My birthplace revisited....

Blew it

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 8, 2008
1,472
97
Swindon, Wiltshire
Part one.

Even before returning to cycling, I had always been aware of a rural cycle route from Swindon to Marlborough...my birthplace. Prior to 1961, the rural section across the Marlborough Downs was originally the trackbed of the M&SWJ railway. I had often toyed with the idea of riding this route on an electric bike, and in the late Spring of '08, I did just that.

At that time, the only machine in the stable with enough battery power to accomplish the distance, was my old reclaimed 24 volt steel framed full susser. A pair of 15 ah lead acid, and a Ping 15 ah LiFePO4 gave a useable capacity of 27 ah and a demonstrated range of around 40 miles. Fully kitted up for rural riding, "ChinaBlue" weighs a massive 45 Kgs.

The ride starts with an intricate system of quiet side roads and Victorian "backs", avoiding the very busy arterial into the Town Centre. This is a particularly "diverse" area of Swindon, the aroma of a multitude of exotic spices is quite enjoyable, but, the remnants of many WKD parties are something to be avoided. Emerging from the last of the backs, I am then confronted with the fearsome sight of "Dante's Traffic Inferno" also known as, Swindons Magic Roundabout.



Consisting of five mini roundabouts around a central hub, and placed 7th in "Englands most feared road junctions" list. The locals, including myself when driving, go straight through the middle...strangers preferring the chicken run around the outside. Folklore has it, on the day this roundabout was finished, the cops held back the traffic on the five feeder roads while the contractors removed cones and traffic lights. When all was ready, and a fair bit of traffic had backed up, the cops simultaneously released the five traffic streams into the roundabout. I would love to have been a Pidgeon sitting on top of the central lampost to see what happened!. Today, I'm on a bike, and this is where I join the National Cycle Network Route no.45, with Toucan crossings at each feeder road.

It's a term time weekday, and the long smooth shared tarmac path alongside Queens Drive is almost deserted. ChinaBlue has only three gears, as usual, bottom is too high and top is too low. The fastest I can pedal is 14 mph, so I sit back and take advantage of the over-volting of the Ping and "go with throttles" at 17 mph to quickly get some distance under the wheels, not because I'm in a hurry, I just want to get away from the hurly-burly of workaday life, of which, I am no longer a part.

Swinging in through an always open five bar gate marked "emergency entrance only", Route 45 then skirts along the top side of Coate Water Country Park. A 56 acre lake built in the 1800's to supply top-up water for the two canals that once existed in and around Swindon. Nowadays, it is used purely for leisure including kayak and sail training, and of course, the annual dragon boat races. In a recent survey, It was voted by the people of Swindon as their favourite place in the Town.
To be continued HERE
 
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dazzie

Pedelecer
Jul 16, 2008
129
0
\gets the popcorn out.

That roundabout looks insane. I can't see any reason why it shouldn't be a fairly typical large three lane roundabout (I come from Redditch, an Island [as we call them] mecca ;)). Nutters.
 

Danny-K

Esteemed Pedelecer
Aug 25, 2008
281
0
South West
An interesting read, Blew it. Look forward to the ongoing account; it's like that BBC serial 'Survivors' - where a virus has wiped out 90% of humankind and you're trying to make your way back to your ancestral home with what energy sources you can find along the way to get there.

P.S. That roundabout! Tufty the safety squirrel says: Look right, look left, and right again. If all clear, then read the following diagram before proceeding :) -

 
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tenderbehind

Pedelecer
Oct 31, 2008
159
0
Hi Blew it, very interesting and I just wonder what a Sat Nav would say when confronted with that gyatory system, something like:'' Gawd help us both'' or perhaps, ''This is it then, over the top''..........
 

Rad

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 16, 2008
285
0
Nicely written Blew it. That roundabout looks like major fun. Looking forward to the rest.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,528
30,828
These mini roundabouts on major roundabouts do look weird, but they can make entry into a busy roundabout easier for a motor vehicle, slowing the main flows on the roundabout enough for others to pop in. Fair shares for all rather than some routes getting a fast flow though at the expense of others.

