Tuesday 5 July 2016

Clarification over the Col de la Bonette


Jan, who administers the 100 Cols route, has provided some information on the mystery over the height of the Col de la Bonette (see blog entry titled 'Five and a half hours of climbing and no sign'):


'The Col was constructed (in 1937 I believe), to have a fast route from north to south through the Alps. It was made by the Ministry of War by that time, for strategic reasons. Both the col (2715 m) and the top (Cime de la Bonette 2808 m) were opened the same time. The Cime was made to have a strategic overview of the valley.'


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Monday 4 July 2016

Thank You

 I just received an email saying the following:


Your JustGiving page was one of the most successful of June. Out of 67626 fundraisers, you were in the top 3%!

A massive Thank You to all of our supporters for that achievement :-)


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Sunday 3 July 2016

A note from Steve



There are many people I need to thank for giving me the opportunity to do this bike ride including, of course, my family for their support, Jackie for her forbearance, Dee and Ken for looking after my guide dog Connie, Sandra for keeping an eye on things for me, Limoux Lions Club for their hospitality and help, Saverne Lions Club especially Marc for providing a safe haven for Graham’s car and Tim and Sarah Goff. But the two people I need to thank above all others are Anna Dore for all her assistance to us  and especially Graham for giving me the chance to complete this adventure on what is a challenging and wonderful route, his planning, pedalling, putting up with me, piloting, mechanical work on the bike, navigation, helping me and agreeing to do this with me on a loaded tandem which has made it a more difficult ride for him. Finally, I would like to thank everyone who has made a donation to Cancer Research UK and if there is anyone out there who hasn’t yet made a donation and would like to, this blog has the link to the JustGiving page.

Steve


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Thursday 30 June 2016

It is done πŸ˜ƒ





This was our last col - no sign so I took a picture of the pothole





Steve and I rose at 05:00 this morning. The lady at our hotel had given us some breakfast stuff in our room so we ate that and we were on the road just before 06:00. I think it took about 15 minutes to get out from the gravel track and lanes where the hotel was and then we will were on our way. The first col came up almost straight away and then there was one other slightly harder one later in the day. On the whole, though, we have had another day of good tandem roads and we were back in Saverne by about 14:00.

It was exiting when Saverne first appeared on the roadsigns but then our route kept turning us away from the town. Clearly the organisers thought we needed a few more km and an extra hill or two to make our day comlpete 😉. Joking aside, the 100 cols route is just brilliant. Definitely hard, but varied and interesting with stunning scenery. I will definitely strive to do sections or even all of it again (maybe not on a tandem 😃).

This afternoon we have driven part way back to the ferry port for the sailing home tomorrow. How strange it feels to have that little plastic pedal and to push it down and effortlessly accelerate up the hills on the motorway 😃. I expect the novelty will soon wear off.

Very sorry but I have tried everything to publish pictures and it just won't work - I will add them for this and the previous day when I am home tomorrow.

Pictures now added - there will be a couple more posts in the coming days.

Today we rode 127km and climbed 2162m.


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Nearly there







Post for Wednesday 29th (sorry, no network available to publish on the day).

The people at the hotel on top of Col Du Ballon D'Alsace told us we could have breakfast early so we wandered down at 07:00. They had left serial flakes for us but had neglected to leave us any milk 😞. Steve tried his with yoghurt but it was the gelatinous set type of yoghurt so that didn't seem to go so well. There was a coffee machine which dispensed hot chocolate so we tried that. I'm not saying I'm going to switch to that instead of milk at home but it wasn't too bad 😃.

Not long into the day we came across another group of British cyclists. It turned out that three members of this group were also into the final throws of the 100 cols - the first other people we had come across doing the route. These guys had taken something like 40 days to do the tour on solo bikes with a support vehicle. They had been taking some rest days and were keeping the cost of their trip down by camping, which is clearly more feasible with a support vehicle to carry all of their kit. The most remarkable thing about bumping into these guys was that some of them had worked at an outdoor education college where Steve's estranged wife used to work so they had worked with her.

