth it for me as all the major (And not so major) cycling classics and stage races are shown live.

TV isn't free anyway, you have to pay the licence fee.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Duncan
>>
>> TV isn't free anyway, you have to pay the licence fee.
>>

Oh?....... Is that right? I didn't realise!

;-)
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Clk Sec
>> TV isn't free anyway, you have to pay the licence fee.

>> Oh?....... Is that right? I didn't realise!


MB LEC.
Licence fee = Small beer.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Zero
>> >> TV isn't free anyway, you have to pay the licence fee.
>>
>> >> Oh?....... Is that right? I didn't realise!
>>
>>
>> MB LEC.
>> Licence fee = Small beer.

More like "so old gets tv license free"
       
 Tour de France 2015 - Clk Sec
>> More like "so old gets tv license free"

Oh yes...I'd forgotten his age.
       
 Tour de France 2015 - John Boy
>> Sport-wise these guys are my heroes. They make professional footballers look like mummy's boys.

See what I mean?

tinyurl.com/nmj2rgk
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - No FM2R
www.bbc.com/autos/story/20150528-australias-pedal-powered-electric-trail-terror?utm_source=BBChomepage
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - Bromptonaut
>> www.bbc.com/autos/story/20150528-australias-pedal-powered-electric-trail-terror?utm_source=BBChomepage

Not accessible in UK.
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - Old Navy
Can't be accessed from the UK.
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - Slidingpillar
Oh yes it can, you just have to be naughty and go through a proxy:
tinyurl.com/ppt25pz
(above is same page via www.uswebproxy.com/ )

Last edited by: Slidingpillar on Tue 7 Jul 15 at 20:31
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - Bromptonaut
>> Oh yes it can, you just have to be naughty and go through a proxy:
>> tinyurl.com/ppt25pz
>> (above is same page via www.uswebproxy.com/ )

Seems not to go to bbc.com page directbut rather via www.uswebproxy.com link.
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - No FM2R
b***** BBC...

www.stealthelectricbikes.com/stealth-b-52-bomber/
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - Slidingpillar
Unfair to blame the BBC, the fact it cannot be seen in the UK is a charter issue. Blame governments from 1927 to date if you like.
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - No FM2R
b***** BBC.
       
 Cycling Corner - Volume 26 - Armel Coussine
Useless sites.

Can't help fancying a powerful electric bike nevertheless. I wouldn't mind making a small contribution to the motive power. Just a small one.

I suppose when they seize up you'll need the AA or a friend with a van or big car. They look a bit heavy to wheel let alone pedal for any real distance uphill.
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - Bromptonaut
Paris will allow cyclists to perform kerbside turns on red after tests show no increase in accidents:

www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-33446899

       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - No FM2R
Whereas in London they just do it anyway.
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - Bromptonaut
>> Whereas in London they just do it anyway.

It's wrong because it's 'bringing the game into disrepute' but it's no more dangerous than in Paris.
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - No FM2R
I have no idea whether or not it would be more or less dangerous in London.

But its wrong because its against the law. There is no permissable discretion, its not a game and they are fools to try to justofy themselves.
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - Fursty Ferret
>> Whereas in London they just do it anyway.
>>

I assume you've never put your foot down as the lights go amber?
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - smokie
People do that?? :-)

I read today somewhere that the RNLI said that more people die in British coastal water than are killed cycling. Not sure I'm making any point but I guess someone can make something of it :-)
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - CGNorwich
Statistics prove that cycling in coastal waters is the worst possible thing you can do to shorten your life expectancy. ;-)
      1  
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - Duncan

>> I read today somewhere that the RNLI said that more people die in British coastal
>> water than are killed cycling. Not sure I'm making any point but I guess someone
>> can make something of it :-)
>>

Cycling injury/fatality figures:-
www.rospa.com/road-safety/advice/pedal-cyclists/facts-figures/

All causes of death - drowning is no. 32 IIRC. Link to Grauniad:-
tinyurl.com/n9fpzld
       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - smokie
Thanks Duncan, though they are from different years...

