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Category Archives: Places
Posted by cisamcgu on September 9, 2008 – 11:22 am
Filed under Places, Touring
Day Two : Tarporley onwards…
Wednesday August 27, 2008, 16 miles (26 km) - Total so far: 27 miles (43 km)
Woke about 07:30am, and lazily packed the panniers and luggage. We wandered over to the dining room of the hotel, and tucked into the cereal and fruit juice. Lucia had some bacon and toast, but the bacon, it seems, was almost inedible due to being more salty than the Atlantic ocean. I, on the other hand, had some smoked haddock and a poached egg - just lovely.

We checked out, and freewheeled down the High Street, laughing as we were effortlessly taken down the hill - the wrong way !!!!!! A hurried check of the map, and a rather severe glare from Lucia had us straining back up the road until the correct turning appeared. We cruised through the empty lanes, passing through Tiverton and climbing the hill at Beeston. We stopped at Beeston Castle, but decided against paying the entrance fee, and instead amused ourselves for 30 minutes in the visitor centre. For some, unfathomable reason, both Lucia and myself forget to buy an ice cream - this is something that would have to be remedied later !
No sooner had the promise of an ice-cream been made, than we arrived in Bunbury, a lovely village with elegant and beautiful cottages, and were able to buy a much needed ice-cream.
The weather hadn’t improved since the beginning. Cloudy, grey, overcast yet warm. There was only the faintest of breezes however, so I suppose the cycling was a pleasure even if the countryside wasn’t at its best in the gloom. After a few miles we reached Cholmondelely Castle (pronounced “Chumley”). It had a most impressive driveway, a leafy avenue stretching for almost half a mile before it reached the ticket man. He, the ticket man, was very helpful and friendly, pointing out the benefits of cycling in the grounds (cars have to park before the gardens, cyclists don’t).
We spent a few hours there, playing on the climbing frames and swings (well, one of us did). We also wandered around the gardens which, even to my rather philistine’s eye, were quite stunning. We had cake, we saw pigs and we bought some presents for those still at home. If you are ever in the area, I recommend it !
It was only a short few miles to our second nights accomodation, a farm house B&B near Malpas. It was, however, on the top of a long, steep(ish) drag, that came at the end of a rather tiring day. Lucia needed a little help to get to the top, but very soon we were happily esconsed in the warm, inviting amostphere of Hampton House farmhouse B&B. Our hosts could not have been more friendly or helpful, even driving us down to the local pub for dinner, and arranging for the pub to drive us back once we had finished. Lucia collapsed asleep as soon as we got back, but I managed to watch the football on TV, seeing Liverpool beat Liege in extra time !
 Even the bikes needed a rest
Day Three : The end
Thursday August 28, 2008, 20 miles (32 km) - Total so far: 47 miles (76 km)
We rose, bright and early, and wandered down to breakfast. There were 6 other people staying in the farm house. It seems that there had been some sort of noise related problem last night, but Lucia and I had been fast asleep. The other people at breakfast included a couple who were spending a few days fishing around the area, and another who were visiting Chester Zoo with the idea of using it for their wedding venue ! We had a lovely breakfast, and were soon gliding through the silent lanes, which had become rather more “lumpy”, much to Lucia’s distaste. We climbed and descended steadily, the weather still a heavy, leaden grey, but the rain stayed away, much to our joy.

At about 11am we arrived at the Cheshire Ice Cream farm in Tattenhall. We looked around and sampled the home made ice-cream before pedalling back into Tattenhall village for lunch. We then returned to the farm to watch the cows being milked - not very exciting really, it was a very restricted view. We did get to see a vet with his arm buried up to his shoulder in a cows behind though, which caused some amusement Once this excitement was over, we remounted our trusty steeds and turned our heads towards Chester, and the end of the journey.

We arrived at the farm early, so put the bikes back in the car, and watched the harvesters at work in a nearby field. The cat reappeared, welcoming us back after our epic trip, and received another scratch behind the ears. We were soon on our way home, it seemed slightly odd to be whizzing along the motorway at 70mph rather than pottering around at 7mph, but we were both tired, and the call of a long bath was dragging us home…
Posted by cisamcgu on September 1, 2008 – 3:30 pm
Filed under Places, Touring
Day One : The beginning
Tuesday August 26, 2008, 11 miles (18 km) - Total so far: 11 miles (18 km)
Well, today is the day; My daughter, Lucia, and I start our epic (well, not epic so much as tiny) tour of Cheshire. The plan is to drive to just South of Chester, near Stamford Mill, park the car in a farm yard, and then spend three happy days pootling around the quiet lanes of rural Cheshire.
