Monday 30 June 2014

Thanks George, your gift keeps on giving

Old George Peabody was an interesting chap. An American who fell in lev with London made a giant pile of cash and gave it away to good cause here and in the States. One of his lesser know gifts was to chip in to the building of the Albert Hall. No idea how much big George (as I like to call him) coughed up, but it was enough for him to have a box in the Grend Tier (just along from the Queen) into perpetuity.

In the spirit of George the tickets aren't just divvied up amongst the big wigs. Instead staff pay into  lottery, win tickets and the money raised goes to support good works. This, going the long was round was how I got to see the Eels tonight put on a blinding show, climaxing with E having a go at playing the grand organ.

So thanks George



Sunday 29 June 2014

SCCU 50 The Course of True Love

With the ongoing roadworks around Broadbridge Heath this event was moved to the G50/10 out of Dial Post. Looking at the route on Garmin it looks like a bunch of grapes with the fruit stripped off, a series of out and backs between roundabouts. A lumpy, twisty course, much of it in single carriageway busy roads, it was never going to be one for those seeking a moral boosting time. That said, plenty did just I was not amongst them. Hugh again was a DNS- work getting in the way. Kevin making a return to the tribals following a broken arm gave it 25 miles before deciding discretion was the better part of valour. That left me and Dave Warne. Dave was looking super strong and it showed with a very impressive 2.05.07 despite his visor steaming up. 

Despite yesterday's moral boosting time today I could have ridden forever, just not very fast. Though I maintained the heart rate throughout the speed and grunt to get over the lumps was missing. Came in with a 2.17.20. Couldn't be too disappointed as feel at last have a solid base to build from, and this is the first 50 I have completed since 2011, my last 3 attempts have ended in various DNFs, mechanical, medical and mental related.

Good to see a bunch of Portly friends. Katie Crowe from Dulwich and Val Place from 7  Oaks Tri both put in strong rides, as did James Stone from Brighton Excelsior. But undoubtedly the ride of the say was Steve Kane from Brighton Excelsior who won with a 1.52 despite crashing. He was all smiles back at the hall  despite a bloodied arm and hip. But victory is a wonderful opiate I guess. 

Horsham 10 28.6.14

With a few hundred miles in my legs thanks to the Raid and the Tour of Wessex since I last raced I was pretty interested in seeing how would go in this one. I generally don't like 10's, they are over before I gave got started and a 2 hour round trip for less than 1/2 hours race never seems like a great return. But I was glad I had entered this one as one of my fellow Raiders was Alan Dolan from the Horsham CC. 
Three ports were on the start sheet, though Hugh turned out to be DNS. It left me and Paul King to defend the clubs honour. I felt good in the warm up, raiding my heart rate like clicking through gears. It was a decent morning, and we got it all done before the rain started, the rain that drenched the SEWTTS riders over on the H course in the PM.

Despite not having touched the TT bike in over a month I was comfortable, and was very satisfied with my 24.40. Paul was less enthusiastic about his 23.52, but as he said it wasn't a target event for him. Conal Yates won in a well contested battle between the top guys with a 20.18.

Wednesday 18 June 2014

Raid Pyrenean part 3 - People and places

The journey took us to curious mixof hotels from the functional to the decidedly odd. At Massat at the end of the3rd day we were at Hotel les Trois Seigneures. We were told we were lucky to have a room in the main hotel rather than the annex. To be fair the room was large but, the hotel had something of a gothic flavour where the lobbies were filled with large china faced dolls, all in elaborate Victorian costume. In the dining hall there were a number of stuff animals. That they served coffee from huge yellow tea pots only added to this Alice in Wonderland feel.

Over dinner the next night I was reflecting on this with Steve the anaesthetist. Steve was a strong rider but with a touch of the Huge Laurie about him and a nice way with stories. I shared my guilty pleasure following the twitter feed @craptaxidermy. Steve was a long way ahead of me.

'I have a friend who's hobby is collecting animal skulls.' What a line to either make or kill a conversastion. 'What like fossils.'

