have very - Audax Australia
Transcription
have very - Audax Australia
Checkpoint Audax Australia The endurance cyclist’s magazine No. 20 Baw Baw Ride reports & photos Audax Australia How it all began Start ‘em young Kyran Beasley, 9 years old 1 ��������������� ��������������� ������������ ����� ���� ������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������������������������� ������� ������� ������� ���� ���� ������ ������� ���������� ������������������������������������������������������������ �������������������������������������������������������� ���������������� � � ������� ���������������������� �������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� �������������������������������� ������������������������������ 2 National Committee The Audax Club of Australia Inc. Association No. A0014462N in this issue... REGULARS President’s Pedals Letters to the Editor Committee Talk Brevets NEWS Young Achiever Melbourne Region News Opperman Memorabilia Auction Audax in the Media - Tumut New Opperman Challenge Full house for PBP night Cafe Audax We Need You (to organise a ride) EVERYTHING ELSE Cycling with Diabetes Hubert Opperman Autobiography The Beachcombers Too many Kangaroos? Award Recipients Completing the Circle The Early Days of Audax Bound for Baw Baw Proposed new Awards A Radical Reconnoitre Don & Enid Halton - Rider Profile Comparing randonnees Bosch on Track Cycling for fitness Lighting the PBP fuse ACP celebrates Going Fixed Wheel for PBP ‘07 Brilliant: Setting out at twilight on the Heywood 300/400/600 in early March. 4 5 5 41 5 7 8 9 9 13 26 38 6 10 14 15 17 18 21 22 26 27 28 31 33 34 35 36 President Hans Dusink 03 9314 3815 president@audax.org.au Secretary Don Briggs 08 9458 8175 d.r.briggs@bigpond.com Treasurer Greg Lansom 02 4271 6091 treasurer@audax.org.au Membership Secretary Lorraine Allen 03 5783 2427 membership@audax.org.au Brevet Secretary Peter Mathews 03 9890 6089 brevets@audax.org.au Committee Members Barry Moore 03 9803 6529 barrykmoore@optushome.com.au Henry Boardman 02 4275 3130 henry.boardman@bluescopesteel.com NSW Correspondent Malcolm Rogers 02 9415 1204 sydney@audax.org.au QLD Correspondent Vaughan Kippers 07 3376 6761 v.kippers@uq.edu.au SA Correspondent Matthew Rawnsley 08 8370 0415 audaxsa@audax.org.au Photo: Russell J Freemantle TAS Correspondent Paul Gregory 03 6229 3811 pgregory@bigpond.com VIC Correspondent Martin Haynes 03 5674 2157 clothing@audax.org.au WA Correspondent Colin Farmer 08 9330 4441 bcfarmer@dodo.com.au 3 Checkpoint No. 20 - Winter 2004 Editor/Producer Patrick van Dyk checkpoint@audax.org.au Brevet Editor Stephen George checkpoint@audax.org.au Distribution Phil Bellette info@audax.org.au Checkpoint is published 4 times per year on the 20th day of January, April, July & October. Contributions, especially those accompanied by photos and graphics, are always welcome. Contributors should confirm that articles have not previously been published elsewhere. Articles are subject to editing for clarity and length. Articles submitted may also be published on our website. Please send to: checkpoint@audax.org.au, or Editor PO Box 12144 A’Beckett St Melbourne VIC 8006 Closing date for the next issue is 28 August, for publication by 20 October 2004. Advertising is available at attractive rates please contact the Editor. Checkpoint is distributed to around 600 members Australia wide. Members of Audax Australia may place free classifieds for bikes, bike-related items, and club events. For back-issues, contribution tips, advertising rates and other information, please visit the website at www.audax.org.au or contact the Editor. 4 The Lucky Country The Audax riding season in the northern hemisphere is now in full swing after a winter of few or no events. We in Australia should consider ourselves lucky. Every weekend of the year, somewhere in this wonderful country of ours, we can take part in an Audax ride. I must admit though that in the middle of winter in Melbourne, I prefer to do an Audax Australia distance of 100km rather than the Les Randonneurs Mondiaux (LRM) sanctioned ones of 200km or above. I find that this keeps up the mileage and the bike fitness. I raise this issue to point out to all members that there is a place in the Audax ride calendar for both LRM and non-LRM events. The trick is to ensure a balance between the two. Audax clubs worldwide promote long distance endurance events of 200km and above as recognized and homologated by Audax Club Parisien. All Audax clubs also promote rides of lesser distances that are designed to encourage riders to participate in cycling events where the aim is to finish and not to “win”. By using the shorter events riders can build up the endurance to tackle the longer brevet rides. These shorter rides can also be used by experienced members to recover from injury or extended time off the bike, or to encourage new riders. The shorter rides are a great chance to pass on Audax tradition. At most Audax rides, after the first 20 kilometers or so the starting peloton breaks up into groups of ones and twos. This does not lend itself to passing on information nor for much social interaction. The larger regions of the club, such as Melbourne, are able to hold regular social nights. Some of the other regions are a little less structured and there is a social dinner for Christmas or at election time. If you take part in a ride away from your normal region don’t ride off on your own, try to ride with some of the locals and have a chat. If you can, stay after the ride and have a coffee or a meal before heading home. Audax is also about making friends. President’s Pedals with Hans Dusink At a recent club night in Melbourne there were about 100 people in attendance. Admittedly the topic was PBP. The 2003 video was screened and a panel of PBP anciens told of their experiences and fielded questions. This video is available to members on loan. First preference will be given to PBP anciens. If you wish to borrow the video, please contact me. Your national committee is committed to promoting Audax. Currently about half the membership resides in Victoria. We are interested in promoting Audax in other areas of Australia. On a recent trip interstate on business, Barry Moore had dinner with members in the ACT. Discussions took place regarding the promotion of a feature event in the ACT that over time could grow in appeal. The ACT members will also look at expanding their calendar of rides. There is now also an ACT email chat list. We are hoping that the Audax activity in Canberra will grow as a result of this. Brevet Results We have noticed a delay by organisers sending in ride results to the brevet secretaries. This delay can have very serious consequences. Unless a ride result is sent to France within a month of the completion of the ride, the ride will not be homologated. This means that ride organisers need to get their results to the State organiser within a week of the ride being completed. It is in all our interests to comply. Besides, the paperwork takes just as long to do the day after the ride as it does a week or two later. Safe riding during the winter months. Correction: The photo of the three sleeping beauties, Doug Kennedy, Alan Tonkin and George Caulfield, shown at the Brest control on PBP in the previous edition of Checkpoint, was incorrectly credited by the Editor to Greg Lansom. The correct credit should go to Ian Boehm, and the Editor extends an apology to Ian for this error. ���������� Young Achiever Audax Australia ��� ��������� ��������� �������� No. 20 A 100km Audax ride in Rochester to commemorate Oppy’s 100th birthday was held on on 29 May 2004. The ride also celebrated the official opening of the renovated Opperman museum. Baw Baw Ride reports & photos Audax Australia How it all began Fifteen riders participated in the commemorative ride. They enjoyed a relaxed late start, and reported that it was a great event. Start ‘em young Kyran Beasley, 9 years old 1 Completing his first Audax randonnee was Kyran Beasley, nine years old next month, who rode with his father, Gary. Kyran completed the ride on a mountain bike with knobby tires, completing the ride with a generous five minutes to spare. Bravo Kyran, a fantastic achievement! Letters to the Editor Address letters to Editor, PO Box 12144, A’Beckett St, Melbourne VIC 8006 or checkpoint@audax.org.au Dear Editor, Edition No. 19 was outstanding. Good to see the return of the Letters to the Editor section. It was great to review the Alpine Classic through the superb coverage in the magazine. Please, can we have more of Twenty Years Ago ? Tony Bolduan’s article The First Classic brought back memories of the 80’s, back when t-shirts, stubbies (a popular brand of cotton shorts) and tennis shoes were standard gear. These days I cannot contemplate a 50km ride let alone a 200km ride without lycra and cleats. Tony stated that “back then a lot of randonneurs were carless...”; perhaps ride organisers could keep in mind that some still are! Barry Moore’s Committee Talk column mentioned a proposal for Audax Australia to increase it’s range of awards, can we hear more? Once again, outstanding magazine, keep up the good work. Russell J. Freemantle Ed: Thanks for your feedback Russell, which is most welcome. Some of your wishes have come true in this edition. Alan Walker and Russell Moore take us back in time to when Audax just started, and Vaughan Kippers discusses increasing the number of Audax awards. If other readers would like to see more (or less) of something, please write in. The accolades for Checkpoint generally belong to those who contribute, as without them there would not be a magazine. Thanks to the regular and occassional contributors, and for those considering contributing, please don’t hesitate. Dear Editor, Over a year ago there was a competition for a new club jersey. The competition came to nothing. Now that the last PBP is over and the excitement leading to 2007 PBP has not yet started, is now the time to re-open the competition? Peter Weiss Reply from the President, Hans Dusink At the last national committee meeting on 5th May, it was decided that as the last competition did not come up an acceptable jersey design that we would enlist the services of a designer. Our clothing manager has commenced this process and the National Committee will review the result. We still have in stock the current jersey. As a club we cannot afford to just give this away, as a new design is probably some time away, I encourage members to snap up a very good quality jersey for a good price. Committee Talk with Hans Dusink At the last national committee meeting held on 5 May 2004, the following items were discussed: • Whether the club should continue to pay the cost of awards (in lieu of applicants paying themselves). Resolved that the club continue the current practice. • Amendments to the constitution have been sent to the Department of Fair Trading, Victoria. • A policy statement will be created to cover expenditure authorisations for those on the national committee. • Further liaison with Cycling Australia was required to clarify some insurance issues regarding Raids. • President of Audax Australia may allow change of closing time of intermediate control points by prior application from ride organisers where the terrain is unduly hilly in the early part of a ride. • Arrange a designer to establish some design ideas for a new clothing range. • Issue of new awards will be put to members (Ed: see article in this issue). 5 Cycling with Diabetes by Richard Connelly This year, I received an Audax membership as a Christmas present. After a few rides and meeting some inspiring people, I turned my sights on a ‘Super Series’. As a new rider to long distance events, the usual queries flooded through my mind: How do you manage exhaustion on such little sleep? How do you train for a 600km event? I had however one added question... How do I cope with my insulin dependant diabetes on such a ride? Photo: Jean-Philippe Battu Managing diabetes presents the challenge of finding the right balance between food, exercise and injected insulin to control blood sugar. Usually this is done by the pancreas. In Type 1 diabetes the pancreas doesn’t produce insulin. With high blood sugars, there is a long term risk of developing health complications. Too low, and there is the risk of drifting into unconsciousness. I generally find this balance easy to strike when undertaking my sedentary lifestyle. So, off to my endocrinologist for a few pointers. “Well, you look healthy, so there is no reason why a diabetic cannot do such a ride. Crazy maybe? Just keep a close eye on your blood sugars, lower your insulin, and you’ll be right!” So with a green light there, I set my sights on training for the Super Series. Riding endurance events begins pushing a few boundaries. First boundary: Bonking Bonking is dangerous with diabetes. After riding for 4-5 hours, everyone’s stores of glycogen are depleted. Glycogen is the body’s main form of carbohydrate storage. It is readily converted to glucose to satisfy the body’s needs. After this point eating is what keeps fuel up to those leg muscles. Not enough food and the “bonk” occurs. However for me, not enough food, and I’d have low blood sugars (have a “hypo”): erratic wondering, not thinking straight, at worst become unconscious. Not so good for the person slipstreaming me! Second Boundary: How much insulin? Insulin is the hormone that allows glucose to get from the blood stream into the muscle cells. With insufficient insulin, glucose builds up in the blood stream (giving high 6 Just as any hill can be conquered, so too can riding with diabetes. blood sugar levels) but more importantly, the muscle cells receive no glucose from which to derive energy. However, with too much insulin on board, the muscles get all the glucose and don’t leave enough for the brain to work. Again resulting in a “hypo”. To make it more complicated, exercise also increases the efficiency of insulin as the body’s metabolism rate increases. So the trick is to take as little insulin as the body needs to get sugars into the muscle cells to function. Any more than this and hypo’s happen. I experimented with a 300km ride the week prior to the Adelaide 600km and I found that taking as little as 15% of my daily insulin was enough to maintain constant blood sugar level within the ‘normal’ range of 3-8. Even then, I had to eat constantly throughout the day to maintain my blood sugar levels as regular checks indicated that they were hovering on the lower end of the scale. luxurious shower before finishing off the last 200km. The ride started crossing the Adelaide Hills (climbing!) to Murray Bridge and back. I found the first 200km to be no problem and my sugars were well maintained within the normal range. This took me 9 1⁄2 hours all up. Third Boundary: Which insulin to use? I use two forms of insulin; immediate acting insulin with an active period of 15 minutes to 2 hours and slow release insulin with an active period of 5 - 12 hours. The problem now becomes that when taking part in a 600km event, the riding lasts longer than the insulin is working. I have to top up at some point to keep insulin on board. However, too much too soon and I risk a hypo. In practice rides, I found the insulin’s effect lasted longer than usual. So I planned to regularly check my sugars (by pricking my finger and using a blood glucose machine) every hour until my sugars started to rise, and then take some short acting insulin. By Sunday afternoon, my sugars started to rise, indicating that the insulin had been depleted. I topped up with the short acting for the last few hours. So how did it go? I headed across to Adelaide for the 600km event put on by Matthew Rawnsley. The course was well thought out, with 3 x 200km loops from a base, where I could keep a store of food to top up on the way, a place to sleep after 400km and even a During the second 200km I thought my sugars would start to rise, especially as the night wore on as my insulin ran out. However, when I pulled in at 3.45am, my sugars were still manageable without needing further insulin. The night stretch was a flat 200km, even though a nasty headwind brought us home over the last three hours. Ten-and-ahalf hours for this section. To be held at 92 Shuter Ave, Greendale on 15th August 2004 at 3.00pm. Melbourne Region is the largest of the Regional Groups within Audax Australia and co-ordinates rides over the whole State of Victoria. The majority of rides it coordinates are in rural areas of the state as far afield as Warragul, Wangaratta, Shepparton, Maryborough, Ballarat and Geelong. It is felt that the current title of “Melbourne Region” does not truly reflect its field of operation and only adds to the general confusion of the Regional structure within Audax Australia. I finished! The end came after 36 hours. Three months ago I would not have thought it possible to ride such a distance, and now I am a Super Randonneur! Wow! Tackling such a distance was a huge challenge. I learnt about my physical capabilities and I felt that I had achieved something amazing for having completed this ride with diabetes. Looking back, it’s hard to believe what I ate along the way: 2.5 litres of orange juice, 9 bananas, 2 coffee scrolls, 5 large Big M’s, a hamburger with the lot, 3 sausage rolls, a bowl of cereal and 3 potato cakes, not too Three months ago I would not have thought it possible to ride such a distance. After three hours sleep, it was “up and at ‘em’” to complete the last 200km loop into the Clare Valley. I found that the insulin I took on Saturday morning was still effective throughout the night and half way through Sunday. We were frustrated by a head/cross wind for 140km. The route took us along some fairly busy roads with Sunday drivers and climbed out of the Adelaide plains into the hills. From Clare Valley there was still further climbing up into the hills of Melbourne News Notice Of Extraordinary General Meeting Kapunda, before the final run home. To clarify this situation it is proposed that the name of Melbourne Region be changed to Victoria Region in a motion to be put at an Extraordinary General Meeting on 15 August 2004. No changes in structure or operation of Melbourne Region are envisaged. Any other region within Victoria wishing to operate independently could do so. If you wish to contribute to the discussion and voting of this issue, members of Audax Australia residing in Victoria are invited to this meeting. If you are unable to attend you are invited to complete the Proxy Form below and return by mail. Please mark the envelope “Melbourne Region Title Change” mention 15 litres of water. Even after this, my sugars were still low. Its amazing how much energy we all use on these rides! Thanks must go to Alan Jones, and especially to Chris Rogers, for their company on the ride, and to Matthew Rawnsley for organising this great event. Now, for the next challenge…Paris maybe? Proxy Form The Audax Club of Australia Association A0014462N PO Box 12144, A’Beckett Street Melbourne 8006 Melbourne Region I ........................................... (full name) being entitled to vote at the extraordinary general meeting of the region to be held on 15 August 2004 appoint:* The chairman of the meeting * .......................................................... (name of proxy) (*delete one) to vote for/against (delete one) the motion that the name of Melbourne Region be changed to Victoria Region. Signed............................................... 