Curiously, the other people didn't stop at every col sign and take a picture of it - I guess that's just me then 😃.

Not far into our day we climbed the Grand Ballon. Since dropping down from that we seemed to spend a good part of the afternoon flirting with the 1,000m contour.  The area we have cycled through today has mostly been wooded hillsides of conifers. Some of the villages we passed through have had Germanic names.

All was going well for our early finish for the day until we were close, or at least so we thought, to our booked accommodation. From the map on Booking.com we expected it to be just off to the side of our decent from the last col for the day. Using the grid reference for the place our GPS wanted to send us up a gravel track. The people at the hotel weren't answering the phone so that was no help. The app on my phone came up with some sort of error and then said it would take 40 minutes by car (it was only supposed to be a few km away). In the end we managed to get directions from the tourist office in the town. Once we had directions and we were riding to the place we were riding across white space (i.e. no roads) on the GPS map for quite a while. It added about 7km and quite a big climb to our day 😞.

Today we have ridden 145km and we climbed 2858m.

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Tuesday 28 June 2016

Back to Alsace

View from outside our hotel

Our route takes us along some tiny roads

Thank you all for your generous donations to our Justgiving page 😃.

I have put some pictures on for yesterday.

Today we have made good progress along the kind of roads tandems are built for. The hills have been less steep so we have been able to keep up a decent pace even on the uphill sections. The countryside has been very pleasant and there has been a good mix of roads to keep things interesting. Tonight we are staying at the hotel on the (road) summit of Du Ballon D'Alsace. We have cycled 184km and climbed 2776m. From here we hope to finish with one full days ride tomorrow and a part day on Thursday.



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Monday 27 June 2016

Onwards through the Doubs

Lovely roads

Some idiot has used the sign as a shotgun target 😞

Sorry about last night's blog - it was a literary masterpiece 😃. I must have tried at least 20 times to publish it last night. When we finally got to a place with a half decent phone signal this morning it said 'no drafts on phone' 😭.

Tonight is looking a bit tricky as well (no WiFi) so the pictures may have to be added later.

Today we have rolled through some nice countryside, initially through the Jura and latterly, according to the roadsigns, the Doubs. These are areas of mostly coniferous woodland and farmland but with interesting limestone outcrops, escarpments and gorges. The climbs are less severe than the ones we have become accustomed to in previous day's, although they still go on a bit! I think it was the climb to Col de Berentin which I characterised as the climb which just keeps giving - each time it seemed we were at the top it would drop a bit and then, around the next bend, carry on up 😞. This afternoon we followed one really nice tiny road beneath limestone cliffs for about 10km. The only other traffic we came across was one car and a couple of motorbikes.

Tonight we have stopped 18km short of our intended target because we could find no accommodation (with any kind of online presence) there. We decided we would stop if we spotted a hotel along the road after we had done 150km. So, here we are at Censeau after covering 156km and climbing 2447m. We have now done 90 cols and we are up to 3647km of our 4081km according to the routesheet.

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The last big one



Auberge near the top of the Colombier

The Rhône valley from a shoulder a little way up the Colombier





Just a very short post because I lost what I drafted last night and was unable to publish owing to no WiFi or 4g service.

We made it over the Col de Grand Colombier yesterday (Sunday). This was the last of the really hard cols on our tour so it is good to have it behind us.

We covered 140km (more than intended because I screwed up reading the mileages off the routesheet 😠) and climbed 3181m. We spent the night near Lochieu.



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Saturday 25 June 2016

All hell breaks loose on the Roselend

I think Steve may be grimacing in the storm 😞



View from the Aravis

Breakfast was available unusually early in last night's hotel so we were on the road by about 07:30. We continued the descent to Bourg St Maurice where we just flirted with the outskirts of town before turning up towards the Cormet de Roselend. Conditions were pleasant enough with misty patches here and there. A few km from the top it started to rain. I made an executive decision to stop and put jackets on, not least because I had my phone in my back pocket and I depend on that far too much to allow it to get wet (e.g. no phone = no blog). By the time we got to the top the weather almost seemed a little better but it was soon raining hard again as we commenced our decent. There was a small bar a few km down so we called in there to put on more clothes and warm up a bit. While we in the bar various little groups of cyclists and motor bikers came and went. Most of them dripped on the floor in the process of putting more kit on 😞. In the meantime the storm raged outside with lightning and thunderclaps separated by just a couple of seconds.

