I have spent many years in search of riding Nirvana.
I
say searched, which raises visions of some expansive and adventurous
endeavour but I have not actually tried that hard. It sounded good as a
tag line but, actually, what I’m looking for doesn’t necessarily require
much geographical movement (other than the pedal power obvs’) or
literal searching.
By Nirvana, I don’t mean the ultimate trail or
location; I’m talking more psychologically. A particular place in my
mind, where I find happiness and contentment. Counter-intuitively, this
is not as simply achieved as just getting on my bike and going for a
ride or finding some ultimate trail; but it is a great place to start!
Mountain
biking has a well renowned ability to restore peace of mind to those
mentally wearisome, acting as a medium for the enjoyment of the great
outdoors. It can free your mind of the daily problems and give your grey
matter a chance to re-charge. The simple, raw need to process the
requirements resultant of your physical exertion can place otherwise
distracting issues to the back of ones consciousness, allowing for more
freedom of thought.
Mid climb is actually where I have some of my
best ideas - be they a design for a new house i’m working on or
decisions that have become all-encompassing. On the bike is a great
place for quiet contemplation.
Be
it racing, messing about in the woods or arbitrarily passing through
the countryside on a warm spring/summer’s day, Mountain biking can be
the conduit to a healthier mind and body (Yes, that’s right. It also has
a great ability to make you physically fit and healthy, fancy that).
Originally
taking up mountain biking over 20 years ago on a fairly bog standard
(but I loved it) Universal hardtail (full-sus didn’t really exist back
then) with narrow bars and steep angles (everywhere), one of the aspects
that really struck me was the freedom I felt as we headed out from my
local village and up in to the hills. For this, I have 2 Uncles and an
Aunt to thank who, swallowed up by the late 80’s surge in mountain
biking, would set upon themselves the responsibility of looking after me
and my two cousins every weekend for a few hours by taking us on rides
up in to the hills surrounding Winchcombe, in the Cotswolds.
From
this, my passion for mountain has grown ever since. With it an
appreciation for all forms of the sport/discipline. Be it a mammoth xc
ride or a Downhill session to Freeriding and Enduro. I have even tried
jump parks. I simply like riding my bike. Alongside this, I have come to
appreciate the carefree, peace-of-mind that comes with it and have
become increasingly aware of the benefits it harbours.
I have
become more aware of this feeling over the last few years but, due to
its absence more than anything. It feels like something has been
missing?
There are many different ways of enjoying bikes and no
ride is ever a bad ride, as they say; even the bad ones. But no-one
really remembers their weekly night ride, or their Sunday morning local.
It’s a bit like comparing your evening dinner with going out to a
michelin starred restaurant with the wife. Only one winner right? Your
local ride is a snack compared with the banquet that is a weekender with
the mates. Memories are made through shared experiences; from days on
the bike that include your friends and acquaintances.
Like
a sinusoidal graph, my life riding can be mapped out in a similar way. I
have spent large chunks of my life somewhere between the median line
and the lower half of the curve; riding solo. Of these rides, I remember
very little specifics. Sure, I can remember all my local loops, I know
them like the back of my hand. In the same way, I know what Spaghetti
Bolognese tastes like but I couldn’t recall one Bolognese meal from
another; they all blend in to one collective memory.
Obviously
not every ride is a solo and whilst there have been times of plenty,
these have been less frequent than the former. The peaks on the graph
are a more acute than the more rounded, lower half; Whilst fewer in
number, they represent the vat majority of my riding memories. They
represent periods in my life when I was more carefree and at greater
peace of mind. It’s great to have riding buddies.
The
biggest spike would be a period of some 2 years between 2000 - 2002:
sixth form. With a good group of friends, some of whom still are, and
lots of free time, memories were made in abundance. After this, life
just sort a got in the way. Another spike would see me out on a regular
basis with siblings and in-laws over a few years around 2005 - 2008.
During
all this time, I have stayed in touch with those pals from sixth form
(and I still have siblings). We manage to meet up on a fairly regular
basis - usually on Wales trips or other trail centres. Not necessarily
often, but regularly. From c.2013, I was fortunate that a few of them
moved back to the area and, there followed, another really good patch.
We had at least a year or so of weekly group rides. Another spike on the
graph.
