Category Archives: Cycling Adventures

Cycling holidays whether solo or with friends in the UK, Europe, North America or Australia

Hadrian’s Wall 2025 – Last Day (4)

I suspect it may be plain if you’ve followed this trip that I’d spoilt John and now it was time to bring him back down to earth. In summary, the sumptuous countryside, the antiquities, the museums, my scintillating company/guide skills and lastly the up market hotel in Hexham, The Beaumont. The latter cost £158 per night, which isn’t the way I usually roll but when divided by two it becomes more like it. However, you can take the boy out of Yorkshire but not Yorkshire out of the boy and the £17 breakfast option was a sausage too far. Anyway John absorbed the blow well and got his face around his Egg McMuffin.

Again another chilly morning (and as it turned out chilly day) and we left the Hexham rush hour for Corbridge and a route that generally followed the River Tyne as the river progressed to the estuary and then the North Sea.

The road itself was straightforward to navigate and eventually gave way to a cycle path that actually took us all the way to the end of the Wall.

A former rail bridge now a path

Along the path we came across many walkers who were either starting out on the Hadrian’s Wall trek or finishing it. As we cycled we came across George Stephenson’s childhood home.

The home of George Stephenson the ‘Father of the Railways’ and the inventor of the steam locomotive

I have to say the walk through Newcastle is straightforward but involved a selection of Zebra, Puffin, Pelican and Toucan Crossings. (We both know you have no idea about the difference between these various ‘bird’ crossings yet the Highway Code would expect you to know. Shame on you). It might take a day or two at the start but for these hikers but the change to rugged paths and splendid views was going to be a tonic when it came.

Stops along the way were few and far between but we eventually came to rest at a Sicilian café a couple of miles from the centre. John liked the coffee so much he bought some to make back in Hampshire.

Soon we were in the heart of the city and passed under the various bridges before finding the continuing Route 72 signs toward Tynemouth.

Overall Day 4 was an easy ride with little climbing. In discussing the route beforehand John had been surprised that our local map had identified so many Morrisons. Me too. On closer examination John had misidentified the signs for the Newcastle Metro!

These ’72’ paths were not the actually route of the Wall: the wall was a little further north in a more urban part of the city.

At Wallsend we came to rest at Segedunum (‘Strong Fort’) Fort. This location was the site of the first fort along the Wall in the east. Up until the last few decades it was a large housing estate. They cleared it and exposed the foundations. A villa that housed some exhibits was closed as was part of the main building. In fact this whole site is run by an amalgamation of five local councils and was shabby in places and a little unloved. The Vindolanda Trust museums were frankly on another level of presentation and care.

The Fort was sited here by the Romans rather than along the estuary at Tynemouth because the fort could ‘police’ the countryside to the east with its view of the land. Also on the south bank there was another fort (Arbeia) should the pesky Scots/Picts fancy a swim. A reconstruction of what the original Wall looked like had been built. It must be added that a vallum and other impediments would have made it a completely daunting task to overcome. It’s also here that the Wall ends.

The site of the Fort
A reconstruction of the Wall and the end of the Wall

With photos taken we retraced our route back to the centre. Near the bridges we had the slightly daunting challenge of finding a route up the hill to where the station was located. A combination of bridge construction works and a road surface that was shamefully potholed made the ascent memorable. At the Station we booked the earliest train we could get for the hour’s journey south to York and until it arrived we ate chocolate and John listened to me moan about how cold I was.

In summary it’s got to be one of the best short rides in Europe with so much to see, so many important and unique places to stop and stay or eat and terrific rail links south to either end. We had a great time and John has passed Module 1 of cycle touring.

Hadrian’s Wall Ride 2025 – Day 3

We rolled out of Haltwhistle noting a distinct fall in temperature! As a man with drawers, in York, full of cycling kit for all the seasons I was rueful that I had believed the weather forecast. It advised that the week would get warmer rather than cooler and so hadn’t packed some leggings, a heavier cycling jacket, a long sleeve jersey and a buff. However, the granny wheel action got some blood pumping as our route abandoned the lower part of the valley near the Tyne and an ascent began up to Vindolanda. It was just before 9:30am when we got close to the museum with lots of time to spare and so I suggested Plan B – ‘let’s go up to the actual Wall’.

Cycling up the B6318, the former Roman military road below the Wall, we headed east to Housesteads Fort. On this roller coaster of a road we endured the chilly easterly headwind. On arrival at the Fort car park it was busy with a large group of walkers who sounded like they were either Dutch, Belgian Flemish or Welsh (with heavy colds). Climbing up to the Wall we set foot on the path and took some photos.

