Saturday, 2 November 2024

Best Ever End To October?

 

Superb At Silton




Things are definitely looking up for the second half of October, weatherwise anyway. Today’s ride was nothing but a cruise in the sunshine, on familiar tracks and trails but none the worse for that. Swainby, Sheepwash, High Lane, Square Corner, a few trails in Silton Woods and a return to Swainby via some trails in the woods above Codbeck Reservoir. But what a splendid day for it, short sleeves in October, superb. Nothing more to say really, so let’s move on. 














Wallies On Walla




Me and The Breadlad having a sleepover? In a caravan? At the Lakes? With no grown ups to supervise us? What could possibly go wrong? Well, it is the Lakes, so the weather could go wrong, horrendously so usually from past experience and rain braying off the caravan roof all night long didn’t bode well. The following morning dawned bright, if not exactly cloudless. A brief discussion last night came up with a route traversing both sides of the Borrowdale valley, above Derwentwater, which is how we came to find ourselves dragging bikes onto the rocky top of Walla Crag after a steady warm up riding in from Threlkeld. Anything not made of stone was soggy but the view from the top more than compensated for the occasional squelchy patch. The descent from Walla to Ashness Bridge is just rocky enough to make you have a think but not to the stage where a tumble will probably win a free helicopter ride. The water flowing beneath Ashness Bridge was voluminous and voluble, testament to last night’s rain. We made like tourists for a short while before resuming our journey, the plan being to cross to the other side of the valley and return on the Catbells Bridleway. Part of our route turned out to be submerged, a few hardy walkers had resorted to bare feet to splodge through, complaining about the coldness of the water. It was time to show them what a couple of mountain bikers were made of. It turns out one of us was made of icing sugar and tissue paper, The Breadlad, who didn’t want to get his feet wet, bless him,  opted for a meandering detour, even after being shown the optimum line through the water by a pensioner. Owing to a couple of misunderstandings and some less than perfect route finding, we became separated after the flooded section. One of us took the correct path to the road, The Breadlad stayed low on the lake side. After several phone calls we reconnected on the road, too far along to bother with the Catbells Bridleway, so we continued to Portinscale on tarmac, made our way to Keswick, picking up the Keswick to Threlkeld railway path for a steady 3 miles back to Threlkeld. Enjoying every moment of the scenic river crossings and late afternoon sunshine.


















Wallies At Whinlatter




Another night of rain lashing the tin box was followed, once again by a day of exemplary weather. We were to join the trail centre hordes for a day of man-made fun, enjoying facile route finding on signposted trails and the predictability of pistes carefully graded by health and safety officers. It must be said though, Whinlatter is my favourite English trail centre, with awesome views and speedy trails and it has been over two years since my tyres graced the place. As usual we warmed up on the Blue route before continuing on the north loop of the Red route. Some areas of trees have been felled since our last visit, opening up some of the trails and The Long Drag has not been replaced by an escalator or cable car, in fact, it seems to have gotten longer. Everything else is pretty much the same as it ever was. The finish of the north loop is spectacular, a set of huge switchbacks which traverse open fellside before zagging back into forest and back out into the open. Only the south loop remained for us to polish off, it has a black graded section and a red graded section, the red is pure flow, a journey of smile-inducing pleasure which validates every penny spent on mountain biking. And then it was over, all the routes finished and our little holiday too.










Crazy Weather - like a summer's day.




It's half term and that can only mean one thing, SuperBri is released back into the community, along with millions of other teachers, clogging up our parking spots and wandering about trails, giddy from their renewed acquaintance with sunshine and fresh air. We began the half term with a gentle ride from Scaling Dam, in fact The Slagbag, is the only trauma of the whole route; an always brutal ascent on grass and gravel, starting after crossing a beck on foot, so no chance of momentum to aid the ascent. The rest of the ride is almost flat in comparison. The weather remains pristine, blue sky, sunshine, light wind, I can hear the words of The Pensioner filtering through my consciousness, forever pessimistic,  the yang was always going to be worse than the yin.