Over
the last few years, however, those friends and family members have
moved afield or become burdened with the responsibilities of adulthood
or simply lost interest in mountain biking. I myself have recently taken
on some of these responsibilities, with a lovely bundle of joy waking
me up every night. As such, it has been vastly more difficult to ‘meet
up’ and I have therefore, found myself lost in the wilderness. On my own
again, riding solo.
During this time, I have found my own
motivation fading. There is only so much soul searching that one can
take before it just gets boring. I have tried to arrest this decline and
reinvigorate my interest by introducing fresh challenges. Strava
bashing my local hillsides helped for a short while but that soon wore
thin. Having taken the KOM on all the descents (not really interested in
the climbs), the interest began to fade again.
It
has become clear to me that the social aspect of mountain biking is a
crucial aspect in satisfying that little part of my brain that finds
happiness and contentment from riding a mountain bike. It’s not just the
trail, or the view, or even the bike I’m riding. It’s who I’m sharing
it with. Of course, the other bits helps but the friends top trumps
every time.
Eventing has become my most recent attempt to test
myself. Mass start, endurance type events where the challenges
themselves are technically and physically demanding. However, as tough
as these events might be (maybe I am just unfit), I found them genuinely
more intriguing as a social construct. These events have really hit the
mark. Its like taking a quadruple espresso shot when all your used to
is decaf tea.
In
2016 I completed the HONC [link here], a local endurance ride through
the Cotswolds. In 2017, I added the Dyfi Enduro [link here] to that
roster - that was mint and one of the classics. In 2018 me and my
longest serving biking buddy, and defacto best mate, took on the Mendip
Murmuration. Another mass start type endurance event serving up 57km of
singletrack across the Mendip Hill’s, including Cheddar’s infamous
Gorge.
Here’s
a link to that particular days enjoyment (insert link). Lots of
climbing, including one particularly bug hill; One of the hottest days
in English meteorological records. My best mate by my side. Oh, and shit
loads of descents too, of course. Perfect.
This kind of stuff
has tested me. Tested my stamina, my attention. It has engaged my brain
and served a thick portion of whatever it was that that particular place
in my mind, where I find happiness and contentment, wanted for tea.
Next up is the Malverns Classic Enduro. Bring it.
16 Apr 2019
14 Apr 2019
Mendip Hills & Cheddar Gorge
Mendip Hills; Cheddar Gorge (Mendip murmuration)
Length: 57.4km
Climb: 1,688m
Grade: Red/Black
Time: 5 hours
Rating: 5/5
Time: 5 hours
Rating: 5/5
Something different; a change of scenery. Something to test my limits… of endurance, if not skill level. Or maybe that too. Something to reignite my passion in mountain biking, which is in the midst of a bit of a lull right now; Am I just unfit and suffering the consequences or has everything just got boring. Surely not, right?
A circumstance not helped by a winter that dragged on for so long I was beginning to forget what summer (or even spring) actually felt, or looked, like. I understand that statement sounds ridiculous after the summer we then had, how ironic. At the time, however, we had just come out of the winter from hell. All nicely rounded off by The Beast from the East. Last winter was something else.
I don’t normally shy away from getting out in the cold and wet climes of a typical British winter. I actually enjoy it in some perverse, masochistic way and, if all enjoyment fails, riding through winter does at least put you in a much better place come spring to take advantage of those drying trails; and it beats the gym so?
Anyway, winter arrived much earlier last year (2017). I know, I know, its generally the same time every year but we’ve not had snow before Christmas in the Wolds since 2010 (real snow I mean, not a flurry)… [insert image of 2010] …and this time it came twice before the year was out. Then a few more times for good measure. With the longevity of shitty weather that ensued, enthusiasm simply fell away. To make matters worse, in February I came off my bike (or was blown off) whilst attempting a manual off the top of North Hill in the Malvern Hills. This was not a great idea and it tore one of the Rotator cuff (shoulder) tendons.
Careful rehab meant I was back up and running, so to speak, by the summer and, oh boy, what a summer. In the middle of June, me and Ash ventured down to Somerset to take part in the Mendip Murmuration; an event ran by Channel Events as part of the National Trust Top of the Gorge Festival held, obviously, at the top of Cheddar Gorge. The ‘murmuration’ being a 57km endurance ride through the peaks and valleys of the Mendip hills, including the escarpment of the Gorge itself.