My statement was from the Beeb - www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-33457009

I couldn't find anything about it on the incfredbly slow RNLI site.

       
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - Londoner
>> Paris will allow cyclists to perform kerbside turns on red after tests show no increase in accidents:

>> www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-33446899

As Lord Montgomery of Alamein said regarding the 1967 Act to make Homosexuality legal:

"this sort of thing may be tolerated by the French, but we're British – thank God."
Last edited by: Londoner on Thu 9 Jul 15 at 23:15
      1  
 Paris Allows Red Light Jumping - Londoner
I believe that some posts have been removed (probably very wisely to avoid any possible legal implications).
       
 Life in the peloton - Robin O'Reliant
On bike footage from the Tour de France -

www.cyclingweekly.co.uk/racing/tour-de-france/moto-moto-cavendish-warns-the-peloton-that-gendarmes-are-coming-through-181950
       
 New Smarter Bike Helmet - Lumos - rtj70
What do our cyclists on here think of this:

www.kickstarter.com/projects/819484536/lumos-a-next-generation-bicycle-helmet

I think it has some good ideas but if following, I'm not sure the drivers would know what the flashing lights mean, e.g. slowing down.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Robin O'Reliant
Fast forward to 1:55 for Geraint Thomas's spectacular head butt of a telegraph pole. It's a wonder he survived, let alone got back on his bike and lost only 40 seconds in the overall.

www.theguardian.com/sport/2015/jul/20/ruben-plaza-16-stage-tour-france-geraint-thomas-crash
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Westpig
I watched that live (ish).... he's a lucky chappy.

Can't believe he's only 40 secs down.

If spectators helped him up the embankment, would that disqualify him?
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Robin O'Reliant
>>>>
>> If spectators helped him up the embankment, would that disqualify him?
>>
No.

As long as they don't help him ride his bike...
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Zero
>> Fast forward to 1:55 for Geraint Thomas's spectacular head butt of a telegraph pole. It's
>> a wonder he survived, let alone got back on his bike and lost only 40
>> seconds in the overall.

That report says it was an accident, looks like he got deliberately diverted to me.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Robin O'Reliant
>> >>
>> That report says it was an accident, looks like he got deliberately diverted to me.
>>
>>
The rider who collided with him, Barguil, is a notoriously poor descender with some history of causing chaos.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Crankcase
But didn't Barguil say (and it looked to be true in the half second clip we got on ITV 4) that he had made contact with Tejay van Garderen (or vice versa I suppose), which put him so out of line for the corner he couldn't avoid it?
Last edited by: Crankcase on Tue 21 Jul 15 at 11:47
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Robin O'Reliant
>> But didn't Barguil say (and it looked to be true in the half second clip
>> we got on ITV 4) that he had made contact with Tejay van Garderen (or
>> vice versa I suppose), which put him so out of line for the corner he
>> couldn't avoid it?
>>

Apparently Barguil was passing Van Garderen then dropping behind on numerous occasions during the descent, not something it is really advisable to do when going downhill at those sort of speeds as it upsets the positioning of everyone in the group.
Last edited by: Robin O'Reliant on Tue 21 Jul 15 at 11:59
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - RichardW
All those wendy-ballers that need carried off the pitch and a month to recover when they get a tap on the shin should take note..... :-)

I'd be very surprised if GT doesn't have a bit of a stiff neck this morning - although his helmet appeared to be not heavily damaged. Hate to think how much it would have hurt had be not been wearing one.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Zero
>> All those wendy-ballers that need carried off the pitch and a month to recover when
>> they get a tap on the shin should take note..... :-)
>>
>> I'd be very surprised if GT doesn't have a bit of a stiff neck this
>> morning - although his helmet appeared to be not heavily damaged. Hate to think how
>> much it would have hurt had be not been wearing one.

Helmets do nothing for safety, how many times does brompy have to tell you that.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Robin O'Reliant
It's very unusual to get a blow to the head in a cycling prang, but this is one of the few times when a helmet was definitely a bonus. His biggest complaint was that he lost his glasses, which are apparently no longer made.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - Bromptonaut
>> Helmets do nothing for safety, how many times does brompy have to tell you that.

