Coast to Coast 1-dayer: Achievement Unlocked!

Coast to Coast 1-dayer: Achievement Unlocked!

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keith2.2

Original Poster:

1,100 posts

195 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Having done the C2C route (Whitehaven to Sunderland) over 3 days with some friends about 4 years ago, I've always wondered about seeing it off in a day.

Well this weekend, I just went and got on with it.

The longest ride i've done previously was about 90 miles, with my usual "long rides" being 50-60 miles. So this was a bit of a step into the unknown.

I was targeting an average of 15mph for 140 miles, but accepting 12hrs in the saddle would be nothing to be ashamed of.

At 5:15am, having popped ten £1 coins into the meter, I dipped the rear wheel in the Irish sea and set off. I had made 3 concessions to the distance and terrain:
1) Vittoria Open Pave tyres. They' were a b**tard to fit, but I think they proved their worth.
2) A £19 high-vis gilet from decathlon. chosen mainly because it had a big back pocket for extra flapjack.
3) Don't hurl the 'rules' at me - I used a saddle bag for my tubes, pump and multi tool - so that my pockets were free for food and a power pack for my phone..

The lakeland passes were serene and beautiful at that time in the morning. A little drizzle in the air keeping me cool - though I was glad of the arm-warmers.

I stopped at a cash point in Keswick, to get money for what I hoped would be a well-earned espresso in Penrith.

Well Penrith came and went with no sign of espresso. Sadly I also made an error - I continued following the "Route 71" signs, rather than change to "Route 7". I didn't realise my error for about 15 miles, at which point I queried why I wasn't heading towards Hartside.

Hartside - it transpired - was 20 miles due north. st. I had blundered onto the softies route. Well I'm no softie - so planned a course for Hartside, annoyed that I was eating up my contingency time and also adding just over 20 miles to a journey I already thought was going to be a stretch. The error also meant I had to do a full ascent of the Hartside road climb. The correct route sees off Hartside in a couple of short sharp climbs. The road climbs nearly 1900ft over 5 miles. It took me 74 minutes to summit (the record on strava is 17?!?!?!?!?) - it was foggy AND raining. Hartside had always been my planned stop - so stop I did, and saw off a hot chocolate, cup of coffee, flapjack and steak pie. Also topped up the water and had a coke.

Refreshed and revived, I stepped back into the miserable weather, jumped on the bike and headed down. Decending at 40-50mph on wet roads is...exciting.

It was more than exciting when, at a Garmin indicated 52mph, I got a speed wobble. Nothing was sorting it so I eased over to the verge and came to a stop on the grass - whereupon I realised I hadn't unclipped, and toppled onto a soft mossy mount. I couldn't have been happier with that particular outcome - having come off at a similar speed on Honister 2 months ago under very similar circumstances..

The rest of the ride was entirely uneventful. I eventually got my espresso fix at the top of Stanhope Moor - probably the toughest climb of the day - but also the point I believe to be "if you make it to here, you've done it" - because it's pretty much all downhill to the coast.

It took me an annoying couple of laps up and down the seafront in Sunderland to find the actual finish point (A big sculpture), but find it I did.

In total I covered 166 miles @ 15.2mph. What really took me by surprise was how fresh I felt at the end - having planned the timing based on feeling totally ruined by the end of it. I wouldn't say it was an anticlimax, but it has left me instantly looking for longer rides (I've got a couple planned) and possibly revisit this one - to do it faster (I'm thinking a non-record-bothering sub 10h - the record is 7.5hrs!)

A fantastic ride out - and something I'd definitely use to say - never let other people say you can't do something.

I was glad to have someone there at the finish - just to share it with. I think getting to the end and then having to make my way to a train station to to make the 4hr trip back to get the car would have been a bit of a come-down.

I'm now looking at the the Chiltern Cycleway (a 175 mile loop around the chilterns) and "Way of the Roses" - Morecambe to Bridlington (a bit further but less ascent) - in what I want to dub my "Run out of Road" series of rides (I know, what a douchebag).

I even did a 60 miler down the coast the next day in the glorious sunshine. What a fab weekend!



wseed

1,514 posts

130 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Well done for the achievement and good write up.

Reminded me of doing the C2C walk as a teenager we too made a costly detour due to poor map reading and dropped into the wrong valley. It me and a mate somewhat longer at 8 or 9 days walking though.

Daveyraveygravey

2,026 posts

184 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Top effort, and well written up, chapeau! I'm doing an everesting in a week which will be about 230 miles in 20 odd hours, more than double anything I have done in the past so it made encouraging reading.

Sounds like audaxing could be you - a friend has done 200k, 400k, and 600k this year. Bristol to Anglesey and back in under 40 hours! Seems mad to me!

Other things you could try - Lejog, or one of the longer European rides? I did the South Downs Way in a day a few years ago, 95 miles off road, 13.5 hours. Some folk then turn round and ride back...

Mark83

1,163 posts

201 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Chapeau!

You've given me an idea for my next challenge.

