The C2C Cycle Route. Jeremy Evans
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THE C2C ON FOLDING BIKES
Si Trickett and Steve Brindle, both aged 34, commute to work on Brompton folding bicycles with two-speed gears designed for city cycling. For a change of scenery, they decided to unfold their bikes and ride the C2C…
The Brompton is a unique British-manufactured bicycle, mainly used by commuters in combination with trains. Many cyclists consider them to be some sort of a joke bicycle, suitable only for slow riding on very short journeys. In fact, in spite of their small wheels Bromptons have a long wheelbase coupled with rear suspension to give a good ride. They can be used by the tall to the very small, have a range of gearing options from single to a wide-range six speed, and are fitted with an excellent luggage system. They also fold small, so fitting them into cars and onto trains is a doddle, including services where cycles are not permitted (such as the Metro at the end of the C2C in Tynemouth). We both have the Brompton S2L configuration designed for city commuting on fairly level roads, with flat handlebars and two gears – one for getting away from the lights and climbing fairly easy hills and one for zipping along the flat. The ratios are not entirely suited to powering up steep hills in Cumbria and the Pennines!
When we told people our plan to do the C2C on our two-speed Bromptons, we heard many a story about evil hills to climb along the route. It has to be said there were some very long and very steep climbs, sometimes both steep and long. We would also be first to admit that we needed lower gears, but still managed to grind up all the C2C climbs and carry our luggage with a decent amount of zig-zagging – with the exception of the very steep 200m stretch coming up out of Garrigill. Zig-zagging on this bit meant that we were just going back and forth across the road and not getting anywhere, so we got off and pushed! However, we both got a great sense of achievement from grinding past a group of mountain-bike riders, who were pushing their bikes uphill in spite of their low gears, having earlier taken the mickey out of us for doing the C2C ‘on giant kids’ bikes’. It’s not what bike you have, it’s what you do with it! Our next challenge is doing the Land’s End to John O’Groats route on the Bromptons, aiming to take eight days to complete the 1000 miles!
THE C2C ON UNICYCLES
A group of eight riders rode the C2C in August 2010, but cycling on two wheels wasn’t enough of a challenge. Peter Haworth outlines the challenge of unicycling the route and shares some tips…
An average 35 miles per day might not sound a big deal to many two-wheeled cyclists, but unicyclists generally ride a lot slower, with pedals driving the single wheel directly at a low 1:1 ratio. My comfortable cruising speed on the flat is around 9 or 10mph, so taking the fairly hilly terrain of the C2C route into account, this meant at least 5hrs in the saddle every day, with no chance of freewheeling, even on downhills. But, thanks to an amazing support team and a lot of perseverance, we did it, overtaking two-wheeled cyclists on the steep climbs but struggling (and, very occasionally, getting down) on the downhills, and raised a few thousand pounds for the British Heart Foundation on the way.
Tips for one-wheeled success
The best thing you can do to prepare is to check your equipment before you set out. Carrying sufficient spares and having the skills to use them was vital to our success, but a bit more preventive maintenance in the weeks before the ride would have made things go a lot more smoothly.
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