Club Rides
The WSW has club rides for all abilities and is a good way meeting like minded individuals. It improves your riding technique and gives you confidence in riding within a couple which can be 20% more efficient than cycling by yourself! Best practice for riding in a group is covered by these guidelines |
Suffolk Punch 2010 - Reliability TrialSunday February 7th 2010 HQ: Nowton Village Hall If you want to look up the location of the HQ on an Internet street map site, the nearest post code is IP29 5ND. Travel details from Cullum Road roundabout at the southern end of Bury St Edmunds: Leave town via Nowton Road and go past Nowton Park. Continue along Nowton Road to Nowton and turn left on a sharp right-hand bend, and the Village Hall is on your left
Last Updated (Sunday, 07 February 2010 22:36) |
Suffolk Punch 2010 - Reliability TrialSunday February 7th 2010 HQ: Nowton Village Hall
If you want to look up the location of the HQ on an Internet street map site, the nearest post code is IP29 5ND.
Travel details from Cullum Road roundabout at the southern end of Bury St Edmunds: Leave town via Nowton Road and go past Nowton Park. Continue along Nowton Road to Nowton and turn left on a sharp right-hand bend, and the Village Hall is on your left Registration from 9.30am – First group away at 10am Routes
Choice of two routes - 55 miles and 40 miles
55 mile route – Nowton Village Hall, Hawstead, Shimpling, Hartest, Somerton, Hawkedon, Stansfield, Poslingford, Chilton Street, Stradishall, Wickhambrook, Lidgate, Cropley Grove, Dalham, Ashley, Newmarket, Moulton, Gazeley, Dalham, Ousden, Hargrave, Chevington, Whepstead, Hawstead, Nowton Village Hall. 40 mile route – Same outward route to Cropley Grove as the 55 mile ride, then right turn to Ousden and back the same return route as the 55 mile ride. Four average speed categories - 18, 15, 13 & 11 mph Certificates to all qualifiers
Entry fee £4 For more information Contact event organiser, Justin Wallace tel: 01359 232 151 email: justinannwallace@btinternet.com mobile phone # for use on the day of the event: 07867 600 593 Last Updated (Tuesday, 12 January 2010 16:18) 2 November 2009 WET, WET, WET or Nine get InundatedIt was dark, but there was no rain - just an occasional drizzle-y drop, as I rode up and down the A1088 filling in time before the Bury Bunch arrived, with the Thurston Contingent. Somehow or other, we must have passed my house about three minutes before Lindsay Clayton arrived; some time after the advertised 07:20, but crucial moments before the 07:30 that Lindsay thought she should be there.There was more to come. I joined the front of the group, and didn't fully take in who was on board. Only later did Peter Heath ask "where's Jonathan?". We discovered later from his e-mail that the poor chap had a real, full-on, "BANGGss-Phssss-Phsssss-Phssssss-Phssssss" puncture., just at the point where the ride turned right to Woolpit 'Nord' and A14. Being a relative newcomer he didn't immediately shout at the top of his voice, the magic word "PUNCHERRR!!!" which (usually) brings the most determined ride to a halt. So that was the end of HIS ride. Last Updated (Wednesday, 18 November 2009 12:28) Memories of a Super Summer AWHEEL & Best Tea Stop - 2009Whilst the west side of the UK experienced an awfully wet summer, the West Suffolk Wheelers Cycling Club’s Wednesday rides benefited from a prolonged period of warm, dry, days from June right through to October. We got really wet once and dripped all over the floor in the Tea Pot Pottery café in Debenham. They were very good about it but then they were taking money from us; the floor is tiled so no harm was done. Another ride was curtailed because of lowering dark clouds, when we took refuge in The Hunter Gallery in Long Melford, the sort of place where you pay a fiver just to open the front door. The lady owner was very nice about our disparate bunch descending on her gallery for scones and tea, and we were very nice in not shouting “Rip-Off” at the prices of the varied selection of artworks on sale. It was only on the way home that the heavens opened and we got soaked. So that’s twice then. For the most part the Wednesday series of rides were sun-drenched, balmy, colourful, scenic and a joy to experience. The rides have increased in popularity through the year. Stalwarts of the ride have been Stephen Hill, Justin Wallace, Richard ‘Tom Tom’ Seggar, Ron Fisher, Tony Panting and Peter Heath. Other riders, some more regular than others, have included, Sharon Calton, Mike Cross, Peter Gay, Anne Fish, Kevin Flanagan, Barry Denny, Jeff Agricole, Julian Coleman, Neil Dykes, Simon Bourne, Ed Bucknell, Mike Bowen, Shaw Fox, Gareth Doman, Adi Grimwood, Steve Mayes, Jonathan Howe and Tricia Dennison, - 24 riders involved over the summer. Guest riders have included Peter Hogg, Richard Muchmore, Richard’s cousin John from Jersey, a vicar from East Harling, (was he Gary?) and Glenn Grant from the Eagle Road Club, Essex. The ethos has been one of a relaxed, social ride, (most of the time!), full of banter, with the emphasis firmly on the quality of the cakes at the tea stop; fruit or cheese scones are a particular favourite of the group.. In fact, certain members like to think they have become connoisseurs of the scone and talked about forming the Wheelers very own SAS, the Scone Appreciation Society, to provide feedback to the various establishments we favour with our presence, and more importantly, our money. But cakes of any description must be homemade, and freshly homemade at that. Thus we only frequent Tea Rooms and Cafés of a certain standing. No ‘Greasy Spoon’ cafés for us thank you very much. Quality is all. Our search for the ‘Outstanding Scone’ has taken us far and wide this year, with tea rooms visited for the first time at Dedham,( Essex Rose Tea Room); East Bergholt, (The Fountains TR); Ashbocking, (The Crockery Barn TR); Wickham Market, (Tea Pot TR); Ely, ( Peacocks TR); Wicken Fen,( National Trust TR); Stisted TR, and Finchingfield, (Jemima’s TR). Local favourites have included, Woodlands Coffee Shop at Hollow Trees Farm, Semer; No 1 Delicatessen and Café, Clare; Corn Craft TR, Monks Eleigh; Mere Moments, Amandines, The Angel, all 3 TRs at Diss; Bressingham Garden Centre TR; Coffee and Co., Newmarket; Spencers TR, Wickham St Paul; Thetford Garden Centre TR and the Tea Pot Pottery TR, Debenham. The reader might be forgiven for thinking that the Wednesday riders are simply cake lovers with a cycling problem and this may not be far from the truth! But we have covered many miles whilst putting the world to rights and perhaps earning the epithet of the Last of the Summer Wheelers. Quite who Compo, Clegg, Foggy, and Nora Batty are I’ll leave you to decide. The major revelation in 2009 was the discovery of the massive computing and navigating power of Richard Seggar’s brain. No longer did we need to agonise over the quietest, most scenic route to any particular point of the compass. Give Richard a moment to fire his synapses and we were off on a mystery tour, down lanes many of us have never explored before and in directions which are seemingly and obviously wrong. Not so. Earning the tag of ‘Tom Tom’, Richard’s routes have a 98% success rate; he is not infallible however, his wires once becoming a little crossed on the return from Lincoln’s Tea Room at Hingham. But then we were in Norfolk and it wasn’t a Wednesday, so that don’t count do it Rich?
Last Updated (Thursday, 12 November 2009 21:14) |