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Mountain biking in the Scottish Highlands by the Flying Vs. A story about their biking holiday in Scotland

December 22nd 2009
Skedaddle

Having sampled a numerous Skedaddle weekends and mountain biking holidays in Europe, we decided it was time to try something a bit closer to home and setting aside all concerns about the Scottish weather, booked on the July Scottosh Highlands Coast to Coast moutain biking holiday. 

After the customary enthusiastic welcome from the Skedaddle guides in the form of Steve, Tony and Charley, we were immediately put to work trying to reassemble our bikes with the added interest of turning it into a bike building time trial - successfully completed from our point of view with only a minor need for adjustments by Steve !!  First place went to our token German but at least we didn’t come last (hey John !!).


With the Skedaddle van and landrover being replaced by a comfortable bus we then headed northwards to the Highlands.  After a stop off in Fort William to stock up on Avon Skin So Soft (Tony and Steve preferred to keep their body soufflé to themselves) as a first defence against the midges, we arrived at our first hotel in Glenshiels which set the tone for the holiday – great accommodation, good food and a wonderful setting. Our first days biking: woke up, brushed hair, showered, dressed and went downstairs for bacon and eggs ……During breakfast we were informed the day would comprise a sample of all the riding we would experience over the week.  We weren’t disappointed – thrilling single track, rocky ascents/descents and the customary Skedaddle beer challenge – those impossible hills thrown in to perfect bike carrying techniques. After a great days introductory riding we arrived at Tomdoun.  A beautiful hunting lodge hotel with great views and some nice Spanish bar maids to keep the boys happy.
Next up was an easier day with a beautiful ride along the Caledonian Canal ending the day at Fort Augustus, finishing early to prepare for day 3 and the Corrieyairack Pass – the start of the 3 best days of the trip.                                 
 
Despite some apprehension about the prospects of climbing the Pass for hours (can’t remember the time taken or the height gain) it was a great ride – taken in easy chunks with plenty of jelly baby provision from Tony.  With great encouragement from the guides, it was a challenging but doable climb leaving enough energy to enjoy the scenery.  The descent was without doubt one of the best descents we have ever ridden (or not) and waiting at the bottom was Charley with lunch.

    

The next 2 days provided great diversity in the terrain covering technical singletrack, woodland paths and rocky ascents/descents not to mention the odd river crossing and swim in the case of Charley.  Supportive as always, Steve proved unplanned exits can happen to anyone with an over the handle bars into a peat bog.  The guides had again arranged great accommodation and evening meals in Tomintoul and then in Ballater.Starting to feel overfed (although over generous measures of recovery drink may have had something to do with it), we needed a mountain to climb and conveniently found Mount Keane en route.  There was no way we were going to ride all the way up this one – even with encouragement and jelly babies!!  After a good effort riding ¾ of the route – on and off – we put our practiced bike carrying skills in to play and were rewarded at the top with panoramic views of the Cairngorms National Park, Glen Tanar and the Spittal of Glenmuick (we think according to our reference map).  Again a fantastic descent and quite manageable despite Tony’s lecture on the drainage ditches !!

With only an easy 15 miles left for our last day - a distance for which apparently snacks are just plain greedy (although we know Steve was trying to prevent us from buying extra large shorts next time) we had a leisurely road ride to the sea and the end of our coast to coast trip.The organisation on the trip was excellent and the riding sensational.  We just wanted to do it all over again. For more reviews of the trip click here Vicky A. (UK) and Victoria J. (Australia if they win the Ashes and UK if not)
      
Next year and we are heading to Sardinia to do the Transardata or maybe Portugal’s Roman Trails…here’s to 2010!!!

