Tag Archives: Richard Burton

The Tour of Reading… bike shops

Just seen a very retro-looking Ridgeback in here. It looked sturdy and up for the job. But I want something that is a bit more sleek and swish. Problem is that in the cycling world those words don’t fit comfortably with mundane words like touring and panniers. Mr Cyclezone also mentioned the Dawes Galaxy which I think Richard Burton has gone for. Earlier in err… forgotten the name of the shop, I was shown a nice Trek that is a possibility. It’s only 1pm so I’ll head off to AW Cycles in North Reading, sorry, Caversham – my cycle supplier of choice to hear what they have to say.

More from Essex

Andrew
Just got back from the first ride of the year. It was alot harder than i remember. Not helped by the potholes in the roads. I’m fortunate to live on a cycle route so at least there’s not much traffic. Loads of cyclists though. Found myself in the middle of a race. The support vehicle followed me for a while. I must have looked like i was going to collapse. I need to start some serious training.
Back to the shopping trip.
I did what i try to get my customers to do, impulse buy. Only went window shopping but found a really light tent in the sale so i bought it. It’s the Terra Nova Competition. I think it’s the one that you had already mentioned. Can’t believe how light it is. Had a look at bikes but they are all waiting for the new stock so there wasn’t much to see. I’ve narrowed it down online to the Dawes Vantage at spacycles or the Dawes Horizon. 40LTR Ortlieb panniers look big enough for my kit. Also bought a lightweight sleeping bag and mattress.
Had a little look at stoves but i’d be interested to know your thoughts on these.
Richard

News fom the Far East (Essex)

It looks like I am not the only one who is relieved to see the back of the snow and ice. Richard, my cycling companion from Brussels to Strasbourg(ish) writes:
Hi Andrew
Hope you’re keeping well. Can finally get out on the bike today. Just thought I’d give you a quick update. Purchased maps of uk and Europe. Plotted the final route to dartford but also bidding on a GPS to maybe save time map reading. Follow cycle route 1 and 16 from Dartford to Dover. This I will do as soon as the weather warms up. Looking at routes from Calais to Brussels. Found the canals but very unclear on the roads to take. This part to be done in May. Fell into the January sales trap yesterday and purchased a tent, sleeping bag and mattress. Visited bike shops to look at panniers and bikes but think I will get these online. How’s your plan coming along?
Speak to you soon.
Richard
I’ll be interested to find out which tent he has bought. If you remember I spent much time last summer debating the pros and cons of different tents. Mark Beaumont even emailed with his thoughts! I never bought one as I chose to use hostels instead. I will, however, need to buy one before the summer as the flexibility a tent can offer is invaluable.

