I am very interested in feedback on today's ten-to-nine experiment. Please post your thoughts on this, if you were on the ride or not.
Here are my thoughts. There were 14 who set off from the square with a real mixture of abilities which was great - there is clearly demand for a steadier ride. But I was determined not to turn this into a social ride - everyone there wanted a training ride and I think that should represent a challenge, not just be a social chat for 3 hours.
The ride started very steady as everyone found their feet and we started to up the pace just before the A168 with 30 second turns on the front. Through to Boroughbridge the pace was steady and those unfamiliar with through-and-off started to get it. To be honest, we were reasonably tidy all the way to Crayke when the group inevitably split but we waited at the top, re-bunched and set off again. 15 riders returned back to York (we picked up 1 in Crayke!) all in one piece and with an average speed for out-of-town bit of 18.0mph which sounds very reasonable for November. My Strava here:
http://app.strava.com/activities/27396741
On riding standards, it was tidy-ish and I would probably give a 7/10. Good marks for respect to horses, calling out holes, cars, safety at junctions and even Carol questioning the size of the genitalia of a white BMW driver who cut us up on Haxby Road. I just have a few points that would improve the safety for everyone.
1. When you roll through to the front, knock off your speed gently as you roll to the left hand line. This keeps things steady behind you. It can be hard to judge but everyone today was really good at telling others to knock it off a bit.
2. If there is a gap on your right (or left), don't jump into it unless you are sure you have enough room and you aren't just about to take out someone's front wheel. I saw a couple of manoeuvres today where people assumed that there was a gap and didn't look. Thankfully no damage done.
3. Don't assume that the people around you know rule 2 above. So protect your front wheel and don't overlap the wheel in front. This can be hard with changes in pace (see rule 1) and you don't want to be slamming on the brakes either as this brings other dangers. Better to have a gap in front that you are closing than always be overlapping and braking.
Hope this is helpful.
For me, the pace was just right but I'm interested to know what everyone else thought - too fast, too slow? While the objective of keeping everyone together definitely worked, we need to know how it was in terms of effort.
As I said, please let rip with your opinions and then we can have a collective decision about future weeks before next Saturday.