However, when a roundabout is that busy I think traffic light controlled entry into it is better.
.
 

Tiberius

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 9, 2007
919
1
Somerset
Hi Blew It

Keep it coming, looking forward to the next instalment.

The target to shoot for is 100 miles on one charge with less than 40 kg starting weight. But is part of your route off road; that would mess up the numbers?

Nick
 

Blew it

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 8, 2008
1,472
97
Swindon, Wiltshire
Part two.....

There is now one final obstruction to the open countryside... the "Micky four" motorway. This is safely crossed using the Curly Whirly footbridge.



No! the traffic is not stationary, my new camera froze it. Oh!, and if anybody has a couple of hundred gallons of masonry paint to spare....magnolia perhaps!.

Now, about this darned bridge!, at the bottom of each spiral ramp, there's a galvanised steel contraption designed to prevent horses, deer, cows (and very large people?) gaining access. They resemble two vertical inward turning shoe horns. They are, to say the least, very difficult to get through being less in width than the handlebars. It doesn't help that the upslope of the spiral ramp has already started.

Once across the bridge, the horrendous racket from six lanes of 80 mph traffic quickly fades as I ride the rollercoaster route through the heavily wooded "Timberland Trail". A bit of care is needed here as it is listed by several leisure activity groups. Surprisingly, it's listed as wheelchair friendly, how on earth a wheelchair could get through the "shoehorns" each side of the bridge beats me.

The hitherto gentle climb up to the Marlborough downs suddenly changes to a short savage cliff face of 1 in 6. For me, this is a walking job with old ChinaBlue pulling herself up on the throttle. The end of the tarmac indicates an invisable Parish boundary, beyond that you can clearly see it gets a bit rough, but soon returns to tarmac a little futher on. On the return trip, I waited at the top for three very fit young guys pounding up this stony slope on stripped MTB's, the type of machine most likely to be seen on this route. "Your a better man than me Gunga Din".



If you ever pass this way, make sure you have a raw carrot or two. Up on the flat, a rather sweet pony stands at a gap in the hedge waiting for a "chat" with passers by. She's quite happy to pose for photo's, suitably rewarded of course. It appears the City Fathers of Chisledon did not want hordes of bikers riding through the village, so we have to take a detour along some quiet but VERY WIDE roads, the road names "Ladysmith" "Sambre" and "Quebec" providing the clue to the two very large Army Transit camps built here between the wars. Each camp had it's own MT section, and it was quite normal when, as a boy, travelling into Swindon on the Bristol Omnibus Co. double decker, to squeeze past a Mighty Antar sagging under the weight of a Centurian MBT. A tiny red white and blue sign directs us through a gap in the hedge, and on to the eight mile rural section of Route 45. From here on, things get decidedly bumpy!.

To be Continued......
 
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frank9755

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 19, 2007
1,228
2
London
Yes, interesting!
Those compound roundabouts always cause a bit of a laugh. It's interesting that there is more than one legal route through them. I'm only glad that the people who designed them didn't have responsibiltiy for the big London gyratories such as Hammersmith, Hanger lane or Hyde Park Corner - that would be fun!
 

westminehead

Just Joined
Aug 19, 2008
3
0
Rural rides and sparticles

How good is Blewit's rural ride! Hope we can hear more like this. Flecc gives us the lowdown on the Downs of course: what we want now is a perspective from the North to match these two Southern types.

Second thing, latest A to B has news of the Sparticle / Brompton conversion.

Can we look forward to members' real rides on this combination?

All the best
Rob
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,528
30,828
How good is Blewit's rural ride! Hope we can hear more like this. Flecc gives us the lowdown on the Downs of course: what we want now is a perspective from the North to match these two Southern types.
My mentions don't compare with "Blew it's" truly great presentation though, thoroughly entertaining and well written as it is.

