Tally ho! Red Team peel out of the cloud to thrash the Hun
Life
continues to be a learning experience; in this case, ride leading. Last time around the route was handed me on a
plate and it was the first week after lockdown so there were no pubs open (or
toilets, for that matter!). This was the
first time I had to do it all; find a pub and plan a route on paper maps and
then ride around the Surrey lanes for a couple of weeks, ascertaining whether
double lines on an Ordnance Survey map were cyclable or fit only for cattle; in
this case, something between the two.
You
end up broadly familiar with the bulk of your route, save the one or two tricky
bits on which you have not yet quite decided, so that on the final recce, when
you show your sub-leaders what you have lumbered them with, you can at last
relax a bit on the bike and revel in the realisation that this is some
beautiful English countryside through which you are riding, and there are some
gorgeous views.
Then,
on the eve of the big event, you have to acknowledge that the weathermen might after
all be right and all those miles you practised in benign sunshine might have to
be shared with your friends in the cold drizzle!
Redhill
has never been the most popular ride for the B Group but we ran two groups of
five, John Austin kindly taking the first (Blue Team); Sue, Ken, Colin and
Dudley. Mine was the Red Team (Tim,
Tony, David and Dave), and the weather when we congregated at Pistachios in the
Memorial Park at Redhill, twenty minutes apart with very little overlap and only
a couple of minor fraternisations, was cool and grey but nowhere near as bad as
had been predicted.
What
a contrast Redhill provides for the cyclist.
Every runner and dog walker we met as we left town through the country
park could not have been friendlier, standing aside, greeting us. Perhaps they could put together a seminar on
manners for the drivers on Coopers Hill Road, whom I strongly suspect, given the
speed they were doing, were not locals!
It
was there that the spits of rain increased to the point that we stopped to don
rainwear but no matter, it was only a brief, light shower and we were dried out
by the wind by the time we got to lunch.
The off road was not universally popular but none of us had fallen off
by the time we turned into the damp garden of the Barley Mow at Tandridge only
to discover an issue that had not featured in my risk analysis; the pub had not
opened in time for the first group.
It
was one of those lunches where you had to balance the risks of getting Covid
inside the pub against the risks of getting a chill outside. Blue Group opted for the garden; Red Group
split, two in the second garden and three remainers. We allowed Blue Team fifteen minutes after
their departure, which was just enough time for the heavens to open but it did
not rain for long and we made our way over the North Downs and on to Caterham
Hill to RAF Kenley, the best preserved of the remaining Battle of Britain airfields,
appropriately a few days after the anniversary of the conclusion of that battle
eighty years ago.
There was some excitement at the bottom of Old Lodge Lane, where the lorry in front of us had millimetres to spare under the railway bridge. He made it!
The last drag up past the posh houses of Woodcote was slightly more telling on the thighs than it would have been had we not climbed a fair amount already, but it was important to show the social deprivation in evidence all the way up the hill. Why do they call it Millionaires’ Row?
Pistachios
at Banstead was not only open but offering a fine slice of chocolate cake as
the rain came again; nicely timed! Thank
you, John, for leading Blue Team, who had an equal share of rain, before and
after lunch but found Salmons Lane a doddle!
And thank you all for your companionship on an enjoyable day. I am glad my first “proper” ride is done and
dusted!
Pistachios
to Pistachios, thirty miles with a thousand feet of climbing
3 comments:
Well done Paul, with all the effort you put into your first fully organised ride.
Paul, depending what software we use to record the rides I reckon we did about 2000 feet of climbing on your actual ride but the ride down to Redhill to Elevenses brings it up to something like 3000 feet for many of us.
There are many sources of variation in these elevation figures so they should only ever be treated as approximate in my opinion. It is possible that Garmin devices are more accurate but I'm not sure we can ever know. I usually give the most conservative figure though it is easy to find more infalted ones.
Well done Paul - now a fully-fledged ride leader! And a lovely write-up.
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