Tuesday, December 06, 2005

The Lone Cyclist!: Phnom Penh to Skun - Day 1

Then of course there's Mr. Felix's Lone Cyclist blog, which immediately makes up for finishing Cris Osborn's travelogue and is full of possibilities - start here: The Lone Cyclist!: Phnom Penh to Skun - Day 1

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Sparklines

Every time I go to Edward Tufte's website I find something new and interesting to read. The Sparklines thread is a good example. Must find a way to use these in the documents I'm writing at work, as well as the Bembo font he uses for the book "Envisioning Information"...

Saturday, December 03, 2005

Great winter ride near Selbourne

The picture below, taken of All Saints Church in Upper Farringdon by David Pack of Hampshire Cam, is here because it was a really grey, cold afternoon for taking photographs so the camera stayed in the bag - but a great cycle ride nonetheless.


Upper Farringdon Church by David Pack


I drove down the A31 to Chawton (near Alton), then parked the car at Upper Farringdon, which is a quiet, unspoilt village with some notable old buildings, this church, and The Rose and Crown pub - four streets, not much else - lucky the car isn't any bigger or I'd have found it difficult to park. I picked up a ride listed by Nick Cotton that takes in the Meon Valley and Petersfield, but it was going to be too long so it was unceremoniously cut to just 16 miles. The barometer read 961 when I left the car, and the sky was full of heavy rainclouds. Fortunately the wind was on my back as I followed the little road down to Selbourne. This village was the home of Gilbert White (1720 - 1793), the famous natural historian and some say Britain's first ecologist. His house and gardens are open to the public now, along with a rather good tearoom, which I summoned up the willpower to ride past...


From Selbourne, the route took me past Goleigh Farm, Church Farm (and its lovely manor house), Hawkley, Vann Farm, Newton Valence, and Newton Common, before turning right for Pies Farm and Lower Farringdon. Stopped for a brew at 3pm just off the road behind a high bank with coppiced beech trees creaking in the wind. I pegged out the tarpaulin this time to keep the rain off me, but it stopped before I got moving again. The landscape here is dominated by quiet, narrow lanes among steep-sided wooded hills known as hangers. The riding alternates between highly energetic climbs on impossible gradients, and long flowing descents back to the valley floor; it's a magical area on a windy afternoon with rooks cawing in the trees, or later on in the dark, picking out the road between high overgrown banks by the light of a headtorch.

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Cycling Around The World - two great sites!

Today I've been using Google to track links to http://www.angst.demon.co.uk from other cyclists's websites. Following the requests back to Bicycle Fish, I found two great cycle touring websites to explore. Firstly, there's Anja de Graaf and Paul van Roekel's...


cycling around the the world


.. "Cycling Around The World" site which is simply stunning and sets a new benchmark for the rest of us to follow, and then there's the brilliant and very funny Big Trip website here on blogger by Banz and Vic, which will keep me dreaming for weeks, and is beautifully written.