'No, animals an birds he find by the road. He carries plastic bags and a hatchet in his car just in case and buries the heads in his garden for six months so they get picked clear.' Nervously I enquired whether this friend was in the medical profession. 'Oh no he works in construction.' Again I presume this man would be unfamiliar with the caress of woman. 'He's married with two kids.' Oh lordy. But worse was to come. This man took his kids to one of the Thames islands to camp. They decided to kill a good to eat. Now if you have ever met a goose in the flesh.... Apparently they got hold of some unfortunate bird but then could not make it die, not for want of trying just they couldn't make it happen. The amount of noise and fighting that must of gone on  is too terrifying to consider.
 Steve the anaesthetist chilling with his mate Tim (not the skull collector)

 Simon - checking his colour coordination.

Simon, the cycling hairdresser belongs to a small demography, cycling, vegetarian, non drinking Iggy pop and Lou Reed fans. He is a man who likes his Bianchi whether or not it a practical choice. The kind of guy in a group of relative stranger who is guaranteed to keep the conversation rolling. Mike from somewhere in the Northwest observed that Simon was the only rider who when up hill as fast as he went down. This seemed to tickle Simon no end.  Mike is one of the good guys in the world . Gentle, modest, despite being one of the stronger riders was generous with his praise. As a hobby in England he coaches young athletes, some who don't really have much in the way of parental support. Talking about one runner he commented 'It was just me there going bananas' as his rider pulled off a PB. He noted with some sadness that as a coach if you get somebody good there are going to get taken from you. 'They will have expectatons now, if next hear its not happening then I am not going to keep hold of them.'

Raid Pyrenean Part 2 - lets talk about cols

Here's me cresting the Peyresourde on Day 3 (not in the big ring)

Its the mountains that makes the Raid so special, a pretty much unbeatable tour through the classic Pyrenean battlegrounds of Le Tour. The whole ride boasts 18 cols but to be honest some a relative pimples. Day 1 features none of the big names, but though looking like an 'easy' day has the distance and the amount of climbing one would typically find in a British sportive such as the Castle Ride or the first day of the Tour of Wessex. When one is dealing with the Raid, easy is a relative concept.

It day 2 that really bites and there was a tricky little extra chucked in. The day was due to kick off with the Aubsique, but a landslide meant an alternative route. The alternative needed to be approved and the powers that be were not going to let us off lightly. They added an extra 18km and 500m of climbing by replacing the Aubisque with an ascent of the Col de Soulour, prefaced by the Marie Blanc. One damp morning we left the hotel and hit the foothills of this nasty bugger pretty much straightaway. Many of the Pyrenean climbs start with a gentle upgrade before showing their teeth. The Marie Blanc is not one of the giants at 9km, but with the final 4km between 10.5 and 12.5% gradient it stings. By comparison the Soulour is more of a pussy cat, but by the time one has crested this we still had 100km to ride and the Tourmalet lay ahead.

Of course the Tourmalet is the big beast with all the tour history but for the first two thirds I was pretty underwhelmed. To start with there seemed to be pretty much continuous road works, with some pretty serious civil engineering going on. The we rode into what I took to be a thick mist, where one could only see a few feet ahead, so even if there were majestic views we weren't going to see them. It was when Tim came past in the van, I realised that we were riding through the clouds, and about 7 km from the top we broke through into beautiful sunshine, and the true power of the landscape opened up. Despite is 8.5% average in the last 8km, and some pretty iffy road surfaces I found I could keep a steady pace going and enjoy the spectacle.

At 174km day 3 was the longest with a generous 3000m of climbing, but with a real sting in the tail. The Col d'Aspin was a treat, beautiful, nice tarmac and a steady gradient. What followed was the peyresourde, probably my favourite climb, not least because the café at the top served the most wonderful cheese and ham omelettes, and delicious crepes. But again, we still had 120km to ride from there. Day 2 had been a bit mixed on the weather from, but day 3 was beautiful, and after a couple of minor Cols we reached the foot of the Portet d'Aspet. Arriving after 100km, and with reports of gradients of 14%, though fairly short this one had a few of us worried. There was one ramp where it was probably over 14%, but averaging around 9% for the final 5km meant that it never got out of hand. But even now, we still had to slog the best part of 60km to the finish, firstly a long descent to St Girons and then a 27km uphill drag to Massat. A long tough day.