From the top of the Gorge, the route took us west over to Charterhouse, before heading north and east to Beacon Batch, the highest point of the route. From here, we were eschewed through Mendip Lodge wood, Rowberrow Warren Wood and down Longbottom on a meandering path towards Hale Coombe. This included 3 genuine descents of over 150m elevation loss, which meant 3 climbs of equal gains; a sign of things to come.
The route was very up and down, making good use of the rolling topography, which was great for my legs. Taking in 4 named peaks (Beacon Batch, Crook Peak, Loxton Hill & Wavering Down plus the Gorge escarpment itself). From Hale Coombe, the route headed over to Compton Bishop, via Cross, before ascending Crook Peak in what felt like quite an arduous endeavour.
Mendip Murmuration took place right in the middle of the melting pot that was last summer. On this particular weekend we were being blessed with temperatures in the high 20’s. With a cloudless sky, the exposed western flank of Crook Peak became a bit of a slog. At only 150m it is not actually that high (relatively) - I climb hills of greater elevational change on my local trails - and, having tackled only c.350m elevation change so far, on paper this should have been fairly easy. In hindsight, it wasn’t actually that bad but I could feel the pain beginning to build.
We were already committed to the ‘long’ route however, so there was no going back. I am glad we did, however, as the view from the trig point was very impressive. Panoramic in the fullest sense of the word. Views back to Axbridge and Cheddar to the East and distant views of Wales over the Severn estuary to the west. To the North, you can see the M5 snaking its was back to Bristol and Wavering Down, which we circle back to later.
The descent off the west side of Crook Peak was cool (watch out for riders practicing their summersaults here, they’re everywhere); some big rocks. Singletrack weaving initially off the barren hillside in to dense gorse shrubbery. Fast. Eventually spitting you out in the village of Webbington. We then pass beneath the M5 and head towards Loxton Hill.
The climb was another short and sharp, 150m or so, ascent. My legs starting to feel the pain at this point. My crash earlier in the year, and subsequent lack of training coming sharply in to focus. No more so than on the next descent. We reached the top in reasonable condition. The fairly mellow gradient helping in that regard. My riding buddy, Ash, is fit as a fiddle and zipped up in no time. I, on the other hand, took my time.
The descent that followed was fast, untechnical and straight. And great fun. The chance to off the brakes and pin it was a huge relief to the lungs and, rather than take it easy I saw it as an opportunity to go flat out. At c.1.5km it didn’t last forever but it did linger in the body. A combination of a reasonably high pace initially, a ridiculously hot day, lots of climbing and a poor salt replacement strategy meant my legs were in a bad way and, as I alighted my bike at the end of the descent, both Quads and Hamstrings decided to cramp at the same time. I hopped about a bit, tried stretches and thought better of it before just resting until it abated.
A relatively flat cruise for the next 8km really helped and the muscles got back in to line. I was nursing them, it has to be said; spinning, to get the blood flowing and the lactic acid out.
To a point, it worked.
That point was the very next climb, obvs. This was the first proper challenge to my fitness (and quite a few other’s too, apparently). I took to walking to try and conserve energy and give my legs a rest. The cramp lurking just beneath the surface like a croc in murky water. My legs were simply not fuelled to tackle such a challenge on a day like this. At 42km, this was about the limit of how far I normally ride on my local trails and so, from here I was in foreign ground. It was baking, literally, and stupidly steep. I recall thinking to myself at the time that we were doing it the wrong direction.
In hindsight, I realise it was simply a precursor to an even bigger challenge. Wavering Down. Getting to the top of this was hard. The contour lines came tightly packed at this point and rather than go round, we were going right over the top. Nursing my cramping legs again, I took my time reaching the summit but, upon doing so, I re-engaged my downhillers brain. I was at the point that I didn’t really care and I was going to enjoy the descents, whether it killed my legs or not. This was a test of mental attrition as anything else.
The descent off Wavering Down was mint. From wide open Common land, with tracks everywhere, the options gradually reducing to one or two lines as we entered the woods. With the ground so dry, the lattice of roots that littered the floor did little to slow me down. Pinning it in to the feed station my legs decided to have another dance, while I rolled about on the floor. From here we re-climbed towards Longbottom before heading south, weaving between the Callow Hill and Batts Coombe quarries. There was a really cool bit of downhill that traversed Shipham Road. It was short but very sweet.