 All ready and waiting
I had bought some cheap panniers from Lidl (£15 - a bargain I thought) and strapped them to my trusty Dawes Horizon. We were having a supported tour, since this would be our first attempt, and therefore our main luggage would be moved from one night to the next by these nice people. So into the panniers went snacks, locks, waterproofs and other assorted necessities, adding quite a bit of weight, but nothing too frightening. We packed the bicycles into the back of the car, and at about 09:30am, drove down the M53…
We arrived in plenty of time at the farm, and parked the car and unloaded the bicycles, putting the panniers back on. At this point it became apparent that the velcro and strapping method of attaching the panniers that Lidl employ is perhaps not the most convenient, since it takes quite a bit of grunting and cursing, as well as rather a lot of manual dexterity. Never mind, I’m sure I will get used to it. We parked the bikes up against the wall and waited for Carolyn from ByWays to turn up.
A couple of minutes after 11:00am, Carolyn arrived, very friendly and efficient, she took our luggage, gave us a printed weather forecast, wished us well, and disappeared. The farm cat turned up, and curled around our legs, looking for food or attention. It got a quick scratch behind the ears, then we pointed our bikes down the track out of the farm, took a breath, and began to pedal - our adventure had begun.
 The last living thing to see us depart - hope we see it again when we return!
Two minutes later we stopped, the first of many, many stops that we would take during the day. We had the route marked out on an Ordnance Survey map, and also described on a piece of A4 paper. Places of interest and places to eat were also marked - the problem was that I only had my panniers to store these most important items, so I had to stop again and again to refer to them. (Lucia would not have been pleased if we had ridden miles in the wrong direction so it was essential that we kept to the route ). Having checked the route yet again, we pedalled along a cart track, bouncing over stones and rocks “I don’t like this; it is too rough, I’m going to fall off !” We crossed over three tiny bridges that spanned a rather murky pool of water, and eventually came back to a tarmac road.
 Waiting on the bridge
It was at this point that Lucia had a moment of inspiration, and a few minutes later the plastic sleeve that had held all of our information was now elastoplasted to my handlebars, holding the torn up OS map in full, easy seen, glory. A DIY map holder of the highest quality - nothing could stop us now ! We pedalled onwards, the aim of the day was to reach Tarporley, about 11 miles away; not a huge distance, not even a small distance, but one that Lucia and I felt comfortable with. So we cycled through Tarvin, a pleasant village with a picturesque church, before turning off the road onto another track, this one muddy and churned by cattle. We were forced to push the bikes for a bit, but were soon back on the quiet country roads. We passed through Oscroft and stopped in Willington for lunch. Happily stuffed with good pub food, and having spent a few minutes chatting to a handsome horse and feeding it grass in the adjacent field, we set off again, swooping down the hills (well, perhaps not swooping, since Lucia is not too keen on going fast down slopes - and neither am I really), and aimed our bikes towards Oulton.
After maybe an hour of pleasant pootling, a car overtook us, then pulled in. A women of mature years got out of the driving seat and flagged us down. “I’m trying to get to Tarporley, but the A51 is closed, and the blasted satnav will not tell me where to go!” Suppressing a small grin, I pointed to the crossroads about 20 yards ahead, the signpost to Tarporley just visible; “Turn right at this junction, and you should be fine” I said, so with a muttered thanks, she hopped back into her car and zoomed off. Lucia and I exchanged a wry smile and trundled over the cross roads, taking a long loop before we arrived at our destination. The last couple of miles were tiring for Lucia and she was immensely pleased to see ‘The Swan Hotel’ sign as we crawled up Tarporley High Street.
Our bags had been safely delivered by Carolyn, and within 30 minutes, we were checked in, our bikes locked up securely (in the kitchen we found out later), and we could rest our weary legs in the comfortable bar, sipping a Cains bitter and a lemonade.
Posted by barq on August 12, 2008 – 2:03 pm
Ann Arbor is a Michigan college town a few miles outside of Detroit. As the home of Google’s AdWords division and Domino pizza you might not immediately associate it with a healthy cycling community. However Ann Arbor positively welcomes cyclists so wherever you look there are people on classy road bikes, sturdy MTBs and, the most popular of all, ‘sit-up-and-beg’ town bikes.
Whilst on a recent trip to Michigan I bumped into a fixed rider and asked him about what kinds of cycling the area offered. 70 mile excursions along the wide open roads seemed to be his ride of choice. With more space on the tarmac, and fewer cars per mile than in the UK, I could see the appeal. Personally I was surprised by the poor condition of the roads. They say everything is bigger in the USA and that also includes potholes.
Although I didn’t find many mountain bikers in downtown Ann Arbor I discovered the next best thing… mountain bike beer. The local brewing company teamed up with a nearby Ypsilanti bike shop to support local trails through the sale of beer. I was able to express my ‘support’ for the mountain bikers several evenings running.