George: My Response

Hi George
Thanks for your email – your enthusiasm is infectious!
I’m glad to be in touch with another person who is interested in the Eurovelo 5. My initial enthusiasm was not the Eurovelo 5, simply an interest in cycling and a wish to do something a bit more exciting one summer. I have a friend who has a small house in Puglia, Italy and I visited him and his wife a couple of years ago when they were there for the summer so I put two and two together and came up with the idea of cycling to southern Italy. I then discovered the pilgrimage route – the Via Francigena (I’m not in the least bit religious but it does add an element of history to the whole thing) and via that discovered the European Cycle Network and the route number 5.
Although I cycle every day to work – a round journey of around 12 miles – I had never done ever longer distance cycling over a period of anything more than one day so that is why last summer I cycled from the northern most town of England, Berwick-upon-Tweed to the English midlands, a journey of around 300 miles. I survived and the next step is the big one to Italy in the summer and if you have read the blog, you are probably up to date with my plans.
The blog was initially simply a way of organising my thoughts and plans but then other people found it and it seems to have become one of the main sources of reference for details about the Eurovelo 5. I have been in touch with quite a few people around the World and will be meeting up with a few of them over the next few months to chat about things EV5. One person – Richard – is potentially going to join me for the portion of the trip from Strasbourg to Switzerland which should be interesting.
Your comments are interesting and I’ve had a good look at your own blog. It doesn’t surprise me that you had difficulties following the route. From the information I could find, I have come to the conclusion that the EV5 is not sign posted much and that it piggy-backs upon other national routes, for example down the Rhine or from Calais through to Belgium along the canals or through Italy following either the national routes number 1 or 3. That said, I’m not sure whether I will be able to afford the time to follow slavishly the routes as marked. I did this over the summer when I cycled in England, following the Pennine Cycleway, route number 68. It held me back as it, quite rightly, made a point of keeping me on very minor roads or more often than not on cyclable off road paths. But sometimes, I just needed to get a bit of distance under my belt. I think next summer, I will take a pragmatic approach to the route that I follow. First of all, I don’t want to do it in a shorter period of time as I possibly can. I have six weeks at my disposal so the 80 miles per day distance is an average that I need to hit to make it from one end to the other (with a few rest days built in). I read stories about people cycling the route in 10 days. This is not for me: I want a holiday as well as a physical challenge! Where the Eurovelo 5 route allows me to make good time – and I’m sure it often will – I will follow it. However, there will be times where I deviate and take a minor road to make up distance. I would never get to Brindisi in time if I were to do anything otherwise.
I haven’t yet decided how much of the route planning I will do prior to setting off. I will try work out which places to stay in along the way – I plan on camping so villages / towns with campsites are invaluable each day – and then have a rough route planned on the 1:200,000 maps that I talked about in one of my posts last week. If there are local routes to follow – as mentioned above – I will consider following them and I would imagine that more often than not, I will.
So that is my approach to route planning. You mention GPS. I’ve never used it simply because I’ve never needed it. I’ve seen others use it and have occasionally played with the GPS function on my mobile phone but nothing more than that. I hope this doesn’t make me sound like some kind of Luddite – I love the technology side of the trip (the blog, keeping it updated en route etc…) but I do love maps. I love to pour over them and see not just where I am going and where I have been but also to see what is in the next valley or discover that the train line that I have been following branches off to go through a tunnel in the distance only to reappear in somewhere completely off my route – that kind of thing. However, I would love to work out how I can log my route discretely so that others can see where I am and also so that at a later date I can see exactly where I have been. I think this might be possible via my mobile phone and Google – I’ll have to investigate. Clearly, as mentioned above, the technology to do that involves GPS.
All that said, I’m certainly up for assisting your work in any way I can. I think that the Eurovelo 5 does need someone to create a definitive route: I only wish I had the time to do it myself. If you know of anyone who is happy to pay me to do it, let me know !
Keep in touch and keep me updated with your plans – they sound very exciting!
Best wishes
Andrew

New Year Exchanges with Essex

From: Richard
To: Andrew
Subject: Maps

Hi Andrew,
Hope you’ve had a good Christmas. I see you’ve been busy on the blog. I’ve started telling people about my plans and am very much committed and excited about the trips. I think I will plan to try meet you in Brussels if all goes well. I have started looking into routes from mine to Dover on Sustrans. Do you think it is a better idea to stick rigidly to the cycle routes or go for the shortest route? Also I see you have purchased maps for northern France and Belgium. I was thinking of buying these and wondered if we could have a chat about possible routes from Calais to Brussels.

