Well done Martin - I wouldn't have fancied Brid yesterday. Got soaked just
walking the 10000 steps to Waitrose and back to get all of the out of date
Sushi ;-) I also had to stay in to listen to myself on an Afrikaans radio
station.
http://www.simonmason.karoo.net/page501.htm
Well that's my excuse for having a rare day off the bike.
--
Simon Mason
http://www.simonmason.karoo.net
15 hours sounds a good time to me, that'll be cos you weren't having to
drag me and my twin rock lights along ;-)
Lucky with the weather I guess, today has seen a lot of rain here in
Manchester.
Well done!!
bfn,
Tony B
I did a 15hour 300last year and this seemed much harder. IIRC we stopped
for longer on this ride so therefore we rode faster. On the other one
we were in a large group for a while whereas on this, at one point we
were a group of 8, only three of us did any real driving.
Sure was. As motivation to get my backside off the sofa and onto a saddle,
I do a mental deal with myself: go cycling or do some bit of housework I
loathe. Today was so wet I rang Audrey to say I was staying home in order
to vacuum the stairs!
--
Steph Peters
Chorlton Wanderers Cycling Group
Monthly slow and easy rides from South Manchester
http://www.sandbenders.demon.co.uk/cycling/chwan.htm
Thats where my thread went
That sounds more like something was /very/ right!
>Home in 15hours 10mins.
Nice one. That's bloody fast. If I can get my PB for a 300 under 16
hours I'll be pleased, but 15 seems way out of reach for me.
d.
I reckon you'd have managed with ease on the Invicta if you'd been
having a good day. If /I/ did 14:30...
I didn't really, but someone's pen slipped. I made it 14:38 by the
computer and 14:41 by the time I got my card stamped, as my fingers
weren't up to the task of getting the thing out and signed.
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
A complimentary biro(tm) is /not/ to be sniffed at.
Are youse lot doing the Spurn Head in two weeks time as well as the
Thorne - Edinburgh wossname?
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
Ha ha, you fool! You've fallen victim to one of the classic blunders!
The most famous is "Never get involved in a land war in Asia"
>
> Are youse lot doing the Spurn Head in two weeks time as well as the
> Thorne - Edinburgh wossname?
>
Yes we are. Are you doing Spurn Head ?
I am indeed. Now, if I can just work out a method of attaching that
bloody light which will stay intact for more than 400 km...
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
The entire population of Uxbridge has no idea that it doesn't actually
exist.
S'funny you should say that, I've been having trouble with keeping my
rear lamp attached to my bike! It fell off after about 250K on the
Plains 300. Luckily I didn't need it again after the first few hours.
MSeries has made me a sturdy bracket and reattached it so I shouldn't
have the same happen again. It would help if my rack wasn't attached
(badly) with ill-fitting p-clips botched up to fit better with rubber
from old inner tubes. The constant rattling can't have helped the
longevity of the original bracket much!
> S'funny you should say that, I've been having trouble with keeping my
> rear lamp attached to my bike! It fell off after about 250K on the
> Plains 300. Luckily I didn't need it again after the first few hours.
> MSeries has made me a sturdy bracket and reattached it so I shouldn't
> have the same happen again. It would help if my rack wasn't attached
> (badly) with ill-fitting p-clips botched up to fit better with rubber
> from old inner tubes. The constant rattling can't have helped the
> longevity of the original bracket much!
It's my front lights which are giving me trouble. Advice from Elsewhere
suggested that a Cateye seat-post clamp and suitable short piece of
metal would do the trick. It transpires that the metal from which B&M
brackets, even when cut into a short length, is NOT suitable, as it has
the fatigue resistance of brie.
Note to self: try a piece of stainless steel cutlery next time.
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
That's *got* to be a first? Surely most people are glad to be leaving
Bridlington? <grins>
--
These opinions might not even be mine ...
Let alone connected with my employer ...
The last time I was in Brid was on January 24th 1981, and I was quite
pleased to be there. Something to do with the previous night's Black
Sabbath gig at the Royal Spa Hall :-)
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
Frozen gorillas can be used to control the temperature of a warm and
stuffy room.
> Note to self: try a piece of stainless steel cutlery next time.
A fork attachment?
--
Dave...
My secondary lamp is attached with a cateye seatpost clamp, a short
piece of aluminium and a piece of steel from a computer. two rivets and
a bolt. It hangs down from my handlebar and seems fine so far.
> My secondary lamp is attached with a cateye seatpost clamp, a short
> piece of aluminium and a piece of steel from a computer. two rivets and
> a bolt. It hangs down from my handlebar and seems fine so far.
I was trying to remember what odd bits of metal I've got lying around,
and have just realised there's an entire dead PC at home begging to be
turned into something more useful than "object for holding the door
open"...
Pass me my hacksaw, Carruthers! There's a cutting to be done!
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
Me, I wanna be an anglepoise lamp, yeah!