At this point I was actually on my own as I was having to nurse my legs with even greater care. Wierdly, I then caught my friend up at the bottom of the Batts Coombe descent, just on the outskirts of Axbidge, as he had succumbed to a puncture. Rather than stop, I continued to gain some time on him. He caught me back up a few kilometres later at the top of next climb; another 200m slog, which I actually managed to ride up, surprising myself. The lactic acid finally giving way a little.
We completed the last few kilometres together, rounding the top of The Cliffs and heading over the open pasture land before descending back down to Cliff road. At the top of Cliff road, we had one last click of uphill before we reached the finish line.
I took on the Mendip Murmuration, not least for the challenge. However, I have always wanted to ride through/over Cheddar Gorge and the Mendips; driving past on the M5 on our fairly regular pilgrimage to Cornwall and Devon for our holidays (and Uni), they stood out like a beacon and compelled me to click purchase. Having my best mate with me was a bonus. This was a great opportunity to do so.
I actually came across the event one day in 2017, whilst searching the ’net for something new to test myself. Fresh from completing the Dyfi Enduro, and high on the dopamine it left coursing through my veins, I was keen to testmyself again; and this really hit the spot.
The trails were fairly typical of the UK, mixing high, open common upland, typified by dry, sandy soils and grass grazed short by the roaming agriculture, with rooty, deciduous woodland, rich in detritus and thick with earth. Nowhere was particularly rocky (except for the top of Crook Peak), and the descents were not physically demanding or technical. It was also really dry, so a bonus there.
The changes in elevation were also fairly typical of middle English mountain bike country. Nevertheless, the Mendips delivered. On some level, this had something over my local trails. Maybe the fact that there were c.300 participants and it was one of the hottest days of the year; I don’t think it was as simple as that. The Mendips are just a classic location and they didn’t disappoint. Period.
Having the benefit of a way-marked route through unknown country meant we didn’t end up lost down a dead end trail to nowhere and we were offered up a nice mix of classic bridleway and private trails. I suspect there are better pieces of trail hidden away but this is a bit irrelevant. The Murmuration picks out some of the key local markers, as would be expected of such an event, and serves them up with decent trails in between. What I saw, and anticipated, when driving past on the M5; I rode it in the Mendip Murmuration.
13 Feb 2019
A Hill Through Four Seasons - Spring
As I sit here in my window seat writing this blog, the depths of winter are all to clear to see with a simple glance out the window in to my garden. Fundamentally typical of the season, it’s raining. I have just come in from cleaning the bike after yet another mud fest. Everything is sodden already and, now, mother nature has seen fit to add another rinse to the wash.
It is at times like this that one (a mountain biker) can start to feel slightly trapped. A Catch-22, if you like. Ground Hog Day. Despair ascends and thoughts like “it’s raining, meh” or “will I ever see nice trails again” start to surface. With temperatures averaging only single digits, the winter months can often feel neither here nor there; not proper winter where frozen trails and azure skies inspire multi-layered epics nor dry enough (because it hasn’t dried yet) to warrant playing about in the woods on jumps etc. Just crap!
• It only takes one day.
With one day, however, that all changes. There may be the odd spell of sun but for some reason or another, it just doesn’t feel like spring. To break the chrysalis that is winter and finally embark on a flight through spring; it only takes one day!
Come the end of February, when the green shoots start to reappear, as temperatures start to rise (marginally), one immediately starts to think of better days to come. March is usually a nice and reliable month of the year. Like September, particularly in the Midlands, it tends to remain fairly settled and, in the most part, reasonably dry.
However, the Gregorian calendar and the meteorological seasons rarely combine and there is, quite often, a brief sting in the tale as winter passes with one last chill for the bones. It usually means the end of my plums, as the early blossom succumbs to the freezing temperatures. I had 5 this year. The wasps ate those.
Many a day are spent wondering when the bitter weather is going to pass and, just as you think it can’t go on any longer, that day finally arrives. Opening the curtains on that morning is like climbing back through the closet from Narnia; leaving behind the bitterness of Winterland and the White Witch.
Strangely, the day that casts aside the spells of winter looks remarkably similar from the other side of the window pane to that of a crisp winter morning. A crisp blue sky, usually a manifestation of blocking highs up in the atmosphere; can result, during late Feb/ early March, in a cold and frosty morning. Stepping outside, however, one is cast mute as you marvel at how warm it is. Get your shorts on, its time to ride!!!