Speak to you soon.
Regards
Richard

From: Andrew
To: Richard
Subject: Maps

Hi Richard
Thanks for the email and I’m glad you’ve gone for the Brussels to ??? bit of the trip. I’ve never really discovered that little corner of Europe (the bit going south from Brussels through Luxembourg and then down the Rhine towards Switzerland) and it will certainly be one of the most interesting bits. As for getting from Essex to Dover, well, you are kind-of lucky in that you could follow the National Cycle Network route 1 more or less all the way to Dover. That said, you make a good point about whether it’s a good idea to follow the route or go for the shortest route. Last summer I followed the cycle path as closely as I could and it did hold me back with constant junctions, referring to the map all the time etc… It did slow me down. I think the best thing to do is to follow the cycle path where appropriate (when it is along a canal or disused railway line for example) and then use minor roads to make up the distance.
As for getting from Calais to Brussels, the blurb in the official description of the EV5 says the following:
“In Dover the white cliffs wait for you. Channel crossing by train or ferry to France at Calais. Then you follow Canal de Calais to Saint Omer signed as LF1 and continue through Lille / Roubaix into Belgium. Here you follow the river / canal Escaut, which is the border between Fanders and Wallonia and then through Ronse and into Brussels.”
I haven’t actually looked at the map yet to work out the detail of the route but I’ll be basing it on that description – it sounds flat (on canals!). Let me know if you manage to plan anything more detailed. Obviously you will be cycling that bit before me so I’ll let you take the lead on this part of the journey!
Best wishes to you and your family in 2010.

Speak soon – keep me updated with your plans.
Andrew

End of 2009 Summary

I’m on the train en route home after Christmas with my family and thought I would use the time to pull the strands of my preparation for my trip to Puglia in the summer together. Let’s kick off with the route. That is more or less in place: National Cycle Network routes 4 and 1 from Reading to Dover via London, follow the canals to Brussels and then use the route maps supplied by Jean-Marie Vion all the way to the Great St Bernard’s pass. That’s where he and his cycling mates finished but I will of course continue south following the Pilgrim Cycle Route number 3 of the Italian Cycle Network. That takes me all the way to Brindisi. So that’s the route. Other people: never really thought that anyone would be interested in what I am planning but how wrong could I have been? Ian Hendry in Adelaide is cycling from London to Rome a few weeks before me and I hope to meet up with him when he arrives in the UK. It will be interesting to compare plans and then maintain contact as he cycles ahead of me. Jonathon Scott – the other Australian – is doing Rome – London earlier in the year. Again, it would be interesting to meet up with him when he arrives in London to use him as a source of advice and guidance, albeit in reverse! It would be interesting to have a beer with the aforementioned Jean-Marie Vion in Brussels. He sounds like an experienced cyclist and come that point in the journey, I may need some advice and guidance. Brussels is also, of course the point at which I will hopefully be joined by Richard Burton (if he has managed to do the Essex to Belgium bit earlier in the year otherwise he may join me earlier). Richard is able to stay with me for about a week to ten days so I imagine that will mean somewhere between Strasbourg and Switzerland. I have wondered whether contacting either Claus, my friend in Stuttgart or / and Richard Laid, a teacher in Reading who I haven’t seen for a while but who has a flat in the Alps where he spends his summers (or did the last time I spoke to him). It is further to the west than my route over the mountains but he is a keen cyclist and if he is in the area he may want to join me for a few days. Can’t imagine Claus will be up for cycling but he and his new wife may fancy meeting up on one of my rest days. Once into Italy I have no firm contacts until south of Rome where Massimo and his friends are expecting me. Not sure what that will entail! Finally, a warm welcome is guaranteed in Brindisi by Basil and Liz. Equipment wise, I imagine that a new bike is on the cards. That Bianchi might just be too tempting and then there is the tent. I will have to revisit all my research prior to last summer’s trip before I decided that I would stay in hostels instead. So that is a rough summary of my planning so far. Like all good plans, it will of course change… Roll on 2010!

A Chat with Richard Burton

I just had a good telephone conversation with Richard Burton, the guy who contacted me last week and who is interested in doing some of the journey from the UK to Puglia with me next summer. Here is his picture from his own website! We chatted about different aspects of the trip and why we came to be planning our respective long-distance cycling adventures. We made no decisions about anything apart from meeting up in the New Year sometime - I suggested one of the weekends at either end of the February half term holiday - in London to chat further about collaboration. We discussed how it may be a better idea for him to join me for the bit of the trip from Brussels to somewhere further south but ultimately that depends upon whether he is able to do the bit(s) from Essex to Brussels before July of next year – two long weekends should enable him to get Brussels I would have thought (he doesn’t have the luxury of a six-week holiday in the summer so is planning on doing his UK to Rome trip in chucks over an extended period of time). I’ll leave the decision entirely up to him. I did promise to let him know as soon as possible a definitive date for my departure and that means asking for my three days of extra holiday from school when we return in January. My plan, if you remember, is to set off on either Sunday 18th or Monday 19th July but the school year doesn’t finish until Wednesday 21st. With just over 200 days to go, it really does feel as though my plan is now starting to come together but that means I have to start making decisions; so much of the project to date has “could”, “may”, “might” etc… in most of its sentences.

