06/07/2021
gravel diaries >> 004
>>taking the rough with the smooth
>>There’s no rough without smooth I guess. Ain’t no sunshine without rain. That’s another. And when all these things combine, what have you got? Hello UK Gravel riding.
>>With rain forecast all day, and a strengthening headwind we set off to the south to pay a visit to our local gravel garden. You can’t be choosy around here. Oxfordshire is blessed with many things but amazing gravel trails are few and far between, and so it was to the south we headed. The sun was out and I took a gamble to leave the rain jacket at home. It’s a mainly flat draggy ride to the Ridgeway through the villages of Appleton and the outskirts of Didcot, but there’s one stretch just after Fulscott where the sun was shining and the tarmac was glassy smooth - it could have been the South of France. Oh for those smooth French roads. Back in reality, we dodged the potholes of South Moreton and then swung to the south and onwards through Aston Upthorpe. You pretty much head directly due South all the way to the top of the Ridgeway. But whilst the compass pointed straight down, the gradient pointed straight up as we approached the base of the climb.
>>As soon as you cross the main road you’re onto the first Restricted Byway - a steep farm track that quickly turns to gravel. On the way to the top you get the full pick ’n’ mix. Pools of clay-like mud where the laws of friction do not apply, and off-camber chalk where you’re on the limit of grip. You keep going pushing up, through nettle strips and water-filled Landrover tracks that are unsuspecting bicycle traps. There’s no easy route to the top of the Ridgeway from this side. But when you get there you are rewarded with some freshly honed gravel sections and long flowing downhill sections. All the way into Goring and the wonderful cafe Pierreponts. Coffee or cake? Rain or shine? Rough or smooth? >>You can’t have one without the other.