Practising to be a fierce guard on the Wall (fail)
On the Wall

I regaled John about my last visit here where leading some walkers I had the responsibility for a very elderly but determined lady who despite my request that she forsook the walk in the heavy rain and slippery conditions added to my concern by telling me that she’d had a replacement knee and shoulder. I let her walk this brief section before slipping down to the lower path yet I still wondered how long the Air Ambulance would take to get from Newcastle or Carlisle. After this we visited The Sill. This is a youth hostel with a very nice café. Fortified we headed up to Vindolanda.

This is ‘one I took earlier’ of a model of the fort layout. Now mysteriously not there now as you enter the site

This Fort and its subsequent small settlement had predated the Wall. The settlement was outside the Fort Walls and this is where the British lived and provided services, food etc for the Romans. Over the centuries Vindolanda had had nine separate forts. Four had been timber and the other five stone. When a Roman cohort left they broke down the fort. The next set of Romans built a new fort. It is this destruction that led to several foundations being compacted in wet ground. This wet ground preserved the artifacts that tell the story of the Fort over the 450 years of its occupation. The current custodians are very concerned that climate warming as it’s drying out the ground and probably destroying/damaging anything that is currently preserved in the ground.

Paddy gave a chilly tour of the site before we dived inside for something hot to eat. The museum itself is equally as fascinating and shows many of the artefacts.

Paddy, a retired accountant from Carlisle, in full flight

The weather had slightly warmed and we remounted for the cycle into Hexham. Most of this was delightful and the path took us beside the railway and Tyne before we ended up in the centre and our hotel.

To celebrate the Roman connection we had a pizza and then took a stroll around the town.

John waiting for a Stradivarius
Evening bowls

On a bright and clear evening this was delightful as we were invited to take up bowls! We declined and continued through the park before ending up at a violin repair shop. Here a lady told us all about the surprising skill set of the owner of the shop strangely located here in the sticks. Our next stop was for a beer that turned out to only be a half as the fire alarm went off!

Hadrian’s Wall Ride – Day 2

If there are any pleasures to be found in a Carlisle city centre hotel then breakfast was one. Normally it crosses your mind that having the equivalent of a ‘heart attack on a plate’ is bad despite your saintly consumption of cereal with skimmed milk as a starter.  However on a cycling ride you can console yourself that you’ll probably burn it all off later. On seeing the selection of cereals John and I reminisced on our school days. The cereals we got always came in these little Kellogg boxes and I can well remember that it was a ‘red letter day’ if you managed to get Coco Pops. (If you think about products that don’t change over decades then many foodstuffs are in this category.)

We emerged into the Carlisle rush hour from our hotel. but soon dived off the main road onto cycle paths. This is usually a traffic free experience but the path doubled up as a pedestrian path knee deep in school children ambling along, with their heads buried in their mobiles, to school. Despite the temptation to lay waste these barely sentient obstacles I dinged away on my bell to warn of our presence. As we nearly cleared the throngs of shuffling teenagers one bright specimen piped up to our backs that “bikes aren’t allowed on these paths!” Clearly the painting of large white bicycles on the path might have provided a clue I thought.

(The white square on my sunglasses is a rear view mirror)

As we cleared the city we were into the countryside. The traffic was light but the roads had started to go up and we climbed up several country lanes to arrive in Brampton. This market town seemed to be teeming. A coffee break ensued along with the surreptitious consumption of the remaining chocolate covered custard creams after the coffee had been delivered to our table. John was delegated with the procurement of sandwiches and I with crisps. John sadly failed as my cheese and tomato sandwich turned out to be the saddest abuse of sliced white bread, tomato and cheese I had experienced in many years. I absorbed the blow. Unluckily, for them, two American tourists from Portland, Oregon sat next to us at the cafe and establishing their home I felt compelled to tell them about the legendary Bob Sanders pedalling across the USA. Weirdly this conversation took place as a passing dog vomited in front of them. How they’ll treasure these encounters…

Anyway, refreshed we pedalled on into the real wilds and found that the road did start to climb seriously upwards. However as we started to live on the granny gears we stopped at Lanercost Priory. This is a delightful site with a Priory ruin and church. Inevitably Henry VIII shut the priory and sold off the building to a rich pal. What remains is still interesting.

Lanercost Priory (English Heritage)

Shortly after leaving we came across the Wall: our first actual sighting of the remnants. The first 30 miles was always earth, turf and timber.

