Enjoy

https://ianbarrington.com/2016/10/25/so ... et-so-far/
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AbsolutelyIt's meant to be difficult, that's why it's a challenge.
whitestone wrote:the best challenges are those that are only just achievable: too easy and it's not really a challenge; too hard and so few are capable of even attempting them that they wither and become historical oddities.
The Etape du Dales https://www.strava.com/routes/2135340 manages 3290m in 175Km. Also a lot of the climbs both on the Etape and elsewhere are rather steephtrider wrote:Good effort even so, well done!
I've been trying to suss out a suitable route local too me (largely as an intellectual excercise rather than with an intention of actually doing it) and its proving nigh on impossible - so far I've got one route taking in pretty much all of Perthshires road climbs which came out at 400k but only with 6000m of climbing and then another route going into Deeside and Angus taking in some of the monsters around there which came out at 700k and still only managed 9000m of climbing.... Looking elsewhere in Scotland there just aren't enough road climbs within a reasonable area to hit the climbing total without going halfway round the country.
Yorkshire Dales should manage it.....
It's 500 miles and around 5,000m of ascent.Ian wrote:Spatial density, height gain and gradient all have an influence on the viability of the route in my opinion. Devon would be good, too, I think.
How much climbing is there on the North Coast 500? And is that 500 km or 500 miles?
The various factors that would need alignment for this boggle my mind.ianfitz wrote:I think off road is the way to go. Plenty of steeps around. Especially in Wales
Virtually flat thenScotRoutes wrote:It's 500 miles and around 5,000m of ascentIan wrote:How much climbing is there on the North Coast 500? And is that 500 km or 500 miles?
I've got a couple sketched out. Thought I'd emailed them to you last week? Not easy, of course - far from it, but nothing worth doing ever is.Ian wrote:The various factors that would need alignment for this boggle my mind.ianfitz wrote:I think off road is the way to go. Plenty of steeps around. Especially in Wales
Very rideable route, no gates, adequate resupply opportunity, supreme fitness, ability to stay awake for 36 hours, keeping the bike working, dry, not too hot, plenty of light - the list goes on. Not saying it can't be done, but still![]()
2.5 laps of the original Wildcat 100 route would get you there, but if you wanted to not repeat anything, creating a route suddenly gets very tough