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C2C - Coast to Coast - Self Guided Cycling Holiday

December 20th 2009
Skedaddle

Here is a C2C story we received from Helen who recently came on a cycling holiday with us, the famous Coast to Coast!
I was talked in to cycling the Coast to Coast by some colleagues. Ic2c.JPG
heard tales of speeding down hills at silly speeds, and fabulous views, so I said ok. Thankfully there are companies that organise it all for you- take you to the start, ferry your kit between B&B’s, and are on hand if you need them. We went with Skedaddle and what a friendly bunch they are too. Choosing to go self guided we could pick our dates, and were driven over to Whitehaven. After a good nights sleep, and rather more than adequate breakfast we started off on our 140 mile adventure.
There really is no better way to see the country than on a bike. You can go at your own speed, stop as much as you like, and enjoy it all at your own pace – so long as you get to the next B&B by bed time! The Lake District is beautiful, and we were blessed with the weather. However the head-winds were horrid, and made for some very challenging riding up some rather long climbs (1904ft up to the top of Hartside).

helen_and_haggis.jpgCobbles however are not for the feint hearted, and I am very glad no one told me they were at the start of day three. However, at the end of day three I was very glad of the assistance from Skedaddle as I endured a rather amusing ‘off’, landing on my right knee and rendering me unable to cycle the final following day – that just happened to be downhill all the way to Newcastle – and was transported to the finish line with our luggage to greet my fellow cyclists. A magical four days of beautiful countryside, superb cycling and friendly people all along the way (cakes at Winlatter Pass café are superb, and the tea at the top of Hartside is very much needed).

If you would like to try this classic ride why not ride with us on one of our guided trips.Or if you would prefer to pedal at your own pace, have a look at these self guided options.For those of you who would prefer to take it easy, explore some Roman history and possibly bring the family whilst sampling the coast to coast experience, our Hadrian’s cycleway tour has what you need!

 

 

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Hadrian Wall Cycleway - Self Guided Cycling Coast to Coast Holiday in Northern England

March 09th 2009
Skedaddle
Sheep, Walls and Roman Sites. A UK Cycling Holiday beside Hadrian’s Wall Cycleway and the along the Coast to Coast (Sustrans C2C Cycling Route)A story as featured in the Boston Globe by Diane Daniels, who cycled with Saddle Skedaddle.       

Diane opted to cycle with all her own gear, but if you want an easier option, then sign up for our Self Guided Hadrians Cycling Holiday trip or Coast to Coast Cycling Holiday (choose either a 4 day or 5 day option), where we’ll transfer you to the start of the route, provide route notes and maps and transfer your bags from place to place too.Hadrian's Cycleway

“OK, you can stop staring now,”
I called out between labored breaths. The sheep kept their eyes on me as I pushed my bike weighted with a week’s worth of gear up the steep path next to their pasture.

Sometimes, when you’re on a bicycle and the hill is vertical, you just have to get off and push. My husband and friends were too far ahead to witness my surrender. Instead, I had an audience of 50 or so sheep following my every move.

The reward for tackling one of the few punishing grades along the 175-mile Hadrian’s Cycleway was Walltown Crags, which gave us our most impressive view of the week of “the great wall of Britain.”

had078j.jpgBegun in 122 AD by the Emperor Hadrian and his Roman soldiers, Hadrian’s Wall marked the army’s northern frontier in Britain for nearly 300 years. An engineering marvel of stone and turf that ran 73 1/2 miles from the North Sea to the Irish Sea, the wall Hadrian envisioned was to be 10 feet wide and 15 feet high, though those dimensions varied because of materials and manpower as the wall extended westward.

The wall was completed in about eight years and bustling civilian communities sprang up around it and its milecastles (fortlets) and garrisons to do business with the soldiers. Today it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. While only small parts of the wall are visible, ongoing excavation turns up new finds yearly.
We, however, assumed we would be cycling along the wall for days. Instead, we didn’t spot it until our fifth day, after 100 miles of riding. But the route is filled with archeological stops - forts, churches, museums, and ruins. Best of all, we were treated to an eclectic sampling of northern England, from its haunting coasts and sheep-speckled countryside to thriving cities.
had075j.jpg
The national cycleway, which opened in 2006, was routed using mostly country roads and bike paths. Save for a few spots, it is well signed. For walkers, there is the 84-mile Hadrian’s Wall Path National Trail, opened in 2003.

