
GrannyJen
Super Poster
Lifetime VIP Member
So, two old biddies, veterans of end to end charity walks (Lands end - John o'Groats) are now going to complete unfinished business by going East to West (Ness point to St David's head) with a proposed launch date of 21st May 2021 (Covid permitting),
No back up teams this time, no one to ferry accommodation to the next point, no one to wash up and clean after us, no one to do the laundry, so it's effectively going to be there and back, finish one day, returning to start point, continuing from finishing point next day. Accommodation will be my camper pulling Jo's caravan with a move to the next campsite roughly every five days.
Cycling rather than walking because of advancing age and creaking joints, Jo, my sister and partner in this adventure has arthritis in knees and hips, my feet and ankles are suggesting that I may have run one marathon too far,
So part 1 was to choose the noble steeds. Neither of us being cyclists we did not have a clue, although one look at the terrain once we passed Northamption/Bedford heading west made us both put an "e" before "bike".
I'm not one to spend months of researching, as some of you may know. Compulsive may be an appropriate term. Our first trip to a bike shop was the last and we came away having seen, sat on and ordered. Specialised Como 4, Hybrid E-bikes.
We picked up the bikes end of August and having completed 250 miles had the first "shakedown" service this week. I've not fallen off for a while now, the last time was Wednesday, and a week camping in the Tonbridge area finding lots of hilly places to go have proved to us the value of the weight trade off in having an EAPC.
Fortunately both of us are delighted with the choice of bicycle. A very comfortable ride both on and off road, although the street tyres can be a bit twitchy in gravel (picture Jen completing a fast downhill return section on to a pea-gravel surfaced car park, finishing with an ever so elegant slide on her butt ...)
The hardest lesson has been how to get the bikes on and off the A-frame bike rack on the caravan. No one said it would be easy and it isn't.
Not a lot of room as the second bike can only go on once the caravan is hitched to camper and things like Jockey wheel handles to get in the way ... many a camping person twitching the curtains on a campsite has had hours of entertainment watching two old girls manhandle bicycles on to the caravan.... and off again .... then back on ..... then off .... with technical commands echoing back and forth such as "try the pedal down... up ....higher ....your side ...."....
More to follow ....

Now, suggestions please! How do I get on it ........
No back up teams this time, no one to ferry accommodation to the next point, no one to wash up and clean after us, no one to do the laundry, so it's effectively going to be there and back, finish one day, returning to start point, continuing from finishing point next day. Accommodation will be my camper pulling Jo's caravan with a move to the next campsite roughly every five days.
Cycling rather than walking because of advancing age and creaking joints, Jo, my sister and partner in this adventure has arthritis in knees and hips, my feet and ankles are suggesting that I may have run one marathon too far,
So part 1 was to choose the noble steeds. Neither of us being cyclists we did not have a clue, although one look at the terrain once we passed Northamption/Bedford heading west made us both put an "e" before "bike".
I'm not one to spend months of researching, as some of you may know. Compulsive may be an appropriate term. Our first trip to a bike shop was the last and we came away having seen, sat on and ordered. Specialised Como 4, Hybrid E-bikes.
We picked up the bikes end of August and having completed 250 miles had the first "shakedown" service this week. I've not fallen off for a while now, the last time was Wednesday, and a week camping in the Tonbridge area finding lots of hilly places to go have proved to us the value of the weight trade off in having an EAPC.
Fortunately both of us are delighted with the choice of bicycle. A very comfortable ride both on and off road, although the street tyres can be a bit twitchy in gravel (picture Jen completing a fast downhill return section on to a pea-gravel surfaced car park, finishing with an ever so elegant slide on her butt ...)
The hardest lesson has been how to get the bikes on and off the A-frame bike rack on the caravan. No one said it would be easy and it isn't.

More to follow ....

Now, suggestions please! How do I get on it ........
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