Hambleton Hills Circular- Sat 13th aftermath

Good ride, but hard work at times. The Yorkshire mud as legendary as ever. Great skies/views. Hats off for getting that San An around there, twice the weight of the P20!!! Also the most bizarre crash on those steps.
Photos up tomorrow hopefully, haven't even looked at them yet.
 
Looks like a tough ride chaps! A couple of my pals were up there too and were both knackered when they'd finished. Told them to look out for you lot but they must have missed you.
 
Looks like I missed a good day :( , :shock: how much mud :shock: :LOL: :LOL: , glad to see a good day was had by all :)
 
haway lads get the rest of the pics up.......and none of me falling down the flight of stairs head first :LOL:
 
Hambleton Circular Report- total distance 18.9 miles. Weather- fair to good. Mechanicals- 2. Puntures-0 :cool: Lessons learned- several!

Had time to recover from the 'Rough Stuff' adventure at the weekend. A few musings and pics....

4435352812_b5ba8f7fbb_b.jpg


Although the weather was fine enough the going was hard over the opening stretch. The route started, after another top notch cooked breakfast in Thirsk, from Sutton Bank Visitor Centre and after the usual car park bike demoing and fettling was completed we set out on an oldskool adventure- a route I last enjoyed back in 1988.
The first few miles were very clarty indeed- several stops needed to cloy some of the gloop out of brakes and bottom brackets as wheels became stuck in frames. On one occasion it was so bad wheels had to be removed en-masse to allow a good clean out. Certainly a route for summer next time!

4435352798_edb90245f8_b.jpg


4435352820_131bf48b8a_b.jpg


We soon made it to the better surfaced areas of Boltby Forest before heading back onto high ground and the occasional patch of deep snow over the moor toward Black Hambleton.

4435352824_7fed566f82_b.jpg


4435352830_8175d10340_b.jpg


4435352828_c323b92e0c_b.jpg


A slight retrace after missing a turn took us Eastward and into the steep descent into Thorodale. A descent made easier as the bracken than usually grows shoulder height in the summer had all but died back to ground level.

4434590609_c39d2b3bfd_b.jpg


4435365316_0609654187_b.jpg


A little delay here as climbing out of the beck my chain snapped depositing me onto cross bar with the usual cussing and nursing of bruised nether regions :evil: . The chain had snapped clean through the plates rather than the joining pins which was quite worrying. I expected a repeat performance on every climb thereafter.

4434592023_b1b0eaf881_b.jpg


A nice doubletrack section through the private woodland of Arden Hall surrounded by a carpet of Snowdrops took us past the grand house and out onto quiet lanes toward Hawnby where we arrived a little later than planned and after they had finished serving food. The lovely staff took pity and soon rustled up half a dozen splendid chip butties and a few pints though for their mud splattered visitors.

Refreshed, we then took once more to the lanes and bridles above River Rye before plunging down to the River itself and picking up a cheeky footpath alongside the silted up canal that runs to Rievaulx Abbey. Saltyman took a novel approach to the steps on this section- his stem coming loose and throwing him over the bars.

4435366756_fb28770ddc_b.jpg


We now had a long drag back up to Sutton Bank along Blind Side, past ponds filled with Mallard Ducks (doing what Ducks do in spring) and up into Worry Gill. It was a case of finding a steady pace, heads down and grind it out. Two thirds of the way up the track petered out into nothing. I'd riden down this section 22 years ago but various rock falls had lead to the track being abandoned a long time ago and mother nature was finishing the job with some style. It was a real sting in the tail for tired legs as we climbed and carried bikes for the last mile over boulders and through dense woodland.

4435367938_0d929b33fb_b.jpg


Several stops had to be made and the choppers were salvaged from Kaya's bag to cut our way through the fallen trees that littered the path. After an hour of toil we could hear the sound of cars at last and eventually made our way back onto the A170. The last section of singletrack was aborted in favour of a quick spin up the main road to our starting point.

4435368390_bb1619b2ff_b.jpg


So there we have it. Too much mud and too much trust in once clear routes from BITD. On the bright side the weather held off, the views were to die for and the company and craic were second to none as ever. Everyone seamed to enjoy the challenge and there was an air of satisfaction as filthy bikes were loaded into cars for the long haul home.
I like a tough route, maybe not as tough as the last few miles but, anyone present will remember the Valley of Death for a long time.

All things considered, another grand day out!
Si
 
Cheers for the ride lads, thoroughly enjoyed it , no really, sorry for lusting after the forks on every pic Vern, but... they match the P.A!
I`d do it again when the mud tide has gone out...





Oh I better tell you now.. I have another alias... so quite fitting that my first retro ride had a section that was named after me ;)
 
lewis1641":fl4epu5r said:
i'm always intrigued to know who is who in the pictures!

saltyman - yellow san andreas
mr savory - white cove stiffee
kaya - kona cinder cone
simonside resident - prince albert
dr s - fat chance
p20 - ritchey p20
 
hehe the valley of death big respect to kaya for carrying a extra bike out of the valley of death, great day good craic as always :D
 
Back
Top