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[Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 11:29 am
by chris n
More like the We. Got a week off in July, so will be riding part of Aidan's EWE route: start from Chepstow, up into the Black Mountains and Brecon Beacons to Llanwrtyd then into Rhayader (the EWE goes past Claerwen to Hafod, Nant Syddion and Nant-yr-Arian but I'm heading further east to get cleaned up at my parents' house). Follow the Wye Valley to Llangurig then W to Nant y Moch and pick up the official EWE route for a bit, missing the long drop + climb into and out of Mach. Wiggle around until I get to the Kerry Ridgeway, cross the Long Mynd (via Pole Bank and Minton Batch rather than the EWE) then across to Cannock and home.

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Route overview by cnarborough, on Flickr

360-ish miles planned, some vague ideas about where to stop and 5 days to see how far I get. This time I'll be taking more than one brake. :D

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 11:46 am
by Taylor
Think all that extra weight.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 1:51 pm
by numplumz
Thats a tough ride for sure.
I have similar not the EWE plans myself. Having had to cancel plans to do the real thing, I can't resist the chance to check out some of it at a comfortable distance per day pace.
Friends are racing at the 24-12 in Plympton so the lift down is easy.
Then I've got as long as I want to jump on the Dartmoor Exmoor section and head on upto the Bristol area.
From there connect up with the Avon canal, and then pick up the Ridgeway and head for Milton Keynes and home. About 460 miles so far.
Is there a team relay class, who can do the rest :-)

So I know it's pretty boring terrain (probably just what I'll need by then) but can't anyone confirm that it's ok to ride on the Avon canal from Bath going East.
Cheers.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 2:02 pm
by Taylor
Fantasticmrmatt rode along there from Reading to Bristol last summer so he's the best man to ask.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 2:17 pm
by Tanglefist
From wikipedia; "Cycling is permitted along the canal towpath except for a 656 yards (600 m) section near Woolhampton. Some sections of the canal towpath have been improved and widened to make them more suitable for cyclists and disabled users."

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 2:33 pm
by Dyffers
Are you planing on some gears for this Chris, or going SS with the old 24" as backup?

Looks like a good week. I'd be pestering you to join in if I wasn't lapping 24/12 or working in July.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 3:07 pm
by chris n
I never planned to race the EWE anyway - I'm definitely a tourist, not a racer.
numplumz wrote:Thats a tough ride for sure.
I hope it's not that hard! I'll be leaving Chepstow at lunchtime on day 1, then hopefully stopping somewhere in the Black Mountains for the first night. Night 2 will be between Llanwrtyd and the Elan Valley, night 3 near Carno and night 4 near the Long Mynd. I might have to cut short the to-ing and fro-ing around Cannock depending on how I'm doing.
Dyffers wrote:Are you planing on some gears for this Chris, or going SS with the old 24" as backup?
SS on the Inbred, but I've got it setup as a dinglespeed (32/20 + 34/18) now, in case I've got long road sections to do. Will be dropping a resupply bag off in Rhayader next week with fuel, clean clothes and batteries so I can travel a bit lighter than a pure 5 day ride.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 3:58 pm
by Ian
The Black Mountains/ Beacons section doesn't pull any punches. Nice trails though - you'll enjoy it, I'm sure.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Thu Jun 28, 2012 8:14 pm
by j.c.gillies
Nice looking route Chris, one I'd like to ride myself. Let us know how it goes :)

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Sun Jul 08, 2012 7:26 pm
by chris n
Bike and bags all packed, got my tickets to Chepstow for tomorrow morning. Forecast looks ok-ish so should be a good week out.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Sun Jul 08, 2012 10:09 pm
by Dusza
Godspeed Chris. I hope you'll bring back some photos with you :)

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2012 6:57 pm
by chris n
Everything started well, heading out from Chepstow station at lunchtime on Monday. Surprisingly hilly until Usk where I followed the River valley and then the Sustrans route to Abergavenny.

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Clytha Park gates by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Into the Beacons by cnarborough, on Flickr

The weather improved as I headed west but the going got harder as I approached the edge of the Brecon Beacons.

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What's down there? by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Mynydd Du Forest by cnarborough, on Flickr

Popping out of the woods at the top of Mynydd Du forest was great:
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Rolling by cnarborough, on Flickr

Found a good spot for the night on the edge of the Beacons, though the weather started closing in just after I pitched up.
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Grwyne Fechan by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Grwyne Fechan by cnarborough, on Flickr

Hard slog the next morning up to the top of Mynydd Llysiau, but a fun descent the other side.
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Edge of the Black Mountains by cnarborough, on Flickr

The planned route was around Llangorse Lake, but my chain (bodged together from leftovers) was really starting to complain so I dropped straight into Brecon for a replacement. A wet, windy afternoon on the Sarn Helen road wasn't much fun, but the trails through Halfway forest and on to Llanwrtyd were much easier going.

