therealkw15
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Arran odyssey 1/2
Arran trip report
by Steven Heddle, aged 45 1/2
........
I awoke bright and early on Saturday morning at 6.30 am, ready to head from Edinburgh to Ardrossan, intent on a solo circumnavigation of Arran. The bike had been stowed in the back of the car the night before, and a pannier was packed with a range of unncessary and heavy tools just to make things a bit harder. Full length mudguards iced the cake.
Personal preparation of the Human Machine had followed my familiar tactic of carbo loading the night before, in this case on Czech lager from the Filmhouse bar. Food supplies were packed in the form of two cheese rolls, two Tunnocks Caramel wafers and a rather black banana. A pair of water bottles were addedas ballast, making no nutritional contribution. I wasn't worried- my map (torn from the road atlas in the car) showed lots of little settlements around the island, every one of which would surely contain a welcoming shop or hostelry, as celebrated in Neil Young's 1977 album, Arran Spars and Bars.
Sadly, like the record, both food availability and the road surface would prove patchy and uneven.
I'd never been to Ardrossan so allowed 2 hours to get there from Edinburgh and for navigation. But as my navigation is flawless I arrived there after a mere 75 minute drive, parked in the long stay car park down the pier, and surveyed my challenge.
Ardrossan, 9.40 am by therealkw15, on Flickr
Weather was cool, wind light, need for jacket borderline. I got my tickets (£9 odds return) and wheeled onto the boat for the 9.45 departure, with only a few other cyclists for company. I bantered on this site, and resolved to go anticlockwise, thinking I'd get the big hills out of the way first and enjoy a rapid tootle around the rest. This was because I had forgotten to take the route profile with me.
Coast road anti-clockwise from Brodick by therealkw15, on Flickr
No photo ID required for embarkation, despite Calmac being a sister company of Northlink who require travellers to Orkney and Shetland to provide photo ID before they are allowed on the boat. This makes me mad. The journey across was pleasant, only marred by having to put UHT milk in my mug of tea, and discovering that my black banana had turned to a pervasive goo and had to be binned.
Returning to the car deck I found another 30 cyclists- a road club seemed to have shown up at the last minute. Strangely I never saw them again, even on the way back. They were in front of me though, as I paused to establish my location.
Brodick by therealkw15, on Flickr
I was on Tufftrax 2, the big one, El Grande, la velo di tutti velo, das Uberrad. Well, it has a frame a bit bigger than my normal one. I'd picked it up from its storage location earlier in the week and stuck v-brakes, stubby bar ends and a rack on it. I think the reason it adhered to the road so well was because of the mutual gravitation attraction between it and Earth. Actually it's a reasonably light frame on its own.
It was 11am. Time to go ...
Arran trip report
by Steven Heddle, aged 45 1/2
........
I awoke bright and early on Saturday morning at 6.30 am, ready to head from Edinburgh to Ardrossan, intent on a solo circumnavigation of Arran. The bike had been stowed in the back of the car the night before, and a pannier was packed with a range of unncessary and heavy tools just to make things a bit harder. Full length mudguards iced the cake.
Personal preparation of the Human Machine had followed my familiar tactic of carbo loading the night before, in this case on Czech lager from the Filmhouse bar. Food supplies were packed in the form of two cheese rolls, two Tunnocks Caramel wafers and a rather black banana. A pair of water bottles were addedas ballast, making no nutritional contribution. I wasn't worried- my map (torn from the road atlas in the car) showed lots of little settlements around the island, every one of which would surely contain a welcoming shop or hostelry, as celebrated in Neil Young's 1977 album, Arran Spars and Bars.
Sadly, like the record, both food availability and the road surface would prove patchy and uneven.
I'd never been to Ardrossan so allowed 2 hours to get there from Edinburgh and for navigation. But as my navigation is flawless I arrived there after a mere 75 minute drive, parked in the long stay car park down the pier, and surveyed my challenge.
Ardrossan, 9.40 am by therealkw15, on Flickr
Weather was cool, wind light, need for jacket borderline. I got my tickets (£9 odds return) and wheeled onto the boat for the 9.45 departure, with only a few other cyclists for company. I bantered on this site, and resolved to go anticlockwise, thinking I'd get the big hills out of the way first and enjoy a rapid tootle around the rest. This was because I had forgotten to take the route profile with me.
Coast road anti-clockwise from Brodick by therealkw15, on Flickr
No photo ID required for embarkation, despite Calmac being a sister company of Northlink who require travellers to Orkney and Shetland to provide photo ID before they are allowed on the boat. This makes me mad. The journey across was pleasant, only marred by having to put UHT milk in my mug of tea, and discovering that my black banana had turned to a pervasive goo and had to be binned.
Returning to the car deck I found another 30 cyclists- a road club seemed to have shown up at the last minute. Strangely I never saw them again, even on the way back. They were in front of me though, as I paused to establish my location.
Brodick by therealkw15, on Flickr
I was on Tufftrax 2, the big one, El Grande, la velo di tutti velo, das Uberrad. Well, it has a frame a bit bigger than my normal one. I'd picked it up from its storage location earlier in the week and stuck v-brakes, stubby bar ends and a rack on it. I think the reason it adhered to the road so well was because of the mutual gravitation attraction between it and Earth. Actually it's a reasonably light frame on its own.
It was 11am. Time to go ...