Come end of March, early April, it’s time to ditch those tights and the base layer (maybe) and get out on them trails. What does Bredon Hill have to offer in the spring? Well, them trails might look dry but 4-5 months of rainy days take their toll. Moist is usually an understatement and Cotswolds mud can be a right royal pain in the arse.
Whilst I’m generally thrilled to be out in the sunshine, it can be a bit of a slog if the chosen trail is picked unwisely. Sticking to the stony singletrack of the southern side of Bredon Hill one will find dried out bedrock that rolls nicely. However, I like to get to over to the tower. Its a bit of a focal point and often defines the half way point of a ride. Its the perfect panoramic view point to look out over the surrounding counties (whilst munching on a cliff bar).
The Muffin Top:
The route up to the tower, particularly from the south, is rocky. The trails and Bridleways well worn to exposed bedrock (its not that far below the surface generally). As such, in early spring it becomes the go to route to the top. Doing so means avoiding most of the soft stuff.
Obviously spring is not all sunshine and flowers. Bredon hill can often be completely obscured from view as it comes under the scrutiny of low lying cloud. Being so exposed, and segregated from the main Cotswold escarpment, it often suffers its own micro climate. Whilst the Vale of Evesham is bathing in sunshine Bredon Hill can often appear to be missing its summit. The winds from the west that generally whip up the western side of the hill and keep it clear can also stall around the top on more suppressed days leaving the low cloud to hang around, forming a bit of a Muffin Top.
It creates a strange and eery atmosphere to ride in. Ephemeral, cold, quiet. It makes the ride far more insular as vision is restricted. That is until one descends back down the hill and in to the warmth (hopefully) of the surrounding foothills. This phenomenon tends to occur more in spring than any other month as the humidity and temperature combine to make heavy, low lying cloud.
May oft brings more opportunities. With the ground generally drier and the fields yet to be overcome by enemy livestock, gates tend to lay/remain open and the downhill runs are free of obstacles (fixed and moving) from top to bottom. They may still be soft in places - in particular, where the surface water beck passes over the plateau mid way down Doctor's wood descent/climb. Although, I have, in years past, experienced drier trails in spring than in summer.
As the season moves in to summer, the hill comes fully awake. With sheep and cows grazing the land (Wild deer also roam these slopes) and the arable crops at full maturity, the rural character of this hillside is explicitly apparent.
Riding ones local trails throughout the year is a great way to experience the differences brought about by the growth and wain of the suns influence through the seasons. Many a word has been writ about the pursuit of new trails as being a mountain bikers birth given predilection. To be honest though, you can get the same type of feeling from riding the same trail at the four corners of the year.
Each seasons brings about very different climatic conditions and the trails tend to reflect this. The atmosphere, the surroundings also. It doesn’t matter if the trails go in the same direction. Just get out there and ride your bike.
26 Jan 2019
A hill through four seasons - winter
Bredon Hill - A Bleak Mid-Winter:
Snow
drifts/rain storm/hurricane/I can’t be bothered (delete as
appropriate). Let’s be honest, the dark and dreary days of mid-winter
can be soul destroying for a mountain biker. The trails no longer flow
with the seamless ease of summer - they don’t really flow at all. Short
days and colder, persistently inclement weather will render all but the
most well drained soils pure slop in no time. From the mildly moist,
loamy stuff we are all generally exposed to throughout the year (I’m
excluding nice, dry and dusty trails as this is normally a pipe dream
for most residents of middle england) to 6 inch deep slop that, if you
don’t keep pedalling, will simply swallow you whole; normally followed
by a ‘dignifying’ dance in your grip-less mtb shoes - seriously, how can
Five Tens (other shoes available) be so grippy on a pedal but worthless
on literally everything else.
Its great that British Mountain Bike designers place lots of emphasis on mud clearance in their frame designs. That extra space is a blessing on the worst of days. Providing additional storage for all that extra mud you really wanted to carry along with you. I live and ride in the Cotswolds and, in the summer, there’s no better place (IMO) but winter is a curse. Cotswold soils are clay based and get very cloying in the wet; a bike can resemble a monster truck within 5 feet of a muddy trail, resulting in regular drag-a-bike exercises and subsequent cleaning a-la sturdy stick. In this instance, the extra mud clearance not really helping.