Racing is a different thing to commuting. It should be noted however that helmet compulsion in UCI races has not changed the death rate one iota. The last to die in the tour, Casartelli, was wearing one. The TdeF went past the beautiful monument to him on the Col de Portet d'Aspet last week.

I've never said helemets do nothing, just that their benefits are a lot less than 'commonsense' or those promoting their use for commercial etc reasons suggest. Chris Boardman has stated that helmets are not even in the top ten things to improve your safety as a utility rider. I agree.
      1  
 Hard Headed Welshman - Robin O'Reliant
>>>> in UCI races has not changed the death rate one iota. The last to die
>> in the tour, Casartelli, was wearing one. The TdeF went past the beautiful monument to
>> him on the Col de Portet d'Aspet last week.
>>
>>
>>
Casartelli was bare headed as a matter of fact, though it would have made no difference as he hit the front of his head on a roadside concrete block at 90kph. As you say though, the introduction of helmets have made no difference to serious head injuries in professional racing - mainly because there was no problem to begin with.
       
 Hard Headed Welshman - sooty123
>> All those wendy-ballers that need carried off the pitch and a month to recover when
>> they get a tap on the shin should take note..... :-)

Perhaps they should get something to toughen them up, say an enhancement of some sort. I understand these push bicycle players know a thing or two about that sort of thing. ;)
       
 The Tour - how Sky operate - John Boy
A Daily Mail report:

tinyurl.com/pyord43
       
 The Tour - how Sky operate - Robin O'Reliant
Thanks for that, greatly enjoyed it.

A second TdF win for Froome, no chance of having his lead clawed back on tomorrow's flat stage.
       
 The Tour - how Sky operate - Focusless
>> A second TdF win for Froome

www.thedailymash.co.uk/sport/sport-headlines/champagne-renowned-for-its-urine-like-flavour-french-tell-froome-20150727100507
      1  
 The Tour - how Sky operate - Robin O'Reliant
A great performance by Froome, surely now one of Britain's greatest ever sportsmen (Yeah, I know he was born in Kenya, but British parents and a British passport so who cares?)
       
 The Tour - how Sky operate - Bromptonaut
>> A great performance by Froome, surely now one of Britain's greatest ever sportsmen

We tried to find a cafe showing the final stage but the french seem to have lost interest........

The Lad came up with the ditty 'How old's Bernard Hinault now Do-dah, Do-dah' to tune of Camptown Racers and kept wondering round the campsite whistling the tune.
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - Fenlander
Just bought a Pashley (Parabike style) for a bit of a laugh... it has a Sturmey Archer 5-speed hub which needs setting up since I took the rear wheel off to replace the tyres.

Can't seem to get it just right by trial and error... and google isn't finding a perfect method.
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - No FM2R
Presumably you found this? (each line is a clickable link to manuals &/or tech information)
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - Fenlander
Hmm.. it seems you too are keeping the mystic setup info secret.
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - Robin O'Reliant
This should help -

www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_P9Z4viP_0
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - Focusless
...and if you can identify which model it is, all the Sturmey Archer info is here:
www.sturmey-archer.com/en/products/5-speed
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - Fenlander
Good links thanks guys... particularly the Youtube one which should have me sorted. The way the little chain screws into the hub to adjust is not something I could have guessed.
       
 Sturmey archer 5-speed setup - No FM2R
>>it seems you too are keeping the mystic setup info secret.

Doh. what a dipstick. Sorry.
       
 My hero - John Boy
www.telegraph.co.uk/men/active/recreational-cycling/11767635/Angry-cyclist-lifts-car-out-of-cycle-lane-with-his-bare-hands.html
       
 My hero - No FM2R
That's in Brazil, I think.

Impressive bloke.
       