Day 4 had less pedigree but no shortage of ascent, but with day 5 being a relatively mild run to the sea there was confidence building. As before we were climbing pretty much from the moment we left the hotel, but the Col de Port was nice and steady. However that was just setting the scene for the Col de Paiheres. Rising to 2001m with average gradients in the last 5 km of 9% this was probably only second to the Tourmalet in terms of scale. As one reaches that final part it is one of the few climbs that has that alpine feel with lots of hairpins and ramps where one can look back to where you have come from. Once over the top the descent was on a skinny road that seems more like a bowl of spaghetti thrown at the mountain than any sensible route.

It was getting hot now and though nothing special the Col de Garavel kind of pissed me off, but as  I started the final climb, the Jau, my mood picked up and when I got of 4 km from the top  I threw a bit of caution to the wind and attacked to the summit. From there it was a beautiful downhill run to the finish in Prades. And that was that for Cols, well not strictly speaking. on Day 5 we went over St Pierre and Ternere, but compared to what had gone before these were pimples. But the climbing wasn't quite over, having hit the Med at St Cyprien, the Coast road started to get a bit lumpy, and there was a final little hump to get over before the run in Cerbere.

The Pyrenees' have a feel all of their own. Only the Tourmalet and Paiheres get serious beyond the tree line and though often vary steep the gradients felt more variable than the Alps or Dolomites. The roads were often narrow, and one had to be serious alert to livestock. On the Tourmalet climb we got stuck behind a farmer herding his sheep, and narrowly missed being pursued by Llamas. On the descent of the Paiheres but for a shout from the rider in front I would have piled head long into three riderless horses ambling slowly up the mountain.

It was possible to sit in a gear and ride to a heart rate generally, compact chain sets and 28t rear cassettes have probably done much to tame these brutes. The idea of tackling the Tourmalet on a barely made road, with a single speed bike like Octave Lapize did in 1910 is quite a different concept.

Tuesday 17 June 2014

Pyrenean Raid - Part 1, of probably many


I got back from France in the early hours of Sunday morning, in time for news of England's defeat and tweets about a rave at the old post office building by East Croydon. I have been putting off writing about the Raid since then, despite having kept a pretty decent diary while in France, basically because there was so much  I don't really know where to begin. So this will probably be rather rambling and unsatisfying to read but best thing is to make a start.

The Raid Pyrenean is a route from Hendaya on the Atlantic coast of Southern France, through to Cerbere on the Mediterranean, taking in 18 Cols and 730km along the way, including such famous climbs as  the Tourmalet, Aspin, and Portet De Aspet. it was devised by the Pau Cycling Club over 100 years ago though has only sprung to life in the 1950's. To Qualify as a Raider the course has to be completed in under 100 hours. Its a ride I have wanted to do  ever since I joined the Ports. Around 10 years ago there was a club trip to take this on, and was part of the club folklore by the time I became a Port. The story of that trip was immortalised by Graham Fife in his book The Beautiful Machine, in which he alleges he climbed the Peyresourde in the big ring, and who am I to cast doubt on such a claim. Anyway it has been on my list to do for ages, and a few times there has been talk of another club trip but it never quite happened. So this year me and Say decided to get on with it and book up. We started on the Monday 9th June at 9.00am with a group photo by the sea, and arrived in Cerbere shortly after noon on Friday 13th. In between was a fantastic cycling adventure, and one that I would recommend to anyone for wants to ride in the high mountains.

We travelled with Marmot Tours. The support they provided through their leaders, Graham and Tim turned out to be first rate. 14 were booked as part of our group, but only 13 started. By the time we left France there was still no news of no-show Peter. The group was an eclectic mix, including 2 anaesthetists, a hairdresser and a Rugby League correspondent amongst other things. We all assembled at the seashore for the customary photo to start the Raid.

To be continued.....