LEJOG - thoughts?

SimonAH
SimonAH Posts: 3,730
edited September 2011 in Commuting chat
How many of us have done it? Tips? Horror stories? There's an Alzheimers society run next summer and I'm very tempted to sign up.[/img]
FCN 5 belt driven fixie for city bits
CAADX 105 beastie for bumpy bits
Litespeed L3 for Strava bits

Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast.

Comments

  • lastant
    lastant Posts: 526
    Do it! Full details of mine in my sig..
    One Man and LEJOG : End-to-End on Two Wheels in Two Weeks (Buy the book; or Kindle it!)
  • AlanW
    AlanW Posts: 291
    A group of us did it last year in 8 days, but rather than the usual route we went straight up the centre of the UK and took in a lot of climbing in the process. :shock:

    But I would recommend it to everyone to do.

    Lands End to Postbridge.
    In an effort to avoid as much traffic as possible we to stayed on minor roads and also included the beach cycle path between Penzance & Marazion. Slowly crossing the spine of Cornwall through the non-touristy bits that you rarely see, and then crossing the River Fal via the King Harry Ferry. Eventually arriving in Tavistock and then the start of some real crippling climbs as we crossed the Dartmoor. The later part of this first day was very tough with the relentless up and down of the countryside. But we had been blessed with descent weather and a nice gentle tail wind to help us along. We stopped at a campsite at Postbridge, which was roughly 20 miles short of where we really wanted be for the first nights stopover. The net result was that the following day would now have to be that bit longer than first expected. Distance for the day, 104.22 miles and 10,746 feet of ascending. Time in saddle - 7 hours, 27 minutes.

    Postbridge to Morton Valance, Gloucestershire.
    On leaving the campsite we were right at the bottom of a 1:5 incline, not a great start to anyone’s day! We ploughed on regardless and still blessed with the same gentle tail wind and warm weather we were soon crossing the River Avon via the Clifton suspension bridge, complete with a Police escort by two Police officers on horse back. On one of the long climbs, one guy managed to break his rear mech, and we all thought that that was his ride over with. But would you believe that a chap following in a van witnessed the problems and offered to take him and his bike to a bike shop in Bovey Tracey to be repaired. The shop replaced his rear mech, also fitted a new chain, but the rear hanger on the frame was badly bent and needed replacing, however, they didn’t have one in stock. Nevertheless, after ringing around they found a shop in Exeter that did have one. Without further ado, him and his bike were then taken to Exeter to have the repairs concluded. With his bike now fixed, he then set off for the overnight stop. Left with only a route card and no maps he found himself going in the complete wrong direction at times. He refused to give in, despite being offered help by the support crew. It was clear that he was running out of day light hours and in the end, reluctantly resorted to catching the train, with his bike, from Bristol to Gloucester, then riding the short hop to the campsite. The second half of the day was mainly flat but with more traffic as we headed for the campsite at Moreton Valance, just south of Gloucester. Distance for the day, 128.20 miles with 6,857 feet of ascending. Time in saddle - 8 hours 26 minutes.

    Gloucester to Bakewell.
    Considerably less climbing than the previous two days with mainly fast roads towards Tewkesbury, then on towards Evesham. As we approached Evesham we were met by a few local guys who rode with us till Redditch, great moral support, thanks guys. It was also a very odd feeling riding within a few miles of your front door after riding up from Cornwall? After Redditch we then had to navigate through the centre of Birmingham and under Spaghetti junction, not for the faint hearted it has to be said!! Once clear of Birmingham it was on to Lichfield and Ashbourne, before hitting the Peak District with more climbing, and finally a sting in the tail with a short sharp climb before the descent into Bakewell. This was the first night where the plan was to spend the night in the Scout hut on the floor as opposed to camping. But as the floor didn’t seem quite so appealing, I decided to find a local B&B or hotel instead. So after we had arrived, I rode around around the one-way system to book in at a local hotel but in the process I managed to find a lovely sharp piece of glass. Dam….the puncture fairy had struck, but also resulted in a large slash in the front tyre rendering it scrap. Thank heavens that I had packed a spare tyre! The best was yet to come, the local brass band turned up for their weekly band practise only to find the Scout hut full of sweaty cyclists and a floor full of air beds and bags. So we had to vacate the hut while they practised. But personally I really enjoyed listening to them, it was a great end to the day. Distance for the day, 120.84 miles with 5,981 feet of climbing. Time in saddle – 8 hours, 17 minutes.

