Biking

  • Hey Guest, Early bird pricing on the Summer Moot (29th July - 10th August) available until April 6th, we'd love you to come. PLEASE CLICK HERE to early bird price and get more information.

Mutley

Forager
May 6, 2005
101
0
I do alot of biking and find it a great way to travel around, you get great views and able to get to almost anywhere rather quickly.

It is also suitable, as my bike is only light, and it isn't hard work getting around, you can easily carry everything you need in your back-pack, then if you find a spot, just chain the bike to a tree and walk on!

Does anyone else bike? I like to think of it as the land Canoe - don't ask why, lol.
 

arctic hobo

Native
Oct 7, 2004
1,630
4
37
Devon *sigh*
www.dyrhaug.co.uk
It's my main mode of transport, as I don't drive and prefer not to pay for the bus. Occasionally I switch to my bike for training as well to give me a bit of variation. But for leisure I run, walk and climb. IMO you don't get the same closeness with a bike - and there are hundreds more places you can go on foot.
 

R-Bowskill

Forager
Sep 16, 2004
195
0
59
Norwich
Havn't done any for a year or so, lost a couple of bikes when someone set my landlady's garage on fire which was a bit of a problem, seems the insurance policy didn't cover arson.

I used to have a great bike, did it out in an olive green and sand tigerstripe pattern, including the rims so I could lay it down in the grass and no one would nick it as they couldn't see it. Went all over with that until eventually it gave up the ghost 25 miles from home which was a long walk in the rain for me.

If you put two bikes together and throw a basha over them you've got a tent.

Yes they aren't as versatile as being on foot but they let you get to where you want to do your bushcraft alot faster than walking to the area. Once I've moved house I'll be getting a bike again so I can head out of the city every time I've got half a day off rather than needing a full day to make it worthwhile.
 

Snufkin

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Oct 13, 2004
2,097
138
53
Norfolk
I ride. In fact cycling is my main passion (and financial drain!).
Road bikes, cross bike, mountainbikes, I love'm all :D I don't drive so they are my main source of transport.
I don't like to leave them unattended so I don't tend to bushcraft by bike but they are excellent for foraging as you can hit many blackberry sites in a day. Great for mushroom hunting in the woods too.
 

R-Bowskill

Forager
Sep 16, 2004
195
0
59
Norwich
I've just thought up the perfect combination:

A good touring bike, maybe a Dawes or a good mountain bike and a folding canoe. That would open up alot of possibilities and the combination of leg and arm excersize would be really good, better than any Gym workout.

The trick is to be able to load the bike into the canoe for when you're on the warer and carry the canoe with the bike for the roads. Now there's a project for me to work on over the next couple of years.
 

maximus otter

Member
Sep 14, 2003
41
11
UK
R-Bowskill said:
The trick is to be able to load the bike into the canoe.

I remember years ago seeing a documentary on TV where sea-kayakers had attached brackets onto the front decking of their vessels to fit a mountain bike. IIRC, they were in NW Scotland and used to paddle out to the islands, camp, then explore by bike.

As close to perfect an expedition as I can think of!

maximus otter
 

Andy

Native
Dec 31, 2003
1,867
11
38
sheffield
www.freewebs.com
R-Bowskill said:
I've just thought up the perfect combination:

A good touring bike, maybe a Dawes or a good mountain bike and a folding canoe. That would open up alot of possibilities and the combination of leg and arm excersize would be really good, better than any Gym workout.

The trick is to be able to load the bike into the canoe for when you're on the warer and carry the canoe with the bike for the roads. Now there's a project for me to work on over the next couple of years.

I think it's been done :)

I'm not sure if they still make them but there was a folding mountain bike around a while ago that was quite good. that with a trailer and you could carry the canoe, fold them up and they could go on the canoe if you only have one person

forgot to mention
my bike, the spec of which is in the website in my sig and I'm hoping to do the coast to coast twice this summer (starting in sheffield going to one coast and back and then go to the next coast the following week). Only thing is I haven't been on any big rides since christmas (only time at home I was too ill to ride).
 

grahoom

Forager
May 27, 2005
161
0
48
oxford
pathmusick.hermetech.net
I cycle everyday - i live in brighton and its easier to get about on a bike than it is by car (and often quicker).

i do drive, but dont like it too much and prefer to cycle - i gave my car away to my sister as i didnt use it very much.

i try and ride up into the downs as often as possible, and its a great way of exploring the countryside.

and - its an excellent way to keep fit.

i managed to pick up a second hand specialized stump hopper recently for £55 - which is a bargain, its a light bike, and nice to ride, having 21 gears, it's just fine for what i use it for.
 

match

Settler
Sep 29, 2004
707
8
Edinburgh
I've cycled on and off since my childhood, but recently invested in a road bike instead of the usual mountain bikes I'd always had before - am now finding is a very pleasurable way to travel, and since its got heavy-duty road tyres on it, I've even managed to cycle on gravel paths with reasonable ease.

Spent last weekend cycling round Arran - I agree that a bike can distance you abit from the countryside, but as a lover of wild plants and herbs, I found I was still able to spot things growing in the undergrowth from a fair distance and at speed - but maybe thats just my keen eye!

No cycling for me this week though - the excesses of Arran's mountains have given me patellar tendonitis in my left knee - serves me right for cycling up steep hills in 60mph winds and driving rain with no granny ring to make life easier!
 

swyn

Life Member
Nov 24, 2004
1,159
227
Eastwards!
I love my bike, it's a Raleigh 15 speed in black and green. last year some cows escaped into the woods and i followed their trail (not difficult!) on my bike until they went into more hilly ground where i had to walk. I had left the bike where i thohght i could find it but an hour or so later when we finally got them back into the field could i find it :confused: It took me as long to find the bike as it took to sort the cows out. I still have not painted it orange as i swore i would :p
 
Sep 5, 2005
9
1
34
london
My bike is my only mode of transport. It's an agile hybrid which can handle roads, rough tracks and easy cross-country. On my bike I can easily reach off-road places within a 10-mile radius of my home, mainly on byways, paths and rural roads. I also keep a 'wild food map' on my puter, which is an organised of all the edibles I find on my travels. So for the last few years, at about this time of year I look up what's available my map, hop on my bike, and an hour later I've loaded up my panniers with enough apples to last me a few months, and a few trips later I'm stocked up with blackberries, elderflowers, etc. Other times of the year get me stocked up with other things.

(But this year, I've just moved into a new area, so my map doesn't have much on it yet.)
 

miniac

Forager
Sep 1, 2005
121
0
49
Rainham, Essex, UK
I use my bike whenever I can to comute, then convert her from a road worrier to the cross country animal that I take great pleasure in getting dirty :D :D
Shes called Kerri...... I'm sad!! :rolleyes:
 

Attachments

  • Image027.jpg
    37.3 KB · Views: 87

JoshG

Nomad
Sep 23, 2005
270
1
36
Stockton-on-tees, England.
I used to really be into mountain biking as a kid, I went to races and stuff with my dad, but then I got depressed, lazy and fat. A winning combination, I assure you. I'm getting back into it now though, I recently got myself a pair of offroad lights and they're the business. :D I'm totally going to have to go to hamsterley forest or some similar place to truly test them out in the dark.
 

spoony

Need to contact Admin...
Oct 6, 2005
1,402
12
54
tyne and wear
www.bike2hike.co.uk
i find this biking a bit easier

alan1.jpg
 

ship

Tenderfoot
Nov 27, 2005
94
0
60
NE UK
yep, thats more my kind of biking, last one was an xr400, which got nicked, but had a few over the years

ship
 

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE