by higg » Mon May 19, 2008 12:24 am
Good to see you're at least thinking about cycling again, Bob. Any idea how long it'll be before you're back again or is it too early to tell ?
Not wanting to rub your nose in it but there was a big group out this morning for the MTB ride. I didn't believe it at first, I was expecting 3 or 4 but actually by the time we left there was 14 people in total. Route master Marco led us out of Croydon in the Lloyd Park direction with a view to getting us out to the top of Titsey hill by the easiest route.
Even on the easy routes though there is scope for making things interesting with some "special" loops around Croham Hurst and Selsdon woods. The climb up through Farleigh golf course seems to get trickier every time I get there. Loose flint combined with an upward slope demands concentration to avoid ending up in the bushes.
An impromtu photo session in front of the Norman church led us onto the cylce path by the Croydon road.
A quick warning at the top of Titsey about about the gate at the bottom of hill and we were off. I was last to start and managed 30mph on my skinny tyres and rigid forks. Not sure what the guys up front managed but it couldn't have been much short of 40mph. Just hope they spotted the gate early enough.
After a quick regroup and map check at the bottom we skirted round the back of Oxted and up Chalk Pit Lane. OK strictly speaking this is not offroad but it is steep enough to offer a challenge.
The flint house downhill was next. This looks like a straightforward grassy slope but add in the dried hoof prints on the ground and this is enough to shake your fillings out. Maria entertained everyone when her back wheel started skipping from one side of a rut to another. Her survival instinct kicked in and she managed to stay upright and was able to laugh about it at the bottom.
Next up was the choclate eclair hill which is only 600m long but a fairly vicious bridleway, 10% average gradient, with sections at 20%. If this isn't bad enough the surface is loose shingle with shoulder high nettles and ferns on both sides. The name comes from Marco's offer to buy anyone who can cycle up it a box of chocolate eclairs at the Warlingham Sainsbury's just after the top. Over the last few years I seen a few people try but nobody really got past the first 10 yards, most just walk form the bottom.
Today Joel led up and just didn't stop. Legs spinning like a washing machine he got up the steepest part, just about managing to get enough traction to maintain momentum. As the trail levelled off to 10% he kept going with me running up behind him pushing my bike eager to be a witness the complete ascent. Then disaster struck, 10 yards before the trail re-enters the wood and the suface improves, a loose rock and some ferns conspired to drag his front wheel off course then to a standstill on the edge of the path. So near ... maybe next time.
From here it was mostly downhill back to Croydon. Welcome respite after a reasonably long but enjoyable day, 40k in just over 4 hours.