From
dour experience, I have learnt to avoid particular trails during this
time of the year, especially with regard to my local trails/Bridleways
off Bredon Hill. Once upon a time, there may have come a moment, often
coincident with the sun coming out for a few days, where I have been
lured into attempting a run down Two Bridges, for example. I’ve learnt
the hard way to avoid that route until April, probably May, at the
earliest.
Winter often becomes an exercise in restraint, avoiding certain trails until conditions improve for fear of badly damaging them. Erosion is a poignant issue when it comes to access rights and I have seen too many trails ruined from miss-use (from cyclists, horses and walkers alike) to know that it is simply not worth it. Bredon has enough variation in trail type that it can accommodate the closure (voluntarily at least) of certain routes during times of the year.
Days are short, there’s lots of rain. With limitations on potential riding opportunities, unless you are weird and you like riding in the rain (or you ride at night but, in winter, come off it!), the slim occasions where the sun is actually shining and the ground is rideable can seem like gifts from some higher deity. Not to be missed. However, in winter, the local trails can often take so long to recover from a spell of rain that you can actually end up as covered in muck as if you'd been out in the rainstorm in the first place.
It becomes wearisome and last winter was a great example. The persistent rain and constant need to perform a full service on the bike, and washing machine, after every ride became too much. I’m not one to shy away from a wet ride and I am a firm believer that any day on the hill, wet or otherwise, is better than being cooped up inside. I would, however, question the mind of anyone who argued that it made no difference whether it were pissing with rain outside.
Despite my best intensions, the motivation to get out the door and up the hill got harder and harder last year. A feeling that was exacerbated by the aftermath of the several snow storms we experienced - think Cola flavoured Slush Puppy and you might get it. Looking past the beauty of it - cos it is beautiful - the repeated snow/melt cycle wreaked havoc to the integrity of the local trails. I actually love riding in the snow. There is a pleasure to be had from riding through such a pure landscape - and I was out in it like most - but the aftermath is generally quite messy.
Like
a glinting nugget of gold amidst a pan of grit and dirt, the weariness
of a grey winter (the season) is all forgotten once real winter arrives.
Stepping out on a crisp and frosty morning with moisture rich mist
hanging dankly in the air, the sun passing through it creating some kind
of ethereal atmosphere. A clear Azure sky above. Leaf litter snapping
crisply underfoot; it is a tantalising nugget for the senses amidst an
otherwise dark, damp & grey environment.
Riding in the snow and ice is incredible; the sound of frozen puddles cracking under the pressure of passing tyres, the dull crunch as one carves fresh tracks in the snow. The dicey balance between traction and death-by-trails-so-slick-they-resemble-a-frozen-lake with fingers so cold they can’t actually pull on the brake levers anyway. Watching my breath disipate in front of me as i work to get to the top of the hill and the need to wear as many layers as I can feasibly apply, including ear warmers - despite steaming from inside. Components on strike and my nose tingles. All this and on top of that, the virtuosity of having ‘got out there’ whilst re-warming your digits in the warmth of a pub fire (or just on the radiator) is warming to the soul.
Bredon Hill can be quite a pleasant experience during summer and in to Autumn. It becomes less so as the year progresses in to Winter and early spring and often feels more like an obligation.
Those trails that I designate as ‘closed for the season’ come the end of Autumn, tend to remain that way until May in some cases. There are exceptions, as noted above, but these are rare. The closure applies to pretty much the entire northern half of the Hill.
Best avoided are the open climb/descent to and from Elmley Castle, which gets particularly boggy due to a passing stream and a plateau in the terrain about halfway down. Also, the trail known as Two Bridges and the extended route down to Comberton, both of which become very wet and sloppy. They are both generally wooded and take a while to dry out come spring too so, unless you fancy practicing your strictly moves, they are best avoided for now.
Whilst they generally fare better, there are earthy trails on the south side too that suffer during winter but most are small sections of otherwise longer and more rocky descents or simply steep enough to cope a bit better with water.
Nevertheless, I tend to avoid the hill more during winter. The lure of the Cannock and the South Wales trails centres and BPW (Bike Park Wales) are too hard to resist under the circumstances.