Three (slightly edited) emails….

I was only thinking earlier this week that no-one had been in contact for quite a few weeks about the blog and cycle to Italy…. and then this happens:

From: “Richard Burton”
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 3:17 PM
To: Andrew
Subject: Puglia 2010

Hi Andrew
I keep getting drawn back to your blog and I am very envious of the trip you’re planning. I was thinking of cycling the same route but breaking it up into a few visits as I couldn’t get five weeks off work in one go. I was wondering if you were looking for any company for a week or ten days at the beginning of your trip. I was thinking I would cycle as far as I could and then get the train back. Then return later in the year to continue where I left off.
Let me know your thoughts and if you think it’s feasible.
I took up cycling at the beginning of the year and train a couple of times a week. I did the Brighton 50 in September and it’s now made me want to take on the world.
I’m 42 and my girlfriend says I’m having my midlife crisis. She may be right.
Kind regards
Richard Burton

From: Andrew
Subject: Re: Puglia 2010
To: “Richard Burton”
Date: Saturday, 12 December, 2009, 8:00

Hi Richard
Thanks for the email and glad you are following the blog which sometimes has little to do with cycling to Italy next summer!
Interesting proposition! …. Having some company would be an interesting thing to consider, especially in those first couple of weeks of the ride. I suppose I am at a bit of a disadvantage here as I know little about you apart from the fact that you are 42, you cycle and share a name with a famous actor. My life is on the blog, or most of it…
I did a search on Facebook with your email address but nothing came up apart from a prompt to invite you to join Facebook so that is what I did – you will have already received the email. Where are you based? Are you the kind of person who would drive another person nuts if they had to spend 11 days with you? Do you have convictions related to violence? That kind of thing etc…
Apologies for the delay in responding by the way. I tend not to function on any level apart from work from Monday 5.30pm to Friday 5pm. My postings at 4am on the blog mid-week are because I can’t sleep due to the stresses and strains of being a teacher….
Look forward to hearing from you
Best wishes
Andrew
PS: I have put a small reference to your email on the blog – nothing too detailed – hope you don’t mind. :)

From: “Richard Burton”
Sent: Saturday, December 12, 2009 18:40 PM
To: Andrew
Subject: Puglia 2010

Hi Andrew
I haven’t joined Facebook yet as my daughter says I’m too old and I may embarrass her if her friends see me on there.
I live just outside Clacton in Essex with my girlfriend and our three children and work for ourselves, so we are limited to time off. …. I don’t think I’m the type to drive anyone nuts and I don’t have any convictions for violence. Although there was one time when… just kidding.
I started the cycling to get fit and now have the bug. So I did a little bit of research and chose a route in Europe that I could do in stages, then I came across your blog.
I was surprised to find someone else looking at doing the same route.
I was thinking (I’m still in the thinking stage) of setting off from Clacton and taking 2 days to get to Dover. Then following the Eurovelo 5 as far as I could but I can’t seem to find a very detailed map. I’m not sure whether I would camp or stay in cheap b&b’s. Here comes the cheeky bit. I was wondering whether you would consider sharing your route with me. Either by meeting up each day and setting off alone or by riding some parts together. I am only in the very early thinking stage and I’m not expecting a yes or no. But it will give you another thing to think about. Sorry.
Regards
Richard
PS
I like the breaking news.

Contact with the Other Side

I have been contacted by a certain Richard Burton. Could it really be the man himself emailing back from the dead? More to follow soon….