    Bakewell to Reeth, South Yorkshire.
    Into the Dark Peak, passing Ladybower reservoir and then climbing up towards Langsett on our way to the Yorkshire Dales. The first part of the day was clear and bright with plenty of urban cycling through Huddersfield before Skipton and the Dales. Yet more rolling countryside and then on to the Mother of all climbs out of Bolton Abbey before arriving at the campsite at Reeth. With over a hundred miles done, this was a cruel and very sadistic end to the day. So many false summits on this ascent, it affected us all with very poor moral. Then just to finish the day off, as we rolled into the campsite, down came the rain. Pitching the tent in the rain is never good, let alone when you are very tired and physically drained. It continued to rain, and was really heavy at times, all night long, but most of us were so knackered we slept through it. Distance for the day, 107.73 miles with 9,474 feet of ascending. Time in saddle – 8 hours, 24 minutes.

    Reeth to Selkirk.
    After a rather damp start, the day brightened up. But it was to be another day of hard climbing, high moorland and forest roads as we left Reeth on mainly quiet roads. On towards Hexham and towards Kielder Water, at this point the weather turned and down came the rain and the wind was now right in our faces, this was the worst afternoon by far. We crossed over the Scottish borders at 17:30hrs and still had 40 miles to ride before our planned over night stop at Selkirk. This was a very hard day, huge amount of climbing, combined with lots of miles we had ridden, had taken effect on most people. The last 10 miles seemed to take forever, even if most of it was downhill. With no camping available, the plan was to spend the night on the floor in the local Scout hut. However, with no shower facilities, this saw a large number of us running down the road to the nearby swimming baths before they closed. Distance for the day, 122.06 miles with 12,042 feet of ascending. Time in saddle, 10 hours 16 minutes.

    Selkirk to Glenshee.
    In comparison to the day before, the day was pancake flat as we rode on towards Edinburgh and navigated city traffic before crossing the Forth Road Bridge. Crossing this bridge was quite a memorable moment for most of us, but more climbing shortly afterwards soon bought the reality back. On towards Perth and the foothills of the Cairgorms, stopping overnight in Spittal of Glenshee. Four miles from the finish one poor lad had his chain snap, and had to be recovered by the Support Crew. But in true fighting spirit, once he had repaired his chain at the campsite, he then rode back to the spot where he had been recovered from and rode back. Distance for the day, 118.56 miles with 7,590 feet of climbing. Time in saddle, 9 hours, 1 minute.


    Glenshee to Inverness.
    Within 20 minutes of leaving the campsite we were onto the first of four huge mountain climbs up and over the Cairngorms, so no chance to warm up in advance. As we descended the first pass, nothing prepared us for what was to follow! The second and third climbs were equally as bad. On towards Braemar and Tomintoul and one last climb out of Tomintoul before the downhill run to Grantown was something special for all the wrong reasons. This final ascent had a leg crippling 25% gradient right at the start, then a hairpin to the left, then a hairpin to the right and up to what we thought was the summit. How wrong could we be, as we crested the top the road dipped downwards slightly then rose upwards at an alarming angle? To make it worse, it was dead straight. The only way I can think to describe it would be like a long ramp rising up to heaven. But 50 minutes later we were now descending, this was where I reached a rolling top speed of 58.4 mph!!! This was the shortest day in terms of distance, but it made up for it with the hard climbs. Thank heavens the weather once again had been very good to us, with a tail wind. I cannot begin to imagine what it ‘could’ have been like? Distance for the day, 98.97 miles with 7,200 feet of ascending. Time in saddle, 7 hours, 23 minutes.

    Inverness to John O’Groats.
    At last the final leg and the weather had finally turned for the worst as we left Inverness in the rain and a headwind. The plan was to stay on the costal road all the way to John O Groats. It really was a miserable start to the last day, the temperature had dropped quite considerably, and everyone was really suffering. However by mid morning things had brightened up and spirits were lifted as we ploughed on to the end. As we neared the final destination, the rolling countryside started to drain what bit of energy we had left. Then with a couple of hours to go, the heavens opened and we were now riding into horizontal rain and a horrible headwind. The last 10 miles can only be described as torture, slightly uphill, into the eye of the storm, terribly depressing. I looked at my GPS and we were struggling to maintain 7.5 mph, which speaks for its self really doesn’t it? Distance for the day, 121.12 miles with 6,588 feet of ascending. Time in saddle, 9 hours, 21 minutes.