The stone Walll starts at Banks

Sadly, It seems that it is only the last 150 years or so that the Wall has been properly respected and preserved. Over the centuries the stone in the Wall was taken for many local uses and I imagine there will be most farms that have a building or wall that was built from this Roman largesse. The Wall took six years to build and at one time 15,000 men worked on it. The stone mainly came from local quarries. The Wall was 3 metres thick and 4.2 metres high. Along the Wall were 80 milecastles that housed soldiers and gateways for the movement of people and livestock. (A Roman mile was slightly less than the mile we know.)

The ditch in front was called a vallum. Needless to say the structure must have appeared impenetrable

After the climb out of Banks we plateaued and came to rest at Birdoswald Fort. This was the most westerly Fort. To be frank the most impressive feature was the set of graphics and models inside the Visitor Centre. The other interesting thing about the remains was the high location and its imperious views of the surrounding countryside. On asking the staff why it was called Birdoswald they admitted they or no one else knew? A strong suspicion is that this name was latterly given to the Fort and it was called Banna before this. 

Some serious climbing was necessary to get to the Roman Army Museum. The last hill before we got there was steep enough to be a ski jump slope and before my heart leapt out of my chest I dismounted and pushed before resuming the ascent. This museum goes into the life of Emperor Hadrian and covers the life of the troops who were deployed on the Wall and how they went about their training and responsibilities.

After all this culture it was time to descend into Haltwhistle where we were billeted in a pub on the main drag. In discussing dinner options with the Receptionist she said that Tuesday was tapas night across the road at a hotel. That sounded brilliant and after a shower and a pint in the fading sunshine at a nearby pub we further toasted our day with a glass of vino over our patatas bravas, chorizo and other plates.

They were inordinately proud of this award!
The day’s ride. 30 miles and 2,074 feet climbing

Hadrian’s Wall Ride – Day 1

I suspect on these pages I’ve written about Hadrian’s Wall before but it’s still topical, not least because it’s a wonderful and intriguing piece of our British history and the fact that it offers a wonderful route across the north of England with delightful scenery and antiquity. 

I first got interested in the area in 2020 when Anna and I took a short break up at Hexham and ventured onto the wall for a bit of a walk. Anna remembers it will as she slipped on the mud, that comprised the path, and sat in her coat in a soggy puddle! It was touch and go as to whether I would allow her into the car.

Later that year I ventured back up in the Morgan to investigate the Vindolanda Fort, the site of a world class museum that was one of the first locations in the UK where archaeology discovered the written word. Frankly, I was blown away by this Fort and the stories and histories it divulged. If you’ve not been then what’s wrong with you?

From here my visits were about taking holidaymakers there as a guide, whether walking or cycling. One of the delights that never failed to draw literal sighs of pleasure was Sycamore Gap. Here where the wall dips down between two cliffs a glorious and iconic tree stood. Sadly we know that the tree was felled for no good reason by two vandals who will find out their sentence in July. Let’s hope it reflects this awful act.

My image taken in May 2022

Stretching back nearly as long ago as the building of this 84 mile long barrier was my friendship with John. Fortunately John, judging by the look of him, has fared better than the Wall over the 60 years we have known each other. We met at Ashville College, Harrogate in 1966. We were both very young boarders at Ashville’s preparatory school, New College. John moved south at 16 and stayed down that way (poor soul, I know.) Our contact has been intermittent but includes the honour of being his Best Man at his marriage to Pip.

I’ve hardly changed since 1988.

So when John contacted me about his own idea to cycle Hadrian’s Wall I invited myself onto the ride! He never objected. Using my knowledge of the ride, the sightseeing and possible accommodation solutions we agreed a date and I got down to booking hotels and trains. John’s worries weren’t about my itinerary but how much fitter I’d be cycling after my well documented adventures. As it turned out John did quite a bit of training in the hilly areas of Hampshire and turned up fit. He actually turned out to be quite an athlete and got round well with no hitches or stress. So leaving the house we cycled to York Railway station and embarked on the straightforward trundle to Carlisle.

The only problem arose in arriving in Newcastle and finding the platform for the Carlisle train that was so tight for time that a coffee couldn’t be procured. However in Carlisle we girded our loins to cycle west to the ‘start’. This was at Bowness-on-Solway. Here the Wall was originally earth and timber and had disappeared several centuries ago. However before that we popped into Carlisle Cathedral. This magnificent building has quite a history with lots of graphics as well as impressive vistas.