One friendly cyclists who had chatted to us despite language difficulties and who came across as a really nice bloke went out but then reappeared a little while later with an older cyclist (maybe 70yrs plus) who looked in a bad way. This poor man only had the normal summer short sleeved cycling top and shorts. I feel the bar owner should have done something for him, like put some heat on or fetch some blankets but he didn't seem to take much notice. (he was more interested in charging us an arm and a leg for the world's smallest cakes 😞).

Steve and I left soon after, once the electric storm had abated leaving us with just ordinary rain. The storm had washed all manner of rocks and stones onto the road so we took it easy to show our new tyres due respect. Thankfully it wasn't long before we were back in sunshine and taking clothing off again.

Next came the Col des Saisies, which wasn't particularly spectacular, being just a high road through a ski resort village. Finally came the Col des Aravis, which is more what we have come to expect from a col. I have forgotten the date now but we saw banners advertising the Tour de France coming this way on into July.

Today we have pedalled, grunted and groaned 118km and climbed 2720m. Incidentally, Aravis is col number 83 so, since there are actually 103 cols on our 100 cols tour, we have just 20 left to do - how hard can it be? 😃

Tonight we are recuperating at Les Etages, between the Col des Aravis and the Col de la Croix Fry.



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Friday 24 June 2016

It's all lower after today











We did the modest climb to the top of the Col de Telegraphe first thing this morning and then dropped down to St Michel-de-Maurienne for the bike shop. The bike shop man rummaged through the tyres on the shelf and confidently concluded that he did not have the right size for us. We perused our routesheet together and the prognosis for further bike shops down the line was not good. He did mention one 10km off route but the concept of going off route is, to us, almost as distasteful as backtracking 😞. To any off route excursion around here you have to add the inevitability that at least one leg of the off route journey will involve a monster hill. With all of this in mind I was getting a bit desperate to find a suitable tyre so I started prowling around the shop looking for a bike with the right sized tyres, so we could negotiate to relieve it of its shodding. Not quite buy the bike, take the tyres and throw away the rest but you get my drift! By the time I had been around all of the bikes I reckon I was beginning to know my way around the place better than the lad working in there and it was at about this time that I found a little stack of new tyres hidden away in a corner. The happy outcome is that we now have new tyres front and back and our spare (folding) tyre that we have ridden for several days is now, once more, strapped to the frame as an emergency spare. Let's hope that is the end of our tyre problems.

There was a lot of climbing of one sort or another after leaving the bike shop, first taking in the Col de la Madeleine but culminating in the Col de L'Iseran. After the Col de L'Iseran all that remained was the rip roaring decent to Val d'Isere where we are resting our legs tonight. At 2770m Col de L'Iseran is our high point of the whole 100 cols circuit. We have had another day of great weather (although it is thundering this evening). I'm not sure I would want to be up at 2770m on a bad weather day 😞.

When we were quite high on the ascent of the L'Iseran we came around a bend to see a couple of marmot in the road - they scampered up the bank and looked down on us as we cycled slowly by.

Today we have covered 110km and climbed 2453m.