7 Oppy Memorabilia Auction In late May, Bonhams & Goodman Auctioneers of Sydney put under the hammer the Sir Hubert Opperman Collection of cycling and political memorabilia. The collection was offered by Ian Opperman, Oppy’s son, and included a large collection of photographs of Opperman taken throughout his career, including 1928 Tour de France, Bol D’Or, 1931 Paris-Brest-Paris and many of his record breaking performances in Australia. The collection also included his favourite signature beret, complete with a one centimetre moth hole, which sold for an incredible $5,700. Also sold were autographed photographs and letters to Oppy from various famous names such as Don Bradman, one of which sold for $1,500. Pre-auction publicity: Sydney Morning Herald, 19 May 2004 8 Both the National and Melbourne committees considered purchasing some items. However, due to both high prices on the day and other factors, no purchases were made by the Club. The national committee instead donated $750 to the Opperman Museum, which was presented on the day of the 100km commemorative ride in Rochester. Audax in the Media From the Tumut and Adelong Times (NSW), Audax Tumut pulls in the big names again. Courtesy John Quinn. Newsflash Opperman All Day Trial by Sue Taylor The Melbourne Region of Audax Australia is excited to announce an innovative approach to introducing the concept of the Opperman All Day Trial to those less experienced or less confident in tackling this unique event. In 2004 Melbourne Region will offer on a trial basis a Petit Oppy event in conjunction with the Opperman all Day Trial (OADT). Teams comprised of five bikes/trikes/ recumbents/unicycles (you get the idea) made up of either : • all females (positive discrimination!) or • four riders under the age of 18 and one adult member of Audax experienced in riding the OADT are invited to register to ride a distance of no less than 180km over the 24 hour period, comprised of at least 155km on the Saturday beginning at 10am, and the remaining 25km on the Sunday morning between 7am and 9am, finishing at Rochester at Sir Hubert Opperman’s statue at 9am. PS. A huge thank you to Lorraine Allen and Ray Watt for taking over the running of the OPPY 100 held at Rochester recently. All other rules common to the OADT will apply. Riders will spend part of their journey cycling at night, and all bikes must be fitted with lighting complying with Audax Australia regulations and must have reflective gear and roadworthy bikes. So get those entries and letters flooding in. We can’t book the band and the scrumptious breakfast until we know there are LOTS of cyclists planning on arriving in Rochester. Impressive: The new Fleche Opperman All Day Trial medallions for 2004 and beyond. 9 Pedals, Politics and People - extracts from the autobiography of Sir Hubert Opperman Lands End to John O’Groats by Hubert Opperman Checkpoint is pleased to be able to bring you selected extracts from Sir Hubert Opperman’s autobiography, Pedals, Politics and People. In this issue, we take up the story of Oppy attempting the End to End record, and other records immediately after, in the UK. We begin with his training ride prior to the record attempt. I trained from Land’s End to John O’Groats, grappling with the problem, even at touring pace, of finding my way accurately over the labryinth of excellent roads which bisect England. At Exeter it was found quicker to by-pass the narrow congested streets but with the risk of taking a wrong road back to the main highway when at racing pace. In daylight, at Bristol, Gloucester, Warrington, Wigan and Preston the streets were a maze and on the open roads in the darkness the signposts a time-wasting mystery. By regulation an official time-keeper and commissionaire were always in a following car, and unless one was off course no audible signals were permitted, nor any interested motor vehicle allowed within 100 yards, were the rider in motion. Special checkers cycled to the chosen route and conscientiously verified that these rules were being observed. I could visualise myself being repeatedly recalled back from incorrect turnings and losing precious time when halting unhappily for guidance. We had not budgeted for English Club life and its solid basis of sportsmanship and dedication. I had joined the Century Road Club, to which Jack Rossiter also belonged. Nevertheless, it accepted responsibility for the entire road organisation from “End to End”, and arranged for 250 marshals to be on point duty day and night at doubtful or difficult junctions. I returned by car from John O’Groats after my training ride to learn how much better one can appreciate and understand the topography of a country from personal effort than motorised propulsion. England, 10 with hedge-fringed roads, and Scotland with its sheltering stone walls, are a cycle tourist’s Elysium. My prior 6,000 miles over those smooth highways remain not as memories of arduous, punishing preparation but as those of a privileged visitor to a ‘Sceptred Isle,’ viewing its fresh green meadows, spectacular rugged hills, contrasting murky industrial areas, always fringed and softened by the charm of surrounding wooded valleys or silver winding streams. These older and more discerning years are tinged with some regret that, as in France, circumstances did not permit in training even a brief halting of the wheels for one to gaze on and study the close-by milestones of history. But when in pursuit of a future, there is no gain in permitting the past to divert one from the present. I commenced from Land’s End at 7 a.m. on July 16th. English cycling’s clandestine formula gave it the drama of a postman pushing off on his daily round. Some 10 officials, mechanics and drivers, the hotel-keeper and his wife comprised the gathering. Accustomed to the emotion of the crowded boulevardes and the unconcealed assembling of Australians on arterial roads, despite the confident presence of Bruce Small and the unceasing supervision of Bill Sweeting, the departure had the inspiration of a Bankruptcy Court, until a Mr and Mrs Spencer Nall, of Geelong, attracted by the activity of the small group, drove up, made enquiry and introduced themselves as interested Australians. Their added presence to the sparsity of attendance lifted my morale immeasurably out of proportion to their number. Not, though, by any stretch of mental projection could any one of us visualise, as photographs were taken and we shook hands, I would 16 years later be their Parliamentary representative. I left with a previously announced threefold mission, although by choice I would not have signalled my combined attempt, on the “24 hour”, “End to End”, and “1,000” miles. Because of the R.R.A. need to advise supervisors prior to record attempts, cards cannot be played “close to the chest”, but all extras which could become integrated into the main objective must be revealed by previous applications. After detailed analysis of the schedule with Bruce, I agreed we should incorporate the 24-hour as a “starter” and the “1 ,000” miles as continuation after John O’Groats. This carried an in-built risk. Over-exertion early could have adverse consequences for the principal task, or alternatively a failure in any one could dim the prestige of success in the others. But the plan had been sealed and from the outset I pursued the 416 and a half miles of E.B. Brown, missed by a halfmile on Australian roads in 1927. I remember little now of that first day’s ride. Incidents in massed start events remain more firmly embedded in the mind. There are such variations - the breakaway, the chase, the struggle on a hill, the smash or a puncture, or even the painful remembrance of a champion’s beautiful “cadence”, such as one witnessed from Le Calves, Magne, Leducq, Rebry, or Speicher, tearing the resistance of the best to shreds. But unpaced riding can pass through many hours, and total many miles, with only the mental assessment of averages and schedules to break the methodical beat of patient endeavour. Pedals, Politics and People - extracts from the autobiography of Sir Hubert Opperman One misconception was soon removed. For some obscure reasons, from one’s European perspective, perhaps because of the Alps and Pyrenees, one had presumed that England’s countryside would be comparatively flat. Certainly roads were narrower, better sheltered and faster, but Cornwall and Devon, despite their smooth surfaces, retained a vicious “bite” which would have pulled the best of the Continental climbers out of their saddles, while Shap in Northumberland, and Berriedale in Scotland in cohorts with the centuries of miles, made me leave the saddle and “dance” on the pedals. According to the local colloquialism, this was “honking”, and in the eyes of the purist (of whom there were so many in England) a pedalling sin almost bereft of absolution from success. I was informed afterwards that nearing one town a Club rider ranged alongside Bruce Small’s car and said in a Lancashire accent as he viewed me swaying from side to side, “He is not a good pedaller like Rossiter” upon which Bruce, slightly frayed by sleepless hours, snapped unkindly, “But he’s three hours ahead of his time!” Ironically enough, when I first rode in France, my background of Australian handicap road racing, where one depended upon co-markers for “pacing” until the front groups had been overtaken, developed a style which led Continental critics to complain, “Oppy seldom leaves the saddle.” However, a season of education in en ligne events in which one left the saddle or was left behind, soon taught me to ‘reef’ and pull and fling every ounce of body weight on to the pedals, to immediately break a gap, or surmount a rise, whether paced or unpaced. But I can barely recollect the miles between Exeter and Wellington, Taunton, Bridgewater and Bristol, or between the Continental style cobbles of Preston or Wigan. There was evidence of an ever growing interest by friendly wheelmen. Advised by telephone and telegram and some type of fraternal intuition, they were clustered in force as at Bristol, for the puzzling crossroads, traffic lights and roundabouts, waving handkerchiefs during the day and a signalling torch at night, always I learned later, well ahead of the most rapid possible rate, to call, “This way Oppy; good luck!” and then turn for home to wait for news. Had I failed and again attempted the record, they would have been patiently waiting once more. The majority I never saw again, but some to my intense pleasure I met as migrants during post-war political days. They still represent to me, however the Olympic oath may be read, and its spirit be extolled, a demonstration of the most admirable and self-effacing fidelity to sport and the stranger in their midst I have yet encountered. Nearing the 24-hours, for the first and last time in cycling effort, my digestive system went sulky, high-hatted its food and refused to assimilate. Two years later, I had dietary problems, self-inflicted, which “There is no steak - what would you like?” “Well, I’d like chops and eggs,” but as sure as death and taxes, the end result would be “bacon and eggs.” Gastronomically, from a cycling perspective, I never felt completely adjusted in England away from base and I certainly never felt worse than in those final poisonous miles of that “24”. As the reaction sapped strength from my legs and slowed my speed, there was consternation when the chances of this first record began to recede. “It’s still yours, if you don’t stop again,” cajoled Bruce, and the extra pedal poundage continued up the 1,400 feet elevated, fog-shrouded slopes of Shap. A “Come on in, laddie,” he invited, when I informed him I was an Australian record-breaking cyclist with a rebellious stomach. I stretched out on his table; he mixed a potion; I drank it, and promptly slept for an hour. “You’ll be all right, laddie.” affected me for a complete season, but never such an intense inner rebellion, when in action, as this one imposed. In retracing my cycling locations and reactions, and without prejudice to so many things English, for which I have the most profound affection, I must admit that its food for cycling always left food for thought. In France it was like being at home in quality and variety, within ready access. I think the general lack of this latter was the most irritating and damaging. I have no doubt that if living in one area, or in the one home permanently, one could have located an adequate, palatable, nourishing regime. This was evident the following year, when my wife and I made Birmingham our headquarters and she attended to my cuisine. But it was a repeated joke of when “on the wallaby”, one would call at a roadside cafe and ask for a meal. “What would you like?” would be the query. Consistently the reply was, “I would like a steak and eggs,” and just as certainly the answer came back, car signal signed off the first complete day and a journalist wrote, “The first stile was crossed; half the journey was done and a wonderful record of 431 and a half miles already made. For it was wonderful. Taken in his ordinary stride over all the hills and bad towns lying along the End to End route, the record bore no comparison to all the other 24-hour records which were made on a picked course and day while the rider went all out for 24-hours and more.” But my interior workings were unimpressed and had I read this eulogy at the time, it would have carried no more comfort than a wet towel to a shivering swimmer. Memories of that second day contrast sharply with the first. Like alternating station lights from the window of a racing train, they changed from bright to blurred. There was no energising help from food. Every mouthful was rejected as rapidly as it was eaten. Hard won hours went into the discard as I halted repeatedly for relief from the nauseous illness, and 11 Pedals, Politics and People - extracts from the autobiography of Sir Hubert Opperman the once exhilarating advance on schedule degenerated into a grim prospect of complete cessation. The night climb over the Grampians from Blair Athol during the few dark hours became a torment of uncertainty. Mistshrouded trees formed ghostly tunnels, and training landmarks dissipated as the machine shot down the slopes, with rabbits rasping nerves as they scurried dangerously across the road. In the pre-dawn light as I slouched through Beauly, bleary, strained eyes sighted a doctor’s plate. The bicycle was instantly propped against the fence and without hesitation, I rang his bell. The Scotch medico who answered was the most imperturbable man I have met. A figure garbed from neck to ankle in black cashmere, white capped, smeared with mud and perspiration, standing on his doorstep at 6 am, speaking with a foreign accent, and a dishevelled troupe hurrying towards him, was accepted without a lift of the eyebrows. “Come on in, laddie,” he invited, when I informed him I was an Australian record-breaking cyclist with a rebellious stomach. The followers crowded behind me; I stretched out on his table; he mixed a potion; I drank