On the wide sidewalks on Ann Arbor and the leafy university campus sit-up-and-beg bikes intermingled at low speeds with pedestrians. Cycle paths are conspicuous by their absence. Cyclists actually use their bells and pedestrians seem to respond appropriately. Very strange. Of course it wasn’t all idyllic and one taxi driver rattled off the familiar shouldn’t be on the road tirade. However two factors seemed to make cycling more appealing to the citizens. Firstly the weather is quite settled, so although the winters are very cold, the summer is relatively dry so people spend less time worrying about packing waterproof clothing. Secondly Ann Arbor is a relatively low crime area and the fear of bicycle theft was a minimal concern. Londoners would laugh at the puny bike locks Ann Arbor residents use.

A graduate student at the nearby University of Michigan said she bought a cheap mountain bike from Target due to rumours of quality bikes being stripped for parts. But on the whole people seemed happy to take their bicycles pretty much everywhere. Some commutes were surprisingly short which seemed to free people up to take less clutter with them - afterall who needs a puncture repair kit, pump, multitool, water and so on when the commute is only two miles?
Back in England I find myself wondering if more people would take up cycling if it weren’t for the fear of theft or vandalism? Unfortunately whatever we do the weather is one thing we really can’t fix.
Posted by zimzum42 on August 4, 2008 – 8:27 am
Following last week’s trip to Malaysia by the Woodlands checkpoint to the north of the island, I set out this Saturday to try getting to Malaysia by the other road route, the ‘Second Link’ at Tuas on the west coast. I didn’t have much luck…
The south-west corner of Singapore is dominated by industry. Thanks to some forward thinking/paternalism in the middle of the last century, the gently rolling hills of this corner of the island were scooped up and used to fill in some pesky bits of sea. The area is now nice and flat and is covered in various factories. Small outlying islands have been adjoined and turned into an enormous petrol refinery where access is restricted to prevent terrorist attacks.
The upshot of all this is that there exist some lovely nice wide roads that are relatively free of traffic at the weekends and in the evenings, so not bad cycling conditions. Whilst most people like nothing other than to tour the more picturesque regions of the world, scaling the Alps or cruising the country lanes of Cornwall, I’m quite a fan of industrial areas.
Whilst I will freely admit that the Alps are stunning, there is also a beauty to behold in industrial wastescapes, in a refinery, or a container port. One of my favourite spots in London is Creekmouth, a massive expanse of nothingness near Dagenham. It overlooks the river where it is nice and wide and deep enough to receive big ships, and affords a great view of the Ford plant and the sewage works to the south.
These places are full of life, there are always lights twinkling, flames burning atop narrow stacks, machinery moving back and forth, night never really falls on these places. From the window in my apartment I can admire the constant to and fro of the truly massive container movers of the Keppel port, ships arrive and depart all day, heralded by a blasting poop of their big horns. The stacks of containers rise and fall, ships bob up and down as they are relieved of their cargo and instantly replenished.
This kind of activity dominates most of the south coast of Singapore. As you head further west, the air becomes heavy with fuel fumes and warehouses which looked like small blocks of flats from a distance loom above you, immense and windowless, impressing upon you the sheer scale of everything. Singapore might be tiny, but its influence is huge, a massive amount of stuff comes in and goes back out every single day.
Some might think this the antithesis of what cycling should be about, why do I glory in what most find ugly and depressing? But there is beauty nestled in amongst the concrete megaliths. Many of the roads remain tree-lined, beautiful views of the sea appear suddenly in between factories and shipyards, workers collapse and sweat in shady patches under the trees nestled in the corners by the fences.
All of this rolls by me on my way to the second bridge to Malaysia, and it would not let go its grip. The Tuas checkpoint is for motors only. The approach is a motorway, so I had little choice but to bend the rules and slip onto the road from which I am banned and make my final approach to the barriers. At the bus and coach checkpoint the police were very friendly, and told me to turn around. Then ensued a quick discussion in Malay, and they suggested I try ‘upstairs’, at the car and motorbike checkpoint. This involved doubling back down the motorway, doing a u-turn at the first junction, and climbing the drag up to the top deck, where after a number of phone calls to the bosses, I was told to go back again.
So rather than take my lunch in Malaysia as planned, I retraced my route back to the industrial wastes and found a food court I had passed on the way to the bridge.
Food Courts are something that the UK could think about introducing, they really are great. The concept is simple. You have a communal seating area surrounded by various stalls. Most stalls specialize in a small number of dishes, so the quality is often rather good. Other stalls operate a ‘pick-n-mix’ system, with a number of dishes on offer. Rice is dumped onto your plate and you pick and choose what to have alongside. ‘Aunties’ and ‘Uncles’ from the drinks stalls stalk the tables and shout your orders back to their colleagues and return sharpish with a variation on your order. Others prowl and remove the used cutlery and crockery so that subsequent diners may take your place.