“This can’t happen in October.”

“We’ll pay for it later I’m telling you, it’ll be a shit winter.”

“We won’t get away with this, there’ll be months of suffering to pay for this.”

We took the chance and had a grand ride, nothing out of the ordinary but it was marvellous, had a brief rest at Danby Beacon before finishing off with a blast across Roxby Moor, a Terra Trailblazer’s favourite. Back at Scaling Dam, we basked like lizards in the sunshine as our tailgate picnic disappeared down our throats.








Another Day Of Autumn Perfection.




A bit cloudy today but our Indian Summer still continues and me and SuperBri are hitting the trails again, this time for a scrounge about Guisborough Woods from Great Ayton. It has been a while since SuperBri ventured over this way, there are large gaps in the trees compared to his last visit. For me it was a standard ride around the woods but things feel fresher when you can introduce someone to a bit of trail they haven’t ridden before. Eventually we ended up on top of Highcliffe Nab, looking down on the house of our occasional companion, Miles, no doubt aiding the British economy by actually working for a living, unlike the people on top of the cliff - a retiree and a teacher. Although I suppose you could class teaching as a part-time job. The simple pleasure of a blast down Codhill Heights brought a grin to our faces, we continued around the Lonsdale Bowl and Fingerbender Bank (another nemesis of The Pensioner, the name is self-explanatory). The bracken has died off enough to make Andy’s Track feasible again, more or less, parts are still like riding through a tunnel of vegetation, it has just changed from green to golden brown. The car park at Gribdale was busy with vehicles, probably more teachers. We had a choice between one more hill, up to Captain Cook’s Monument or directly down the road to the butcher’s in Great Ayton. An obelisk erected to the memory of a long dead mariner was no competition for a cornucopia of pastry-wrapped animal flesh, particularly as the butcher’s shop has the advantage of not being on top of a hill.









Trick Or Treat




Sometimes, when planning a route, I like to consider the finish and figure out an entertaining way to reach it. Laid in bed this morning the idea of a Coleson Banks descent popped into my mind, it has been a while since this was ridden in the gravity friendly direction. Starting from Ingleby Greenhow, involves a lot of climbing to find ourselves in a position to ride down Coleson Banks, so we girded our respective loins and got on with it. Through the woods from Bank Foot Farm to Clay Bank, is a fair bit of ascent, from Clay Bank to Round Hill on Urra Moor is a lot more. Without the assistance of our advanced mesolimbic systems, it would have been a struggle but we cruised upwards, ever upwards, barely breaking sweat. (Disclaimer: some aspects of the previous sentence may be a fabrication.) Eventually we were on the roof of the North York Moors, Superbri even riding the extra few metres to the trig point marking the highest point on the moors, I remained on the main track with the pretence of taking pictures. We rode along to the Incline Top and took a breather at the cast model of the area in its heyday as a railway transporting ironstone from the mines in Rosedale. The last train was in 1929 but I can remember playing in long gone buildings beside where we were sitting in the 1960’s. Continuing, we picked up the Cleveland Way, following it to the Baysdale road, some welcome downhill fun to make up for our ascent. At the road we turned left and headed down the rough track which leads to a gate at the top of Coleson Banks. The Coleson Banks track is a green lane, or whatever it is they call them nowadays, regularly used by the wobbly-heads in their 4x4’s. It was resurfaced a few years ago, to smooth out deep ruts and it has held up fairly well but ruts are beginning to reappear which made our descent a tad more exciting. The wooded bank opens out to a gully cutting through fields until a final water splash pops us out onto the road in Battersby, the earlier climbing erased from our memories by a thousand feet of descent. A mile or so of tarmac and it’s all over, three rides enjoyed in a week of pristine weather, there’ll be no complaints from this direction.  








Clicking on the route names will take you to the Strava page for the route. Where you can marvel at how slow we are.