it, and promptly slept for an hour. When we left, there was no discouraging lecture on such folly but a smile, a handshake, and the words, “You’ll be all right, laddie.” Two hours later, some grilled fish, roadside-cooked by Bruce, remained loyal, the calorific effect of nourishment flowed again through the limbs, and I knew I could reach John O’Groats. This is how the remainder of the ride appeared to one of the journalists who followed: “Though obviously weakened by his lengthy illness, Opperman continued to press on resolutely, nor was he unduly perturbed by the additional discomfort and hazard of heavy rain. Through Bonar Bridge, then on to Golspie he went, and 800 miles went by in two days 4 hours 11 minutes. A few miles later the record breaker, now riding gears of 73, 64 and 53 inches, made an amazing ascent of the Ord of Caithness which rears itself up for over four miles. Opperman, always an excellent climber, averaged more than six miles per hour for 12 the entirety of this hill. The B.S.A. man also negotiated Berriedale in a completely unruffled manner, the drop into the valley being taken with a poise borne of the days. in the Continental mountains, while the one in four rise that followed did not compel a dismount. At Berriedale he was more than four hours up on the record and had accumulated still more by the time he had reached Bill Best, the time keeper, at the famous John O’Groats Hotel.” angled back south on an alternative road. Salt went on the wound. The road selected on the map had not been reconnoitered. In our haste to return from John O’Groats, we had accepted local assurances it was in good condition and carelessly, I had not trained over it. It plunged through the wildest parts of Sutherland shire, the weather degenerated from mist to heavy rain and the road into ruts and shingle. The situation was later described by B. W. Best, Two hundred and fifty assisted me to break the records of their own riders and then, without reservation, I was granted their own national honour. At Beauly, I had said to Bruce as I walked out, “I’ll be lucky to reach John O’Groats I’ll have to forget the 1,000.” “Sure,” he said, “if you can now break the End to End, after the 24, that’s good’ enough. You can have a go at the 1,000 some other time.” That soothed the final hours and I raced that last extraordinary drop to John O’Groats which, until the last few hundred yards, appears to be heading for a direct dive into the sea, in a happier physical and mental state than I had known for over 30 hours. Compared with the commencement at Land’s End, by English standards, the finish at John O’Groats was like a Mardi Gras. A “Bravo Oppy” banner over the doorway, I was photographed, signed the Guest book, telephones rang for Bill Sweeting from Australia’s A.B.C. and stiffly and thankfully I climbed the stairs for a bath and bed. Bruce maintains to this day that he informed me then, because of my obvious recovery during the latter hours, the “1000” was still to be completed. I had no thought at all of this horrifying proposal which must have been made during instantaneous slumber, until four hours later, when I was resurrected into reality, protestingly attired in a clean outfit, and pushed off into what was a surprisingly black night, when we had hoped for the clarity of a summer twilight. I had, of course, run out of northern miles, the timekeeper and journalist:- “The road became a tortuous mountain track, a gale and a rainstorm arose. Only Oppy knows how he kept to the road or perhaps even he does not know. At such times, one rides by instinct and who could blame a man if his instinct wavered after such an ordeal! The storm raged against him and at times at a bend it threatened to upset him, but he continued to ride like a superman and when the terrors of those mountain passes were over, and the good main road at Helmsdale was reached, it was found that the 25 miles from Forsinard to Helmsdale had taken exactly two hours.” The entire party, by this time, due to sleepless hours, responsible supervision, driving strain and irregular meals, were nerve-taut like myself to the edge of hysteria, so that my feeble query to them when delayed by the Forsinard railway gates, “if I was Forsinard enough,” was greeted with immoderate peals of laughter completely unworthy of its humour. Finally, at 3 days 1 hour 52 minutes, the 1,000 miles ended. There was nothing left to think of but sleep after what had proved unexpectedly, not to be so much a bicycle battle against the extrovert resistance of miles, weather or roads, but the delaying, disloyal introvert ailment which had cursed the second day. There were, though, pleasant rewards for the hours of pedalling labour. From its Photos: Gordon MacMillan Full house for PBP night Pedals, Politics... ...continued from previous page Key speakers Top photo: Barry Moore (standing, centre) with Peter Matthews (sitting to his right). Portaits, from top: George Caulfield, Kathryn Temby, Howard Duncan and John Boyle. by Peter Curtis, Martin Haynes and Howard Duncan well-concealed actuality the trio of records now emerged into a public spotlight of press coverage, trade publicity and personal appearances. Cables arrived from Australia, including one from the then Prime Minister, Mr Joe Lyons. I spoke to Australia from the B.B.C.; B.S.A. hosted a grand presentation dinner. I was nominated for the Golden Book of Cycling, but the award of the Bidlake Memorial prize “presented to the rider whose achievements are deemed the greatest of the year” was worth every penalty in every mile. I was proud of it then, I am proud of it today for it represents the true English outlook of those times towards the sport. Two hundred and fifty assisted me to break the records of their own riders and then, without reservation, I was granted their own national honour. *** This extract from Pedals, Politics and People has been reprinted with kind permission from Ian Opperman, the son of Sir Hubert Opperman. Pedals, Politics and People was published in 1977 and is now out of print. The Editor gratefully acknowledges the assistance of Henry Boardman in making available his copy of the book for loan. A record attendance of over eighty people attended the recent PBP Retrospective Night held in Melbourne. Howard Duncan organised the evening and arranged a variety of speakers who related their experiences of the 2003 PBP randonnee. They were: • John Boyle, the fastest Victorian, starting in the 80 hour group and finishing in about 68 hours • Kathryn Temby, the first Victorian female to finish, who rode fast and enjoyed lots of sleep, including a one hour kip at Mortagne on the way out, in the 85 hours she took. She attributed her well being throughout the whole ride to this sleep and riding to a pre-arranged plan. • George Caulfield, who rode with Alan Tonkin of Melbourne and Doug Kennedy of Sydney. They stuck together like glue and rode as a close team. • Peter Matthews, who rode the event on a two-wheel recumbent • Barry Moore - who’s notoriety was the least amount of training of any starter, but he still successfully finished. All agreed they would be keen to give it another go. The talks were followed by a screening of the PBP 2003 video. 13 The Beachcombers by Chris Walsh For the first time in the three years that this writer has taken part in a Fleche Opperman All Day Trial, everything went pretty much perfectly, which is one of the main reasons I wanted to write this report. Every randonneur anticipates certain target times for reaching different checkpoints along their route, and visualises rolling in bang on schedule. How often these go out the window because of weather, mechanical breakdowns or just as frequently, human ones! How much easier it is for this to happen when planning a team event like the Oppy. So when everything works, why not write about it? Garry Armsworth, Geoff Robb and I first teamed up for an Oppy in 2001. In my inexperience I set a course that in retrospect (well, I actually realised it during the ride) was too challenging. We took in a large loop through the Sydney Basin, taking in Peats Ridge, Wisemans Ferry, Windsor and Picton before climbing up to the Southern Highlands and Bundanoon. The Sunday saw us roaring down Macquarie Pass to Dapto. The hot weather and hills took their toll and although we completed the course, I felt that a revised route would be better for the following year. Amazingly, Garry and Geoff signed up for 2002 and were joined by Tim Hoskins and Sue Attreed. The course went due west to Penrith, then to the Southern Highlands where we looped around for a while before lobbing in to Sue’s parents’ home (at 255km or so) to sleep and complete the last 110km to Dapto the following morning. With an astonishing sense of timing, the Oppy was ridden the day the fires roared through the Southern Highlands. As we rode through Yerrinbool towards the last climb into Mittagong the scene was a little like that from Apocalypse Now, with black plumes of smoke rising into the air and helicopters everywhere. Our efforts to reach Mittagong were severely thwarted by fire roaring across a hillside less than a kilometre away, forcing the closure of the main highway through the town. A hot 14 southwesterly wind in our face much of the time only added to the misery. We spent much of the time re-evaluating our course as the fires closed down sections of the planned route, and it was a shattered band of troopers that crawled into the Attreed’s late that evening. Further injury was added the next morning when the planned descent of Mt Keira, which I had used as an encouragement the day before, was abandoned because of road closures, forcing us to come into Dapto via Mt Ousley. I was staggered when in 2003, Garry, Tim and Geoff put their hands up again, and Sue would have as well but for a family function. Graham Jones stepped in and we lined up with a full team of five riders. What on earth would the Oppy throw at us this time? The answer was an absolutely superb weekend’s riding! Our route took us from Parramatta out towards Penrith, then through Picton, Bargo, Mittagong, Moss Vale and Fitzroy Falls to a steep descent into Kangaroo Valley. The weather was kind, the scenery gorgeous, with plenty of winter rain on the Highlands producing lush pastures and grass right up to the road verges. From Kangaroo Valley (the first time it was really warm) we climbed over Berry Mountain, stopping a number of times to admire the view, down to Berry, and then along the Princes Highway. We took a turnoff south of Jervis Bay that led to Cudmirrah, a beachside village at which our overnight accommodation was located, courtesy of Tim and Vicki. That was around 255km and the plan was to be there by 9pm. We succeeded admirably in this, rolling in at 8:45pm. The red wine packed in the overnight bags by a number of riders went perfectly with Vicki’s spaghetti bolognaise and we rolled off to bed around 11 PM. The 120km back up the Princes Highway the following morning commenced at 3:30 am, with no more than a dozen or so cars passing us before we reached Nowra. The sun rose as we rode out of Nowra towards Shoalhaven Heads. We breakfasted in Gerringong at 7am and had a leisurely 35km or so to complete in the two hours before 9am. At Dapto we enjoyed the traditional cooked breakfast, which always tastes wonderful, with Henry and his team. We rode just under 380km with only two punctures between five riders, and no other mechanical or rider problems. This, combined with the very favourable weather, good team riding and -may I say - a well-chosen route, were the main factors behind our success. The enjoyment was heightened by Tim and Vicki’s hospitality on the Saturday night, and Henry’s organisation of the event. Many thanks to them all, and also to the rest of Team Beachcomber! For those who are interested in such things, and because I have no photos, I thought I would include the elevation maps of our course, split over four sections, courtesy of Garry Armsworth. Alpine Classic - Trivia Too many Kangaroos? by Phil Bellette, Organiser, Audax Alpine Classic While it is not necessary to give a reason when claiming an Alpine Classic refund, about half of the claimants do so. From previous years’ experience I have been amazed at the number of people sustaining cycling related injuries while training for the event. This year I decided out of curiosity to keep a log of the reasons given. About 41% of the claimants withdrew because of training related injuries, mainly injuries to foot, back and hand. Of the four riders who were in cycling accidents two collided with kangaroos and two with vehicles. Of the vehicle related accidents one was driven by a drunken driver. It is quite obvious from the statistics that kangaroos are more of a hazard on the roads for cyclists than we may be aware of. This point is further highlighted when we consider that of the two accidents that required ambulance transportation on the day of the Alpine Classic, one was the result of a rider colliding with a wallaby while descending from Falls Creek. The rider received injuries to his hand, whilst the condition of the marsupial is unknown. So what can we learn from all this? Probably nothing if you are an average Audax rider. But maybe it is best to take a measured and planned training program for the big event. We can be thankful that kangaroos don’t consume alcohol but it’s just as well not many koalas choose to travel by road! Reason for requesting refund Did you know the club has an active email chat-list to discuss anything related to Audax cycling? For subscription details, visit www.audax.org.au It’s free! The club receives a number of magazines and newsletters from Audax Clubs around the world. To borrow the magazines, or to view back-issues of this magazine, visit www.audax.org.au (News/Magazine) Number Training Injury 16 Family reasons 6 Illness 4 Work Commitments 3 Moved interstate 2 Accident with car 2 Accident with kangaroo 2 Medical Procedure 2 Home Renovations 1 Lack of training 1 Death of entrant 1 Under age 1 Pregnancy 1 15 ��� ���������������� �������������������� ����������������� � ������������������������� ����������������� ��������� �� �������������������������������� ��������������� �� �������������������������������� ������������������������������� �� ���������������������������������� ����������������� ������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������������� ���������������������������� �� ������������������������������������� ������������������������������ �� ���������������������������������� �� �������������������������� �������������� ��������������������������������� �� ����������������������������� ����������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������� �� ����������������������������������� �� ������������������������������� �������������������������������������� ✁ ✁ ����������� ���������������������������� ���� ����������� �������������������������� �� ����������������� ��������������������� ��� ���� � �������� ��������������������� ����� � ���������� ����������������� ���� ������������������������������������������������ �������������������� ������������������� ������������������ ��������� ��������������� ���� ����������������������������� ���������������� � � � ����������� � ��������� ���������������� ������� � � ������ ������������ ����� �������������������� � ��������������������� ������ ��������������� ���������������������������������������������������������� ������������ � ��������� ����������� �������� ������������������� � � ������������ � � � � � � � � ��������������� �������������������� ����������� ����������������� � � � � ��������������������� �������������� ������������������������� ��������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������������� 16 Award Recipients courtesy of Enid Halton Congratulations to the following riders who attained Nouveau and Super Series Awards for the Audax year ending 31 October 2003. Nouveau Award Algefski, Chris Armitage, Loretta Aston, Brian Baron, Phillip Brandis, Howard Brown, Joan Campbell, Debra Cockcroft, Gordon Green, Lindsay Hagedorn, Klaus Haynes, Libby Jones, Ken Lee, John Leyden, John Lostoh, Susan Matuszek, Maria Monot, Stephan Newton, Noel Pascoe, David Povey, Neil Preyer, Frank Rawnsley, Matthew Rogers, Chris Smith, Ross Southren, Michael Stoneman, Peter Vella, Aldo Watt, Raymond Watson, Peter Wood, Lee Super Award Armitage, Loretta Armsworth, Garry Bednarz, Bob Blasse, Bjorn Caulfield, George Cunningham, Greg Curtis, Peter De Jong, Melonie Dickson, Allan J. Dixon, Peter Duncan, Howard Dusink, Hans Gavan, Brian Grant, Phillipe M Halton, Don Haynes, Martin Helyar, Gillian Helyar, Keith Jenkins, Roy J Jeppesen, Bill Kennedy, Douglas King, Trevor Lansom, Greg Martin, Greg Mccartan, Ron McDonald, Duncan Malzinskas, Leon Morgan, Ken Palmer, Grant Paterson, Leigh Peak, Ian D Portway, Oliver Pinkerton, Richard Preyer, Frank Quinn, John Rawnsley, Matthew Rogers, Chris Searle, Peter Stevenson, Barry Temby, Kathryn Theo, Ross Vella, Aldo Watt, Raymond Watson, Stephen Wilkinson, Graeme 360 km + 24 hours 3-5 bicycles per team Experience the thrill. Challenge yourself for a day and a night. Opperman All Day Trial Adelaide (SA) • Dapto (NSW) Ipswich (QLD) • Perth (WA) Rochester (VIC) 6-7 November 2004 (03) 