A bit of searching out new things around us and trying (but failing) to get the ride done before the rain started
Dropped down into the valley to ride in to town along the Leeds-Liverpool canal, stopped to look at the memorial to a Polish aircrew who crashed here during WW2
http://www.raf.mod.uk/raflintononouse/n ... 6c66d6721f (Just realised that today marks the start of that conflict) then continued along recently renovated towpath to town. I've never been along this bit of the canal before so it was nice to get a different perspective on what is essentially the same journey as the main Aire valley road which runs right alongside for most of the way. We just need the same doing to the towpath between Skipton and Gargrave plus upgrading it to bridleway status - I wonder what they did with the horses on that section when it was a working canal?
Up the never nice on a mountain bike climb to Halton Heights but rather than take the estate track across Barden Moor I took the signposted bridleway from the summit of the road which I've never been along before either on a bike or on foot. Glad I did as it's a really nice bit of moorland singletrack, just a pity it's so short, it basically cuts a corner. Rather than race across the moor I did a bit of investigating things just off the track so it took a while. The bit of singletrack at the Rylstone end was much drier than on last week's YD200 - you could see the holes you were going to fall in to!
Once back down in the valley I'd got a bit of road to get to the next new to me section when I realised that there was a green lane between Rylstone and the level crossing at the old station. It looked very overgrown and I prepared myself for some nettle and bramble dodging but in the event it wasn't needed as the riding line avoided them. It's called "Mucky Lane" but it was anything but as it seemed as if beneath the grass was a bed of hardcore. Certainly nice to ride along.
My target was the bridleway behind Swinden Quarry but rather than ride along the road and come back on myself I thought I'd ride up Swinden Lane. A bit chancy as last week riding down it was getting very muddy. It turned out to be almost dry and quite easy climbing. Through the gate at the top I managed to follow the actual line of the bridleway across the fields rather than through the extended wall gaps that I normally do in the dark before crossing Eller Beck and heading up the dead end bridleway by Hamerton Hill Syke.
My wife had said that this wasn't particularly nice but with it being reasonably dry and having plus tyres on the bike I found it quite nice. At the top you go through a gate to a three-way sign that has bridleway pointing back the way you've just come and footpath for the other two directions which just happen to be on stoney vehicle tracks

Another example of our brilliantly thought out RoW network. I headed left and over the ford to climb up on to Boss Moor. The one woman walker I met wasn't bothered in the slightest that I was riding a bike on a "footpath".
By now the rain had started so on with the jacket I'd bought after suffering in the Braunton 120 at Easter but hadn't actually worn yet then blast down to Hetton and along the lanes to Gargrave. Cafe stop

I left things as long as I could but it was still raining heavily when I decided to get going again. Rather than just ride home along the roads I took the canal towpath as far as East Marton. I've done the first half many times but from Bank Newton we normally take the lane, let's just say that the canal is intestinal in its course as it works its way through the drumlins.
All that was left to do was climb back up and over Pinhaw to home. At least the rain was on my back.
A total of 60Km and just over 1000m of ascent. About a third was on road but reducing this would require some poor bridleways and some cheekiness