It was early October when we met our friends in Newcastle, then paid for private transportation across the island to the Cumbrian coast. (Because of prevailing winds, most cyclists ride west to east.) My husband and I rented bikes, while our friends brought their tandem. We carried all our gear and winged it with lodging, but shuttle providers are available for those wanting baggage transfer and nightly reservations.

We were braced for bad weather, but got only a couple of cloudy days and a mere hour of rain. What I hadn’t mentally prepared for was cycling on the opposite side of the road, a challenge, particularly through roundabouts.

The route begins without fanfare (some of the signage in the route’s first stretch is not yet up) in Ravenglass, a tiny coastal community and former Roman port on the western edge of the Lake District. The start is at the well-preserved ruins of the Glannaventa Roman bath house.

We left Ravenglass by a northern coastal trail during a tide so low that boats sat mud-locked on their keels. Bird-watchers were out in force. We cycled along country lanes, where the air was filled with the smell of coal-burning stoves.

Lunch at a nuclear power plant brought us back to the present. The Sellafield Visitors Centre, a couple of miles off course, is an impressive public relations effort by owner British Nuclear Fuels Limited, which in 2003 hired the Science Museum in London to revamp the center’s exhibits. The cafe sold delicious meals at discount prices.had267j.jpg

We zipped through adorable St. Bees, where England’s famed Coast to Coast walking trail begins, to reach our hotel in Whitehaven. This working-class city recently transformed its waterfront area, adding a wide promenade, sculptures, and benches, all with artistic nautical details. During the first of what were to become daily pub stops, I learned not to block the telly after four agitated soccer fans screamed at me to sit down. Or maybe Americans have been unwelcome in Whitehaven since John Paul Jones led a naval raid on the city in 1778, marking the last recorded invasion of England.

We hugged the coast for another day, stopping in Maryport for a bite and a look in the Senhouse Roman Museum, which sits dramatically atop a cliff overlooking the Solway Firth, an arm of the Irish Sea. The private museum houses 17 Roman altars found in almost perfect condition in a nearby pit in 1870.

Shortly before reaching Silloth, our final seaside stay, we stopped at a tearoom called the Gincase for a pot of tea and scones, jam, and clotted cream. To mark our final night on the west coast, we toasted a vibrant sunset over the hills of Scotland.

Away from the coast and headed easterly into the countryside, we were surrounded by farms, sheep, horses, cows, and fields of corn. That’s when we discovered thrips, or corn flies. They are little black pests that travel in packs, plaster your clothing, and stick in your eyes. They drove us crazy.

We hit our first big city, Carlisle, during rush hour, which didn’t make for pleasant cycling. In the morning we toured Carlisle Cathedral (built in 1122), skipped the castle, and pedaled back to the buggy countryside. We labored uphill to the 13th-century market town of Brampton and sped downhill into a tranquil valley to reach Lanercost Priory, a well-tended 12th-century church and ruins built with materials pillaged from Hadrian’s Wall.

Finally we saw the wall in all its glory, casting long shadows in the late afternoon sun. We arrived too late to visit the Birdoswald Fort atop the hill, but we got our fill of all things Roman the next day.

Our penultimate day of the cycling holiday was all about the wall. In hindsight, we should have spent more time in this region around Northumberland National Park, a land of green hills and valleys stretching to the Scotland. We spent hours at forts and museums, the Roman Army Museum at Carvoran, Vindolanda Roman Fort, and Corbridge Fort. But we ran out of time for Housesteads, the wall’s most intact fort, famous for its Roman-era communal toilets.

Walltown Crags was our favorite stop. We carefully crossed a dung-filled meadow, again eyed by dozens of sheep, and climbed to the top of the rock face where a ribbon of wall stretched as far as the eye could see. The only other people there were two Historic Building Services workers refortifying parts of the wall.

