Re: Autumn 2016 | Page 93

RideLondon 100 for Rockinghorse It was reported by the BBC recently that the Manager of Reading Women’s Football Club, Kelly Chambers, returned to the workplace just 12 days after giving birth but employees and employers should avoid following this example if they want to stay within the boundaries of the law. For Jennifer this was the challenge of her first “century” ride, for which she had been training for many months. For me the hope was that this time I could go round the course without getting drenched. I had taken part in 2014 when the event was on the tail-end of Hurricane Bertha and took place in torrential rain and flooding. We hoped to complete the course and hit our £1,000 fund-raising target. The morning was bright, the forecast good, according to the weather apps (cyclists tend to have at least two to cross check against – weather becomes almost as important as coffee as you become more addicted to the sport) and we set off in high spirits, along with 26,000 other cyclists. off (we were lucky enough get the same start time and wave) at a cracking pace, and were soon out of London, through Richmond Park and out into “leafy Surrey”. Tragically we were then held up for an emergency. There are initially mixed emotions when this happens. There is frustration because you want to get on, and we had about 65 miles to go. However, you also know that the hold-up is for a reason – you cannot say a “good” reason because you fear it is far from that. The longer the wait the more you fear the worst, and the arrival of the air ambulance confirms your worries. This year a rider – Robin Chard – lost his life as a consequence of a heart attack, whilst riding for charity (as the vast majority of riders are) his being Cancer Research UK. Contingency plans kicked in and many riders therefore “missed out” the bigger hills of Leith Hill and Box Hill. We missed the first of those but were just in time to avoid the second being cut for us. From there the finishing 30 miles are quick, and the last 10 into London are a blast. Jenifer and I were separated for those 10, and both went hell for leather trying to find/ catch the other, and as a consequence had some really good times on the Strava segments (one for the “anoraks” there). Ultimately the cuts meant our ride was “only” 92 miles, but what a 92 it was. The event is unique, and part of a broader Olympic cycling legacy that is one of the few legacy stories that is a (continuing) success. To borrow a phrase, if you ever get the chance to enter, “just do it”. By Dean Orgill The logistics of this event are awesome. There are multiple start colours and times of waves consisting (I believe) of 700 people in each wave. Within a very few miles these waves converge and riders set off for central London experiencing the unusual joy of closed roads. The chance to ride 100 miles without traffic is a big attraction to riders. The fact that you take in sites and routes such as Trafalgar Square, Box Hill and The Mall along the way really makes it extra special. It is also a fast course. Jennifer and I set 91