Time for a decent length ride on the MTB. The plan was to head up the dale and up on to Buckden Pike and then grab some VeloViewer squares in the dale south of West Burton and then the odd square or two I'm missing that lie just off the bridleways over the tops. The weather had different ideas.
By the time I got on to the tops above Hetton it was obvious that the wind was strong and getting stronger. Mind you it made balancing along the ridges between ruts in the track a good test of skill that I didn't think I'd got

Moor Lane and Boss were very damp and muddy - I completely lost traction on the climb up Moor Lane and had to walk/slither as best I could in Five Ten flat soled shoes. I checked out an old barn as a possible bivy site - no good: the ground floor is half a metre deep in cow muck and the loft floor is rotten. Oh well. At Malham Moor Lane a decision.
Carry on with the original plan, go straight on and drop down to Kilnsey and explore the head of the Dale or turn left and head over to Settle and get the battle with the wind over and done with. I went for the latter.
The struggle began immediately. Having to pedal down a 20% tarmac road that normally has me braking showed how strong the wind was. The stretch along Mastiles Lane was made harder by the sodden ground. A bite to eat at Mastiles Gate and then press on. Except. There's now spots of rain in the air so on with the waterproof. The downs needed pedalling, the flats were hard and the ups needed effort. Again, where usually a touch of brakes was needed now I had to pedal. Eventually I began to drop down towards Langcliffe and the traverse on the Pennine Bridleway around to Settle. This was a bit tricky: keeping upright while traversing a wet limestone hillside covered in mud and slippy grass took a lot of concentration.
The cafe in Settle was welcome, hopefully I didn't make too much of a mess though looking at my mud covered face I probably gave a few other customers a bit of a fright
I now had the wind on my back but the climb up out of Settle is never easy, it's soon over and there's a rolling track across the top before the drop down to Long Preston. I couldn't really face the muddy fields that are part of the Pennine Bridleway as it crosses the Craven Fault towards the southern Pennines so I picked my way along lanes and rocky bridleways eastwards towards Gargrave then along the canal bank until a few lanes led to the final climb back home.
77Km done with 1500m of ascent.