“We don’t add stones, only point them,” one of them said. “If we didn’t repair it, it wouldn’t be here, would it? You’d be selling pieces in America on eBay.”

A parting gift of a brisk tailwind pushed us east on our final day. Cycling along the Tyne River in busy downtown Newcastle returned us to the 21st century. It was tempting to end our ride here, but we felt compelled to reach the official finish, 11 miles east at the Arbeia Roman Fort in South Shields. By the time we reached the replicated fort, it was closed for the day and the street was empty. I would have welcomed at least a few curious sheep.

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Sardinia Coast to Coast Mountain Biking Holiday

March 09th 2009
Skedaddle

A great article about a self guided Sardinia coast to coast mountain bike holiday that recently appeared in the Guardian plus a nice mini video too.

Sardinia Mountain Biking Holiday coastal cycling

If you want to check out our trips to this lovely island then see :

Sardinia Mountain Biking Holiday

Sardinia Cycling Holiday

Sardinia Road Cycling Holiday

Sardinia Coast to Coast by John O’Mahoney

There was a point in our off-road cycling / mountain bike holiday across Sardinia when I wondered whether we might be the first ever slapstick double-act in the history of this most demanding of leisure activities. It came on our first full day away from the smooth security of tarmac. “At the Y-junction, take the trail to the right,” proclaimed my friend Tony, who had insisted on taking on the map-reading duties. Craning our necks to the right, we could see a terrifying trail soaring vertiginously up what seemed an almost sheer cliff, strewn with massive, looming boulders and punctuated by treacherous patches of loose scree. For one gruelling stretch, we had to claw our way upwards on our hands and knees while balancing our bikes precariously on our shoulders. Sweating and panting, we had almost reached the summit when I heard Tony consulting the maps again: “At the first Y-junction, take the trail to the left,” he yelled out. “I was reading the wrong bit. That should have been to the left . . .”Peering down, we could see the trail to the left easing down gently into the valley, a leisurely freewheel winding restfully into the forest. I can’t repeat exactly what was said as we clambered back down the cliff-face, except to confirm that the word “eejit”, prefixed by colourful adjectives, featured prominently. “Well, we did say that were looking for something more challenging this time,” Tony replied sheepishly. “Whatever you say about it, this is definitely challenging . . .” Yes, but not quite in the way that we had imagined.After our implausibly ambitious odyssey from Budapest to Krakow across the Tatra mountains of Slovakia the previous year, we were looking to step up the level of difficulty. On that occasion, there had been grave doubts about whether two podgy Irish blokes could possibly conquer some of the most gruelling cycling routes in the world. But with a lot of unflattering Lycra and a good deal of bluster, we had somehow managed to pull it off.

Taking the podgy cyclist show off-road seemed like the obvious next step. And Sardinia, with its gleaming coastline and rugged interior seemed like the perfect destination. The route, known as the Coast to Coast / C2C, would begin at the south-western extremity before rearing diagonally across the island, intersecting the formidable Gennargentu range, the mountainous backbone of Sardinia, and terminating almost 400km away just below the crass resorts of the Costa Smeralda.

Most of the journey would be on mule-tracks, mining trails and wilderness. For the first time, we would enjoy the luxury of luggage transfer, with our rucksacks shuttled by van to the next stop, as well as a guide to offer advice and support. But for the most part, would be on our own, battling the Sardinian elements in the cycling holiday of a lifetime.

We flew into Sardinia’s capital, Cagliari and were met by our guide, Renato, whose lithe physique, honed by mountain-trails, made us both instinctively suck in our bellies: “So, you’ve only ever been biking on tarmac?” he purred, as he whisked us off to the starting point, the seaside hamlet of Calasetta. “This should be very interesting . . .”

The hilltop hotel was packed with grizzled, leather-clad German bikers, with their chrome-spangled Harleys lined up outside. They glowered from the shadows as Renato handed over the maps and offered a few handy off-roading tips: “Hold on to the handlebars,” he said, without a flicker of humour, “And try not to fall off . . .”

In the morning, we discovered that the bikers had let the air out of our tyres. “Hell’s Angels sure ain’t what they used to be!” said Tony, pumping them back up furiously. Once re-inflated, we powered up the Gulf of Gonnesa with cliff-edge panoramas and rocky gobbets of islands spat into the bay. Then we meandered through the eerie, abandoned mining town of Ingurtosu and took up our positions at the beginning of our first test of off-road mettle.

The scene couldn’t have been more dramatic and primordial. On one side lay a fat, pot-bellied dune named Piscinas, looking like a wedge of burning gold thrust between shimmering sea and crisp blue sky. And sweeping away in front, like a tract of Martian landscape, was the extraordinary valley of the Rio Irvi. Stained an angry vermilion by the iron ore deposits in the surrounding hillsides, the river looked like a stream of red-hot lava flowing through the sand and gorse.

“Follow the trail down into the valley,” read Tony from the directions. “Start counting. You should cross the river 21 times . . .” Our initial attempts were disastrously timed, sending us lurching and heaving across the bubbling crimson. But soon we had worked out how to pick a racing line through the riverbed and were splashing and thrashing our way along, slicing up the stained water and throwing up a fiery spray in our wake. “Eighteen . . . 19 . . . 20 . . .” I could hear Tony counting down behind me, as we dunked into ever more treacherous channels. Then finally, an exultant “21 . . .” as we crossed the finish line, red from head to toe.

The next day would prove an even greater milestone: our first, full eight-hour shift on the trails. It all got off to a slapstick start with Tony’s catastrophic wrong turn, and our pointless scramble up and down the rock-face. Then I evened the score by leaving the maps behind in a ditch, forcing us to retrace our tracks through gorse and quagmires to retrieve them.

The route itself was almost as stunning as the day before, first along corkscrew channels curling through thick maquis. Soon we were carving up the Campidano plain, Sardinia’s famous saffron producing region, where the fields all round overflowed with purple crocus blossoms. However, at the end of a day of jolting, juddering and hauling the bikes across the pocked trails, we were wiped out.

Not even a dip in the effervescent waters in the Roman bath town of Sardara could revive us, and after another bone-crunching climb up to our agriturismo, in the sleepy enclave of Villanovaforru, we stumbled to our rooms like a pair of Lycra-clad zombies.

Next morning, as we sat silently gnawing our breakfasts, Renato came bounding along to check how we were doing. Genuinely shocked at our wan and withered state, he suggested multivitamins.

“Couldn’t we just eat a few more apples?” ventured Tony. Renato frowned at such naivety. “Apples are no use any more,” he pronounced sternly.

So after stuffing our day-packs with pills, we hit the trails again. If anything, the terrain was even more punishing than the day before, beginning with a headlong descent down a plummeting gulley. After wading through fields of neck-high grass and bramble, we arrived at the quaint town of Laconi, that night’s stopover, even more depleted, with every muscle trilling with fatigue. “I never thought I’d say this,” sighed Tony, “but I actually feel nostalgic for those ball-breaking Tatras . . .”

Though we didn’t know it at the time, this undeniable low was a turning point. Next morning was Sunday in Laconi and the only place open to stock up on supplies was a tiny pizzeria. So we filled our packs with miniature margaritas. “I’m not sure if Renato would approve . . .” I ventured.

“He said that apples are no use,” Tony replied. “He mentioned nothing about pizzas. . .”

This was the beginning of the most demanding section: the stupendous Gennargentu range. The trails soared inexorably upwards through dense forest of oak and fragrant eucalyptus before winding through farmland, with goats and pigs turning the tracks into a livestock obstacle course. As we swerved around the last hill, the view cracked open: on one side, slopes swathed with purple and yellow wildflowers - lavender, myrtle and broom - and on the other, a widescreen panorama of slate-grey mountains, jostling their way towards the horizon.