9786 9807 oppy@audax.org.au Cycle Coaching Tanya Bosch Level 2 Accredited Cycling Coach Whether your goal is 50km or 1200km, it can be achieved! For professional coaching please phone Tanya on 02 9369 1436, 0419 217 974 or email onyabike@ozemail.com.au 17 Audax History Completing the Circle By Alan Walker Cast your mind back to a time when very few people had seen a computer. Imagine a world without email discussion groups or web pages. In such a world, how did anyone know about cycling events in another country? Communication depended on a few cycling magazines, mostly aimed at the racing world. The only publicity available to people on the fringe of cycling, itself a fringe sport, was an occasional article in a magazine. That is how I first heard of Audax. While I was on a three month cycling tour of Britain in 1979, I picked up a copy of a cycling magazine. It included a long article about members of an organisation called Audax United Kingdom taking part in a ride of 1200km in France. I read it with a mixture of excitement and incredulity. Back then, I assumed that only a highly trained athlete, approaching Olympic standard, could ride 400km in a day. The prospect of covering triple that distance in 90 hours was overwhelming. But there was the evidence in front of me - a photograph of ordinary-looking people. Some of them had grey hair. Their bikes had mudguards and handlebar bags. Some of them were even smiling. I was determined to join them. I carried the magazine all over Britain, carefully folded up in my rear pannier. A few months after I returned to Australia, I decided to start an Audax club. By pure chance, I saw Sir Hubert Opperman among the officials at a criterium in Richmond in Melbourne. I walked up to him, introduced myself, told him that I wanted to do ParisBrest-Paris (PBP) and asked for his advice. Who better to ask? Oppy invited me to his apartment. We spent an evening talking bikes and he gave me a pile of literature about randonneur rides, about the Audax Club Parisien (ACP) and about Audax United Kingdom. I wrote to ACP and asked if we could start an Audax club in Australia. I wrote to Audax United Kingdom and asked for their assistance. That was how it was in the days 18 before email and the World Wide Web. We wrote letters, posted them and waited. A two week turnaround was unusually fast. In this case, I waited rather longer. I never knew the whole story, but it seems that ACP had contacted Oppy and asked about my bona fides. It took him a while to establish that I was not the rabble-rousing ratbag, with a very similar name, who repeatedly wrote incendiary letters to the newspapers, damning cars and demanding cyclists' rights. Eventually, Robert Lepertel from ACP replied, approving the formation of an Audax club in Australia, offering me the position of Australian correspondent and suggesting that I contact Russell Moore from Sydney, who had independently written to them just a week or two after me. Audax United Kingdom sent me a copy of the rules in English. With so much encouragement, the idea was bound to take off. I wondered how to get started. The main ingredient was missing - riders. Explaining what Audax was about took a lot of work. I persisted in talking and cajoling, telling anyone who would listen that Audax was great idea. I talked to the Bicycle Institute of Victoria. I advertised in Australian Cycling magazines. I contacted cycling clubs in Melbourne. Some long, hard rides already existed. The "Knox Hard Hundred" of 100 miles, the "Two Hundred Miles in 24 Hours", after the fashion of similar events held by the Cyclists Touring Club in Britain and the "Bendigo Double Century", of 100 miles from Melbourne to Bendigo on Saturday and back on Sunday were all of a comparable difficulty to the shorter brevets. Despite this background, Audax style rides encountered resistance. Checkpoints and time limits seemed alien and unnecessary. The notion that the clock keeps ticking even during sleep breaks seemed unfair. Nevertheless, I enticed Glenn Rodda, Fabian Dexter and Malcolm Martin from the Melbourne Bicycle Touring Club to accompany me on a 200km ride starting at Flinders Street Station. Audax had taken its first step. Early in 1981, Russell and I agreed that it was time to form a club, to organise qualifying rides for the 1983 PBP. I wanted to avoid state rivalries and to ensure that any rider anywhere in Australia could have confidence that we intended to form a truly national club. To reinforce the message, we agreed to meet in Albury, as it is on the border of NSW and Victoria. Rather than merely hold a meeting, we decided to combine it with two 600km rides to Albury, one starting in Melbourne and one in Sydney. "The Age" in Melbourne used to have a regular page of free notices for community events, so I advertised a supported ride of 600km in two days from Melbourne to Albury. The support consisted of one car to carry luggage and two very generous volunteers who put up the riders' tents for them at the overnight stop. I was too naive to be surprised that several people rang up and joined in. Russell was the only person to complete 600km in under 40 hours. All over northern Victoria, the Melbourne group was plagued by three-corner jacks (also called caltrops or Photo: Terry Gross Early days: Tim Laugher, Neil Irvine, Peter Annear and Alan Walker celebrate the completion of Audax Australia’s first 1000km brevet in 1984. bindi-eyes). People had punctures three at a time. When we needed to stop, we were reduced to halting in the middle of the road and carrying our bikes to safety, taking care that our tyres did not touch the ground. At one point I could not slip my foot into my toe-clips (remember them?) because the soles of my shoes were covered in prickles. We spent hours fixing punctures. Nevertheless, on Easter Sunday in 1981, about ten cyclists sat on the banks of the Murray and formed a club called "Audax Australia", with Russell Moore as president, myself as secretary and Tony McDonnell as treasurer. In those happy days, no-one thought of legal incorporation. We just did it. The greatest difficulty continued to be finding people who would organise rides or attempt such distances. Most racing clubs simply scoffed at the idea. No-one had any experience in organising randonnees. The most enthusiastic response came from veteran racing clubs and from the more hard-bitten touring cyclists. In Victoria, we began with a typed newsletter of two pages, including a calendar of one ride every six weeks. The rides went the standard distances within the standard time limits with designated towns to stop for rest and refreshment. At first no-one carried a brevet card. It was hard enough to find routes, organise rides and promote them. Brevets, supported checkpoints and homologation had to wait until we had enough members to share the work. In hindsight, the prospect of a medal from France would probably have made the club more attractive, but initially there was no money and no time. Some rides started with two entrants. A field of 10 was a big success. Often, everyone taking part would ride the entire course together in a peleton, waiting for anyone who had to stop. Gradually, Audax caught on. John Drummond, the editor of National Cycling, agreed to publish a short article about Audax. Word of mouth attracted a few more. Occasionally, one would meet another cyclist who had heard of Audax. In NSW, Russell Moore had established a nucleus of riders and four Australians completed PBP in 1983. After about a year as secretary, I bowed out of the organisation of the club. I had recently married, started a new job and moved to a new city and I could not put in the effort Audax deserved. Fortunately, the seed I planted was in fertile ground. The credit for cultivating the seedling belongs to others. Terry Gross formalised the use of brevet cards and organised the first awards of medals. In those days, ACP had us parcel up completed brevet cards and post them to Paris to be checked. They would come back weeks or months later with an homologation sticker and a medallion, but better than that, they came back with the mystique, the aura, of having been approved by the organisers of the oldest marathon cycling event in the world. At first, ACP would not sanction any other 1200km rides anywhere 19 Audax History in the world but accepted 1000km brevets as a compromise. Terry organised the first Australian 1000km ride in August 1984. That, to my mind, is when Audax Australia came of age. By this time, Audax had become unstoppable. The big signature events, the Opperman and the Alpine Classic, became fixed points on many calendars and many non-members participated. The club still struggled occasionally, but one or two people always picked up the baton and continued the relay. From this distance, I will not attempt to single out names: there were many and I might unfairly omit someone, especially those from Sydney. In the beginning, life was simpler. No-one needed to consult a lawyer before they got on a bike. Risk management consultants were unknown. The volume of traffic on rural roads was half present levels. So now I am especially grateful to those who participate in our rides, with their mixture of fun, hard grind and camaraderie, to those who stand at a picnic table in a cold, dark park in the middle of nowhere, preparing food for cyclists who dash in, eat and dash out, and to those who organise meetings, Frank Brandon, one of three Aussie participants in the 1983 Paris-Brest-Paris. See “The Early Days of Audax” , facing page. Photo by Terry Gross. bank money, print newsletters and attend to the myriad of other tasks demanded by such a successful organisation. As Oppy used to say, we Audax riders are among the last of the true sporting amateurs. On the day that Checkpoint Editor, Patrick van Dyk, asked me to write this story of how Audax began in Australia, my PBP medal arrived in the mail, 25 years after I read about it in a cycling magazine in England. It was worth the wait. The brevet card of the first Australian 1000km event, held during August, 1984. At this time, French brevet cards were being used. 20 Thanks to Alan Walker and Russell Moore for their outstanding contribution to this edition of Checkpoint. (Ed). WANTED Old issues of “The Journal of the Audax Club of Australia” - the club magazine between 1984 and 1994. Temporary loan of material required to help document the history of the Club. All postage costs re-imbursed. Please contact the Editor, Audax Australia, PO Box 12144, A’Beckett St, Melbourne VIC 8006 or checkpoint@audax.org.au Audax History The Early Days of Audax by Russell Moore I first heard about Paris-Brest-Paris (PBP) and Audax around 1979 from a magazine and Novocastrian, Chas Coin. He knew of a UK cyclist who had done the 1979 PBP. This started my interest in PBP, and in 1980 I wrote to Audax Club Parisien (ACP) enquiring about PBP and Audax in general. Imagine my surprise when Robert Lepertel from ACP wrote back to say that they had given permission to Alan Walker from Victoria just two weeks previously to be Australia's Audax representative. We contacted each other and were pleased to see that we were both following similar paths in promoting long distance cycling in Australia. Victoria) rode 600km to get there! As Alan has noted I was the only rider to manage to arrive inside the 40 hour time limit. Alan and the other Victorians had a hard time with constant flat tyres. For me the ride was a long, lonely event with the (illegal?) company of my support crew riding some sections, the rest of the time they drove in the support car. After my participation in the 1976 Bikecentennial in the USA, I came home and started running the now defunct Green Valley Twin Century, amongst other long rides. Our first brevet cards were pieces of photocopied paper. These were sent to Melbourne, to be forwarded to Paris and in the fullness of time were returned via Melbourne to us. It took many weeks to return. Our first medallions were ACP ones, we later had our own Aussie ones. Alan and I decided to have a meeting to start up Audax Australia. Not wanting to start small, we decided to meet at Albury, after riders from each state (NSW and Russell back in 1984, starting good habits that would last for over a decade of randonneuring. Terry Gross became President around 1983/84 and brought a more organised form of administration to Audax Australia. I remember him being in the army and going to an AGM at his house in Greensborough in 1984. An example of Terry's adherence to the rules was what happened sometime in the mid 1980's. An army friend of Terry's came on a 600km randonnée from Sydney to Canberra and return. On the way back he withdrew at Moss Vale with a bad case of piles. I said, 'no worries!" he could have a 300km brevet for the ride to Canberra and a 200km brevet for the ride from Canberra to Moss Vale. When I mentioned this to Terry his reply was that if you nominated a distance at the start, you couldn't do a lesser distance, only a greater one. The fact that his friend had piles cut no ice with Terry. I never saw that rider again. Only three Sydney riders, being myself, Audax Australia co-founder and recipient of the first 600km brevet, Russell Moore. Stephen Poole and Frank Brandon, rode the 1983 PBP. An article I wrote went into the Bicycle NSW magazine Push On in late 1983 or early 1984. Audax kept growing at a steady rate, especially in Melbourne and the rest of Victoria, and went from the occasional small event every month or so, to the large events of today. Participation in PBP went from three in 1983 to 13 in 1987, 33 in 1991, 50 plus in 1995, 75 plus in 1999 and 83 in 2003. Events such as the Alpine Classic (we first knew it as 'The Bright Ride') have blossomed beyond our wildest imaginations, and although my efforts no longer include cycling, it was fun to be at the start of Audax Australia, with Alan and all the others. 21 Bound for by Barry Moore Each Audax ride is different, but this one may have been a little more different. It started in a cow paddock, rose to a mountain village, then swept back down to the cow paddock. In between was some of the most beautiful riding country anywhere, a wonderful evening in a very special cafe and a relaxed interlude in a comfortable ski lodge. A hundred up, a hundred down, and in between a night at Baw Baw Village, one of Victoria's best kept secrets. That was the first weekend in April for fourteen riders, four organisers and one family. Baw Baw is a small ski resort about 180km by road to the east of Melbourne. It comprises about 30 lodges, mostly noncommercial. In the summer, not much happens except for some maintenance and repair work. The last 30km of road has only been sealed in recent years, so an Audax ride has now become feasible. We decided on two rides of 100, anything longer could have spoiled a good weekend. We were lucky with the weather. The ride would have been most unpleasant in a blizzard. The ride started on a dairy farm near Tynong (about 80km to the east of Melbourne) where Martin Haynes had arranged for the cars to be left. The sight of lycra clad cyclists picking their way between the cow pats was interesting. The finish of the 100 was at the entry to the park, a very steep 7km from Baw Baw Village. Riders were offered the option of attempting the ascent or accepting a lift. Some brave souls did manage the climb under their own power. Martin and Libby planned and supported the ride, with Barry and Callum Moore making the arrangements at Baw Baw. Many thanks to Chris Rogers and Leon Malzinskas for recording their impressions. 22 Baw Baw 23 Bound for Baw Baw A Family Affair by Leon Malzinskas It was Saturday the third of April and a great morning to be "Bound for Baw Baw". This ride was a little different to other Audax rides in that we were doing two 100km rides on consecutive days. The format of the ride also allowed us to stay on Saturday night in Everest Lodge at Baw Baw Village, close to the top of Mt Baw Baw. The plan was that this would be a social evening. The Saturday morning start was too early for my family so they drove directly to Baw Baw from Inverloch, arriving in the early afternoon. They spent the time waiting for me to arrive (as I had taken the scenic route) bushwalking, floating bark boats down the creek and enjoying the scenery. 