Around the church we found a custard cream.

These little metal biscuits have QR codes with them that if scanned open up web pages giving you the history of the monument, building, sight or whatever they’re sited next to. Why a custard cream I hear you all ask? Well, McVitie’s and Carr are located in the centre of the town where one of their iconic products is this biscuit. Did you know 65 million are made here per year?

Frankly, yet unsurprisingly, I got a little excited by this because this biscuit is made even more supreme by covering it in thick milk chocolate. I felt compelled to share this vital information with strangers. So I did to a very kind elderly lady volunteer in the Cathedral who heard me out. She no doubt thought that this idiot, in hi viz cycling lycra, would shortly be gone and so adopted Plan A: smile sweetly. I felt that after this revelation we should pop back to M&S Food where these treasures appeared from and buy her a packet. The look on her face, on receipt, said ‘idiot, but with biscuits’.

Anyway after all this there was the small matter of turning the pedals to get to the start in Bowness. It was flat all the way and keeping the estuary to our left we ate up the 13 miles to find the formal start.

Forgot to breath in

Catriona took the photo. She was a middle aged hiker with a slightly furrowed brow who was walking alone and planned to start the Wall tomorrow. It did strike me as we chatted that this may be something of a retreat for her as she strode off heading east the next day; no doubt seeking exercise, history and possibly inspiration. The walk is a lot more ‘true’ to the old Wall location than the cycle route where we dodge around it on local roads but we would meet walkers from time to time. Anyway it was a sandwich in Bowness and then back to Carlisle. Also we additionally fuelled for our journey with another chocolate coated custard cream. They’re addictive.

Solway estuary behind us

Bob 3 – A Guinness World Record

My blog ‘Texas Odyssey 2025 – Bob 2’ was about Bob Sanders epic cycle ride from San Diego in California to St Augustine in Florida in a plan of becoming the oldest person to ride across the USA since 2023 when, the mere stripling at the age of 78, Bruce Closser did it. Bob is 85 years old, yet, any dealings with Bob will make you wonder if this is a mistake as he has the energy, determination and fitness of folk several decades younger.

After meeting Bob in Texas in mid April we returned to the UK and left Bob to roll on toward Florida’s east coast. As a busy cyclist communication with his audience, as he toiled every day, was limited with occasional photographs but little else. I compared this situation to being sat in NASA’s Houston Mission Control as the various Apollo craft disappeared behind the moon preventing all radio contact. As then eventually communication would be established and all was well.

Bob kept to his schedule and arrived in St Augustine, Florida after completing the crossing in 44 days (49 overall including rest days) and having accumulated 3,010 miles. Bob did tell a local news website in his home state of Oregon –  “I’ll tell you one thing, without hesitation, I wouldn’t do it again.” Frankly, there’s no need as this record will stand for a long time. I think his lack of enthusiasm may be influenced by his now considerable administration of collating the photos, videos, witness forms, daily logs, and GPS tracking information that the Guinness Records require in order to confirm his achievement. However this won’t be completed perched on a thin saddle in 30 to 40°C heat in a headwind.

Congratulations Bob. I’m truly in awe.

If I have any female readers I must advise of an exceptional opportunity: the current record is held by Lynnea Salvo who sauntered across at the age of 73. Frankly a babe in arms. This was her second crossing although it must be added she did warm up earlier by acquiring the oldest female records for cycling North to South (in the USA) and then across Canada. If you need advice, I know a man.

Texas Odyssey 2025 – Bob 2 – Part 7  

I had Bob’s schedule and his email address and I’d communicated to tell him that there was a possibility we could meet. The meeting depended on where Bob was toward the time we were leaving the USA. The last thing I wanted to do was bombard Bob with messages or requests for updates on his progress. He was under enough pressure as it was. Hence our decision not to book any accommodation over the last few days to see where we needed to be. By the way the record is held by a mere stripping, Bruce Closser, who got into the record books in 2016 at the age of 78. Not only will Bob get the record but it seems inconceivable it will be broken for many years to come. Just being prepared to document for tens of days to satisfy the organisation that runs these records may have put off other riders.

Bob’s cycling route

Bob had been posting some images taken on his ride:

Bob took this stunning image in Rodeo, New Mexico.

‘The Wall’ on the Mexican border at Jacumba Springs in California.

Lunch on the road. Look at all that sun. It looks so hot. One of the party here rode with Bob for a week and Jack, on the right, is the support.