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Thursday 23 June 2016

The odd-ball pair πŸ˜ƒ

I dunno, Steve and his drinking...😃









Now we are in the heart of a cycling honeypot it is more clear than ever that people, particularly other cyclists, view us as a bit of a novelty act. You can count the other loaded tandems we have seen on the fingers of, let me think about this, no hands! We have seen precisely two other tandems: one descending Ventoux and one on D'Aubisque - both of these were bare with hardly a spare tube never mind a pile of overnight luggage like ours. The cyclists coming down whatever hill we are puffing and panting up seem to like to shout something along the lines of "allez, allez, allez" as they whiz past on their way down. They don't do this for ascending solo bikes. Earlier today we passed a bloke on a climb and he said something in French - Steve thought it was something to do with packhorses. Incidentally, how it is that two oldies on a loaded tandem can pass someone on a bare road bike (fancy carbon Wilier on this occasion) on a climb is completely beyond me. It doesn't happen often but this wasn't the first time.

Today we set ourselves two significant challenges in the shape of the Col D'Izoard this morning and then the Col Du Galibier in the heat of this afternoon. Neither seemed too bad to be honest - both are fine cols which I shall strive to repeat before I am too old and decrepit to swing a leg over a bike 😃.

We are resting up at Valloire tonight (betwixt the Galibier and the Telegraphe). Our plan was to get a new tyre for the bike but the shop here didn't have a single 700c28 tyre in stock (in fact I don't think they had any 700 tyres at all). Never mind, we are told there is another shop just down the valley - fingers crossed.

These last few days we have heard the whistle of the marmot quite a lot in the higher places. This afternoon there were, what I can only describe as a 'stack' of eagles, (not sure what type?) riding the thermals near the top of the Galibier.

Today we have pedalled 117km and climbed 2684m (it is pretty hilly around here).

Stop Press: Having typed all that stuff about other tandems at lunchtime we saw s couple descending the Galibier on a tandem this afternoon - they even had one small pannier 😞.



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Wednesday 22 June 2016

Five and a half hours of climbing and no sign 😞







Fantastic lunch 😃

The only sign at the top of the Bonette



Steve - head in hands "what is this you are making me do" (actually he is putting on sunscreen)

It has been another great day on the bike. We rose early and left the hotel in time to catch the opening of the village bakery for a quick brioche - enough to carry us through to the control village about 15km up the road. We had a proper breakfast there and then settled into the rest of the climb to the top of the Col de la Bonette. The top of the Bonette was 53km from our overnight place and the route was pretty much uphill all of the way. This was, by quite a big margin, our longest section of uphill to the top of our highest col so far. I was looking forward to getting a picture of the Col de la Bonette sign when we eventually arrived at the top but there wasn't one - maybe it has been taken away for refurbishment or maybe some low-life has nicked it for a souvenir. There was a little cycling sign - see pictures.

It seems that the Col de la Bonette has been altered because the roadsigns lower down suggested the col would be higher than it actually was. There was a road carrying on higher up than where our track turned back down. This higher road looped around the mountain and then came back to just the other side of a narrow ridge of rock which is now breached (these higher roads are now route barree and blocked with piles of rubble). My guess is that the Bonette has been reduced in stature by short cutting through what would have been a fairly insignificant rock wall to make the old higher section redundant. Anyway, we weren't complaining, we felt we had climbed enough 😃 - 2715m is pretty high in my book (as opposed to just over 2800m on the old signs).

This afternoon we climbed the much smaller Col de Vars. In some ways this seemed harder because it was hotter by then and, even trying our very hardest, we just couldn't out accelerate the cloud of flies which bothered us all the way up the mountain 😞.

This afternoon we called into a bar in a village where we needed to get a control stamp. The dog tied up outside seemed excited - I bet he was thinking "first customers in three weeks". We went inside and an old chap came through from out back. He had no food, the coffee machine was broken, etc., etc.. I took Steve to the loo and I could almost see the cogs in the old chaps head clattering around. He had noticed that Steve was blind and was clearly wondering how it was we were both in cycling kit. He walked slowly over to the door and peered outside to see the tandem and an expression of enlightenment appeared across his face.

Today we have covered 110km (most of that was uphill) and climbed 2892m. It has been a day of stunning alpine scenery in perfect conditions. Hopefully the weather will hold for a few more days until we have the really high cols behind us. We have now covered over 3000 of the 4081km on our sheets.

Tonight we are sleeping near Vars.



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