But, I still try to take part in the winter event in my own 'wierd' way. For the past 3 years now (actually 4 if you count the Peaks Winter Bivy with Karl) I've decided to make it a regular thing of making it human rights orientated. So, I do it for charity/sponsorship etc etc.
This year was unusual that I didn't have to ride alone (Karl probably wasn't about and never looks at the phone anyway) as a young chap came up out of the blue. No bivy experience whatsoever and no proper long distance riding, except the odd 100 miler on the road bike here or there. Told him about this years Freedom for Aafia Siddiqui ride and he was in.
240 miles to London it was - though last year it was just 100 miles locally cos the yearly chest infection just wasn't working with the diary - and thankfully he was happy to take some advice on bivy kit and safety gear. Waterproofs bought, Revelate Spinelock purchased, down sleeping bag and all the rest of the stuff that's needed to make a ride of this proportion safe enough.
It's the first of a series of BAMs hopefully for myself, but for Nasir, who knows! My (newer) kit was as follows, so needed to be put through some winter paces...
1. Revelate Harness. The newer version and which it's probably the first time riding with it. Bought especially for the narrower type road/drop bars. Other harnesses/bags i've used would restrict the hand positions or lever-gearing. This seemed spot on and it was also good for the aero bar shape. Biggest of all was that it can come off the bars without needing the instruction manual.
Downside being that it was too tight on my cable-outers (not a fault of the harness) and by the end of day 2 enroute back home from the station, I got a bit of ghost shifting. But the previous issue on the older harness where the bar strap needed constant cynch-ing up seems to be cured Alhamdulillah. I also (probably) overpacked it and the thickness of the (lightweight) drybag meant it got a bit of rubbing on the tyre.
By the time the bivy came after 13 hours of moving/walking/biking etc, I'd worn a hole through both dry bags. Thankfully the PHD sleeping bag and Criterion jacket (first time using in the field, worked amazing) just about got saved from being worn through. Maybe thanks to that special material they both use. Dry bag was full of tyre grit and the corner of the Criterion stuff sack was frozen-grit!
Time for some pics I suppose and I'll get back to the harness in a mo.

Must've done at least about 5 miles of much needed walking, to save from slipping. Then maybe another 2 enforced walking just to keep the toes warm!

At the time I took this pic, we never realsied the gravity of that much ice. It had probably caused the associated grit to wear out our pads. My new Dura Ace pads are unequally worn and ready for the bin. But, Nasir had zero brake pads left by the time I noticed. Funny stuff is ice and road tires/calipers hey!


Trip would be incomplete without this pair of pics. Night before and we (well, I cos Nasir didn'teven come with his winter jacket, nor winter shoes

It had to be done though as I wasn't gonna be spending an extra so many £s on a new train ticket for another day. We just needed to get past Rugby and it'd be warm

TBC