So by emails and then telephone we agreed that we’d meet in Del Rio. That meant our driving 175 miles west (Texas is a big State!) to the Mexican border to say hello. He planned to be there early on our second to last day in Texas. We drove to the town and phoned Bob. Where was he? Well he was around the town and ironically we’d passed him on the road but not known it. In our faulty understanding, from the telephone call, I set off up a road where after several miles we couldn’t find him. Anna then asserted that I was wrong and that he was going in the opposite direction. We drove back. Pleasingly she was also wrong! 

Anyway another call and under instructions we stayed put in the car park of the Motel 6 and Bob and Jack came into view. Jack is his support man trailing or parking up the road in advance as Bob trundles on. He carries the luggage and ferries Bob around when he’s not pedalling. Jack also gives Bob’s bride, Kathryn, comfort that out in the wilds of this wide country he has a guardian Angel. A true star in this record breaking ride.

A man in awe meets a legend

So with 1,500 miles under his belt since San Diego we met Bob. What a man. Fit as a fiddle, jovial and insistent on buying Anna and myself a meal and having a beer.

Bob’s ridden this Southern Tier route before and knew what to expect. (For what it’s worth I have also ridden several hundred miles of this route from New Orleans to the Florida coast in 2015.) on this ride he was disappointed by the headwinds and some days were tougher than others but he’d rolled along ticking off the targets and was shortly to release Jack back to Oregon whilst Kathryn took over the support duties around San Antonio. We joked that the regime might be tightened up with a few more rules and admonishments when his wife took over!

We were interested in the detail of the ride including tyres, road surfaces, lodgings etc. However, the stories that make these trips so memorable started to flow. The best was when staying at Van Horn,TX it was the same time Katy Perry and her homies borrowed Jeff Bezos’ rocket for a 11 minute spin in space. (Van Horn is close to the launch site.) The celebrities in the rocket had had friends come to Van Horn to see off their pals. Some had arrived from NYC to cheer film producer Kerianne Flynn, in a stretched limo, and were staying at the Motel 6 where Bob and Jack were. Needless to say the friends/young ladies themselves were glamorous and barely noticed these old guys lurking around the hotel until it was volunteered that Bob was also going into the record books. Instant kudos.

Later that evening at a swankier hotel in town the girls all bowled up in their finery and were an immediate attraction to the younger men in the vicinity. However, on Bob and Jack’s arrival there was a demand by the girls for selfies and mobile/cell phones were swapped for a selection of snaps. Bob showed us the photos. I was impressed! I was too discreet to enquire what happened later that night but I know I’d have been looking at the inside of my eyelids fairly early after a long bike ride, a few beers and the thought of another 80 miles the next day. Another story involved meeting the lead singer of an Indie Rock band (Big Thief) near the Wall who was worried she was being followed by a drone. She was, the Border Patrol were tracking her!

Anna and I were privileged to sign a Guinness World Record witness statement. They were amassing tens of pages. We are now part of the history. Then it was time to go as Bob and Jack had to check in and then do their administration and Bob also wanted to give his Surly Disc Trucker a good look over and clean prior to the next ride toward the Hill Country. 

We said our fond farewells in the car park when Bob was hailed by a burly chap in a pick-up. This guy it turned out to be part of a railroad gang who’d been working and staying out west when Bob and Jack were staying in the same place. There, they’d offered a beer and BBQ meal to these weary travellers. Again the kindness of strangers was evident and here in Del Rio they’d met up again by chance.

Anna and I had the small matter of heading east to be in striking distance of Austin to fly back the next day. We had another 120 miles to drive to our accommodation up the I90. Anna and I drove away elated at the meet up.

I shall keep you informed of Bob’s progress in the blog.

So our vacation was over and the long trek to Heathrow and then York began. By the time the car was returned to Thrifty at the airport I’d driven 2,500 miles. 

FINISH

Texas Odyssey 2025 – Bob – Part 6

I think about my 2014 bicycle ride across America one way or another every day. It was an amazing nine weeks of adventure, phenomenal effort, awesome scenery and some new friendships. I’d call it the adventure of a lifetime as well as an item ticked off my bucket list. It was 3,900 miles of scary freedom across nine States not knowing when the next Kentucky dog would chase you or where you could fill up an empty water bottle in the sometimes 40°C heat. The cycle route was laid down on maps and either millennials, wondering what to do with their lives after graduation, or physically fit retirees, with time on their hands and still a head full of dreams. Cyclists would appear coming the other way and you’d stop and engage in a sort of 5 minute speed date before waving goodbye with one heading east and the other heading west. On July 25 2014 I met a guy as I cycled through Virginia. This was Bob Sanders. He was nearing the end; I was passing through my first State. We talked about the route, lodgings and he volunteered a calling card with his personal details on it. I pocketed it. He said that this wasn’t his first long distance ride, he was 75 and was looking forward to reaching the coast where after meeting up with his wife he had some respects to pay for some fallen comrades. He was a Vietnam War veteran. We shook hands, parted and cycled on.