    Statistics for the 8 days: -
    923 miles
    66,478 feet of ascending
    Average speed – 13.3 mph
    Time in saddle – 69 hours, 15 minutes
    Would I do it again?
    Yes, but certainly not the same route!!!
    "You only need two tools: WD40 and duct tape. If it doesn't move and it should, use WD40. If it moves and it shouldn't, use duct tape"
  • @AlanW, that is one crazy schedule!! respect.
  • pangolin
    pangolin Posts: 6,633
    Do it!

    I did it last year in 9 days, quite busy roads for a lot of it though.

    Lands end - Okehampton ......... A30
    Okehampton - Bristol ................ A30 then via Taunton, Bridgewater etc
    Bristol - Shrewsbury .................. via Monmouth, Hereford, Ludlow
    Shrewsbury - Preston ................ via Liverpool & the Mersey Ferry
    Preston - Gretna ......................... A6 mostly
    Gretna - Edinburgh .................... B7076 & A702
    Edinburgh - Etteridge (I think) .. A9
    Etteridge - Tain ........................... A9
    Tain - John O'Groats ................. A9

    897 miles in total I think. Some of the scenery past the Cairngorms was lovely. As was the A6 with the lake district on the left. If I did it again I'd either take much longer (over 2 weeks) and really enjoy it, or try and do it in about half the time.

    I guess an organised one like the one you're looking at will be a very different experience, though still well worth doing I'd say.
    - Genesis Croix de Fer
    - Dolan Tuono
  • snooks
    snooks Posts: 1,521
    My wife and I did on our yacht last year. We sailed past Lands end on June 1st, and got past John O Groats 7th August. We both took a 3 month sabbatical and we went sailing.

    It was hard work and if you asked us at the time whether we'd do it again we'd have said no. But after coming back and returning to work, the bad memories are a thing of the past and we'd do it all over again if we could.



    What? You didn't specify it had to be on a bike :D
    FCN:5, 8 & 9
    If I'm not riding I'm shooting http://grahamsnook.com
    THE Game
    Watch out for HGVs
  • pangolin
    pangolin Posts: 6,633
    snooks wrote:
    My wife and I did on our yacht last year. We sailed past Lands end on June 1st, and got past John O Groats 7th August. We both took a 3 month sabbatical and we went sailing.

    It was hard work and if you asked us at the time whether we'd do it again we'd have said no. But after coming back and returning to work, the bad memories are a thing of the past and we'd do it all over again if we could.



    What? You didn't specify it had to be on a bike :D

    That sounds awesome!!! Must have been pretty trying being together in a boat for that long though, with all the added pressure of manual work to do.

    Do you have your own boat or do people to rentals for that sort of thing?
    - Genesis Croix de Fer
    - Dolan Tuono
  • snooks
    snooks Posts: 1,521
    pangolin wrote:
    That sounds awesome!!! Must have been pretty trying being together in a boat for that long though, with all the added pressure of manual work to do.

    Do you have your own boat or do people to rentals for that sort of thing?

    It was

    We have our own boat. I came to the conclusion that spending 3 months together on a 32 ft boat sailing around Scotland would be good preparation for married life, so I proposed on the way round!

    Blog about the trip and piccies of the boat
    FCN:5, 8 & 9
    If I'm not riding I'm shooting http://grahamsnook.com
    THE Game
    Watch out for HGVs
  • davis
    davis Posts: 2,506
    snooks wrote:
    pangolin wrote:
    That sounds awesome!!! Must have been pretty trying being together in a boat for that long though, with all the added pressure of manual work to do.

    Do you have your own boat or do people to rentals for that sort of thing?

    It was

    We have our own boat. I came to the conclusion that spending 3 months together on a 32 ft boat sailing around Scotland would be good preparation for married life, so I proposed on the way round!

    Blog about the trip and piccies of the boat

    Great boat! Will have a read of the journey later too, thanks.
    Sometimes parts break. Sometimes you crash. Sometimes it’s your fault.
  • Mr Plum
    Mr Plum Posts: 1,097
    LEJOG - thoughts?

    Avoid rain and hills. If you can't then pack light and take waterproofs!
    FCN 2 to 8
  • vorsprung
    vorsprung Posts: 1,953
    Lejog can't be that difficult as hundreds of people do it successfully every year

    The best place for online info is the CTC forum:

    http://forum.ctc.org.uk/viewforum.php?f=22
  • jzed
    jzed Posts: 2,926
    SimonAH - take a look at the Action Medical Research Lejog - I did it this year which was their first year. It was well organised and they have taken all our feedback into account for next year - so should be even better.

    Scotland will be wet and blusterry.[/code]