You don’t hang around a food court at lunch time. Singapore is busy, to say the least, and it can be impossible to find a place to sit in the popular places. Clued up Singaporeans reserve their spots with little ‘Handy-Andy’ packs of tissues, whilst first-timers walk in endless circles with their food going cold in a futile attempt to find a seat.
Most importantly, food centres are cheap, a meal and a drink will set you back between $3 and $6 (1-2 pounds). If we could introduce this system in the UK, I think it would be incredibly popular. A cooked meal, tasty and quick, costing probably about three pounds, it’s got to be a winner!
Posted by zimzum42 on July 28, 2008 – 10:35 am

Singapore is a city-state. This can be a bad thing, it is a bit of a bubble, and you can’t really get away from the ‘big-city’ feeling very easily.
But it’s also a good thing, it’s really easy to go away for a short break, Peninsular Malaysia is just to the north, and Indonesia lies close to the south and south-west, so you don’t have to go far or spend long travelling to get another stamp in your passport.
There are places to go to ‘get away from it all’ in Singapore. Perhaps the most obvious place is Sentosa, a small island just south of the CBD which has been given over entirely to the leisure industry. It’s a complex of beaches and such attractions, and as with everything in Singapore, is a historic site with a man-made gloss. I’m sure the island has had many uses over the years, but in recent times it was a British military base. It’s now a synthetic haven of pristine beaches and perfectly spaced palm trees. But it’s right on my doorstep, and it’s good for a quick few hours on the beach.
Another man-made wonder is East Coast Park. This is a six-mile strip of reclaimed land with a man-made beach. It’s wonderfully (or patronizingly) organized, with marked lanes for cycling, running and roller-blading, barbecue pits, picnic areas, exercise areas, the list goes on. The beach is a bit filthy, and it’s right next to the airport motorway, but it’s a nice place to catch the breeze and watch the ships go by.
Thinking of the motorway… Singapore has got to win the award for the prettiest motorways in the world. The one that leads to the airport is a stunner, three lanes of expressway lined with purple-flowered trees and other greenery. The central reservation would win the Chelsea flower show. Many of the motorways in Singapore are like this, the UK could learn a thing or two, and it certainly makes you feel better as you cruise along.
This weekend I decided to add riding across an international border to my cycling claims to fame. To the north of Singapore lies the Causeway, a road and rail link to Malaysia. It’s only about 16 miles from where I live, so I decided this was the ride to test my new chainset out with.
I’m sure there is a lovely picturesque route that I could take to get to the crossing, but as in London, I prefer to stick to the main roads. Not only are they faster, I reckon they’re safer. The roads are nice and wide so people have the chance to give you room, and people don’t fly around corners as they do in back-streets. Nor are there parked cars obscuring people’s view. All in all, it’s safer on the big, scary busy roads. I can understand why people think the back-streets are safer, but they are simply not. They’re for pootlers, and I’m not a pootler!
The border check is a good laugh on a bike. The queue of trucks stretches back a good four or five miles, and the car and scooter queue is not much better. But on a bike you can get into the car lane and filter all the way to the front, get your passport checked, roll over the bridge, and within ten minutes you’re in Johor Bahru, Malaysia.
It’s only when you get out of Singapore that you can appreciate Singapore. It might be an authoritarian nightmare, but it’s damn clean, and you feel safe. Johor is by no means a bad place, but their tarmac could do with a being looked at, and their drivers could do with a lesson or two. Singapore drivers may leave a lot to be desired, but at least it’s not all a big race to them. The main strip in Johor is a bit of a drag strip, except everyone is crammed in and getting nowhere fast. I don’t reckon they get many white guys flying through the gaps on bikes either……
There isn’t much in Johor, I rode up to a nice mosque overlooking the strait which separates Singapore, and there’s a nice palace of sorts, resplendent with crocodile, and there’s a zoo which makes the cardinal mistake of allowing the elephants to be seen for free from the road. No way I was paying to get into that zoo after seeing the main attraction!
The biggest surprise was lunch. A main dish, four drinks and an ice cream, all for what the main dish alone would have cost in Singapore. Methinks it’s time to look into living in Malaysia, would save a decent bit of cash!
Rode the same route home out of a desire not to get lost. It was then that I realized the stupidity of riding flat out on the way there, having not ridden further than 10 miles in one go all year. Still, sheer determination won the day. This is especially true during Tour de France time, seeing those guys do that kind of thing day in, day out makes you ashamed to consider getting off the bike on a poxy 30+ mile ride. So thanks Carlos Sastre, you got me home without resorting to a taxi!
Disclaimer: These views are not necessarily the views of Cyclechat.
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