Nice job. Looks good especially the handsome chap on the first photo
Is a page listing facilities available at the start or on route worthwhile. Promote good local stores, camping and B&B near the start and any water stops maybe.
Is a page listing facilities available at the start or on route worthwhile. Promote good local stores, camping and B&B near the start and any water stops maybe.
maybe it's not necessary but.....i've got some spare hosting space (i buy a bulk hosting package for a bunch of websites i oversee) and so if you were to buy a .co.uk domain name for this site i'd happily host it so that it'd have it's own dedicated domain and not be a .blogspot.com affair.
no worries if you'd rather not (as it'd be a tenner every two years for the domain name registration) but i thought i'd mention it.
the host supports wordpress and so it'd be easy as pie to set-up (can import what you've already done from blogspot) and edit etc...
The Trans Cambrian way is a long distance mountain bike route spanning the width of Wales from Knighton to Dovey junction on the west coast. The route is approximately 100 miles long and crosses through some very remote countryside. Originally devised and mapped by IMBA, it was intended to be a 3 day ride. There are plenty of riders who will find a 3 day crossing a satisfying challange ... then there are the 'others'!
s8tannorm wrote:Gairy, very nice offer, ta.
We'll see if anyone bothers to use it first, if they do then a switch may be in order.
no worries - just let me know.....
i plan on using the TCW when i'm next back in blighty but i'm thinking something more along the lines of 24 hours for 1 way (as i'll be riding either to or from the Dyfi Enduro and so will either be knackered or not want to tyre myself out) and so i doubt i'll be contending any records (slowest average speed? most pie consumed on TCW?).
The Trans Cambrian way is a long distance mountain bike route spanning the width of Wales from Knighton to Dovey junction on the west coast. The route is approximately 100 miles long and crosses through some very remote countryside. Originally devised and mapped by IMBA, it was intended to be a 3 day ride. There are plenty of riders who will find a 3 day crossing a satisfying challange ... then there are the 'others'!
w and j should both be capitalised
Noted ... in my defence it was getting late and I was tired and emotional
For those who are familiar with the route, is there much in the way of loose rocky stuff (similar to some of the Taff Trail)? I find those kinds of trails slow me down quite a bit with the rigid fork, particularly the descents & if there's a lot of it I'll probably stick some squish on the front.
Not very much of that at all Mark. The most technical stuff is towards the end (above Mach) but even that's not bad. The only place that might really catch someone out, is the descent off Foel Fadian ... if it's wet, it's nasty
Righto, logistics are sorted so I'll definitely be doing this on Sunday (April 1st ho ho!). If anyone cares to keep an eye on my progress on the day, you can follow my Spot tracker here... http://pedalhead.net/satellite-tracking/ I'm aiming to start around 7am & target is to finish well within 12 hours.
Conditions are looking quite good, hence my short notice idea for this weekend. Should be mostly dry after this long spell without rain, but the temps are forecast to drop nicely to pleasant riding levels (12 degrees ish). Only less than perfect thing is a slight north-westerly, but it looks to be mellow enough not to make or break the ride. If navigation is as tricky as people say then at least this'll serve as a useful recce for the ride with Ian on April 21st, but I'm hoping to put in a decent time nevertheless.