24 Shota, our Japanese exchange student, found it all too much and flaked out on the sofa in front of the fire. I arrived at the control at about 4pm and then proceeded to attempt the last 6km up to the lodge. If you haven't been to Baw Baw, this section is one of the steepest roads in Victoria. I lasted 1.3 km and took a lift with Martin. I got to the Lodge at about 5pm and caught up with my family. The evening was great. My kids made their own fun and played cards or watched the television. Carmel and I mingled with the others that didn't go out to the restaurant and happily sat near the fire and enjoyed a wine. The eater outerers eventually returned and after further discussion over wines and coffees, most hit the sack for a well earned rest. Next morning, we had breakfast which consisted of cereal and toast with tea and espresso coffee. The kids were outside again early playing at or in the creek. At about 8.30, I started down the mountain taking the first 6km very slowly. It was good to warm my hands on the rims at the control point. My family passed me on the way down headed for home. The ride back to Noojee was fantastic, through the cool Gippsland forests. I arrived back at Bramleys in the mid afternoon and headed home soon after. I must say that my family and I enjoyed this weekend immensely. Thanks to Barry, Callum, Martin and Libby for organizing this ride. Work permitting, the Malzinskas Family will be "Bound For Baw Baw" again next year. Bound for Baw Baw Ride with a View by Chris Rogers There is something about Gippsland rides. They never disappoint, either with the scenery, or the names of the towns. A group of riders started at Bramley's dairy farm near Nar Nar Goon, and sped along the flat road through Bunyip to Robin Hood, and then through undulating country up to Jindivick. From there we rode to Neerim South and Noojee, where there was a delightful supported contrôle in a picnic area. From Noojee the serious work began with long climbs and fantastic descents through Icy Creek and Tanjil Bren to finish at the resort entrance. For the remaining excruciating six kilometres to the ski village some tried to ride, many ended up walking, but the smart ones hitched a ride with Martin or Barry. At the lodge there was a beautiful fire in the centre of the casual room, which tired riders sat around and yarned away the time till dinner. Most of us walked the short distance to the cosy and inexpensive café for a cheery meal, and some cooked their own food or had take-away pizza back at the lodge. The easy stroll from the café back to the lodge through an almost deserted village ghost-landscape of silhouettes and shifting mist was eerie. The Sunday ride down the mountain was magic. It was a bright clear morning, with the sun slanting through lush green foliage, with vibrant light strips and darkest shadows alternating on the road. The forest in this part of Victoria is different to any other part of Victoria, perhaps apart from the Otways. It is lush and dense and damp and mossy. The roads up many of the mountains in Victoria seem to be statements of engineering conquest, as straight and wide as possible, with attempts at shoulders, and white lines defining their presence. But the road up to Baw Baw is narrow and winding, with the forest right up to the edge of the bitumen, and not a white line to be seen. It is as though the road still seeks permission to exist, and the rider is alone deep within the forest. There was almost no traffic present, enhancing the feeling of isolation. From the hilltops around Neerim South and Jindivick there were sweeping views of rolling hills and the flat lands leading down to the see. At Jindivick there was a section of cool sunken road between hedgerows and large oak trees that seemed to be an English country lane transplanted. The scenery and views on the ride were brilliant, but they were only one aspect of this superb weekend ride. My name is first on the list if the ride is offered next year. 25 Proposed new Awards by Vaughan Kippers, Queensland Regional Correspondent For some time, there has been a feeling that Audax Australia has insufficient awards to encourage riders to enter more rides, either during one season or over the period of a few seasons. The current awards available are shown in Rule 20 of the Audax Australia Ride Rules, which lists both the awards and their associated rules. If you look at the Audax UK website, you will see that they have a long list of awards; probably more than Audax Australia would consider at this stage. I used the UK site as a guide during preparation of a draft proposal for the introduction of more Australian awards. The draft proposal was discussed during a national teleconference on the 5th May, 2004. After some discussion, it was decided to publish the proposals of the meeting in Checkpoint and ask for comment from the general membership. The following points summarise the suggestions made during the teleconference discussion: •The Nouveau Randonneur award, which totals 350km (min), should be retained with an added rule that it only be available for members during their first two years of membership. For existing members, they will have two years in which to apply for this award. • The Super Randonneur award totals 1500km (min) and should be retained. • The Dirt Series Award totals 205km and should be retained. • Introduce a Brevet 500. Ride 5 x 100km rides in one season to gain your Brevet 500 (no substitutes) • Introduce a Brevet 1000. Ride 5 x 200km rides in one season to gain your Brevet 1000 (no substitutes) • Introduce a Brevet 2000. Carry on collecting 100s or 200s over as long a period as you like (commencing in the 2004-2005 season), and eventually you will have your Brevet 2000. That's 10 x 200km or 20 x 100km. You can't mix them, and you can't substitute longer rides. 26 • Introduce a Brevet 3000. Collect 300s, 400s and 600s over as long a period as you like (commencing in the 2004-2005 season, and eventually you will have your Brevet 3000. Any mixture of the three lengths is acceptable for this award. * The Woodrup 5000 award should be retained. • An alternative 5000 which does not require an Oppy, 1000 or 1200 rides, aggregated over a number of seasons. Members are reminded that, except for the Woodrup 5000, a ride counted towards one Audax Australia award cannot be counted towards another award . It is anticipated that this rule will not be changed. The names listed for the proposed awards are the same as the UK awards. Members may like to suggest some more interesting Aussie names such as "The Outback 3000' or 'The Blackstump 3000' or 'The Kangaroo 3000', suggested by Don Briggs. We could also consider naming the rides after famous Australian riders such as the Gray 1000 (after Dunc Gray, suggested by Garry Armsworth), the Stephens 2000 (after Neil Stephens) or the Anderson 3000 (after Phil Anderson). All members are invited to send any comments on the above award suggestions directly to Vaughan Kippers at v.kippers@uq.edu.au or 50 Tekapo Street, Westlake, Qld, 4074. You can also write to the Editor of Checkpoint if you would like your comments to be read by the general membership. Contributions for next Checkpoint close on 28 August 2004 Café Audax You read about Hotel Audax in the last issue of Checkpoint, now we can announce Cafe Audax. Jointly operated by Audax Life Member Terry Gross, the café opened on 15 June 2004. Aptly named, the Café Audax can be found at 14 Doveton Street North, Ballarat, and specialises in nourishing home cooked food made from the freshest ingredients. It will meet the needs of the hungriest cyclists for the quality calories necessary to follow Oppy’s enthusiasm and courage. The café decor emphasises its cycling theme and is decorated with many pictures and photographs of Oppy’s and Audax Australia’s history. The Café’s name was chosen to reflect the spirit of boldness and the “can do” attitude of the randonneur. Meals and snacks, most home cooked on the premises, are available from Monday to Friday as is an extensive range of teas and coffee. Vegetarian and many special dietary needs can be met. The Café Audax can also be opened at weekends to enable Audax events to be conveniently run from the City of Ballarat using the café as a base and control. For further enquiries, ring Terry on 0438 452060 or during the day at the Café on 03 5332 9308. A Radical Reconnoitre The Tin Trail North-East Tasmania by Jenny Caldwell In mid February I ventured down to Tasmania to have a look at the Tin Trail, with Paul Gregory. We were kindly picked up from Hobart airport at 6pm and headed towards St. Helens campground for a Saturday morning start. Six of us set off, with Paul doing support in the van. The ride out of St. Helens headed north taking the coastal track along the Bay of Fires to ‘The Gardens’, where we then headed West. Fun on a gently undulating forest track had me in a joyful, carefree mood, which at my age should ring at least a medium size bell! Cliffords Road was marked as ‘no through’ so we rode onto Terrys Hill Road, then into Murdochs Road. The terrain was changing to taller trees, low cloud and hanging moisture. The detour to Platts Lookout was a densely forested 2km climb - superb even though there was too much cloud for a view. We were told on a clear day Flinders Island is visible from this fire spotting lookout. Back down the hill, across Murdochs Road and onto SunFlats Road. Now there’s a funny thing with names. It’s definitely not a road, it wasn’t sunny and you can guess the rest. A steady climb over flat rocks, running water, beautiful ferns and not much chatter. We ultimately came out at Poinema, 810m above sea level, where Paul had a wonderful Above: Checking directions after passing over a small twig, and below, giving the bikes a wash! lunch prepared. Poinema, once an open-cut and underground tin mine, was a thriving town at the turn of the century. Supporters of this area’s natural beauty hope that the next incarnation of the Blue Tier is as a National Park. There are many walking trails and clearly sensational riding. After a late lunch Paul informed us there was a 16km descent and that he would see us at the Weldborough Pub for dinner. Excitedly we all mounted and began along an exquisite track that came out onto peat high plains. After getting a bit wet we began the descent through different forest types-sub-alpine, mytrle and then eucalypt. A special feature of the descent is the rocky terrain known as ‘Doughboys’, but personally I was busy keeping myself on the bike, the bike not in the bushes and my heart not interrupting hearing. So the 16km descent consisted of rock, creeks, wash-outs, uphill and took 3 hours. At 6pm we fell into the Weldborough Pub - most going straight to the Bar. The dinner discussion consisted mainly of trying to elicit a more accurate description of Sunday’s ride from our laid-back, van driving leader. It appeared there were two options-there is no doubt I will be back to do option A (St. Columba Falls), but the decision for this trip was the easier option B. We enjoyed a good breakfast in a room filled with the amazing historical memorabilia, particularly the Chinese involvement in the tin trade. We were back on the bikes the next morning ascending the Weldborough Pass. This was a steady bitumen climb of approximately 3-4km through beautiful Nothfagus (mytrle) forest. The descent down into Pyengana was one of those yahooing big-smile events and the coffee at the new cafe was excellent. Gough’s Road out of Pyengana showed us that the country is now being shaped by forestry not mining as we crossed three ridge lines planted either with eucalyptus Globus or Pinus Radiata. The ridges, running roughly north-south, gradually petered out into a sandy track (Argonaut Road, named after the Argonaut tin mine), which was a delightful run straight back into St. Helens. We ate, then showered back at the campground. Most of us dozed as the wonderful Paul drove us back to Hobart. I loved this weekend: wonderful insights into the northeast of the state, its tin mining history, the need to preserve the Blue Tier and the great company of my fellow riders. So if this ride makes the calendar next year, don’t miss out. Remember though, practise your rockhopping! 27 Rider Profile Don & Enid Halton Questions by Phil Bellette & Sue Taylor The accents are a dead give away. Why, from where and when did you come to Australia? For the first ten years after our marriage in 1957, we lived in five different homes in various parts of England and Don’s mother reckoned we had ‘itchy feet’. ‘Emigration’ seemed to be the next logical step. There was an advertisement in an English paper asking for a Linotype Operator in Western Australia which Don answered. Whilst waiting for a reply, ‘The Age’ also advertised for a Linotype Operator and at his interview Don was told one of the conditions of the job offer was that we had to be in Melbourne within six weeks. We come from Lancashire in England, more specifically the Manchester area. We arrived in Melbourne with our three children aged 10, 7 and 3 years on the Queen’s Birthday weekend in 1969, a beautiful day with clear blue skies. This meant of course that once the sun went down it was very cold - the coldest Melbourne night for 21 years - and our accommodation at Preston hostel was half a Nissen hut and one blanket per bed. On our arrival in mid afternoon we were offered a meal of stewed rabbit and potatoes after which we went to bed as we had been travelling for about 48 hours. Unfortunately we slept through the evening meal time and after a very disturbed cold night fell asleep again and missed breakfast! Did you cycle before making the move downunder? Enid: My parents were cyclists and I was originally carried around in a sidecar before progressing to a chair on the back of a bike followed by riding on a tandem and then eventually my own bike. My dad was of the ‘old school’ that riding up hills meant sitting on the saddle, putting your heels down and pushing. I still can’t ride out of the saddle. Don: I originally started cycling at 13 with school friends. 28 You were active in other sports prior to Audax - why the move and do you still participate in other forms of cycling? We have always been interested in cycling. Don joined Southern Vets when they started up in 1975 and has raced with them since. We both took part in the Bicycle Victoria rides and joined a local cycling club when the children were older. We found Audax challenging and it was something we could do together. How did you find about Audax.? From a friend in Peninsula Pedallers cycling club. What was the incentive/catalyst for deciding to do PBP in 1995? Will there be any more? Enid: Strangely enough, I think age had a lot to do with it. As I would be aged 59 at the time of the ride, it seemed like a case of now or never. This probably accounts for the fact that I continued riding in spite of problems with my left leg and spending hours at various checkpoints getting treatment. On our second Audax ride in April 1993 which started and finished at Castlemaine, Tim Laugher was at the finish talking about what a wonderful experience PBP was. At the time, having just completed the 100km ride, I thought you’d have to be crazy to even contemplate riding 1200km, but gradually as I built up my distances and enjoyed the challenges and the company I started wondering whether perhaps it may be possible. After being made redundant, I was working on a one year contract which ended in April 1995 and we decided to have a ‘once in a lifetime’ retirement trip which would include PBP and the Land’s End to John O’Groats ride in England. Much as I loved the atmosphere of PBP, I doubt I’d ever again reach the fitness necessary. Don: As I completed the longer Audax rides, PBP became another challenge and yes 2007 is a possibility. You have both been cycling for a long time. Tell us about your early experiences. Enid: My early cycling years were spent with my family and cycling friends of my parents and their children. As this was during and just after World War II there were very few cars on the roads, as well as very few, if any, signposts. (I believe this was to confuse the enemy if they ever landed). We used to go out along country lanes taking our sandwiches and stopping at cafes for pots of tea. As a teenager I joined a cycling club (where Don and I met) which was quite regimented on the road. We cycled in pairs and were not allowed to overtake the leaders who were older members. Once at a café for lunch or tea, there was always time ‘to let off steam’. The Clarion Cycling Club owned ‘club houses’ in various parts of the country. These were similar to Youth Hostels with male and female dormitories, cooking facilities, etc and set in their own grounds. We cycled to those further afield at holiday times. The cycling club was a big part of our lives and we always travelled by bike to the social/club nights and the organised dances carrying a change of clothes. We also did a lot of cycle touring in England staying at Youth Hostels. Don: I started fairly serious cycling in 1948 and joined a club (East Manchester Clarion) the following year. These were fantastic years for cycling with very few cars on the roads and most Sundays were spent on club rides with a few youth hostel weekends thrown in. A couple of years later I progressed to racing, mainly on the track, which marriage and children curtailed. I later returned to racing, specializing in time trials with the occasional road race. You have been described as never home. You must like traveling? Where are some of your favourite places and do you always take the bikes. Enid has two brothers in England and Don has two sisters and it’s always nice to catch up with family. On our overseas trips we spend some time in the UK then travel over to France where we find the cycling excellent. We have had three more European trips since 1995 but none as big spending! In 1999 we cycle camped our way through France arriving at St Quentin in time for Don to ride PBP. We cycled from Manchester to Poole for the ferry to Cherbourg. We then had a wonderful trip winding our way through France along very quiet lanes and through some beautiful