South Downs Way in a Day

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South Downs Way in a Day

Postby Dombo » Thu Jun 08, 2006 5:34 pm

Hi all, anyone here done the above? I am doing it this Saturday 10th June with a couple of friends. Started off as something for fun but then decided somebody other than the makers of Savlon and Asso bottom cream should benefit, hence raising money for Demelza House.

Should any of you kind souls wish to donate to this excellent cause, I have a page

http://www.justgiving.com/dominicbarnes

which also has an action piccy of me at Gorrick May Day weekend.

Some of you may remember me from an excellent club ride one Saturday last August when I turned up on a full susser mtb with slicks, bouncing along in the group ably led by the ever-patient Tim. You'll be glad to know I now have one of those road type machines so hope to join you all again soon, and not hold you up quite so much!
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Postby Alex P » Thu Jun 08, 2006 8:10 pm

Its all up hill and down hill with very little flat in-between - I think about 10,000 to 15,000 feet of climbing in all and 100+ miles. :twisted:

My suggestions are start as early as you can in the daylight, take as much food as you can - powerbars etc (unless you have a support vehicle) and a map as I got completely lost around the Queen Elizabeth Park on the A31 and wasted at least an hour when the "South Downs Way" signs dried up.

Don't forget tools! - tubes, puncture kits, tyre patch, chain splitter, spare disk pads - unless they are very new.

Good luck and have a great time - and we want to hear all about it with pictures afterwards....... 8)
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Postby Dr Frigo » Thu Jun 08, 2006 9:33 pm

I think it was Rory who did it a good while back and had posted a great report about it, but some of the old data on this forum has been lost and I cannot find the thread.

Good luck anyhow, sounds like a long day in the saddle.

Ps: why only 2 laps out of 5 at the Gorrick ? :wink:
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Postby Dombo » Fri Jun 09, 2006 7:04 am

Thanks for the advice.

Shall post a report next week.
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South Downs Way Completed

Postby Dombo » Mon Jun 12, 2006 2:21 pm

Well we did it, I and three friends set out on Saturday to ride the length of the South Downs Way, 100 miles of hilly bridleway from Winchester to Eastbourne, over 10,000 vertical feet of climbing, just under 12 hours in the saddle. Iniitally for fun, I decided to raise money for Demelza House:

http://www.demelzahouse.org

http://www.justgiving.com/dominicbarnes

Saturday morning we set off at 4.30 am after a massive breakfast of pasta, tuna, eggs, muesli and banana shakes, into a brisk headwind that was to rise steadily throughout the day.

Breaking the journey into 25 mile chunks helped psychologically and the first milestone was reached in under 3 hours, ending with a white-knuckle 43 mph grass descent of Butser Hill.

This proved to be the high point of the day, the lows (there were many) beginning at the halfway mark food stop when we were passed by a platoon of Gurkhas on a training run. Our pathetic inability to catch them until the trail turned downhill was a harbinger of things to come.

Long savage climbs followed by downhill stretches that were too short and bumpy to recover our strength, or of such gentle slope that we had to keep pedalling into the wind, quickly sapped our strength.

My dreams of effortlessly dancing up the hills like Lance Armstrong faded into the grim reality of plodding like Neil while puffing like Louis.

Food and water stops became more frequent as the heat and wind took their toll and our psychological milestones reduced to 10 mile blocks, a big figure change now being a cause for celebration: 60s slowly became 70s and we knew once we got to 80 then another 10 miles would take us to the final home run stretch.

Lewes was reached around the 75 mile point and the start of several unbelievably steep climbs, eyes screwed tight against the sun's glare off baking hot flinty chalk, the hills shielding us now from the cooling effect of the headwind.