Standard view from Bredon Tower on an average day. Up here it doesn't look that crappy |
Its great that British Mountain Bike designers place lots of emphasis on mud clearance in their frame designs. That extra space is a blessing on the worst of days. Providing additional storage for all that extra mud you really wanted to carry along with you. I live and ride in the Cotswolds and, in the summer, there’s no better place (IMO) but winter is a curse. Cotswold soils are clay based and get very cloying in the wet; a bike can resemble a monster truck within 5 feet of a muddy trail, resulting in regular drag-a-bike exercises and subsequent cleaning a-la sturdy stick. In this instance, the extra mud clearance not really helping.
Stick cleaning in progress |
Winter often becomes an exercise in restraint, avoiding certain trails until conditions improve for fear of badly damaging them. Erosion is a poignant issue when it comes to access rights and I have seen too many trails ruined from miss-use (from cyclists, horses and walkers alike) to know that it is simply not worth it. Bredon has enough variation in trail type that it can accommodate the closure (voluntarily at least) of certain routes during times of the year.
Days are short, there’s lots of rain. With limitations on potential riding opportunities, unless you are weird and you like riding in the rain (or you ride at night but, in winter, come off it!), the slim occasions where the sun is actually shining and the ground is rideable can seem like gifts from some higher deity. Not to be missed. However, in winter, the local trails can often take so long to recover from a spell of rain that you can actually end up as covered in muck as if you'd been out in the rainstorm in the first place.
It becomes wearisome and last winter was a great example. The persistent rain and constant need to perform a full service on the bike, and washing machine, after every ride became too much. I’m not one to shy away from a wet ride and I am a firm believer that any day on the hill, wet or otherwise, is better than being cooped up inside. I would, however, question the mind of anyone who argued that it made no difference whether it were pissing with rain outside.
Despite my best intensions, the motivation to get out the door and up the hill got harder and harder last year. A feeling that was exacerbated by the aftermath of the several snow storms we experienced - think Cola flavoured Slush Puppy and you might get it. Looking past the beauty of it - cos it is beautiful - the repeated snow/melt cycle wreaked havoc to the integrity of the local trails. I actually love riding in the snow. There is a pleasure to be had from riding through such a pure landscape - and I was out in it like most - but the aftermath is generally quite messy.
See, here, I went riding in the snow! |
When
the temperatures dip below freezing and the ground hardens, all those
trails that have been out of bounds for so long, suddenly become open
for business for a few hours. Time to get out there and remind myself of
what I’ve been missing. And, when it snows, well that’s even better.
Like draping the country in a pure white vail, the landscape takes on an
altogether different quality. I could stare at it all day… but enough
of that, I’ve virgin tracks to carve and drifts to jump in to.
Riding in the snow and ice is incredible; the sound of frozen puddles cracking under the pressure of passing tyres, the dull crunch as one carves fresh tracks in the snow. The dicey balance between traction and death-by-trails-so-slick-they-resemble-a-frozen-lake with fingers so cold they can’t actually pull on the brake levers anyway. Watching my breath disipate in front of me as i work to get to the top of the hill and the need to wear as many layers as I can feasibly apply, including ear warmers - despite steaming from inside. Components on strike and my nose tingles. All this and on top of that, the virtuosity of having ‘got out there’ whilst re-warming your digits in the warmth of a pub fire (or just on the radiator) is warming to the soul.
Bredon Hill can be quite a pleasant experience during summer and in to Autumn. It becomes less so as the year progresses in to Winter and early spring and often feels more like an obligation.
Those trails that I designate as ‘closed for the season’ come the end of Autumn, tend to remain that way until May in some cases. There are exceptions, as noted above, but these are rare. The closure applies to pretty much the entire northern half of the Hill.
Best avoided are the open climb/descent to and from Elmley Castle, which gets particularly boggy due to a passing stream and a plateau in the terrain about halfway down. Also, the trail known as Two Bridges and the extended route down to Comberton, both of which become very wet and sloppy. They are both generally wooded and take a while to dry out come spring too so, unless you fancy practicing your strictly moves, they are best avoided for now.
Whilst they generally fare better, there are earthy trails on the south side too that suffer during winter but most are small sections of otherwise longer and more rocky descents or simply steep enough to cope a bit better with water.
Nevertheless, I tend to avoid the hill more during winter. The lure of the Cannock and the South Wales trails centres and BPW (Bike Park Wales) are too hard to resist under the circumstances.
Labels:
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