villages with houses and village squares festooned in flowers. After PBP we travelled by train to Donaueschingen for the start of the Danube Bike Trail. We cycled as far as Vienna with a side trip to Beilngries alongside the Main-Donau-Kanal and then took the train to St Malo visiting Jersey and Guernsey in the Channel Islands, before returning to England. Randonnee when neither of us had done the necessary preparation and were therefore not fit enough. We also encountered adverse weather including snow on Lavers Hill and Enid had a problem with her knee. Enid: Best experience (apart from the ‘high’ of successfully completing PBP 1995 in 85 hrs 10 mins) was the magic of Mt Buffalo on a volunteers ride in January 1999. We had left Bright at 6 am on a very cold morning and part way up Mt Buffalo I stopped in the sunshine to look down on the mist in the valley and watch and listen to some Much as I loved the atmosphere of PBP, I doubt I’d ever again reach the fitness necessary. In 2001 and 2003 as well as having bikes, we took advantage of the offer of a car from family in England. We would drive to a chosen area, pitch our tent at the local camping ground (which seem to be in every little village in France) and explore the surrounding territory by bike. We prefer the quieter country areas of France as opposed to the bigger cities and have visited different parts of the country each visit. (We still have a few Departments to go). So saying that we have also cycled along the Loire Valley and stayed in the Dordogne and both areas get very busy at certain times of the year. lyrebirds. Don: Completing PBP 1999 in 76 hrs 5 mins - (Enid and I had ridden as a team in 1995) During our 2001 trip we cycled a few of the Pyrenean cols frequented by the Tour de France riders, albeit at a much slower pace! It did mean we could appreciate the beauty of the surrounding countryside though. We have also twice taken part in Semaine Federale in France. In 2001 this was at Crest in the Drome-Ardeche region and in 2003 Aurillac in the Auverge. This is a fantastic cycling experience which is very well organised by the FFCT (who are involved in the organisation of PBP). There are a choice of five rides each day of varying lengths and difficulties and excellent maps are provided. The maps are virtually superfluous as there are arrows on the roads as well as signs at strategic corners. Well organised food areas are set up at nominated towns to cater for the 10,000 or so cyclists. A pot of tea, freshly brewed with boiling water! What are your first, worst and best Audax experiences? Our first Audax was the Bellarine 100km in 1993 and our worst (through no fault of the organiser we hasten to add) an attempt at 1000km on the first Great Southern What has been the best/favourite development in cycling equipment since you started cycling? Enid: Gear levers on the handlebars instead of on the downtube. Don: Clipless pedals coming close behind STI’s. What do you think about in the middle of the night on a 400km ride? Best bit of advice for Audax aspirants? Don: Ride a bike, ride a bike, ride a bike. Enid: Ride at a pace you are comfortable with to be able to finish the distance. Also I believe doing weight work for upper body strength in preparation for long rides would be helpful. Any Other Comments? Enid: After completing an Opperman and a 1000km ride in 1996 to qualify for a Randonneur 5000 Award, my next project was to qualify for a Woodrup. Unfortunately this wasn’t to be as for various reasons, I was not able to complete some of the necessary distances. I have now accepted that it is most unlikely that I will be able to complete the longer distances again, but I can, and still do, enjoy the shorter Audax rides as well as cycle touring. We both also get great pleasure out of taking our grandchildren cycling along the local bike tracks (at their request) when they stay with us. 29 Maximise your visibility PolyBrite split vests provide maximum visibility with red flashing or steady illumination on the front and back. The fluorescent, retro-reflective material provides superior reflectivity from outside light sources. Polybrite split vests are lightweight and durable. Vests run on two AA batteries (not included) and last up to 400 hours in the flashing mode. Sizes S/M/L/XL. RRP $100. Ponchos PolyBrite poncho vests provide maximum visibility with PolyBrite illumination on both the front and back. These poncho vests are lightweight, durable and ideal where enhanced visibility is required for safety. Vests run on two AA batteries (not included) and last up to 400 hours in the flashing mode. One size fits all. Orange or Lime Yellow. RRP $95. Armbands, Collars, Batons & Belts Multi-purpose arm or ankle bands (S/L). Collars for your pets (S/M/L). Batons, only 175 grams in 4 colours. Belts, offering 360º visibility. 30 All products are Vests SELF-ILLUMINATED Visible from up to 1.5 km at night, in low/no-light situations Made of lightweight shock and weather resistant materials Red illumination with yellow reflective material Patented polymer/Red LED combination Hundreds of hours of battery life Constant or Flashing Light Safe - Operates on 3 volts Purchase in Melbourne from Abbotsford Cycles or Ivanhoe Cycles, or for your nearest retailer elsewhere, please contact Wayne Humphrys, OHS Supplies Australia on email ohssupplies@nemesis.com.au or facsimile 03 9482 3321. www.polybrite.com Comparing randonnees by Bob Bednarz Some Paris-Brest-Paris veterans may be inclined towards further testing their endurance on 1200km events sanctioned by Les Randonneurs Mondiaux (LRM). The question of degrees of difficulty of other 1200km rides compared to PBP then becomes of interest. From the Internet I have been able to download and then combine elevation profiles for Paris-Brest-Paris 1999 (PBP99), the Perth-Albany-Perth (PAP), Boston-Montreal-Boston (BMB), and the Rocky Mountain 1200 (RM1200) into a single chart. The advantage of having them on a single chart is that they all have a common scale and axes and therefore the ride topology, such as slopes and altitude variations, can be visually compared at a glance. The result is shown in the accompanying chart. In terms of cumulative climb over the course, both PBP and BMB have been recorded at around 10,000m. In 1997, Melbourne club member Peter Moore recorded a total climb for PAP of 7,200m and the cumulative climb for the RM 1200 held in 2002 was given as 7,850m. A better measure than cumulative climb for appraising course difficulty was brought to our attention by Derek Dawkins in January 2001. He appraised Alpine Classic hills in terms of a climb rating, which involves both grade and altitude 2 gained by using the formula H / 10D or (height difference in meters) squared / (10 x distance travelled in meters). Source: Dutch bicycle-magazine Fiets. Applying this formula to the altitude variation data that I compiled for each ride, and summing the rating of each individual climb over each course yields the following comparison of ‘Cumulative Climb Ratings‘: RM1200 BMB PBP PAP 36 46 36 32 While PBP is characterized by endlessly rolling countryside with no particularly long and steep climbs, BMB passes through the Green Mountains of Vermont, which has indeed more challenging climbs. So although they both have approximately the same cumulative climb, the BMB is a more difficult course, as indicated by its “Cumulative Climb Rating.” Although the RM1200 climbs to the greatest altitude, in general the climbs are gradual, thus yielding a rating similar to PBP. Of course, topology is not the only consideration in determining ride difficulty. Prevailing weather during the ride is a major factor, as is road surface conditions and level of support. In particular, the New England region in the USA can be hot and very humid during August when BMB is run. By far, PBP is the most prestigious event, offering the greatest international participation with some 4000 riders from around the world; together with its historical significance, the cycling enthusiasm of the French, their unique scenery and particularly smooth road surfaces. In contrast, the other 1200km rides have only a small fraction of PBP rider numbers but offer more personalized support such as bag-drops, quick food service as well as showering and sleep accommodation at checkpoints. References Perth-Albany-Perth, Peter Moore, Checkpoint, Summer 97/98 http://home.t-online.de/home/ randonneur/pap2000e.htm http://home.t-online.de/home/ randonneur/pbp1999.htm http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/ 2750/route.html#Profile http://www.randonneurs.bc.ca/ Resources/maps_etc/RM_profile_2004.jpg http://www.komcycling.com/ 31 32 Using Different Modes of Cycling to Improve: Track Cycling is such a great sport. There are so many ways in which you can enjoy it. In a series of articles I will be looking at ways to improve your skills, endurance and general enjoyment on the bike, using the various forms of cycling. Presently as I write, the World Track Cycling Championships are about to start in Melbourne. I will make no secret of the fact that I have a bias in this area. So track is the subject for this time. Track Cycling is done on velodromes or “tracks” around ovals. The banking can be from 45 degrees to a couple of degrees. The surface can be concrete, bitumen or wooden boards. The distance once around varies from 185 to over 400 metres. The venue can be outdoor or indoor. Entry can be restrictive like Dunc Gray Velodrome in Sydney, where you must have a cycling licence, or it can be totally open to the public. It can cost or be free. It is recommended if you are going to ride track, unless it only has a slight bank and there are no other riders around, that you do use a track bike. A track bike has a single fixed gear (which means no freewheeling, you have to pedal) and it has no brakes. It also has a high bottom bracket which prevents you digging the pedal in when going slow on the banks. It is a lot lighter than the road bikes as it doesn’t have the braking and gearing paraphernalia. You’ll find you go a lot faster on a track bike with less effort once you get used to the fixed wheel and having no brakes. What does it do for your skills? 1. Pedalling Pedalling a fixed wheel improves your general pedal stroke and not having brakes forces you to adjust pedalling pressure to control speed 3. Sitting on a wheel A lot of the aerobic work on the track is done by pace line which is a single line of riders where the front rider does a lap turn, swings up the bank, and then goes to the back of the group. Therefore as well as becoming fitter the cyclist is spending most of his/her time sitting on a wheel. This is good practice is you are riding in a tight group on Audax rides. 4. Reactions Riding the track improves your general reactions and handling skills as you have to adjust your line using your positioning rather than the brakes What does it do for your fitness? 1. No Rest for the Wicked! Fixed wheel means you cannot rest while you are riding. 2. A Lot of Anaerobic Threshold Training Track riders generally train faster which means for most of us we would be at our anaerobic threshold (the hardest work you can do aerobically). This has the effect of making us fitter faster. This pace line training doesn’t last too long so it is achievable. If you find the going too hard you can always hide at the back or pull off and have a bit of a rest and then come back in. This will not train you for the long distances of Audax but will raise your fitness level so that together with long distance training the cyclist will be able to put out more power at lower heart rates. Coaching Tips with Tanya Bosch Tanya Bosch is a Level 2 Accredited Cycling Coach and has trained numerous Audax riders including several PBP finishers. Readers can contact Tanya on (02) 02 9369 1436, 0419217974 or by email onyabike@ozemail.com.au Coming Event Fitz/Tharwa Challenge Sunday, 31 October, 2004 Whilst not an Audax randonnee this ride is run under similar rules including a time limit. Choose from 90km or 150km routes, with inclusion of a 200km route this year also a possibility. The one day event passes through scenic bushland and countryside settings in the Canberra district. For further details, please events@pedalpower.org.au or Power ACT Inc, PO Box Canberra ACT 2601 Ph (02) 7995. email Pedal 581, 6248 33 Lighting the PBP fuse by Allan Dickson On 4 December 1999 at Verdun, South Australia, I entered my first Audax ride - the 200km Midnight Madness. Ian Peak, Oliver Portway and Matthew Rawnsley rode too and they lit my PBP fuse with their lively conversation about the 1999 PBP. Riding to Bright in Victoria for the Alpine Classic was now merely a step towards Paris. Meanwhile, back on the Verdun ride, I could not find the Woodside control and returned to Verdun without my brevet card stamped. This could have caused me to be disqualified, but instead I was encouraged and told by the organisers that the Springton control would wait for me until 6am that morning. Inspired, I completed that ride in just 12 hours. The cycling and camping that I did as a scout paid off when I began preparing for PBP. My best friend and I had cycled 160km in the Adelaide Hills when we were only 13 and after beginning cycling again in 1973, I soon wanted to do that again. In 1992 I achieved that and was further enthused by reading about PBP and the Alpine Classic in the Australian Cyclist magazine. When I joined Audax Australia and ordered knicks and a jersey, Sue Taylor put the 1999 PBP Information booklet in the parcel too, and I was hooked. In 2001, I had planned to take seven days to ride to Bright from Adelaide but didn’t reach Bright until 4pm the day before the Alpine Classic (the Raleigh had only 14 gears then!). On the day of the Alpine Classic, I drafted five girls from Germantown because of the headwind, arriving in Bright at 2:40pm, with no hope (I thought) of completing the climb to the Mt Buffalo chalet. However, the organisers encouraged me, and, eating a salad-roll, I continued on to arrive at the chalet with three other riders. The magic of descending for the third time that day and a 12 hour 50 minute brevet are highly treasured memories. Three-hundred kilometres was next and I remember Elle Mattey and Sam Blight driving out past Kersbrook during the night to encourage me. With haemoglobin at the wrong end of the normal range, my cruising speed was reduced but shorter rests offset this. My first 400km brevet in March 34 2001 was difficult. I had only ten minutes to spare because I tried to have some sleep after about 18 hours and then encountered a strong head wind for the last 30km and 300m climb to Belair. In 2002 I retired from a 600km brevet when an August frost made me shelter under my space blanket for too long. I rode a 200km out and back course from home that I could add on to the 400km loop that we use in SA for Audax rides. After several 400km rides when I could not start the extra 200km, I learned to pace myself and did the 600km in 37 hours without sleep. Then PBP qualifying and the insurance crisis arrived. I enjoyed a 400km ride with Rob Reid-Smith, who kindly waited at the top of that 300m climb to Belair so that we could finish together, only to find that our ‘pseudo-brevets’ would not be sent to Paris for ratification. When I set off for the 2003 Alpine Classic, I had arranged to do the Western Districts Wanderers 400km brevet on 8 February and I was hoping that the bushfires would be extinguished. Seven days later, in Wangaratta, I learned that the Classic was cancelled. I camped at Tarrawingee and then rode through the smoke via Bonnie Doon to Phillip Island, back around the bay to Sorrento, along the Great Ocean Road to Cumberland River near Lorne, and back to Geelong for the qualifying ride. Again I lost ground on the other riders until a shorter rest at the Sebastopol control placed me ahead of a group, which caught me at Rokewood. I managed to stay with them all the way back to Geelong, very much enjoying group riding. I declined the invitation to ride the last 116km to Weribee and back with them, but they insisted, and I found that I could stay with them because they were pacing themselves for a 600km brevet. That brevet is 54 minutes quicker than any of my eight 400km rides. I now knew more PBP entrants and those five weeks and 3200km of cycling and camping were the beginnings of my build up for PBP. The qualifying 600km comprised three 200km loops from the Gawler Soaring Club, 50km north of Adelaide. I rode the first loop with Ian Peak and the last two alone. After 400km, I set my timer for an hour and slept for nearly two hours and started the last loop in panic at 8am. It was good to arrive back with 3 hours 40 minutes to spare. After a beer with Matt Rawnsley, I set off on the 50km ride home and discovered that my legs were OK but my eyes had quit. That was the last time, except for a few hours during PBP, that I cycled with ordinary spectacles. I purchased a pair of Euro sunglasses with blue-mirror, clear and amber glasses and a clip-in frame for prescription lenses. My optometrist advised me that I had ‘dry-eyes’ but I considered that the new specs would cure them. I went by Singapore Airlines to Zurich and assembled my 1976 Raleigh Carlton Clubman