Bob Sanders in 2014
Photo by Bob of you know who

Subsequently we’ve corresponded over the years and both of us continued on our two wheel adventures. Mine are well documented here on the web site. When Bob recently dropped into an email that he was going to ride across the USA for the fifth time and nail the Guinness World Record by being the oldest person, at 85, to do this I was literally blown away. Riding across the country with the wind, the sun, the variable quality lodgings and food, the potential bike issues, the endless minutiae of the logistics and all those long hills, day after day, was not an easy undertaking irrespective of your age, fitness, experience and mindset. It’s also an expensive project if you think of getting to the start, home from the finish, the hotels, the food and incidentals etc.

However, adding to the above was satisfying the Guinness World Record rules. The route has to be submitted in advance and be a minimum agreed distance, your own credentials needed confirming and then the verification process on the journey included obtaining witness statements repeatedly daily as well as completing a daily video record. It’s one thing to actually do this as well as the small matter of riding, maybe, 80 miles daily including 3,000 feet of climbing. All this needs collecting and documenting. What a determination and energy on and off the bike!

So whilst I’m sat in wintery York admiring Bob’s plan Anna had booked two weeks in Texas. She knew nothing of Bob’s record attempt. I’d not had sight of Bob’s itinerary and hadn’t worked out that maybe our paths could cross. Slowly but surely I woke from my metaphorical slumber and calculated that if Bob met his daily schedule there was a good chance by our driving west on our second to last day we could rendezvous. If you’ve read my other blogs you’ll know that Anna and I had a busy schedule all around the southern part of Texas and so this meeting would be a bolt on if Bob did the miles.

Stay tuned.

Cycling – Sydney to Canberra to Adelaide – February 2024

At long last I’ve an opportunity to escape the English winter and spend a month cycling in the heat. Australia was an obvious pick albeit it is a long way away! The ease comes with the language, quality of the campsites, weather and my desire to see more of the country.

I cycled there in 2020 until I was pulled out of the country at a couple of days notice due to the onset of Covid 19. That exciting trip, which included losing my passport, torrential rain, meeting an old friend and time in three major cities – Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane is covered in a series of blogs starting with the first (click here). That was a ride from Melbourne, across country to Sydney and then onto Brisbane up the coast. I’d intended to cycle further north to Cairns. However, I got to drive it in reverse with Anna in 2023 but the itch for Australia still remained to be scratched but on two wheels.

In compiling another bike ride I wanted to see Adelaide and Canberra. I looked at a coastal ride via Melbourne but the road route meant quite a lot of time on a motorway hard shoulder. I did this last time and whilst direct and never dangerous it obviously lacked a lot of charm. A trip across country and maybe a little sightseeing in the outback appealed. Frankly this is where you find the real Australia rather than the inevitable diverse selection of folk and concrete sprawl of the large cities.

My planned route is below although things usually change when I’m on tour. There will a lot climbing to start with on the first couple of days and then things seem to flatten out but with, often, undulating terrains. The weather seems to be late 20’s or early 30°C throughout. Checking on the weather in Australia can be a peek through your fingers activity with the potential of out of control bush fires or flooding, however, I’m not anticipating any of that on this route but if things do deteriorate I’ll find somewhere else to cycle in the country.

Sydney to Canberra to Adelaide. 1,100 miles

I will be blogging, as and when, I get the time but I may more frequently put some videos and snaps up on Instagram so please follow me.

Deniliquin is 450 miles from Sydney in a dry scrubby landscape with a population of 7,500. However it does have pies. I plan to be ‘Australian’ on arrival

In the meanwhile it’s been about getting and maintaining fitness. Normally during this cold weather without a trip in mind I’d cycle regularly but not long distances. However, given the ride in Australia it’s been necessary to gird my loins, wrap up and do the miles. The coldest I’ve had this winter is 1.8°C and when it’s not been perishing I’ve had flood detours to contend with. I’ve never seen York so underwater! Anyway, as they say, it’ll be worth it.

Hope to see you on the road.