Thursday 29 September 2011

The dog poo was an omen...

skating through it twice just cursed me completely. However, looking on the bright side, judging by the speeds I attained on wednesday it certainly seems to act as a top notch bearing lubricant.

I was already nervous about this trip - after all I would have the pungent aroma of doggedly determined dregs of the doggy doodah stuck in my wheels' nooks & crannies for an hour & a half on the way up there.

Plus the hills. The Hill Fear was upon me.

At least the sun was shining; forecast 25 degrees mmm. Although the damp from the early dew was lingering unnervingly late into the morning...which obviously meant I should head to Wilfs for a time-killing, moisture-beating cake/coffee breakfast frenzy.

Hmmm decisions, decisions - exotic fruit muffin or tiffin? You're right - it had to be both.


Thirty minutes later, fully fuelled up on caffeine & sugar I parked the car at Ings church & ventured off up the cyclepath next to the main Windermere road. Flat, smooth & easy going with the sun on my back & the wind in my hair. Well, the sun on my back anyway.

I hit the first hill five minutes later: suprisingly easy!

Ok, it wasn't much of a hill but hey, I'm from flat as a pancake Southport - this was like Everest! Particularly when I neared the summit & encountered the slippy stuff in the shade. Whoo boy, that early dew, mixed with moss, leaves & greasy rubber residue from tyre tracks was a lethal cocktail.



If you've seen me barefoot running you know how like John Cleese I can look. Well, the only way to describe how I looked negotiating this stuff is to combine the John Cleese silly walk with the ambling duck-like shuffle of Charlie Chaplin. Drunk. On skates. Sometimes backwards.







On cresting the summit I looked down on a vista of loveliness...& terror. The view ahead of the Lakes from this point is gorgeous: but there is one big monkey of a downhill to get there. Also, the first fifty metres or so were in the shade. Hmmm.

T stopping works really well on the flat. On hills, less well. On slippy, mossy steep mothers of mountains not at all.



Of course, I didn't realise this for the first five seconds of the descent. Then, I got scared; but possibly not as scared as the two Japanese girls walking a couple of dogs at the bottom of the hill were as I plummeted towards them at mach 1. I gestured wildly for them to move to their left post haste. So naturally they froze. Somehow I managed to squeeze between them, yelled "sorry"& left the scene rapidly; not looking back, so they wouldn't get a good look at my face & so be unable to give the police a good description.

Windermere & escape arrived not a moment too soon.

I hurriedly darted off down a side road. I shouldn't have done because it was, yep you guessed - steep, shady & slippy & I careered into a dry stone wall.

Pinballing my way down the lane found me a couple of minutes later in quiet, residential back streets. Nice, flat sunlit streets. I'd never seen a council estate as an oasis before.

Bemused postmen & little old ladies looked askance at me as I skated bruised, battered & bloody quick away from vengeful Yakuza squads & karate kicks.

Hitting the first country lane was a relief. Safe at last.



Until at the top of the hill & around the corner came the next roller coaster section of road. Unlike a real roller coaster, the fun bits for me were the uphills. Slow, methodical & safe. This downhill section was a Disneyland scale nightmare: gentle sunny beginning to lull me into a false sense of security & then the epic 20% gradient descent in the greasy shade began. Having earlier ascertained that T stopping doesn't work on wet hills I nevertheless wobbled around one footedly trying to slow myself down from about thirty mph as around the corner came a vision from hell. Yep, a BMW. Fortunately, not driven by the Yakuza, but still on my side of the road. Well, strictly speaking on the same side of the road as myself. Ahem. Anyway to much to his amusement I threw myself sideways to perform a classic hip/elbow/shoulder loss of skin & blood stop. This worked a treat, in that I came to a stop without hitting the accursed BMW, and that I lost much skin. And any pride I had left.

The driver of the demon car graciously stopped to make sure I was alive before laughing cruelly & driving off.

I took what was left of my hip skin & skated off into the relative calm of some rather nice single track country lane.



The whole route so far had had really good quality surfaces. Ranging between 7 to 9/10 on the dodgy tarmac quality scale. The single track kept up the quality but had a fair bit of loose gravel mixed in with it too. Plus the usual mossy greasy bits. Plus a few puddles. Oh, and some sheep poo for good measure. All good fun.






The last three miles of the single track was a lovely meander through hill & vale, tranquil and bucolic with scattered woods and ancient farms dotted about. Luckily the rabid farm dogs that thought I was a dream target of a sheep on wheels were on t'other side of the fence.




The biggest hill was saved til last. This one had everything. Loose
gravel, sheep poo,
puddles of something that I hoped was water but probably wasn't; and an old farmer leaning on his walking stick watching me.

I had to look cool. I had to skate down this malevolent mountain without breaking a sweat. I had no bloody chance.

I shot off like a bat out of hell confident that now most of the dampness in the shade had dried off I'd be able to slow myself down. The loose gravel was having none of it. Stones flew left and right as I dragged my by now well worn wheels vainly behind me. Clouds of dust & grit followed in my one footed wake. This seemed to go on forever. I rounded a bend at about thirty mph, sheer will power keeping me vertical...and the magical mantra "don't fall with the farmer watching don't fall with the farmer watching".