 My hero - Westpig
>> That's in Brazil, I think.
>>
>> Impressive bloke.
>>

Blimey, you wouldn't mess with him.... but imagine what he'd look like in lycra???
       
 lucky escape - Focusless
www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/motoringvideo/11784553/Cyclist-knocked-into-path-of-oncoming-taxi-by-car-door.html
       
 lucky escape - Alanovich
Kudos to taxi bloke there. Well played. Stopped very quickly, kept a proper distance from the cyclist in the first place.
       
 lucky escape - Bromptonaut
Another reason to ride in Primary; keep out of the door zone altogether.
       
 lucky escape - John Boy
Happened to me when I was 14. It buckled the front wheel and bent the front forks on my Dawes racer. The driver carried it 50 yards up the road to the local bike shop and got his wallet out. More recently it happened in London, but I saw it coming and managed to push the door shut again without falling off.
       
 lucky escape - Bromptonaut
Happened to Mrs B on Whipendell Rd in Watford c1988. Riding home from the station 7pm of a Friday night on one of a pair of seventies shopper bikes we kept for the purpose.

Combination of pixxing rain, useless old Ever Ready light and her being too close to man in Mk2 Escort. She went over the back and suffered a nasty scalp abrasion. Bled like bu**ery and needed a stitch but no serious damage; she was back at work on Monday. Perp ran us both round the corner to the General's casualty and offered to wait while she was seen to but it was easier to wait and get a taxi.
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - John Boy
From London's Evening Standard:

tinyurl.com/npnk9rz
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Old Navy
Are the London commuter transport systems and rush / school run time roads reaching capacity?
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Dutchie
Can only be good for the future and childrens health.
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Old Navy
I doubt it, there are still millions of petrol and diesel engines there, also a relative handful of electric vehicles transferring their pollution other bits of the atmosphere.
Last edited by: Old Navy on Mon 17 Aug 15 at 19:02
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Bromptonaut
>> Are the London commuter transport systems and rush / school run time roads reaching capacity?

In some places/times combined with even a hint of disruption then yes, but that's not the whole story. A combination of a few good summers and mild winters with a spreading realisation that once waits and changes are accounted for cycling is quicker than the tube kicked of a growth in riding. Media cottoned on and cycling to work became normal rather than eccentric. The Olympics helped too.

Bikes achieve critical mass and can no longer be ignored by other road users or by authority.
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Old Navy
>> Bikes achieve critical mass and can no longer be ignored by other road users or
>> by authority.
>>

Did you forget to put the "In London" on the end of that sentence? :-)
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Pat
Is there anywhere else?

Pat
       
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Old Navy
>> Is there anywhere else?
>>
>> Pat
>>

Only if you are clever enough to realise that there far more comfortable places to live North of Watford, or its Gap, or the M4, or for some outside the M25. The up side is that the more people that cram themselves into London, the more room there is for the rest of us. :-)
Last edited by: Old Navy on Tue 18 Aug 15 at 08:56
      1  
 Double the cyclists in 10 years - Manatee
London; I always want a shower when I've been there, and a glance at my shirt collar and cuffs confirms it's not just me imagining that it's still a dirty place. Far better in that respect that it was 25 years ago, nevertheless.

The travel is the worst part for me. I always rejected the prospect of commuting there every day regardless of the pay as long as I had an alternative.

I suppose there must be other dirty places, many with fewer compensations.
       
 End of a Isla - WillDeBeest
For us at least.

As a little postscript to the towbar story, another thing we should have checked before going to France was whether Beestling Minor (12) still fitted on the Beinn 26 that was handed down to him last year, and that he hadn't used seriously for a couple of months before we went.

When we did, the answer was 'yes, but only just'. The seat tube was pulled right out to its Max line and he found it difficult to get full extension out of his legs - not ideal in quite hilly country.

He struggled through sportingly enough, but also borrowed his brother's Saracen for a couple of longish rides with me and loved it.

So, some time this week - and with the benefit of some end-of-summer discounting from our friendly local specialist - he will become the owner of one of these:
www.saracen.co.uk/bikes/urban/studio-74

Somewhat alarmingly, he's already big enough for the largest, 20-inch frame - brother has the 18 - so it seemed unwise to order anything less. And this is before he starts his adolescent growth spurt!

Means we have another Isla to sell. Anyone?
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Last edited by: WillDeBeest on Tue 25 Aug 15 at 15:14
       
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