Finally, with two climbs to go Eastbourne hove into view and 90 minutes later we made the final descent into that popular seaside resort, reaching the station at 7:45 pm, over 15 hours after leaving Winchester. Average riding speed, excluding stops, just above 8mph.
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Postby Toks » Mon Jun 12, 2006 4:53 pm

[quote]My dreams of effortlessly dancing up the hills like Lance Armstrong faded into the grim reality of plodding like Neil while puffing like Louis.
Excellent account! Damn you must of been sore on sunday morning
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Postby higg » Mon Jun 12, 2006 11:41 pm

Well done, that's a real achievement, especially in the heat of last Saturday.
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Postby Elliot M » Tue Jun 13, 2006 9:38 am

[quote="Toks"][quote]My dreams of effortlessly dancing up the hills like Lance Armstrong faded into the grim reality of plodding like Neil while puffing like Louis.
Excellent account! Damn you must of been sore on sunday morning


:D Classic line!
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Winchester Route

Postby Richard » Thu Jun 15, 2006 10:36 am

Wow! That sounds pretty tough.

We are planning to do that route, with a couple of guys from our Bigfoot club (starting at Surbiton), in a couple of weeks. I am used to small 20-25 mile chunks once or twice a week! Your advice will be heeded,

Cheers

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Re: Winchester Route

Postby Dombo » Fri Jun 16, 2006 8:19 am

[quote="Richard"]Wow! That sounds pretty tough.

We are planning to do that route, with a couple of guys from our Bigfoot club (starting at Surbiton), in a couple of weeks. I am used to small 20-25 mile chunks once or twice a week! Your advice will be heeded,

Cheers

Richard


As Alex says above, start as early as possible. Have a good breakfast and figure on 3litres of water (a Camelbak full) getting you to the next tap at the farm at Cocking (30-odd miles away). Set mileage goals similar to your normal regular rides as we did. 5 miles into the ride your goal is then the manageable 25 mile mark, and so on, rather than "phew, only another 95 to go".
Take small bits of food eg dried fruit, salted peanuts, toddler-size sandwiches, hard-boiled eggs and the usual powerbars and carbo gels. Also GO powder or similar - I took 300gms in a freezer bag rolled up and taped to camelbak. That's a far weaker solution than recommended but more palatable in large quantities (we drank about 9 litres). I also took little salt sachets from office canteen as emergency cramp relief but luckily did not need them. The salted nuts may have helped.
At QE Country Park after the Butser Hill descent you skirt the building to the left, stay in the woods and emerge on a gravel drive; keep going up here and you won't get lost.
Line tyres with kevlar felt (Panaracer Flataway, £8.99 from pedalon) rather than the slime strips as flint will slice through the latter. Still take 3 spare tubes just in case.
For crash relief take TCP - I put mine in a small squeezy contact lens cleaner bottle with the labels removed for safety - and hydrocolloid dressings suitable for weeping grazes (the most likely injuries), and surgical tape. Also paracetomol for any aches that may develop.
Get the Harveys Map which has full route and water points marked. Make sure you fill your camelbak and water bottles at every tap as they are well-spaced.

Finally, when it gets tough sit up or stop and enjoy the view and the fact that you're having a good ride with your mates.

Finally finally, you may experience some numbness towards the end. This should clear up by the following day but is massively worrying at the time.
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Postby Alex P » Sat Jun 24, 2006 3:30 pm

Dombo, certainly an excellent effort and you did it th right way.

On my effort several years ago we had a support vehicle meeting us at the major road crossings with food, water, first aid and he happened to be an excellent mechanic so on the whole an easier experience with a bail out option if needed.

It was a boring day for him though
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Postby Dr Frigo » Tue Jun 27, 2006 1:28 pm

There's always one ...

http://www.londoncyclesport.com/reports ... cotty.html

[img]http://www.londoncyclesport.com/pics_2006_reports/cotty/2.jpg[/img]
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Postby Dombo » Wed Jun 28, 2006 10:35 am

[quote="Sylvain"]There's always one ...

http://www.londoncyclesport.com/reports ... cotty.html

[img]http://www.londoncyclesport.com/pics_2006_reports/cotty/2.jpg[/img]


Must have been one hell of a ride - he bent his top tube and snapped off one of his fork legs! :lol:
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Postby Dr Frigo » Wed Jun 28, 2006 12:25 pm

That's what a bbc commentator said of Cristoph Sauser's forks at the Fort William World Cup!
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Postby Dr Frigo » Fri Jul 21, 2006 9:36 am

I'm thinking of doing the SDW on either Thursday 31 August, Friday 1 or Saturday 2 September.

If anyone else is interested let me know.
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