pretty!![]()
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Should have posted this a while ago but didn't get round to it. www.Londoncyclesport.com is a regional website that covers loads of racing & cycling in the South East of England and they asked me if I'd do a review of my bike for them, so I said yes!
Here it is...
http://www.londoncyclesport.com/bikes/liz_condor.html
Its bit grubby but that's explained in the text.
By the way - Condor is a bike-maker based in London who've been selling their frames for about 50yrs.
Just wanted to show off..![]()
pretty!![]()
The list of where you traveled in 2003 say you're a cyclist. But your comments about the color of the bike you'd swap for and the color of your tires say you're a GIRL!![]()
Nice bike!
Very nice!!!
Time is a companion that goes with us on a journey. It reminds us to cherish each moment, because it will never come again. What we leave behind is not as important as how we have lived." Captain Jean Luc Picard
She's a beauty!![]()
I enjoyed your write up too. Please tell us more about your various European adventures, so we can enjoy them too.![]()
V.
Thanks for the nice comments - I was really excited when they posted the photos to see my little bike on the internet!!
Anyway, this is a bit long but here's a bit about one of my adventures. I might have to move it to another thread sometime but thougth I'd start it off here.
Lets see – Paris Roubaix was a good one. It’s run from the outskirts of Paris to Roubaix in Flanders ( Southern Belgium) takes about 7 hours for the Pro’s to do it and large sections of it have cobbled farm tracks that have been used for years by farmers. It’s mostly flat but the cobbles are VERY rough so it’s like riding over millions of mini hills, which really sap your legs as the only way to ride them is hard. It’s usually run around Easter so its often wet and cold and the tracks turn to mud very quickly and it’s nickname is The Hell of the North, not only because it truly is a hard mans course, but it also goes past lots of areas that were involved in the serious trench warfare of the First World War.
Anyway, I’ve been to watch it twice – this first year I took my bike and had a go at riding the cobbles. Anyone can have a go before the race comes through and it was great fun – just very hard work! The weather was grey & freezing and we stood there waiting for the race to come through with a Belgium waffle in one hand ( yummy!) and a bottle of Primus – v .strong Belgium beer in the other .Despite the cold the atmosphere was great. Basically the crowd lines along a cart track only one car wide, that runs through the middle of a field and farmers had parked trailers along side and people were standing on them waiting for the race to come by.
When they finally came through it was incredible. Because the course is so narrow you really have to watch yourself and I ended up with mud splattered over my face as loads of riders and support cars zoomed by. I was freezing but it was well worth the wait to be able to see the riders so close up. T
The place we were standing at was about 40 mins from the finish, so by that point everyone was exhausted and some of the riders were just a pair of hollow eyes staring out of their mud splattered faces. The race finishes in Roubaix where riders race straight into the packed velodrome and do 2 laps in front of the roaring crowd before finally reaching the end and anyone who wins Paris-Roubaix has huge respect as it's probably the hardest one-day race around. By the way – this is all done on road bikes!!!. When you look at the surface you think they must be mad and ought to be on a nice comfy mountain bike, but no!
I went to see the race again last year and this time it was so hot I was standing there in a t-shirt and got sunburnt! We also took a mini – BBQ and cooked burgers and sausages on the roadside before the race came through. When they finally arrived it was in a huge cloud of dust – you could see them across approaching across the fields by the clouds of dust!
I’m going again in a few weeks time so I wonder what the day will hold this time. I’ll keep you posted….
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You are so lucky to be where you can watch classic races like that! I am green with envy! Thanks for sharing the experience. It sounds wonderful! Could you even tell who the riders were or were they too covered with mud/dust?
Time is a companion that goes with us on a journey. It reminds us to cherish each moment, because it will never come again. What we leave behind is not as important as how we have lived." Captain Jean Luc Picard
Yes - if I lived in mainland Europe I think I'd take it for granted, being able to go and see all these races, but we still have to cross the Channel to get there. It means leaving the house about 6.00 but it's cool to be able to go to France for the day!
With all the mud it's a bit tricky to recognise people, but I remember seeing a Telekom rider who was covered in mud except for his cap which was pristine! Either he'd just taken off his helmet or the team car had handed him a new one so the rest of the team could recognise their team mates.![]()
If anyone is interested I've got a few more Euro- trips to write about but don't want to bore people by writing great big posts. Maybe I should start a Euro -trip thread.?
Oh no, you don't bore us!
Feel free to post many more!!! We can live vicariously through you.
thanks for sharing![]()
Wow, are you kidding? I'd love to read about your adventures!If anyone is interested I've got a few more Euro- trips to write about but don't want to bore people by writing great big posts.
- Jo.
I just love race-reports, whether they are reports of big pro races people have watched or races women here have competed in themselves.
Viva living vicariously![]()
MightyMitre,
Here's another vote for more posts from you about your experiences in Europe.
Very cool that normal people would get off the road for a bike race and that you have tailgates while you're waiting! Sounds like a lot of fun. In fact getting a sunburn while watching abike race sounds wonderful right about this time of year! Bike tres pretty too.
Tell us more! It sounds amazinly awesome! I'm trying to get my husband to go watch one of the big races for our 20th anniversary next year. Fortunately, he's a cyclist too. Hopefully the Tour De France!
Kelly
Kelly