Crikey Steve Sordy ..you are no good luck charm..?
Get well soon Major ..
Get well soon Major ..
You are not old enough to have had "a fall"!! You crashed, had an accident, were unavoidably deployed, had an involuntary dismount ..whatever. YOU DID NOT "HAVE A FALL"Deffo no from me. On holiday on the coast in Somerset and had a fall, busting my left ankle. A&E this afternoon, currently on crutches. ?
I disagree. A mate of mine used to refer to me as his "Sun God" because whenever we rode together the sun was always shining (or at least it never rained).Crikey Steve Sordy ..you are no good luck charm..?
Get well soon Major ..
I can't remember the last time I rode the red all the way around, but it would have been about a year ago. I do it occasionally just to make sure I'm not missing anything new. I use sections of the red, blue and green trails to move about the forest. And of course there are some bits of the red that it would be a shame to miss, so they are incorporated in the mostly off-piste routes that I do.From the vids Ive watched the red route looks no more than a blue elsewhere ..but hats off to Steve for seeking out some off-piste to up the ante..hope it all works out and you get that Ranger on side to develop things further ..
Welcome the rideout @EezyRider, looking forward to seeing you.I’m intrigued too, I could never understand why Pines was a red route other than to entice people to the area.
Saying that, I thought the same about Dalby until I took a work colleague, lost count of the amounts of off’s he had and he hasn’t been on his bike since!!
If it’s ok, I’ll tentatively say I’ll come for the ride, I have a lot on atm so won’t know for definitely until the day before
I remember those! They were at the start of the downhill section of the Bike Park. After the launching ramp (still there), you climbed up a ramp to a 6' high section of boardwalk before dropping down onto a sloping rock. That propelled you towards a wall ride, first left then right. Then more boardwalk winding through the trees that was up and down and left - right. You emerged from the trees onto a flat trail that took you onto more boardwalk. The boardwalk rode gently, and the terrain fell away. By the time the boardwalk ended, the vertical height to the ground was about 8'. There was a steep boarded slope down to the ground, which fell away even more steeply. No jumping was required but the down-ramp was about 20' long. Because of the way the terrain fell away, when you were on top of that boardwalk, you could see over all the treetops. It felt very high and exposed, but the furthest you could fall was about 8'. It reminded me of those ski jumps where the skier flies through the air for absolutely ages, but he is never more than 6-10' above ground at any time because his flightpath is matched by the terrain.We built some sanctioned North shore trails/features in Pines many years ago as a side project from what we were doing at Mkt Rasen. It was opened by Steve Peat. I think the pines group took it over.
My how the years have passed.
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That's how I read it @The Hodge
I'm sure I read up somewhere that if you pay enough you can get them blown back up again. Not on the NHS, obviously...................
My balls have shrunk some since those days!!
I'm sure I read up somewhere that if you pay enough you can get them blown back up again. Not on the NHS, obviously.
Hope you all had fun, you certainly had the weather for it.
Never mind, @myapes and I were out on Sun for a final run through to firm up the route, remove any trail blockages etc. We re-routed one small part of the trail because the sides of the gulley were so dry and steep that it was like climbing up a mound of brown flour. I discovered this when my rear wheel slewed sideways and took over the steering. I was heading towards a brick wall and a jumble of rocks! So I did the decent thing and let my backpack take the hit and not the bike. We do this so you don't have to!Ahh my bad lol.
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