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Llanwrtyd Wells by cnarborough, on Flickr

I took the easy road route round to Abergwesyn then up through the trails at Trallwm and a very boggy push over the top to Claerwen.

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Almost sunny by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Carnau by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Claerwen Valley by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Elan Valley by cnarborough, on Flickr

Stopped at my parents house for the night, but the wind was picking up so decided not to bother with the leg out to Machynlleth and went straight to the Kerry Ridgeway via Bwlch y Sarnau.

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Loaded Inbred by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Kerry Ridgeway by cnarborough, on Flickr

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Bishop's Castle by cnarborough, on Flickr

The Ridgeway was great: sunny, flat, dry and with a tailwind all the way to Bishop's Castle for a couple of pints in the Three Tuns.

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Three Tuns 1642 by cnarborough, on Flickr

Slogged up to Pole Bank via Bridges then down Minton Batch. Lovely descent, but there was so much water flowing down the trail I found it hard going.

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Long Mynd by cnarborough, on Flickr

Stopped the night in a basic campsite at Little Hamperley where I decided I couldn't be arsed to ride all the way home so after a nice lie-in I went for a lazy lunch in Church Stretton and caught the train home.

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Little Hamperley by cnarborough, on Flickr

200 miles in 4 days, rode some good trails and 2 nights out in the bivvy. Not too shabby.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2012 9:12 pm
by Ian
Nice one Chris. Trails are pretty tough round here just now too.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2012 10:16 pm
by Anthony
Looks like a great trip, nice to just vary to route depending on what u fancied at the time. I often find myself trying to stick to one original plan whereas in actual fact more fun can be had by just seeing where the mood takes you.

Cheers for all the pictures.

Tarp and bivvybag?

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2012 7:11 am
by 99percentchimp
Looks like a great trip! I don't know the Welsh Border hils well but they look great.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2012 2:12 pm
by chris n
Anthony wrote:Looks like a great trip, nice to just vary to route depending on what u fancied at the time. I often find myself trying to stick to one original plan whereas in actual fact more fun can be had by just seeing where the mood takes you.
Yep, it's nice to have the flexibility to reorganize the route when needed. Once I'd decided that I was better off touring than trying to complete the planned route I had a much better time. That and the route that Ian had suggested to Aidan was really tough - once I got out of the Beacons, I felt a lot better. :D
Anthony wrote:Tarp and bivvybag?
Yep. bicycle + Hunka.
99percentchimp wrote:Looks like a great trip! I don't know the Welsh Border hils well but they look great.
They're great. Quiet, not too hilly with plenty of open space and forestry for bivvying and seem to have lots of bridleways and byways. The area between the Beacons and Snowdonia is great for MTBing, I reckon.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 1:39 pm
by Mike
Sounds like a great trip was had. Can i ask what bars are you using and which GPS unit do u use please. I use a memory map unit which is great but the battery has to be charged everyday which is a pain.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 7:14 pm
by chris n
Yetiman wrote:Sounds like a great trip was had. Can i ask what bars are you using and which GPS unit do u use please. I use a memory map unit which is great but the battery has to be charged everyday which is a pain.
Bars are Titec J bars - cheap(ish) versions of a Jones swept handlebar. GPS is a Garmin Etrex 30 - will last for 36 hours + on a set of Lithium AAs, and 24 hours + on 2500 mAh rechargeables.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 7:42 pm
by Mike
cheers chris, do u also use the 1:50 maps and do u find them to be enough, i only ask as i use mm at mo but considering selling and buying etrex 20 or 30 with full 1:50 GB maps

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 7:50 pm
by chris n
I plan the route on the 1:50k maps (either with Route Buddy or Bikehike.co.uk) then transfer a track to the Etrex (which only has the Open Street Map basemap on). I also have the 1:50k maps on my iphone for reference on the road.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 7:56 pm
by Mike
ah ok, so on ur etrex u just follow a black line with no map in back ground. Do u find that u can follow the route ok without the mapping on etrex - sorry to keep asking questions just need some knowledge of these before i buy thanks

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 8:01 pm
by chris n
No problem. The OSM basemap does show some bridleways and footpaths and most minor roads so it's not totally featureless. You do need to be as precise as possible about placing your track on the maps in the planning stage - 50 or 100m might not sound like much, but on the ground if there are lots of options not knowing exactly where you are can be confusing. Having the OS maps to check on my phone really helps if I get a bit stuck.

Re: [Not the] EWE

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 8:12 pm
by Mike
nice one cheers