to do 11 weeks and 5,500km of cycle touring and camping in France before PBP. About 10km from the Zurich airport, one of the 16 spokes in my Shimano rear wheel broke. Thirteen days later my search for another spare spoke was rewarded when a cycle shop in Beaune gave me two. When the second spoke broke in Grenoble 3000km later, I returned to Beaune and rebuilt the wheel with new spokes. I had just descended from watching the Tour de France at Col du Galibier, 2645m, and Col de l’Izoard, 2360m. In Versailles, I saw the last stage of Le Tour and rode into Paris but I was at the wrong camping ground. After one night at Parc Etang (the right camping ground in Guyancourt) I started a two week trip on the PBP route. This was OK until I was returning from Brest, when 2 spokes broke on Monday and another one on Wednesday, so I spent the Saturday before PBP rebuilding the wheel again with reduced spoke tension. With the scrutineering passed and our ‘last supper’ eaten I forgot to turn in my ground sheet edges and awoke on Monday to find my route book and PBP clothing sodden. There was no sleep during that day! I started in the 10:30pm group and after only a few hours, discovered in Nogent-leRoi that my rear wheel had nearly collapsed. Wednesday was the high day for me. I knew the roads and had camped at Huelgoat two weeks earlier. Instead of hurrying I took time out for a Yoplait drink, bun and banana in Huelgoat and arrived in Brest about 41 hours after starting. I left Carhaix as darkness fell in a large group with a police escort. There were many Americans in that group and I was astonished at our speeds down hills in the darkness pierced only by our puny lights. In St Martin-des-Pres I feasted at midnight and practised my French with the villagers. Then at the Loudeac control, after eating, I slept for an hour on the floor by the heater. I forgot to turn in my ground sheet edges and awoke on Monday to find my route book and PBP clothing sodden. I frantically adjusted the spokes and set off at the rear of the field. Five minutes later, at the last street light, I stopped again to make more adjustments before riding the 84km to Mortagne-au-Perche for a beer, soup and bread breakfast. After truing my wheel, I set off in good spirits and was soon amongst other riders again. That afternoon between Villaines-la-Juhel and Fougeres I needed a 20 minute power-nap, and then another 20 minutes about two hours before sunset, because I knew that to continue riding in a group was unsafe. I left Tinteniac as darkness fell intending to sleep for about 3 hours at Loudeac. Gradually I became confused and could not recall the roads that I had seen earlier in daylight. At a left turn I shouted in vain to a rider going straight ahead and then around midnight, I tried to sleep for two hours in a field in my space blanket. I lost another 15 minutes searching for my LED light that doubled as a torch and then headed confusedly towards Loudeac. Groups of approaching PBP riders and locals clapping for me in complete darkness, gradually restored reality and I reached Loudeac with one other rider, who sounded like an excited Japanese tourist as he discovered the PBP ‘arrow’ on the edge of the town. There was no entry chute and I continued for a kilometre until, after crossing the railway, I turned back and entered the control from Brest. My despairing, “Le controle ferme?” to the official for outward riders was answered, “Oui.” Immediately the official for the returning riders cheerfully announced, “He must have started after ten.” Then, with my book stamped and card swiped, I was back in the carnival! I ate well at every control from the wide range of foods and drinks. After settling in, an hour power-napping and four meals per day was all that I needed. I telephoned my wife, Kath, from Sens-de-Bretagne, announcing, “PBP dans la poche!” little knowing what lay ahead. Gradually the two pairs of knicks and the layers of Silcon cream grew thinner and the hills became steeper. The crunch came when darkness fell after Mamers and that 43km to Mortagne-auPerche seemed to take forever. The LED tail lights of hundreds of riders coming past continuously, were blinding me. Removing my wrap-around, amber cycling specs improved my sight sufficiently to continue but those cold hours, with bare knees, were the hardest to conquer. Finally I made it to Mortagne-au-Perche for a feed and 25 minutes under a blanket before setting off at midnight on the last 141km. Apart from eating at Nogent-le-Roi, I stopped only once to chat with fellow Aussie Ian Peak in Faverolles, and arrived at Guyancourt at about 4pm. The wrong turns only lost 100 metres until a red cross indicated ‘wrong road’. My average from Mortagne was only 9km/h and my riding speed only a bit higher but I had no doubt that I would finish! Loretta Armitage stopped only a few metres in front of me and about 10 minutes later a French rider, who had been riding with me earlier, came alongside to ask me, “Did I know the Australian who said that she just could not ride any further?”. At Nogent-le-Roi, Bernard Collins couldn’t see anything wrong with my eyes but my vision was very blurred. I used my 26 teeth granny-ring for the first time about an hour later and fell off when the chain ‘sucked’ and then, after the umpteenth wrong turn, an official, who had been keeping an eye on me, asked me what was wrong. He hadn’t seen my fall and I managed to assure him that I was OK. At about 3:30pm in Montigny-le-Bretonneux a motorcycle Gendarme (one of many) escorted our little group for the last 30 minutes through all the traffic signals and roundabouts to the finish, where we were cheered by thousands. The tears didn’t cure my chronic dry eyes but the satisfaction surpassed my wildest dreams. In July 2007 I will fly to Milan and cycle tour in France again before the next PBP. An Air Friday with a Rohloff 14 speed hub and Lightspin generator will replace the Raleigh and I will have a larger rack bag for the leg warmers and gloves that I missed in 2003. Poly Gel drops and an optical correction of my clip-in lenses has fixed my eyes. My legs, which improved in France, will surely last another ten years. A bag of toy kangaroos will also start PBP with me in 2007! ACP celebrates Audax Club Parisien (ACP) has announced that a special award will be presented to 100 people around the world to celebrate the 200,000th homologation of a 200km brevet. Jean-Gualbert Faburel, ACP’s results coordinator for all foreign nations, has asked that Audax Australia notify him when any of the following people do a 200km brevet ride this year, so that they may receive a special medal. The list was developed by Bob & Suzanne Lepertel of ACP, to thank people for their involvement in BRM. The Australian riders that have been selected for this honour are Hans Dusink, Sue Taylor, Phil Bellette, Colin Farmer, Tim Laugher, Peter Mathews and Henry Boardman. Congratulations to Australia members. those Audax 35 PBP 2007 Fixation by Alan Tonkin I have just had my first ‘brake free’ 20km commute to work, which includes stopping the bike downhill at a T-intersection from what would normally be a speed of over 50 km/h. By ‘brake-free’, I mean a fixed-wheel bike without brakes or gears. My intention is to ride the 2007 Paris-Brest-Paris (PBP) on a fixed-wheel bike, and it was friend Peter Moore who suggested I document my experiences thus far. Why ride fixed? The answer is simple. It’s lots of fun, it’s a challenge, its a chance to improve existing skills and to learn new ones in bike handling, it improves pedal action and cadence, and the legs get heaps stronger. It also has its idyllic/trance like moments when you are just floating along with the pedals effortlessly coming around (like it or not). It’s heaps cheaper and easier to maintain the bike, there are no worries about it getting knocked off because the thief will get bucked off, the worry of the derailleur getting knocked is a thing of the past, plus it is a kind of cool and trendy thing to be doing here on the streets of Melbourne, especially for this ‘Johnny come lately to cycling’. The ultimate of course will be commuting with no brakes - I still have the front one operative. And the super ultimate challenge will be doing the 2007 PBP on it. What got me thinking about a fixed wheel? Three things. Firstly, my final qualifier for the 2003 PBP was the flat 400 out of Bendigo and I had the privilege of riding it with Alan Kellette and Trevor King. Their pedalling action and smoothness was something to behold and I decided that I wanted to learn to ride like that, seeing as how I had only really gotten into cycling later in life at the age of 49, some seven years ago, and my pedalling action was a bit crook. They attributed their cycling finesse to riding fixed wheel as younger folk on track bikes. Secondly, my mate at work (an ex-courier) had this thing about commuting on a single speed and finally he bought a KHS single speed. Apparently single speed is a bit of an emerging trend among couriers. I was impressed by the simplicity and economy of such a bike especially as I go thru a couple of cassettes, set of chain rings and a number 36 Look mum, no brakes! Alan’s fixed wheel bike takes shape. of chains in my 12-15000km cycling year - just about the cost of a what my mate paid for his single speed which is essentially maintenance free. Finally, on the 2003 PBP I happened to cycle a bit of the time with a couple of Scots, both on fixed wheel. So I thought if they can do it, so can I. What’s happened so far? I had my original 1999 PBP road bike in the garage (it was Leigh Kilpatrick’s original tourer/Audax bike) which I had subsequently stacked and replaced with the yellow made to measure Cecil Walker. I realised the frame was basically still okay and all I needed to do was to get some horizontal drop-outs welded in and I was on my way to single speed. In preparation for the day I would go single speed, I started to do my 40km daily commute on one gear each day on my mountain bike until I found the gear that would be optimal for getting me up the hills, but still be high enough to be able to keep up with the pedals on the downhill and of course, with the rest of the pack on the bike path. I must admit though, that during this experimental stage I always ended up using a higher gear to keep up with the packs. Who did I know who could help me get setup on a single speed? This is where Peter Moore comes into the picture. He kindly offered to help me build up the bike using second hand bits and pieces so that I could in a sense ‘suck it and see’, without initially investing unnecessarily. I also did a bit of reading about going fixed and one of the most informative articles was Going Fixed Wheel at www.deepwater.ukli nux.net/www.fixedwheel.org.uk/howto/. I needed some advice about gearing and found this advice to be spot on from the Going Fixed Wheel article: “Gearing is another matter of personal taste - tradition usually calls for a gear in the mid-60s, usually 66” or 68”, and a moderately fit rider should be able to push such a gear up all but the steepest hills. For the `dodgy knee’ brigade or those who don’t live in the flatlands something like 59” or 63” is usually the gear of choice. Since I live in the flatlands I run something a little bit higher, notably 72”, but then I have no qualms about dismounting and walking up a hill. Contrary to popular belief, running a fixed gear in very flat country isn’t necessarily a good thing unless you either a) like saddle sores or b) are prepared to get out of the saddle from time to time.” With this advice and the experience of riding the mountain bike in a single gear we decided on a 40 spoke flip-flop rear hub with a 17 tooth (71.4inch) fixed and an 18 tooth (67.4inch) free using a Velocity deep dish rim (I am heavy on rims - close to 100kg, and go through a couple a year) coupled to a 46 tooth chain ring. I needed a ‘set back seat post’ and decided on bull horn handle bars - drops inverted and cut off. Interestingly, as the bike was low to the ground anyway, we needed to get 170mm cranks to minimise the risk of the pedal bottoming on corners because one thing I didn’t think about was that on a fixed you don’t have much choice as to the pedal position on corners. I have been told if you do bottom-out you are quickly propelled over the handlebars. I also decided to fit Vittoria Randonneur 28mm tyres with a good tread for commuting as I did not feel confident enough to be using the normal 23mm slicks. I have subsequently learnt though that having a uni-directional tread I would have to change the tyre around when I change the wheel around from fixed to free. I spent the first Saturday I had the bike made up trying to get the hang of pushing away and getting the other foot onto the other pedal. I live on a slope so rolling down the slope helped me get the hang of getting started on a fixed wheel. As for braking, my legs were too weak for doing a back pedal stop so the normal brakes became a godsend. Having developed a bit of confidence, the next thing was to go for a real ride. Realising that I was constantly needing to lift the back wheel and to scoop the pedal around to my natural starting position on the left leg, I decided to change my ordinary pedals for those I could attach toes clips to. The first ride was around 60km and I soon found out that I was not skilled enough to get my foot into the toe clips. I spent the whole ride on the underside of one pedal with the toe clips scrapping the ground on every corner. I resolved then to use my normal clipless pedals. I also found the 17 tooth was too high a gear for some of the hills, so I decided to swap the wheel around to the 18 tooth freewheel side for the start of my first week’s commuting. In the meantime, Peter sourced an 18 tooth fixed cog. My cadence improved out of sight during the week and I found I could get up all the hills I needed to by standing on the pedals. After the first week of freewheel riding, the 18 tooth fixed was fitted and at the end of the week my legs were killing me, especially the adductor muscles. I needed to get a really good massage and to learn some exercises for stretching and strengthening them. I came to realise that trying to hold or slow the bike without brakes meant I was doing a back pedalling action and using muscles not normally used. After the second week of fixed wheel riding, I attempted some longer and more hilly rides. The legs were getting stronger and I was gradually acquiring the art of brakeless slowing and of holding the bike on hills so it would not run away on me because on some hills my cadence would get so high I’d be wobbling all over the place trying to keep up with the pedals. I also noticed I was sitting on the saddle a lot more and became aware of how often on a conventional bike I momentarily stop pedalling just to lift the bum off the seat or to position the pedals to go over a bump, kerb, speed hump and the like. What have 2,500km? I learnt/observed after My commuting time was initially longer due to stopping/starting/pulling away in a higher gear than I would normally, going slower down hills as I couldn’t freewheel up to say 60km/h and could only pedal up to 43km/h, not having as high a top speed on the flat, trying to slow down and stop without using brakes required a longer ‘lead time’, and slower cornering to stay more upright because of a fear of pedals touching the ground. Apart from my legs aching as new muscles got used, my arms and shoulders also started to get sore because I was using them more to climb and hold the bike back. Also the hands/fingers have became sore because I was gripping harder - fear? Looks like I need to do some ‘core strengthening’ to develop that ‘cage of steel’. Standing on the pedals to go up hill with the slower cadence has resulted in more rhythmic breathing and in fact has improved my climbing speed. The ‘adjustable angle’ head stem needed to be changed to an A Head because of the stresses I was putting on it. I also decided to get a new handlebar because I could not risk the second-hand one any longer for fear of it breaking due to the stresses I was putting on it. I needed a better quality rear hub because the initial one needed constant adjustment. It has been replaced by a 32 hole Velocity flip-flop. After week four and with more than 1000km in the saddle I was confident enough to remove the back brake. Where to now? I am still having problems with the chain stretching so I will be investing in a better quality chain and replacing the chain ring with a wider and better quality version. The tyres I am using for commuting (Vittoria Randonneur 28mm) seem to tuck-under on heavy cornering, so for Audax rides they will need to be changed to the standard 23mm Conti. Thanks Leigh Kilpatrick for being a mentor and encourager, Peter Moore for the patience and research in developing the bike, and Alan Kellett and Trevor King on the May 2003 flat 400km for the inspiration to go fixed. In closing Audax UK has The Audax UK Fixed Wheel Challenge/Super Fixed Wheel Awards. See their website at www.deepwate r.uklinux.net/www.fixedwheel.org.uk/auk/ fwc.html Anybody interested in pursuing a similar idea here in Oz? If so, let me know: alantonkin@optushome.com.au or 03 9890 2420. For a list of websites on going fixed wheel, visit www.audax.org.au (News/Magazine) . 