Maybe it was the inspirational landscape, or the thought of scoffing those pizzas, or perhaps our bodies were finally beginning to acclimatise, but it all seemed just a little easier. We arrived at that night’s agriturismo in the town of Seulo in buoyant mood and celebrated our resurgence with goat stew.

But Sardinia hadn’t quite finished with us yet. As soon as we had hit the trails next morning, the worst summer storm in living memory descended, stranding us in freezing rain and merciless wind-chill. With our core body temperatures dropping, we were left with only one shameful option: “Renatooooooo . . .” He responded to our SOS by sending a trail-chiselled warrior named Luca, who arrived in a 4×4 to scoop us ignominiously off the mountain and deposit us in the nearest hotel. A couple of days later when the squall had passed, he dropped us back at the exact same mountain clearing. The swirling black clouds had disappeared, replaced by blinding sunshine and devastating cobalt skies.

This, the last day of the trip, would prove the most exhilarating. First, we wove through the Supramonte massif, a vast, barren wilderness of glistening white limestone that looked like a cross between the Sierra Nevada and the surface of the moon. Then we hugged the mountains on a long-abandoned road, chewed and gored by landslides. Afterwards, it was all sweet, glorious downhill through forests of arthritic cork oak and bulbous prickly pears until suddenly the Mediterranean reared up in front of us, an explosion of azure. To no one’s greater surprise than our own, we had somehow conquered the “challenging” trails of Sardinia.

The remaining days, in the sparkling little village of Cala Gonone, were a big, long, lazy exhalation - chilling in the sea-front cafes, lolling on the pristine beaches and exploring Cala Gonone’s stunning cave system, huge encrusted chambers reaching kilometres beneath the hills we’d just cycled.

Sardinia had pushed us dangerously close to our limits. But the island had rewarded us with the white-knuckle adrenaline rush of off-roading, and the excitement and drama of the red river and the buzz of those hurtling descents are moments we’ll never forget.

Our plan is to return to the trails next year, perhaps a little more trim and toned. Yes, this could be the end of the road for the podgy cyclists. For anyone else, the advice is simple. Spend a few weeks in the gym, and stock up on multivitamins (pizzas are a recommended substitute only in extremis.) And, in the words of one great prophet of the trails: if you want to experience one of the true off-road mountain bike journeys, just hang on to those handlebars, and try not to fall off !

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First Twaddle Caption Competition - Scotland Highlands C2C

March 08th 2009
jim
Taken during our Scotland Highlands C2C off road holiday  

I always thought those sheep were up to something!

sheep-caption.jpg
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Featured Holiday

Morocco - Atlas To Desert

March 07th 2007

Morocco - Atlas To Desert PictureThis superb desert biking adventure focuses on the deep south of Morocco, a land of big skies and stark mountain ranges where mud-brick kasbahs appear to rise up out of the desert, sitting in tranquil palm oases and framed by dramatic backdrops of snowcapped mountains. We ride along Morocco’s dirt roads, taking us from Marrakech to the Tichka Pass, the highest in the High Atlas, and then southward, descending along the Draa Valley to the fringes of the Sahara Desert.

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Favourite Links
  • Sustrans  UK’s leading sustainable transport charity providing loads of support and initiatives for new and experienced cyclists.
  • Cyclexpress  Skedaddle's favourite on-line supplier of biking kit
  • Gorrick Mountain Bike Events  Skedaddle are proud to be sponsoring the Gorrick Spring Series for 2009 - Fun day rides in the South and suitable for all
  • Cyclone 2009  Great weekend of road cycling in and around Newcastle that once again we are proud to support....we are even sponsoring the King Of The Mountains...so get training now!!
  • Great North Bike Ride  Skedaddle are once again supporting the cycle from Seahouses to Tynemouth (29th August 2009). Cycle 54 miles of beautiful Northumberland coastline and raise some money towards childhood cancer research.
  • Clic24  Fun charity ride in the Mendips on 17th May, in support of children and their families who are affected by cancer and leukaemia. Come and meet Skedaddle during this fun event and raise a few quid too!
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