Gren

1,950 posts

252 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Mark83 said:
Chapeau!

You've given me an idea for my next challenge.
The missus is doing this one next month : http://www.chasethesun.org/

205 miles coast to coast on the longest day of the year.

She signed up for it in January, so we then had to find her a road bike....because she'd never ridden one before! She's now doing 120 miles or so every Saturday and cramming in as much turbo time as she can during the week.


Steve vRS

4,845 posts

241 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Well done!

I'm doing the Coast 2 Coast in a day sportive at the end of June. That will be my longest ride ever!

Steve

keith2.2

Original Poster:

1,100 posts

195 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Steve - my top tip would be to keep your speed below what you normally ride at, and keep some "checkpoints" in mind. Hartside makes for a perfect "halfway" point - and eating there means you get a 20 min decent during which you can digest before the next climb. I maintain that once you get to the Moor station - you're home and dry.

Gren - CTS looks irritatingly tempting...I'm also free that weekend...

I've looked at Audaxing but, though I'm generally pretty capable of doing so from time on foot in the mountains - I HATE reading maps. I hate even more having to stop and get a map out to check where I'm supposed to be going - I'm very much a "point me in the direction I need and I'm there" type of rider.

I HAVE been bitten by the distance bug, though. I found more sense of achievement in doing the C2C than I do from keeping an average of 25mph, for example. Must be getting old.

WinstonWolf

72,857 posts

239 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Good work! thumbup

marky911

4,417 posts

219 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Great stuff! Well done.

I was chuckling at the part where you didn't unclip. I'm waiting for the day it happens to me, which it will. I'll be hoping for some moss that day.

Gruffy

7,212 posts

259 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Chapeau. Will you post up your Strava link? It helps to visualise your ride that much better and I may very well copy you at some point.

nammynake

2,589 posts

173 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Nice write-up and good effort; that's a big increase on your previous longest ride. I did the Way of the Roses a few years ago, taking 3 days on a loaded touring bike. The route is great.

I had planned on doing the Coast to Coast in a day sportive this year, but double booked with another event so had to drop out.

Laurel Green

30,779 posts

232 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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marky911 said:
Great stuff! Well done.

I was chuckling at the part where you didn't unclip. I'm waiting for the day it happens to me, which it will. I'll be hoping for some moss that day.
Same here. thumbup

Though have done the not-unclip part. biggrin

JustinF

6,795 posts

203 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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keith2.2 said:
.
Gren - CTS looks irritatingly tempting...I'm also free that weekend...
Do it, Do it do it do it...
You'll never regret the rides you did, only the ones you didn't...

SixPotBelly

1,922 posts

220 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Very much enjoyed reading that account. Well done for taking that ride on and for completing it!

Could Keith's journey be the inspiration for our next PH adventure? Coast to Coast to Coast? Gruffy and the hard men ride from Whitehaven to Sunderland then back again the following day. Those more mortal can go just the one way. If a support car had two drivers each could drive one way and ride the other. I'd be up for sharing the riding/driving in that way...


dontdobends

485 posts

214 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
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Great write up! I did the shortest route a couple of years ago gretna green to tynemouth in just over 4hours with a slight tailwind! And got the train back from Newcastle to Gretna all in the day. I'll try and font the strava!

keith2.2

Original Poster:

1,100 posts

195 months

Tuesday 26th May 2015
quotequote all
Ach, I realised people would actually enjoy reading it, I'd have put more effort in! Look out for the next instalment, in that case,,,

I'd be up for an out-and-back, I've discussed with a friend about doing it next year.

Hopefully this will link:
https://www.strava.com/activities/309517434

...I've never used the online Strava before!



Edited by keith2.2 on Wednesday 27th May 08:10

tobinen

9,226 posts

145 months

Wednesday 27th May 2015
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Good read and chapeau! to you. Decent average speed too (well, I'd be pleased with it anyway)

SixPotBelly

1,922 posts

220 months

Wednesday 27th May 2015
quotequote all
keith2.2 said:
I'd be up for an out-and-back, I've discussed with a friend about doing it next year.

Hopefully this will link:
https://www.strava.com/activities/309517434

...I've never used the online Strava before!
I see you mean about that detour! Respect for turning back north and rejoining your intended route.

I propose any PH out-and-back trip gets called The Savage Ride in your honour. smile

budgie smuggler

5,384 posts

159 months

Wednesday 27th May 2015
quotequote all
keith2.2 said:
Ach, I realised people would actually enjoy reading it, I'd have put more effort in! Look out for the next instalment, in that case,,,

I'd be up for an out-and-back, I've discussed with a friend about doing it next year.

Hopefully this will link:
https://www.strava.com/activities/309517434

...I've never used the online Strava before!



Edited by keith2.2 on Wednesday 27th May 08:10
Quite a detour! Good work.

TonyHetherington

32,091 posts

250 months

Wednesday 27th May 2015
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Top work indeed! And nice write up!

Surely you must have taken a picture at the start and the finish....!?! biggrin