Why do I enjoy cycling?
As some of you will know cycling and I have
a slightly checked history, while I was still living in London I was a ride
leader for the London Cycling campaign. While I was leading a Sunday ride in
Surrey a car shot out in front of me as I was descending a very narrow and
steep hill, I was probably doing about 30mph when I hit it. I flew over the car
and spent a month off work. Then after I had rebuilt the bike and had it sprayed
Pink (hence the “Pink Panther”) I was riding to work when I hit some spilt
hydraulic fluid and ended up laying in the middle of the road cut and bleeding.
That put me off cycling for a while but after we moved here to Cambridgeshire
that changed.
Soon after we got here I bought a Mountain
bike so that I could explore the tracks and trails around here. I also found
how nicely cycling fitted in with some of my other interests, photography and
art. Now when I go out I have a GoPro hero camera fitted to my bars and another
camera, sketchbook and pencils in my saddlebag. Although my MTB is carbon fibre
I am old school in other ways, a Brooks leather saddle, Carradice saddlebag and
panniers and often old style wool cycling shirts. These days I am more
interested in distance than speed. I spend hours planning the route. Rather
than take maps with me I use Trailfinder, an app on my iPhone which uses GPS
and Ordanance survey maps to show your location. My phone is mounted securely
on my handlebars so I can see where I am, my speed and other information.
Cycling is also important to me in another
way, many of you will know I suffer from bouts of depression and the last
couple of years have been really bad. Cycling helps me through this, I am not sure
why, it could be the exercise, the challenge, just being out in daylight during
the winter months certainly helps. I also think you get a feeling of wellbeing
from becoming part of the environment in a way you never can traveling the same
roads in a car. On a bike as you move through the countryside you blend in, you
see things you would normally miss. Wildlife seems to ignore you; I have ridden
down a local lane with a hare running a few feet in front of me for 20 or 30 seconds. A couple of weeks ago I rode up to within 10m of a buzzard who took no
notice of me at all, I think they see a cyclist as a large animal like a horse
rather than a human being.
Smell is another sense that benefits from
being on a bike, in the summer it changes all the time as you pass wild flowers
and trees in bloom, in winter you smell the soil, ditches and wood or coal
smoke as you pass cottages. You also hear things that you would normally miss
especially bird song.
At the moment I am aiming to get
out on my bike as often as I can to get some miles into my legs, this will culminate in a cycling holiday at the end of
May. I am planning to ride from Market Harbrough to Stourbridge in the midlands using the Towpaths of the Leicester, Grand union and Birmingham canals. I hope to do the 100-mile trip in 3 days,
which should give me time to stop and sketch along the route.
Over the next year or so I am also
planning to document photographically scenery and buildings around the area
where I live that are only really accessible by bike or foot before they vanish. A possible outcome of this would be to self publish a small book featuring some of the pictures, but that would be in the long term.
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