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Glasgow, Edinburgh looking at temporary cycle lanes – but not just yet; TT champ breaks women's Zwift everesting record (without planning to); Indian cops puncturing tyres of lockdown rule breakers; Milan reallocates space to cyclists + more on live blog

Welcome to Tuesday's live blog, with Jack Sexty at the controls and Simon MacMichael taking over later this evening. ...
21 April 2020, 19:59
Glasgow and Edinburgh planning to introduce temporary cycle lanes – but not just yet

Glasgow and Edinburgh are looking at introducing temporary cycle lanes by taking space away from motor vehicles to allow people on bike or on foot to stay socially distant from each other.

Scottish Parliament Bike Stands (copyright Simon MacMichael).jpg

Both Scotland’s largest city as well as the country’s capital are said to be in discussions with the Scottish Government’s Transport Agency, as well as the sustainable Transport charity Sustrans over the move.

However, the Scotsman says that reallocating road space is planned once lockdown restrictions are eased – which under current legislation cannot happen for more than a fortnight at the very earliest.

More on this story on road.cc tomorrow.

21 April 2020, 14:21
Time trial specialist Alice Lethbridge breaks women's 'virtual everesting' record on Zwift during charity event... and hadn't even planned to
alice lethbridge on zwift - via twitter

As part of Kingston Wheelers Cycling Club's effort to raise money for Kingston Hospital by tackling a virtual elevation challenge, the CTT 100 mile time trial record holder Alice Lethbridge became the fastest female to complete a virtual everesting on Zwift around the 'Alpe du Zwift' course... and reveals that she hadn't even planned to before starting out for the day on her trainer. 

Lethbridge - who also toppled Beryl Burton's legendary 12 hour TT record in 2017 by riding 286.65 miles - explained: "I’ve only been on Zwift just under a month and knew nothing about virtual Everests until my clubmate Harry started nudging me with the idea last week. I’d read the Everest rules on Thursday in case I felt ok to carry on past 5,000 metres, but I didn't make the call until my sixth ascent of the Alpe.

"I could see I was on pace to break the women’s  virtual Everest record and when my coach gave me the go ahead, that was enough. My third wind came and I went into 12 TT hour mode topping 8,848 metres in just under 9 hours and 24 minutes. I’m so pleased with how much we’ve raised for Kingston hospital and with how many members got involved. The event was great fun - at times it was like being on a club ride, one of the things I’ve missed the most during lockdown.”

kingston wheelers virtual zwift challenge photo april 2020.JPG

Collectively the team climbed 206,996 metres between 61 members and raised £13,000 over a week of fundraising, with Gregg Ball and Harry Bunnell also completing virtual everesting rides totalling more than 8,864 metres climbed - you can donate here

21 April 2020, 16:24
11 Cycle Republic stores to be taken over by e-scooter specialists Pure Electric
pure scooters london - via instagram.PNG

Cycle Republic - which is owned by Halfords - will close 11 other stores permanently by 2021, but 85 staff members from the 11 stores being rescued by Pure Electric will have their future employment secured. Full story over on eBikeTips

21 April 2020, 13:28
Chris Froome 'making lemonade' (as captured by his wife)

Froome's other half is responsible for taking the steady stream of photos we've seen from him in the last few weeks so he says. If you're down with the kids, he's also worth a follow on Tik Tok

21 April 2020, 13:16
York bike shop dealing with non-stop customers amid 'lockdown cycling craze', according to the York Press
cycle heaven york - viw twitter

When we think of a craze, BMX, Pokemon cards and yo-yo's spring to mind... but apparently just good old cycling itself is now a 'craze' in locked down Britain according to the York Press; based off the testimony of bike shop Cycle Heaven, who are are flat our repairing cycles so locals can get their daily exercise on two wheels: 

“It’s really hard work at the moment, but we want to carry on,” boss Andy Shrimpton told York Press

“We feel we are offering a really valuable service.”

Cycle Heaven say they have cut their opening hours and provide safety products such as sanitiser to staff. Mr Shrimpton says he hopes there will be a permanent increase in cycling when the pandemic ends, and the shop is also renting out free hire bikes to key workers. 

21 April 2020, 13:12
Sven Nys gets a unique new bike
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Everyday is a good day to workout! @odlo

A post shared by Sven Nys (@svennys) on

The two-time cyclocross world champ shows us his unusual locked down workout routine in (presumably his own) gym... can anyone identify this contraption he's pedalling?

21 April 2020, 09:57
'You thought you had it tough?' part 2: cyclists caught breaking lockdown rules in India have their tyres punctured and are made to carry their bikes home

A video has emerged of some hardline punishments being dished out to lockdown violators in the Indian city of Kanpur; rule breakers on foot were being forced to do socially distanced yoga and cyclists are shown getting whipped with a lathi (a large piece of bamboo) and having their tyres punctured, leaving them no option but to carry their bikes home on their shoulders... time to switch to solid tyres? 

India's lockdown rules are stricter than the UK's with citizens only allowed out to buy essential items, therefore ‘joy walking’ as it is called by Newsroom Post isn't currently permitted. 

21 April 2020, 13:06
"It was like standing on the edge of a train station platform while an Intercity goes through without stopping"
21 April 2020, 09:15
Another one taking their daily exercise on the motorway

This time it's the M57 we're adding to our 'cyclists on the motorway' archive, after a woman told North West Motorway Police that she was taking her daily exercise walking her bike along it. 

Late last month a man was warned "this does not constitute your daily exercise” after he was caught cycling along the M60 in Cheshire; police reported that the man was unaware of what the problem was when they tried to offer advice. 

21 April 2020, 09:56
'You thought you had it tough?' part 1: Indian labourer cycles 1,700km to get home

The Hindustan Times reports that 20-year-old Mahesh Jena made the mammoth 1,700km trip from Sangli to the village of Bhanra in Jajpur on his battered 22 inch frame bike and a backpack full of supplies, completing the journey in seven days. Mr Jena had no maps or phone, and just carried a blanket, quilt, a change of clothes, some biscuits, water and 3,000 rupees (about £31) in cash. He said that he had 'no fear and little doubt' and was prepare to walk if the bike was rendered unusable along the way; his other opton was to stay in Sangli's industrial quarter where his factory job was likely to be suspended for up to five months, meaning he would have no income to pay for food or rent. 

After an average of 272km a day and numerous punctures, Mr Jena ​made it to Jajpur town 5km away from his home, where he is still in quarantine waiting to be declared fit to go back to his family. 

 

21 April 2020, 08:42
Some good to come out of all this? Milan looking to avoid pre-pandemic pollution levels by turning streets over to cyclists and pedestrians

The Guardian reports that Milan's Strade Aperte plan will transform 35km of streets into cycling and walking infrastructure, which also includes new and widened pavements, 30kph speed limits and priority for cyclists and pedestrians. 

Described as one of the most ambitious cycling and walking schemes in Europe, Milan is keen to prevent a return to the dangerous levels of pollution it was choking in pre-coronavirus; under the lockdown congestion from motor traffic has dropped  by 30-75% and air pollution has fallen, according to The Guardian. 

Deputy Mayor of Milan Marco Granelli said: “We worked for years to reduce car use. If everybody drives a car, there is no space for people, there is no space to move, there is no space for commercial activities outside the shops.​

“Of course, we want to reopen the economy, but we think we should do it on a different basis from before.

“We think we have to reimagine Milan in the new situation. We have to get ready; that’s why it’s so important to defend even a part of the economy, to support bars, artisans and restaurants. When it is over, the cities that still have this kind of economy will have an advantage, and Milan wants to be in that category.”

Last week it was announced Brighton had become the first UK city to restrict road access to cars to aid safe cycling and walking during the pandemic; as of yesterday Madeira Drive along the Brighton seafront was closed to motor traffic from 8am-8pm.  ​

 

21 April 2020, 07:35
Chris Cuomo out of quarantine... although he wasn't always in quarantine, according to cyclist he called a "jackass, loser, fat-tire biker"

The American TV presenter - brother of the current Governor of New York Andrew Cuomo - was scolded by a 65-year-old cyclist last week who spotted Cuomo 'hanging out' with his wife, three children and another woman outside his house in East Hampton, when he was supposed to be in quarantine due to contracting coronavirus according to the New York Post

"I just looked and said, ‘Is that Chris Cuomo? Isn’t he supposed to be quarantined?", the cyclist told the NYP, before Cuomo reportedly launched into an angry tirade against the cyclist. 

Cuomo appeared on a radio show last week and described the man as a "jackass, loser, fat-tire biker", while the cyclist claims he has filed a police report about Cuomo's behaviour. Some are describing the above video as 'fake news' if the cyclist's account is to be believed. 

21 April 2020, 07:19
Man who has already cycled around Britain is doing it again in reverse when lockdown lifts
ryan rides around britain again

Yorkshireman Ryan Anderton has already completed the 5,000 mile route around England, Scotland and Wales, and as soon as the UK comes out of lockdown he aims to become one of a select few who have cycled around Britain both clockwise and anti-clockwise.  

Mr Anderton hopes to complete the journey in 40 days and is welcoming other cyclists to join him for as much or as little as they can, while fundraising for five charities including Mind and NHS Charities Together. You can find out more and follow for updates on Mr Anderton's Facebook page, and donate via his Virgin Money Giving Page

21 April 2020, 07:17
Combining cycling with lawnmowing is the workout you didn't know you needed

Does it come in a gravel version?

21 April 2020, 07:17

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Arriving at road.cc in 2017 via 220 Triathlon Magazine, Jack dipped his toe in most jobs on the site and over at eBikeTips before being named the new editor of road.cc in 2020, much to his surprise. His cycling life began during his students days, when he cobbled together a few hundred quid off the back of a hard winter selling hats (long story) and bought his first road bike - a Trek 1.1 that was quickly relegated to winter steed, before it was sadly pinched a few years later. Creatively replacing it with a Trek 1.2, Jack mostly rides this bike around local cycle paths nowadays, but when he wants to get the racer out and be competitive his preferred events are time trials, sportives, triathlons and pogo sticking - the latter being another long story.  

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16 comments

Avatar
SCC4LYFE | 3 years ago
0 likes

Who cares about virtual everesting? It's all about buns and beers

#SCC

Avatar
WillRod | 3 years ago
2 likes

I'm one of those people still using bike shops.

Moved in with my fiancé, because she still has to go to work, and the lockdown scuppered us buying our first house. Her flimsy shed in the garden meant I didn't want to take a nice, bike so I dusted off my old hybrid that now a pub\town bike and realised it needed a service, and I didn't have any tools with me.

 

Hopefully, since I dropped it off this morning, I should have it back by the weekend and then I can burn off the winter chub, and get back into cycling again!

Avatar
brooksby | 3 years ago
3 likes

I have a Dawes Street Life, a steel framed sort-of-hybrid from 1992, that I bought for £10 after a friend of my wife was going to chuck it out during a shed clear-out.  It has a frame sticker saying it came from Cycle Heaven in York yes

Avatar
ktache | 3 years ago
0 likes

If it wasn't for the motor vehicle in shot, just from the colour and the quality I would have said that motorway "photo" was from the 70s.

Avatar
CygnusX1 | 3 years ago
3 likes

Chapeau to Mahesh Jena! 

Averaging 272km a day for 7 days whilst carrying a rucksack and some carrier bags on an old steel-framed bike with pull-rod brakes on country roads is no mean feat!

Avatar
brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

Cyclist riding about in breach of strict lockdown = bad.

Cyclist having to walk home carrying their bike in breach of strict lockdown because a policeman vandalised their ride = ??

Avatar
eburtthebike | 3 years ago
7 likes

Doubtless Milan will be held up as a great example of how to reduce pollution, congestion and danger, and of making the streets people-friendly by our politicians and planners.  Then they'll come out with all the reasons why it can't be done here.

Avatar
Simon E replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
4 likes

Agree.

Another article in the Guardian yesterday on how research suggests that air pollution may be one of the most important contributors to deaths from Covid-19.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/apr/20/air-pollution-may-be...

Yet another reason to consider reducing or banning fossil fuel vehicles.

Avatar
ktache replied to Simon E | 3 years ago
1 like

Yeah I read thet too, don't know, areas of high transport pollution tend to be the ones of high concentrations of population and indeed poverty. If that can be normalised then maybe?

I'm all for lowering traffic volume and the pollution of that traffic.

I'm kind of hoping that perhaps those working from home might continue doing it for a few days a week, when "normality" comes back, perhaps producing levels of congestion seen more during school holidays.  It doesn't take much of a drop in traffic to cause a massive drop in congestion.

Avatar
eburtthebike replied to ktache | 3 years ago
3 likes

ktache wrote:

I'm kind of hoping that perhaps those working from home might continue doing it for a few days a week, when "normality" comes back, perhaps producing levels of congestion seen more during school holidays.

After lockdown ended in Wuhan, car use went up to higher than previously.  Of course, if the government put in all the temporary cycle lanes we've been asking for, enough people might get the idea that cycling is safe, quick, healthy, non-polluting and cheap, but all they've done is give permission for the bankrupt local authorities to do it.

Avatar
brooksby replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
1 like

I'm driving far more than cycling at present, but that's because my wife is genuinely worried that I might come to harm at the hands of the Angry Locals in our village if I'm seen riding a bike sad

Avatar
Hirsute replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

Can't you put the bike in the back till you are out of the village?

You'll be telling us next you have some of thsoe signs up...

Avatar
brooksby replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
1 like

Quote:

You'll be telling us next you have some of thsoe signs up...

Worse than that, I live in one of the villages covered in articles over recent days.  We're talking pitchforks and a wicker man... 

Avatar
WillRod replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
2 likes

brooksby wrote:

Worse than that, I live in one of the villages covered in articles over recent days.  We're talking pitchforks and a wicker man... 

My first thought when seeing the news stories about grumpy villages was that some of the cyclists passing through probably live in or around the village anyway!

Avatar
Secret_squirrel replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
3 likes

I'd learn* to pop wheelies past the reddest of the Gammons houses if it were my village. 

*To my eternal shame I can't wheelie - its almost enough to make me hang up my lycra  2 

Avatar
brooksby replied to Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
0 likes

No, I never managed to learn to do that, either...

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