It certainly would be good to see more of these illustrated riding experiences from the various parts of these isles, given the huge variety of terrain and views on offer.
.
 

wotwozere

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 6, 2008
280
1
Hi

As anybody seen the programme where they test peoples jeans and find out where the old time family is from, boris johnson is russian but that is not suprizing with a name like boris.

thx

Bob
 

Blew it

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 8, 2008
1,472
97
Swindon, Wiltshire
Part three....

The Sustrans description for this section is: "Very rough track...Mountain bikes and sturdy tourers only". (To which I have added...and dopey old men on electric bikes with hollow rear axles). Riding along between the high hedges that flank the old permanent way, one might think it's very remote from civilization. In fact, we are rarely more than a hundred yards from the A346 road running from Swindon to Marlborough. Like so many rural roads, it's sunk below the level of the surrounding fields, the high banks muffling the traffic noise. In the winter of '63, it filled up level with snow and took a week to clear a way through. The section between Chiseldon and Ogbourne St George runs on the West side of the road, and from there on switching to the East side of the road. One very important part of the "kit", are four different "man with a van" phone numbers on my mobile. In the event of the machine becoming unrideable, it could be pushed or dragged to the road for a rendevous, but forget carrying ( this old girl weighs a ton!). On Google maps, you can clearly see the route. And here is the Iron Horse I use for this run....ChinaBlue.



Described by some as:
CHEAP: Yep, £100 on Ebay, only fourteen months old but very close to death.
JUNK: It was, It isn't now, but that could easily change with this type of riding.
CRAP: Of course not. A sturdy steel frame, rudimentary suspension, and disc brakes capable of pulling up this heavy machine in pretty short order. This machine also boasts the added refinement of a torque sensor chainwheel. Not the modern Hall elastic angle measuring type, but a transducer measuring the degree of compression of the radial springs built into the chainwheel. This totally enclosed mechanism is well protected against flying stones and discarded canine's trophies.
PARTS BIN BIKE: Everything, including Boeing 747's, start their lives in parts bins!!.

There is one particular mile long stretch that's an absolute nightmare. A million divots left by horses that use this route during the winter months, become baked hard by the summer sun, the resulting surface putting the Pave section of the MIRA testing track to shame. Unless we want to suffer a retinal detachment, It's best to jockey the bike along on the throttle, Standing on the pedals with knees and elbows bent, and a silent prayer to the Patron Saint of hollow axles. Once past this, things get a little smoother and we can crack on a bit, but constantly scanning the track ahead for the unexpected. There is of course, a Service Area.



An old Gangers hut, with a well beaten path to the rear for those who need to "water the flowers". Looking inside, I expected to find the usual 21st century detritus....not a bit of it!...other than a few leaves swirling in the breeze, a half burnt log fire in the little grate, it was perfectly clean. Hardly surprising, it's two miles from the nearest village. Twice a year, this route becomes a hive of frenetic activity, with dozens of bikes making the trip. One such "race" is part of Swindon Borough Councils activity week, followed a couple of weeks later by "The Big Bike Ride". Next year, it is my intention to take part in both of these rides. The Big Bike Ride requires an entrance fee of £10 which goes to charity, after paying my fee, I will take part whether they like it or not!!. They don't have exclusive use of Route 45 for these events, so they can't really stop me. The one thing that spoils the enjoyment of electric biking, is the "inbetweener" status that appears to have been awarded to it. I can't really see myself in the company of the local Lycra Harriers, But the idea of perhaps being a Sustrans ride leader is appealing. Its seems a little selfish, having developed several rides of varying lengths, on safe cycling routes around Swindon and beyond, to keep it to myself. Next year, I shall have a look at this possibilty.

To be continued......
 

Fecn

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 28, 2008
491
2
Warlingham, Surrey
Thanks for the latest installment Blew It. What changes have you made to the bike? I have two the same and am trying to work out what I should do with them as nobody seems to want to buy them off me.
 

Rad

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 16, 2008
285
0
Hi

As anybody seen the programme where they test peoples jeans and find out where the old time family is from, boris johnson is russian but that is not suprizing with a name like boris.

thx

Bob
Mine say I'm from Tommy Hilfiger! :D