37 We Need You (to organise a ride) by Gordon Cockcroft & Keith Lowe Do you have a favourite training ride, or would you like to organise a ride in your favourite riding area? Have you enjoyed our rides in the past, which have not been on the calendar recently? Then please consider organising a ride for other members to enjoy. You don’t need special experience and help is available. Ride Organisers are essential for the future of our club, and sharing this role amongst members ensures great diversity and enjoyment. If you would like additional information and guidance in organising a ride, please talk to your State Correspondent or Rides Co-Ordinator (see contact list at foot of this article). If you’d like to run a ride but are put off by the work of having to start from scratch, we have details of a large number of previous rides and would be happy to suggest one which suits your interest or location. If you don’t want to run a ride but would like to help please fill in the enclosed volunteers form or contact your State Ride Co-ordinator. Helpers are often needed, especially for longer or popular rides. To have your ride considered for the 2004/05 calendar, please fill out the attached form. Please also submit a map, highlighting the route, together with a description of the ride and checkpoints with a signed copy of the enclosed Ride Proposal Form. These steps are important as they help us plan safe and successful rides by ensuring that all aspects of the ride have been considered in the planning stages. Consider hazards which might be encountered by both riders and support team during their event and ways to minimise risks. good condition. Major roads should only be used in situations where there is no suitable alternative and traffic is likely to be light. In traffic, left turns are safer than right turns. Riders and the support team will face the usual potential hazards of: • Cycling or driving on a public road. • Being in public places, commercial premises or those owned by local authority, voluntary or similar organisations. Weather While these hazards are not under the organiser’s control they can be minimised by careful planning. In the planning stages of your ride, you should reflect on your route and consider any advice that you might like to give to your event participants, possibly including: Please consider the following safety points prior to filling out the Ride Proposal Form. • Advice at the beginning of the route sheet; concerning steep descents, poor road surfaces etc. • A specific mention in the route instructions where a particular feature has caused problems in the past. (eg wooden bridges). If your ride is especially difficult, advice in the Ride Description, or any advertisement of the ride, as to the gruelling nature of the route and stamina required. Guide to Proposing A Ride General factors requiring consideration Registration of rides closes on 6 August 2004. For each of your events, please send a completed and signed Ride Proposal Form and a highlighted copy of the route map. Roads Planning Rides The Melbourne Region has put together some ride organiser’s notes which provide much valuable information for both the planning and running of rides. The notes are suitable for use Australia wide. They are on the club’s website at: www.audax.org.au/ pdf/docs/MelbourneOrganiserGuidelines.doc. 38 Apart from Dirt Series rides, routes should be on sealed, secondary roads that have low to medium traffic flow. Many organisers will choose routes with the lowest possible volumes of traffic, but be aware that such roads have their own particular potential hazards; choosing a good cycling route is a matter of balance. In considering the use of major highways and roads carrying heavy traffic, account should be taken of possible alternatives, likely traffic conditions and whether there are wide sealed shoulders in When setting the date and location of a ride, consider the likely weather conditions. Adverse weather should be avoided. Most states have extreme weather policies, indicating under which circumstances rides should be cancelled. For rides likely to occur in hot conditions, consideration should be given to the availability of water. Traffic Conditions Peak traffic conditions (holidays, beaches, snow, festivals, etc) should be considered and avoided when setting date and location. For rides that involve night riding (300/ 400/600km, etc.), the less traffic the better. Start times and routes should be chosen to optimise this. Night Rides When planning night ride start times organisers must be aware of the risks involved. Any ride that involves a lot of night riding should preferably be planned close to a full moon. Late night starts that are popular, especially in the year leading up to PBP, can cause fatigue problems from riding through the night. Ride Organisers should consider minimising risks from these rides by planning facilities with opportunities for sleep for riders in the early hours of the morning. Driving home after an overnight ride is dangerous and riders should be encouraged to sleep before driving their car, or to arrange alternative drivers or alternative means of transport. Please remember that if you are submitting a ride which has been run in the past the details of the route may need to be updated. Contacts for Ride Organisers These members are responsible for co-ordinating rides for their respective states. Submit your ride proposals as per the guidelines on the facing page, by 6 August, 2004. VIC Gordon Cockcroft 92 Shuter Avenue Greendale VIC 3341 03 5368 7278 (Fax 03 5368 7427) gordonc@myaccess.com.au NSW Malcolm Rogers 02 9415 1204 sydney@audax.org.au TAS Paul Gregory 03 6229 3811 paul.gregory@parliament.tas.gov.au QLD Vaughan Kippers 07 3376 6761 vkippers@uq.edu.au WA Colin Farmer 08 9330 4441 bcfarmer@dodo.com.au SA Matthew Rawnsley 08 8370 0415 m_rawnsley@hotmail.com ACT Jon Gowland 02 6291 5495 inthepresent@kooee.com.au Product Review Polybrite Illuminated Vest by Bob Bednarz I used the Polybrite illuminated vest during the night on a 300km ride recently. There’s no doubt that it provides superior illumination than the traditional passive reflecting material used by Audax riders. The ride organiser, Sue Taylor, who overtook me in her car as she proceeded to the Poowong checkpoint claimed that she could see the vest before noticing my bike lights. The route was on a quiet country road, with essentially no background lighting and few passing cars. My riding companion, Frank Mitchell, said that when riding behind me he found the vest’s flashing light not irritating to the eye as flashing LED tail lights often are. I was supplied with the XL size vest, which comfortably fitted over my Hydropak water container. Earlier in the night, as I climbed from Wonthaggi to Poowong with the ambient temperature probably in the mid-20’s C, I found the sleeveless cloth vest to be uncomfortably warm. However later in the night I enjoyed the warmth of the vest as I cycled through pockets of cold air. I found that the main problem in using the Polybrite vest for Audax riding is its bulk. The XL size weighs 400gm, and rolls up into a semi-cylindrical package approximately 26 cm long by 12 cm diameter. This means that it cannot be carried in a pocket, bum bag, or under-seat bag. In addition to my road test, I brought the Polybrite equipment to the Audax - Melbourne Region’s AGM where I modelled the vest and displayed it, together with the various bands and straps, on a table during the coffee break. There was a roar of laughter when, wearing the vest, I switched on the flashing lights, with remarks that I looked like a Christmas tree! However, later during the coffee break, there was little interest in the equipment displayed. Of the 36 persons present, no more than six approached the display for further inspection. There was but a single person keen on obtaining the vest. My personal view, as well as comments received after the meeting, is that its weight and bulkiness hinder its suitability for most Audax rides held on quiet country roads. However, the Polybrite vest would be particularly useful in metropolitan areas or on busy highways where there are many light sources competing for motorists’ attention. I’d judge it to be ideal for metropolitan commuting on busy roads. Ed: The distributor has advised that subsequent to this product being tested, a new over-the-shoulder type harness, literally a vest with the Polybrite flashing polymer but without the vest, is under development. For contact details of the supplier, see page 30 of this issue. 39 40 Brevets with Stephen George, Brevet Editor 50km, 18-Jan-04, Adelaide, Alpine Warm-Up Gary Alexander, Alan Capell, David Cox, Thomas Eltridge-Smith, David Foster, Matthew Rawnsley, David Routes 50km, 18-Jan-04, Melbourne, Invitation to Inverloch 2004 Annette Connelly, Cara Malzinskas, Malzinskas, Roger Miller, Donald Millin Carmel 50km, 31-Jan-04, Melbourne, Melbourne by Bike Path [1] Paul Addison, Sue Brown, Chris Chapman, Val Johnston, Leigh Kilpatrick, Roger Miller, Frank Mitchell, Tony Porritt, Catherine Stephenson, Alan Tonkin 50km, 1-Feb-04, Queensland, Watershed Wander Trevor Anstley, Howard Brandis, Liam Callaghan, Rob Callaghan, Debbie Campbell, Dino Morgante, Andy Stephens 50km, 1-Feb-04, Melbourne, Quiet 50 Bernadette Cranswick, Mariam Cranswick, Nunz Mantini, Graeme Mitchell, Tony Porritt, Tony Shinton, Peter Silver, Fiona Silver 50km, 14-Feb-04, Tumut, Pizza in Park Michael Bush, Scott Dowell, Bruce Giles, David Glastonbury, Lisa Glastonbury, Jimmy Goode, Bob Langridge, David O’Brien, Ray Quinn, Andrew Raod Gever, Allan Tonkin, Andrew Tonkin, Lee Wood 50km, 21-Feb-04, Sydney, Waterfall Alan Dunn, Maria Matuszek 50km, 21-Feb-04, Perth, Burkes Backyard Jenny McCloskey 50km, 21-Feb-04, Melbourne, Philip Island and Beyond Kristy Chambers, Marie Devlin, Stephanie Dowden, Howard Jones, Trevor Key, Graeme Key, Claudia Rebaunn 50km, 21-Feb-04, Melbourne, Bring Your Tent Along Susan Albert, Fay Sydes 50km, 22-Feb-04, Queensland, Ups And Downs Brian Aston, Vaughan Kippers, Dino Morgante, Noel Newton 50km, 28-Feb-04, Maryborough, Goldfields Howard Gibson, Brian Park, Paul Volk 50km, 29-Feb-04, Maryborough, Leap Year Loop Gordon Cockcroft, Robyn Doyle, Helen Lew Ton, Andrew McDowall, Caroline McDowall, Gloria Moscattini, Renae Moss, Simon Parsons, Di Taylor, Simon Woodford 50km, 6-Mar-04, Perth, Dupuy Dawdle Ross Cussons 50km, 21-Mar-04, Melbourne, Bunniyong and Back Lewis, Frank Preyer, Ben Roache, Stephen Rowlands, Kingsley Sexton, Mal Shaw, Judith Whelan 50km, 17-Apr-04, Queensland, Flying Fifty 100km, 18-Jan-04, Melbourne, Invitation to Inverloch 2004 Robyn Doyle, Tony Knight, Simon Woodfored Brad Christiansen, Denis Cowan, Lindsay Green, David Horton, Vaughan Kippers, Dino Morgante, Tom Philp 50km, 24-Apr-04, Tumut, Festival Ben Casuaria, Tania Doyle, Jim Goode, Don Hobson, Sussan Ley, Jan Mohandas, David Obrien, Margaret Sheens, Ron Smith, Allan Tonkin, Andrew Tonkin, Duncan Watt 50km, 1-May-04, Maryborough Meander Ryan Bath, Ian Buckingham, Craig Carter, Elizabeth Ennis, Brian Meir, Sally Middleton, Jenny Needham 50km, 16-May-04, Melbourne, South West Match’n Mix Anglelo Faccin, Stan Karaoutsadis, Peter Martin, Greg McVicar, Callum Moore, Brian Nelson, Jan Pannifex, Gary Payne, Cath Stevenson John Abery, Paul Addison, Peter Bell, Arnold Birrell, Domenico Conforti, Richard Connelly, Kevin Dawes, Francisco Golieguillos, Lyn Honan, David Koschade, John Laszczyr, Greame Lock, Leon Malzinskas, Bruce Marriot, Barry Moore, Gary Payne, Tony Porritt, Rob Ramsay, Christopher Rogers, Mal Shaw 100km, 20-Jan-04, Queensland, Watershed Wander Vivien Brooks, Craig Campbell, John Gowty, Laurie Handcock, Susan Lostroh, Andy Woodman, James Woodman 100km, 24-Jan-04, Melbourne, Alpine Vollies Malcolm Faul, Kay Frank, Bill Jeppesen, Brian Joyce, Raoul Mills, Barry Parsons, Alan Richardson, John Rundle, John Webster 100km, 31-Jan-04, Perth, Freo Flyer 100km, 15-Mar-03, Melbourne, Gippsland Gourmet Trail John Leyden, Keith Lowe, Baden Lowe, Tony Porritt, Robert Wilkinson Graham Batholomew, Dan Boulter, Pat Briggs, Ron Collins, Colin Farmer, Adrian Giacci, Tony Gillespie, Klaus Hagedorn, Geoff Helliwell, Andrew Jackson, Ken Jones, John Lee, Rod Marston, Stephan Monet, Ralph Morgan, Brian Smith, John Talbot, Alan Tolcher, Morris Warren, Henry Wurm 100km, 20-Sep-03, Wollongong, Starter Gong Ride 100km, 13-Feb-04, Melbourne, Irene Plowman Henry Boardman, Tanya Bosch, Auriol Carruthers,David Cunnyghame,Shane Granzien,David Langley,Richard Pinkerton, Tony Ring, Kate Roberts, Aldo Vella, John Webster, John Webster, Gregor Whiley, Marguerite Young 100km, 11-Oct-03, Queensland, Dam Good ride Lindsay Green, Vaughn Kippers, Noel Newton, Jopck Pharley, Peter Watson, Andrew Woodman, James Woodman 100km, 12-Oct-03, Sydney (Wagga Wagga), Canola Canter Ron Addison, Shane Burkett, Peter Dixon, Anton Els, Craig Gibbins, Brian Grant, Denis Ross Inch, Garth Mayger, Adam Michalowski, Gordon Moore, Graeme Nelson, Andrew Raadgever, Ray Stenhouse, Peter Stoneman, Ben Turner 100km, 6-Dec-03, Melbourne, Alpine Delight Nick Boylan, Simon Costa, Stephen George, Phillipe Grant, Mark Vardy, Sharon Weiss 100km, 6-Dec-03, Perth, Dog Hill Danny Boulter, Patrick Briggs, Ross Cussons, Colin Farmer, Adrian Giacci, Klaus Hagedorn, Geoff Helliwell, Andrew Jackson, Ken Jones,Stephan Monot, Ralf Morgan, David Pascoe, Brian Smith, Morris Warren 100km, 11-Jan-04, Melbourne, Wheels to Walhalla 2004 John Abery, Sue Brown, George Caulfield, Kirsty Chambers, Stephen Chambers, Peter Harris, Michael Henley, Ewan Hill, Philip Hugenin, Richard Jeffery, Peter Keefer, David Koschade, John Laszczyh, Peter Paul Addison, Chris Algefski, Lorraine Allen, Steve Barnett, Ian Boehm, Carolyn Bolton, Mark Boyd, John Chadwick, Bernard Collins, Yvonne Conyers, Noel Cranswick, Paul Crump, Peter Curtis, Robyn Curtis, Peter Daly, Malcolm Faul, Jacqui Fernados, Bill Jepperson, Brain Joyce, Kaye Kaye, Raymond Lelkes, Helen Lewton, Peter Mathews, Hugh McMullan, Barry Moore, Paul Mulroney, Catherine O’Hehir, Brain Payne, Lesley Pearce, Frank Preyer, Dennis Ray, Brett Riley, John Rundle, Rodney Snibson, Warren Steinicke, Andrew Thomas, Grant Tudor, Stephen Watson, Chuck Ziegler 100km, 14-Feb-04, Wollongong, Coffee Ride Henry Boardman, David Cunynghame, Richard Pinkerton, Jean Viader-Etienne, John Webster 100km, 15-Feb-04, Queensland, Out&About Joan Brown, Debra Campbell, Neil Francis, Vaughan Kippers, Noel Newton, Daniel Radford, Andy Woodman, James Woodman 100km, 21-Feb-04, Perth, Burkes Backyard Danny Boulter, Pat Briggs, Adrian Giacci, Tony Gillespie, Klaus Hagedorn, Geoff Helliwell, John Lee, Ellen Oliver, Mike Oliver, Daved Pascoe, Brian Smith, Alan Tolcher, Morris Warren 100km, 21-Feb-04, Melbourne, Bring your Tent Along Robyn Curtis, Peter Curtis, Charles Day, Hans Dusink, Sandra Fraser, Joan Gauhwin, Sandra Howard, Jacinta Mahony, Alex McNee, Joanne Pugh, Christopher Rogers, Kevin Simcox, Ray Watt, Lea Watts 41 Chris Algezski, Arnold Birrell, Gordon Cockcroft, Lauren Collier, Margaret Douglas, Rod Herron, Brian Joyce, Ron Kirwan, Andrew Lighten, Chris Mennie, Steve Murphy, Barry Parsons, Brian Payne, Tony Porritt, Jamie Robinson, David Robinson, Andrew Thomas 100km, 29-Feb-04, Maryborough, Leap Year Loop Judy Beswick, Arnold Birrell, Neil Christensen, Tony Doyle, Danya Driessen, Howard Duncan, Laurie Foley, Wendy Gowing, Glen Hepburn, Mark Hibberd, Cliff Jones, Mike Kenealy, Ron Kirwan, Deb Lesinskis, Steve Murphy, Ron Norton, Barry O’Connor, Glen Pascall, Gary Payne, Tony Poritt, Maxine Riggs, Janet Robinson, Micheal Rogers, Merv Tozer, Arno Van Der Schans 100km, 6-Mar-04, Wollongong, Sat Coffee ride Henry Boardman, Greg Lansom, Maria Matuszek, Aldo Vella 100km, 6-Mar-04, Perth, Dupuy Dawdle Patrick Briggs, Tony Gillespie, Allen Gunther, Klaus Hagedorn, Brian Hughes, Ralf Morgan, David Pascoe, Brian Smith, Alan Tolcher 100km, 7-Mar-04, Westvic, Rifledowns Phil Adams, Owen Barr, Peter Couttie, Stephen Crossley, Frank Donnelly, Neil Ellery, Noel Gorey, Geoff Hunter, Darrell Ralph, Kevin Saunders, Kathryn Temby, Kathryn Temby 100km, 13-Mar-04, Queensland, Blackall Ranging Neil Francis, Dino Morgante 100km, 20-Mar-04, Maryborough, Central Lakes Tour Chris Algeski, Ian Clark, Lauren Collier, Margaret Douglas, Rod Heron, Brian Park, Tony Porritt 100km, 21-Mar-04, Melbourne, Bunniyong & Back Neil Clayton, Bernard Collins, Hans Dusink, Russell Freemantle, Matthew Gale, Glen Hepburn, Elaine Johnson, Ron Norton, Tom Probert, Maxine Riggs, Shane Scanlon, Andrew Thomas, Andrew Webb, Ron Wescott 100km, 27-Mar-04, Melbourne by Bike Path Paul Addison, Steve Brown, Joe De Losa, Leigh Paterson, Daniel Potter, Christopher Rogers, Alan Tonkin 100km, 28-Mar-04, Melbourne, Gippsland Gourmet Ian Bukingham, Laurie Foley, Mathew Gale, Graham Gill, Julie Gill, Mary Green, John Iiott, Max Pemberton, Brenda Spargo, Ronald Spargo 100km, 3-Apr-04, Melbourne, Bound for Baw Baw up John Abery, Laura Bettio, Steven Brown, Dominic Confortis, Ian De Bruyne, Harry Dudink, Stephen George, Leon Malzinskas, Gary Payne, Anne Reilly, Christopher Rogers, Malcolm Shaw, Kevin Ware 100km, 4-Apr-04, Melbourne, Bound for Baw Baw Back John Abery, Laura Bettio, Steven Brown, