Bivvy a Month 2016.

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frogatthefarriers
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by frogatthefarriers »

4/4 at Penrhos Isaf on the WRT. I got there after dark on Saturday at the same time as a bunch of other chaps. "Good" I thought, "Some company for the first night". It was not to be. Some selfish git had bedded down in the communal room and effectively scotched any chance of socialising, so it was pitch hammock and have a good glug of the whisky I'd brought for the occasion.

Hammock picture 1
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5/5 by Llyn Tegid I had been aiming for Llangower Point on the lake shore where I've camped before, but the wind seemed a bit strong so I found a nice sheltered spot in a beech wood just up the bank from the south-side road. A good call. I could hear the wind whooshing through the tree-tops while I was gently rocking to sleep in still air. (with the rest of my whisky).

More hammock pictures.

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Richard G
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Richard G »

Neat. I like that.
GregV
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by GregV »

5/5 Lakes
ImageIMG_8184 by Green Vegetables, on Flickr
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jay91
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by jay91 »

GregV wrote:5/5 Lakes
ImageIMG_8184 by Green Vegetables, on Flickr
ImageIMG_8193 by Green Vegetables, on Flickr
That looks ace :-bd
Trying to ride bikes.
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TheBrownDog
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by TheBrownDog »

Not sure what Im up to, but I''m counting last night - we had a big group of dads and kids at our local campsite. It was a very nice evening so I slept out in my bivvi bag instead of the big tents everyone brought.

I love doing these camp outs with other families - there were about 20 kids and about 8 blokes (none of our wives wanted in) and we sat about commenting on each others BBQ technique while the kids wore themselves out doing stuff that kids don't do enough of these days. The only vegetables were in the potato salad and coleslaw, no one brushed their teeth before bedtime and no one died.

And by God what a wonderful weekend. My son and I were camping up at Cannock Chase over the bank holiday and it snowed, haled, sleeted and didnt get over 10 degs for three days. You'd hardly think we were in the same country.
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whitestone
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by whitestone »

Having missed April due to work commitments - couldn't find any suitable bivy spots in the urban areas of Taiwan :roll: - had a bit chillier than expected bivy (i.e. I'd got too light a bag) at Moss Eccles Tarn whilst doing the #jennride

So 4/5 for me.
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Taylor »

Thatchers cider orchard was my bed for the night.
Woke up at 3.30 this morning and looked up to see the ISS flying over my head.
5/5
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ctznsmith
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by ctznsmith »

4/5 Rode some of the Gravel Dash route and camped in Puddletown woods. First outing for the new tent :-bd
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Laurensdad
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

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5/5 South Downs Way. Got a bit blowy and windy but 105 miles over the last two days was great fun in good company.
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Blair512
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Blair512 »

Mays bivvy seen me leaving work in Grangemouth on Friday and cycling out to Kincardine to meet up with the Fife Coastal Path.

ImageWP_20160527_16_47_36_Pro by Blair Caldwell, on Flickr

From there I followed the coast round to Inverkeithing where I stopped for a quick chippy before pressing on, the plan was to make it to Kirkcaldy to try out my first night under a tarp with a bivvy bag. I made good time on the easy going path so when I arrived at Kinghorn around 8 I decided to stop for a couple of pints. I went into Pettycur bay caravan park ordered my pint and sat down just as a large wedding party arrived, I was a braw sight sitting among them all with my new Bear Bones jersey on!

A few pints of Stella seen me nicely through to the back of 9 when I decided it would be quiet enough to find a spot for the night. A further 20 minutes and I was on the outskirts of Kirkcaldy and pitched up next to Seafield tower, a beautiful spot to spend an evening.

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Out came the hip flask and I whiled away the next couple of hours listening to the seals howling and watching the cargo ships slowly disappear into the fog. When I finally turned in I was knackered and dropped off pretty quickly. I think I managed an hours sleep before I was awakened by a group of local youths looking for a suitable drinking spot. I seen them coming so lay silent until they were about 10 meters away and then hit them with my Hope lamp at full power, to say they sh*t themselves is an understatement! They weren't long in hanging around after they'd asked my why I was sleeping there and how many gears my bike had (One lads was better than mine because he had 21 gears on his Apollo and I only have 10!).

I slept late in the morning and finally crawled out of my bivvy bag slightly soggy but having had a braw warm nights sleep. The porridge I had brought along for breakfast had been rendered useless as I had managed to use it as a pillow through the night so I had a quick coffee and a dook in the sea before packing up and setting off.

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I was heading inland today and onto some of my favorite trails I used to ride when I stayed in Fife. I had mapped my route on Strava and tried to include some trails I'd not ridden before which turned out to be a bad idea. 45 minutes of horrible Hike a Bike ensued with no discernible path and only a few yellow arrows spray painted on trees to guide my way.

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After despatching that and finally finding good track again I decided to skip summiting the West Lomond and skirt round the back of it instead and oh what a choice that was, that bit of track has always been one of my favorites but it was so deeply rutted at parts it was impossible to cycle. When I reached the top of the glen and looked down at the newly repaired path winding its way down like a river of gold I knew I was in for a treat! The next 18 minutes 13 seconds were the best of the whole weekend and enough to secure me 4th overall on the Strava segment with a loaded bike and having missed a turn at one point. I can't wait to go back without the gear and hit it in anger!

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A few road miles and a stop at the pub before jumping on the train home at Ladybank rounded off my weekend, 67 miles and 2000ft of climbing wasn't overly strenuous but good fun and nice to be back on the bike again. I had a fantastic time and thoroughly enjoyed the tarp and bivvy setup, I bought the emergency bivvy bag to see if I liked it before investing in something more expensive and apart from the sweatiness in the morning it was great, time to get on with finding a good bag now!

That's 5/5 for me including my disastrous trip up the WHW with Adam and Matt of this parish last month which I still can't bear to talk about after spending £300 servicing my bike to be beaten by a mechanical!
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Ray Young
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Ray Young »

Blair, well and truly bitten :wink: :-bd .
Blair512
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Blair512 »

Ray Young wrote:Blair, well and truly bitten :wink: :-bd .
Loving getting out each month Ray and managing to cut my gear down each time as well, almost lost the back pack all together, a couple of stem cells and cages on my forks and I should be sorted.
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jBay
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by jBay »

Sea views just outside Charmouth, Dorset
Alan63
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Alan63 »

Hi there. my first post on this thread. Did my first bike, hike and bivvy with my 8 year old son Fraser. Pedalled from Dalwhinnie up to the high point of the estate track on the Fara. Hiked a bit higher and camped on a flat shoulder. Continued to the top the next morning. Came back down, packed up and rolled back to car. A very successful first bivvy. More in the planning.
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Blair512
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by Blair512 »

I'm hoping this counts because I don't know if I'll get out again this month, spent the weekend with the family at Cream O' The Croft MTB festival in comrie. We slept in a tent and there was cycling so I'm saying it's OK!

I was representing Bear Bones in the enduro race on saturday but failed miserably and came 2nd last after getting a puncture on stage 2 then managing to knot my chain putting the wheel back on, next time I think I'll run to the end of the stage and fix the puncture there. All my other stage times were solid middle of the pack or better so I know I was riding pretty quick despite feeling crap and my bike shaking itself to bits!

ImageComrie Croft 2 by Blair Caldwell, on Flickr

Oor Lucy managed to pull in a win in the kids drag bike racing though so all was not lost!

ImageComrie Croft 3 by Blair Caldwell, on Flickr

Great weekend was had by everyone and it was good to share my passion for cycling with the whole family. Can't wait to go back next year and have another crack at it!
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frogatthefarriers
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by frogatthefarriers »

6/6 Bulkeley Hill.

Pedalled out after evening meal, 13 miles. Set up on top of an escarpment overlooking the Cheshire plain. A good glug of port followed by a good nights sleep.

View from my bed.
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The wind had changed through 180 degrees in the night and was blowing up from the cliff and under the tarp, lifting it like a parachute. It seemed to miss me though, I was toasty warm.
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Then pedalled home for second breakfast.
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GregV
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by GregV »

ImageIMG_8421 by Green Vegetables, on Flickr

ImageIMG_8415 by Green Vegetables, on Flickr

6/6 last night, but no bikes involved I'm afraid. My first walking bivvy. Walked from the Sportsman in Hayfield up William Clough. Bivvied close to the downfall. Got soaked. Up early & back to the car via Kinder Low & Edale Cross. Lovely evening & morning walk.
TimBB
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by TimBB »

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A road trip this month through edge of Lake District then up along Solway coast.
Marvelous trip, great scenery and met some fantastic people along the way
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RIP
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by RIP »

5/6. Had been feeling a bit peaky since last bivi session, so Pickers kindly offered to accompany me on some Peak Practice last weekend. Direct train 07.09 from Leighton Buzzard all-stations to Kidsgrove allowed me plenty of time in the restaurant car – kippers, kedgeree, porridge, toast, silver pot of tea with The Times etc etc. Then it was Picker’s charabanc up to Burbage via Flash Bar Stores where we partook of a late breakfast in the highest village in Britain (although Wanlockhead bitterly disputes this factoid of course). Extra marks were awarded for their possession of an outside lav which Pickers duly sampled. Curiously we could actually see the mast at our destination Eyam from Burbage, 15 miles away, albeit somewhat further via our circuitous route. Equally curiously the mast was almost at exactly the same height USL as our start point.

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First section was over the rocky track to the Cat and Fiddle Inn (England’s 2nd highest boozer; I wonder where the 3rd highest mountain bike trail is, and the 4th highest sewage works?), then down to Three Shire Heads with its picture-postcard river bridge.

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The pull up to Wicken Walls was chain-wreckingly sandy, and the further haul back up to Flash Stores was lung-wreckingly steep too. The proprietor of said establishment was suitably baffled as we rolled past 2.5 hours after we’d previously seen her. A missed opportunity for another brew, but one of the amusing drops down into Hollinsclough beckoned; followed by a pleasant amble next to, and indeed completely into in Pickers’ moist case, the River Dove towards Longnor. A lights-controlled road narrows was entertaining since it was a few hundred yards long up a steep hill and the lights changed at least three times after we’d passed our original green, and it got a bit confusing whether drivers were attacking us from behind or in front. Pickers at the Hollinsclough rockfest:

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Longnor Craft Centre provided a late luncheon, giving us a bit of fuel to head down to the Dove again then back up to Dowlow quarry. Mostly so far our route had cunningly involved roads up and tracks down, and a further track brought us to Priestcliffe followed by another bone-jarring descent down to Millers Dale, riding over the bonnets and roofs of the 4x4s coming uphill towards us. We’d meant to meet Lee here but our geriatric progress (so he said) had allowed him two or three trips along the Monsal Trail and back while he was festering waiting for us. Still, as many know, it’s a very pleasant meander along through the old railway tunnels by the River Wye making it what must be one of the most popular off-road “family” trails in the country. Takes ages picking bits of dog out from your spokes at the other end though ;-).

Eschewing, not chewing, the world’s most expensive sarnie at Monsal Head (see previous report) was little hardship since just down the road the Packhorse Inn offered a far more satisfactory couple of cheeky mid-afternoon pints of Thornbridge Old Scrote. Pickers was all for staying for dinner as well but the 90 minute wait rather put a damper on his lipsmacking so it was off over Longstone Edge for the cracking downhill into Calver and along to Stoney Middleton chippie, which is a good antidote to Tywyn chipshop. By this time the 2pm-advertised 6pm-actual rain had finally materialised so we resorted to the traditional bus-shelter dining room and chomped away in gently steaming puddles.

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Slight drawback with the chippie visit was the 15-minute late arrival at Eyam Stores thereby rendering us milkless for breakfast, sigh. Various bivi spots including the football pitch were rejected in favour of a spot just off the Little Bretton BOAT or RUPP or whatever it is. In fact a boat would have been very useful by this point, and the well-known feature of waterproof clothing (to keep water in) had made itself known by now. A peaceful and aqueous night ensued, broken only by me being attacked by a Monty Python-style killer rabbit which turned out only to be my makeshift tarp pole stick collapsing onto my bag. So far so UK-standard-June: winter sleeping bag toasty in the pissing rain, floating out from the tarp and gently down the hill on a blow-up mat.

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Breakfast was frugal: porridge with stream water (no salt though, I’m not that professional) and ovaltine instead of tea (no milk y'see), and Pickers was even more frugal due to a stove fault. Luckily the last dregs of my bio-ethanol Stu-Stove allowed him a small brew. A screaming downhill from Shatton Moor (or possibly Shat On which is how we were feeling by this point) to Hope Adventure Cafe just as the rain stopped, which offered a nice bit of toast or bacon roll as desired. The well-dressing ceremony was, er, well underway but I’m not convinced that a water shortage was the most pressing of Hope’s problems at this point.

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The usual stagger up Mam Tor brought us to the Blue John tea shack. Shall we stop again? “No definitely not”, “we’ve only just had breakfast that’d be ridiculous”. 20 minutes and two cuppas later, with the weekend’s cafe-stop tally mounting alarmingly, the now-baking sunshine accompanied us over to Tideswell via Oxlow Rake and a very nice track at Wheston which became progressively steeper and rockier and nastier until we debouched into Tideswell with blazing brake pads. Another late lunch, at the Exotic Dancer – sorry Exotic TEA – cafe, where they’d almost run out of food after their own well-dressing day. Due to time constraints we abandoned the return to Buxton via Longnor, and cut along the best bit of the Monsal Trail through Chee Tor tunnels, then up Cow Dale – minus any bovine presence apart from our own hopeless pedalling abilities. As Pickers said there was no way this was a “one arrow” incline, but the purgatory continued across Harpur Hill which looked flat on the map because we’d missed seeing the “twin arrow” valley at Grin Low.

On the way back to Kidsgrove it would have been rude not to nip into Flash Bar cafe yet again. So we did, just before closing time. Nice cup of rosie lee, a fact-finding visit to the outside karzi for me (a separate report of which will find its way to the forum of the Outside Bog Appreciation Society), and a bottle of Flash IPA for the train home. At this point Pickers decided to try and convert me to the efficiencies of Satnav technology to guide us the last 12 miles in a straight line along the A53. I must say I’m impressed – we covered some amazing single-track roads round Leek, some with grass growing down the middle, and at one point the A53 went through a small ford. It may not have been the A53 at this point I confess, but I was too dizzy to suss where we were. If we’d stuck to a paper map we’d have missed all these attractions :-). Anyroadup, Pickers did a top job navigating us back to civilisation, well Kidsgrove anyway, just in time for the 17.50 sleeping car train back to Leighton Buzzard. The Satnav has apparently since been buried in a convenient cowpat after it directed Pickers off one junction on the M6 on the way home, round some random lanes, then back on at the next junction before carrying on as if nothing had happened!

Very many thanks to Pickers for putting up with my dubious route-planning, and next time it’s the Trans Siberian MTB Trail we reckon. The weather’ll be miles better.

“Reg”
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whitestone
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by whitestone »

Nice one Reg.

My al-fresco bed for the night for this month's contribution was a sheep feed storage shed on the Yorkshire Dales 300. Let's just say it had atmosphere :lol:
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by RIP »

"atmosphere" :-).

Thanks 'stone, appreciated. I know I like to wax lyrical but if one is gonna bung a report up I think it's nice to include info about caffs, locations etc. Maybe it'll help another Boner (now now, settle down at the back......) with their planning and ideas. So I'd make that humble plea, "WHERE was pic X?", "what were the people LIKE in caff Y?", etc etc. Obv I must have too much spare time.....

"Reg"
"My God, Ponsonby, I'm two-thirds of the way to the grave and what have I done?" - RIP

The sign outside the asylum is the wrong way round.....

"At least you got some stories" - James Acaster
adrianwr
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by adrianwr »

I was lucky to get three nights out in June. The one spot id go back to is at the head of loch carron in the old castle sitting on an outcrop of granite. Quite spot with great view of the isle skye. Hope to get a few nights under the stars next month so I might get the bivy a month bug. Cheers adi.
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frogatthefarriers
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by frogatthefarriers »

7/7 Dyfnant Forest, on the way to Bearstock.
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Dinner:- Fry onions and cut-up Polish sausage
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Then set aside in bowl to free up pan for boiling spaghetti. Chuck in tub of Dolmio Stir-in sauce (I wanted to boil water for tea afterwards but didn't want to wash the pan).
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Then drain off water and add spaghetti to sausage/onion. Open sauce and mix in. Yummy!
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You can keep your freeze-dried packets.

And Bearbones Towers.
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Huge thanks to Stu and Dee for a fantastic party with great food. As many have said, it was great to be able to fit faces and real names to forum names.

And finally, a few photos from the ride to and from.
The aqueduct at Pontcysyllte, where it used to be a rite of passage for teenagers to cross on the OUTSIDE of the railings.
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The bog. What fun! Eric's having fun too.
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A view from a track down from Foel Fadian
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I took so many "View" pictures that I was suffering from View Blindness by the end.

Then it was a train home from Machynlleth. I'd booked a bike place on the rain but when I got on there was not enough room because there was another bike taking up all the space. A spotlessly clean Raleigh with a full set of panniers front and rear. it looked as though it had just come from the showroom. When the owner was found, he took off the rear panniers and moved his bike closer to the wall, I was able to (just) squeeze mine in.
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I confess to feeling a bit smug seeing my dirty great muddy behemoth dwarfing his mamby-pamby milksop of a bike in the corner. Ha!
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by RIP »

Enjoyed that report Frog, particularly the "recipe corner" :-). Bet the "scary" route down from Fadian was fun on a fatty, although the chippings are a bit tedious compared to days of old. Not tempted to ride the top of the Pontcysyllte railings then?

"Reg"
"My God, Ponsonby, I'm two-thirds of the way to the grave and what have I done?" - RIP

The sign outside the asylum is the wrong way round.....

"At least you got some stories" - James Acaster
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Re: Bivvy a Month 2016.

Post by frogatthefarriers »

"Not tempted to ride the top of the Pontcysyllte railings then?"

Er, no. Given that I can fall riding up a kerb, I think I'll give that a miss? I doubt even Danny MacAskill would attempt it
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