Me. Bicycles are for riding, not fiddling about with. I can just about mend a puncture or fit a new pair of brake blocks. Anything else goes to the professionals in the bike shop. Taking bearings apart? You must be joking!
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A trip into Brum partly to check out the progress with the new cycling infrastructure. Not bad and certainly a step in the right direction. Still a way off where it should be but let's hope it delivers according to the proposed plans.
A scenic route home via the Wast, Lickey, Waseley and Clent Hills. Plenty of mud and leaves on the road so took it easy on the descents. 55km/750m.
A lovely ride today on the Arkose Adventure bike fitted with new Continental CycloXKing tyres. A total of 36 miles and 2'270feet in 2hrs 53min.
12 miles was on tarmac and the rest on trail or very muddy tracks and fields. Only 4 dismounts, 2 in cattle trodden gateways and 2 to avoid puddles higher than the crank!
Out to Monyash then up Derby Lane to Long Rake. A section of very broken and rutted track to pick up the High Peak Trail and then a left onto the Tissington Trail and down to Biggin. A decent 2 miles of Bridleway known as Cardlemere Lane and Cobblersnook Lane to pick up the HPT again at Minninglow and then back to Parsley Hay for a Latte stop. Finally to the end of the trail at Dowlow before the usual run home via Flagg and Monyash.
Managed to stay dry apart from a bit of drizzle 10 mins from home but some ferocious gusts of wind on exposed sections of the HPT that nearly had me over a couple of times.
And I would recommend The Continental CycloXKing's. Never missed a beat!
Managed to get the crankshaft oot and confirm the bottom bracket is ******, one bearing completely disintigrated, a few loose bearings and some metal filings floating about in there :eek:. Now have to get the BB out, see if my mate has the tool to take off the retaining nut, if not I shall dig out the monkey wrench!
It's a FSA system, trouble is knowing what tools are called; I can see what the job is and what is needed, but what is it called - all a bit long winded but a good learning curve - I used to fix my cars so surely I can fix a bike :D
A 38 miles (2200 feet) pootle via Pannal and Burn Bridge (near Harrogate) via some country "roads" so slathered in slurry such that I will never abuse my Campagnolo brake blocks there again.
What I like about cycling is, as the NOTW used to claim, "All Human Life Is There". And in "there" I might include the woman who from a stopped position watching me travelling towards her at 15 yards/second (downhill!) suddenly decided to turn right across my path. Fortunately the aforementioned Campagnolo brake blocks stopped me from hitting her broadside and continuing my journey over the roof of her car for some intimacy with Otley's tarmac. I merely uttered "Tut Tut".
Or, as I made my way between Otley and Pool, the tractor (it was a John Deere - I got a good look) that suddenly emerged from a field gate to cross my path towing a Landrover towing a trailer containing sheep. I assume the Landrover had got stuck in the field mud. One would think farmers would know about mud? Anyway I hoped the sheep were not too late for High Tea.
On the outskirts of Pannal my road was closed because a new estate (by Charles Church) is being built. I asked a friendly local how big the estate was to be - closing my road indeed! - and his response was "Too big! 400 houses on this estate!" I looked sympathetic. I used to live in a farming village of 60 properties in two lanes so to me 400 properties sounded like a city. But Charles Church is building in the same fetching, matching red brick - so not all bad.
The farms in the village where I used to live were really higgledy - piggledy. And the mud! Oh my!
And so to home :)
Pannal.... I parked up there when I came up to Harrogate to see the TdeF.
Nice looking place.