Weekend Round up - 14th & 15th January

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Darren N
Posts: 189
Joined: Mon May 24, 2010 7:30 pm
Location: Oz

Weekend Round up - 14th & 15th January

Post by Darren N »

Well, the Intermediates are back, alive and kicking, in 2012!

I decided to crank up the training yesterday and get out with the Club after 3 months of slow tapping on local lanes to repair a knee injury. It was –7 degrees overnight and –4 degrees when I looked outside at 7.30am. I was fine with the temp because I had my new thick winter riding gloves to wear. I grabbed them from my drawer and threw them on the cupboard top as I walked past the back room, they fell short and toppled onto the top of the laundry basket – no matter, I’ll grab them in a second. Can you guess what happened next? – Returned in 10 mins, laundry basket was empty,…I glanced across at the washing machine and there they were in the window doing somersaults in the soap suds!! – I could only laugh. I donned the Summer gloves and headed out…discovered that the actual freezing process of the fingers is excruciating, but once all the feeling in the fingers has gone, you cease noticing the pain – like having a bunch of bananas attached to your palms. Anyway, thought that story was worth sharing. :)

Turned up to a dozen or so riders in the Square, all wearing balaclavas, headbands, ear-muffs, helmets & sunglasses – difficult to recognise anybody! Three of us, Shaun W, Ian K and myself decided to jump onto the Intermediate ride to Ripley Castle, believe it or not. Had to fight hard to keep up with Shaun and Ian in the hills above Markington and Clint Bank where I’m sure a bunch of moths flew out of my lungs. It was an absolutely gorgeous Winter’s day, roads were dry and almost sticky with salt crystals. Blue cloudless skies, sun was out, probably could have done with another 5-10 degrees. Ripley Castle tea rooms are always good - bike in full view outside and plenty of tables and heater-drying space inside. Shaun and Ian led things superbly all day, even when my condition started to give out in the last 5 m’s. 75-ish miles covered, great pace, nicely knackered at the end...and no knee soreness next day!

A quick plug…I’ll be out for the next couple of months on the Intermediate ride trying to crank up the fitness, enjoying some typical January suffering. No-one on the Inter ride has a Winter Tan Hill in their legs so we’re all starting from a low base. It would be great to do the hard yards together. Obviously if you’ve had a long lay-off it may be better to start with the K-ride, but anyone else requiring some ‘quick-ish but steady’ miles could do no better than to join the fun and frolics of the Inter ride at 10.00am on a Saturday. I’ll be there again next week, with or without a hangover from the Clifton dinner the night before!

BTW, for those that do want to subject themselves to some serious battering and butt-kicking, as well as anything else that turns you on, feel free to turn up to the Square an hour earlier at 9.00am for the training ride where the big names will soon sort you out.

See you soon!

D.
Jon G
Posts: 620
Joined: Fri Nov 02, 2007 1:48 pm

Post by Jon G »

Good to hear from you Darren, have certainly missed your write ups. Glad you've still been riding despite the injury. Hope to see you out in the coming weeks.

Jon :)
PhilBixby
Posts: 2442
Joined: Fri Mar 03, 2006 6:18 pm
Location: Tadcaster Road

Post by PhilBixby »

"...for those that do want to subject themselves to some serious battering and butt-kicking... ...feel free to turn up to the Square an hour earlier at 9.00am for the training ride where the big names will soon sort you out"

(Come on Darren, you knew I'd bite!)

In defence of the training ride, I should say that - certainly where hills are concerned - it's very steady. As the season approaches, you're less likely to find you get waited for if you're off the back, but the name of the game is still riding as a group and working together, not butt-kicking. What you won't get is tea and cake in the middle of it all, and if you really want some cruelty and can't wait until ten, then have a word and when it gets to the through-and-off bit I'll stick you behind someone who had special sprinkles on their cornflakes... :wink:
Darren N
Posts: 189
Joined: Mon May 24, 2010 7:30 pm
Location: Oz

Post by Darren N »

Heh, Phil, sorry, the subtlety of my message may have been lost in my good-humoured exaggeration, no need to defend yourself or the training ride at all! :) …no, my point was that I’d prefer any fit riders join you guys so that you could satisfy their needs rather than come on the Inter’s ride and kick MY butt!…it was a message of self-preservation for me and other low-on-form January starters….;)
Rob
Posts: 1958
Joined: Sat Mar 11, 2006 6:29 pm
Location: In the granny ring, where I belong...

Post by Rob »

Classic winter Sunday clubrun for us. 8 in The Square at 0900, with IanH and Muzzy just out for the morning. That left Mark, Ian, Tim, Andy, Stein and self. Very cold, but the roads were dry giving us no ice issues. That said, planned the route avoid some common slippery patches and we treated a few early corners with caution!

Plenty of climbing involved with Leavening Brow, Warrem Percy being the main barriers on the way out. Sociable refuel in the garden centre cafe at Driffield, then the usual route back via Milligton Pastures. 80miles door to door in 5 hours riding time. Just what the doctor ordered for this time of year.

I'm probably out on Saturday instead of Sunday next week. Would recommend a destination of Thornton-le-Dale for the Sunday crew and can recommend a route if you PM me...
IanH
Posts: 684
Joined: Sat Oct 14, 2006 12:22 am
Location: Europe

Post by IanH »

First Sunday ride for me in a while, stayed with the group until just after Thixendale then feeling quite tired whimped out as I struggled a bit on the climbs thanks for waiting guys it did me good to push myself a bit more than I have lately, cheers for the company until then hope you enjoyed the rest of the day.

Headed for the cafe at Fridaythorpe then feeling refreshed rode at quite a brisk pace home via Millington the day was a bit cold but as Rob said the roads were ok after a bit of caution first thing in parts.

Ian H
Are we there yet
Karl M
Posts: 160
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 6:53 pm
Location: York

Post by Karl M »

Just as there was little ice on the roads this weekend, so too on the moors for the MTB’ers club ride.

We started by ascending the famous Chimney Bank road climb. At the top, we parked the cars and unloaded the bikes :wink:.
18 cyclists divided into two groups- a “K” ride led by Paul C and an “Intermediates” ride with Simon W.

A mile into the Intermediates ride, we passed a stone monument called Ana’s Cross, where we unfortunately managed to lose a rider. Apparently, Ana’s Cross was used by 11th century monks to avoid losing their way over the moors. But in the 21st century, no amount of GPS or mobile technology could retrieve our lost cyclist.

Now being alone without a map on the freezing moors can be a serious issue.
However, we decided to continue without him because each rider carried their own lunch and this guy in question had a whole ‘Soreen’ malt loaf to survive on.
(He has since sold the film rights of his adventure to a Hollywood studio. It's an epic tale of one cyclist’s battle against the moors, armed with just a meat loaf and a series of locals replying “I think they went that way” in American accents).

Next, we passed the towering remains of a 19th century foundry that extracted iron from rocks in Farndale, and cycled along a disused railway line that took the foundry’s output down to Teeside. Only a slight ripple of frost on the cycle track revealed where the railway sleepers once lay.
The striking landscape otherwise hid all evidence of an industrial past (‘though disused mines, pits and shafts are peppered all over the OS map).

Pushing on, we descended off the high moor’s plateau and into the relative warmth of Hutton-le-Hole and finally Lastingham.
Both groups enjoying a 4.5 hour ride as a solid start to the year, thanks to Paul and Simon.

Farndale in August:
Image :)
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