Riding my Moulton in rural Meath

It's been a really wet summer, and so when I woke up to sunshine on Sunday morning, I wasted no time in jumping into my lycra, grabbing my GPS and phone, hopping onto my Pashley Moulton APB, and heading for the hills.

The area where I live is rural, 5km from Navan (population > 25,000). There are a number of national routes nearby.

My cycling playground is an area between the N2 to the east, the N3 to the west, the aforementioned N51 to the south. If I cross the relatively quiet N52 to the north, I have a free run all the way to the border.

With a little bit of planning, I can quite easily find routes of 100km or more without having to travel on a single national route or a busy road of any description. On my rides I encounter very few cars, perhaps as few as 10 per hour.

I usually plan my routes using a combination of Google Maps and the Ordnance Survey Discovery Series maps (usually 35, 36, 42 and 43). Google Maps is great for showing the roads I like to travel on. I avoid all roads that are blue (motorways), green (national routes) and yellow (busier regional roads) and I focus on the white roads (they look grey until you zoom in further).

Backroads in north Meath

Share your bike routes @ Bikely.com

The map above shows the route I took last Sunday. The profile looks like this
Route Profile
I consult the OS maps to find some hills or I use HeyWhatsThat Path Profiler. There are very few big hills near where I live. There are plenty of 100-150m climbs, and just a few in the 150-210m range. It's not too difficult to find a 10% incline, but they are mostly less than a kilometre long.

The "white roads" are usually very low traffic, and quite scenic. On occasion the road can be quite narrow with grass growing down the centre of the road!

These routes are perfect for a Moulton bicycle, with the suspension taking the edge off any imperfections in the surface, and making all descents exhilarating.

I usually travel without a map or GPS, unless I'm travelling a new route and I'm afraid I'll get lost, or find my self on a busy national route. Signposts cannot be relied upon in Ireland! Local youths seem to take sport in rotating the signpost to send you the wrong way. In recent years however, there seem to be lots more fixed (two pole) sign posts appearing, making them more reliable.

Alex Moulton Double Pylon on BikeRadar.com

BikeRadar.com have a feature on the Alex Moulton Double Pylon / New Series and it's highlighted on the front page today.

Alex Moulton Double Pylon

The review is glowing with no negative points and the reviewer states that "if I had the funds I would order one right now".

Wouldn't we all!

An interview with Grant Petersen

Bikescape, a podcast from San Fransisco, recently interviewed Grant Petersen from Rivendell Bicycles, and it is well worth a listen.

I don't know if Grant Petersen has ever met Alex Moulton, but I imagine that they have lots in common. Apart from producing beautiful bicycles to a niche market with a cult following, their attitudes are quite similar in many respects.

To many, both could be viewed as old fashioned and even conservative in their outlook. But both men produce well designed, well built bicycles for the lifetime enjoyment of their owners. Neither uses new materials or technology just for the sake of it, and isn't afraid to take a different tack to the mainstream bike industry.

Grant also has some interesting views on clothing for cycling in the interview.

Oh and check out his Tips for Happy Riding

RSS Feeds Fixed

Recently, the RSS feeds (for use in Thunderbird, Google Reader, Firefox live bookmarks, Internet Explorer, etc) have not been working correcly, causing errors in some programs.

I have figured out the problem, and they should be working ok now.