Somehow I made it alive to the end of the lane and grabbed onto a gate to halt my progress. The farmer was by now out of sight so I prised my hands from the gate and wiped the flies from my sweating forehead and pootled as nonchalantly as I could back to the waiting car.

Just one more thing to do before I could rest my weary bones. Eat cake.

Yep, a quick mile & a half skate down the cyclepath saw me safely esconced at Wilfs in Staveley once again.

Tshirt, skates & socks off and lying on the bench next to me drying in the sun. Job done.

Would I do it all over again? Do you think I'm mad!? Yeah, you're right I am & I would, like a shot - it was fantastic.

Tuesday 27 September 2011

Look, I'll be honest with you...

I'm nervous about the Wednesday skate. There are hills. Big ones, little ones, roughly tarmaced ones, with whopping big pot holes. Sheep poo. Sheep poo on the bends on the hills...
With sheep in attendance?
I actually skated through dog poo today for the first time. Twice. Not on purpose, as a way of preparing myself for the more rural equivalent, just out of gormlessness. But I do feel like I can take on any variety of excrement you care to throw at me now; and having encountered a few Cumbrian farmers, I know this could well happen.

So I'm apprehensive about the terrain, the locals, cattlegrids, cattle...in fact I think I've almost talked myself out of the whole thing now....

Photo of lane on the route near Ings Copyright Ian Porter and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.


but most of all I'm worried about dogs on bloody extendable dog leads! Is there no escape?

Friday 23 September 2011

Bugger, it's wet...


...but let's skate anyway!

Well the forecast was good: damp start but drying off during the morning to sunny intervals. So we set off with a spring in our step & a happy heart. Then we hit the M6 & saw the cars coming down from Cumbria with their headlights on...hmmm.

We decided to pause on the way up at Wilfs in Staveley for a depression-busting carrot cake & coffee. Medicinal reasons obviously.
James cheered up markedly at seeing the micro brewery next door.

It wasn't easy tearing ourselves away from the beer tapas on offer there, but well, we're professional skaternauts who take our exploratory work seriously. And we were skint.

Onwards! We hit the north. And the rain hit us back.

On arrival at Thirlmere carpark #1 the ground was damp but it wasn't actively raining.

Not until we paid our pay & display fee & put our skates on, then it started. After some miserly grunting from me about having paid bloody £2.50 to park, and having promised James that we would avoid any puddles we set off.


The tarmac was pretty good quality - about 7/10 on the dodgy "skateable tarmac scale", but there were a fair few wet pine needles around to get stuck to our wheels & a couple of tons of wet leaves, however I think several inch deep puddles washed them off ;-)

It was a nice gentle skate north for about 4 miles with good views of the Helvellyn range across the lake, with a gentle tailwind.


We arrived at the end of the lake after about 30 mins skating, slightly damp from the light rain & cold sweaty with fear - but exhilarated from our safe passage thus far we carried on towards Keswick & our doom. Well, not quite doom but a bloody steep, wet, leafy, slippy downhill with a blind bend half way down its quarter mile length. It's fine I said & hurtled off downward - cause that's the sorta guy I am. Stupid.

Having made it to the bottom intact with only a mild panic attack & only losing a few kilos of urethane from the wheels due to reckless T-stopping to show for it, I waited for James - eventually appearing a minute or two later with slightly wild staring eyes & newly white hair.



Fortunately the end was in sight by this time & we came to a wobbly stop by the Keswick road. The sun came out, hooray! And then went in again & more rain started. We paused for some slightly hysterical laughter & mopped our sweatily fevered brows before setting off back & doing it all again, but this time uphill & into a headwind.

All in all a really good skate, but possibly better in the dry.

And we saw a red squirrel! :)

And a beaver, but that's another story....

Monday 19 September 2011

It's a definite...


...ly maybe for this Friday.

The expeditionary skaternauts' first venture into Lakeland climes, may hopefully go ahead this week - if the rain holds off...

Myself & James vs Thirlmere.

It's gonna be difficult. There could be wet leaves. Or wet pine needles. Puddles to negotiate, occasional lost cars to dodge. Feral sheep. With rabies.
Anything could happen.

We're gonna need cake to sustain us. Wish us luck. And a good forecast!


Better not tell James about this bit yet.









;-)

Friday 9 September 2011

Ok, I lied


Friday sort of uncancelled itself. I wasn't gonna go up as the forecast said wet...but I had to take M up to Lancaster anyway....and well, an hour in wet Lancaster is enough for anyone! Ah, the lure of the Lakes & the call of the cakes...

So I decided to take a quick scout out of one or two planned skateperditions, to get some idea of the tarmac quality (I can feel a tarmac quality points type system coming on!) & whether the roads are actually skateable.

Yes!

Maybe not today, but next time, definitely; 5 miles of this particular beauty round the back of Thirlmere.














In the 20 minutes that I was there, I saw just one other car.




Sweet!




Thursday 8 September 2011

Friday postponed!

As British Rail nearly said: "cancelled due to wet leaves on the lane"...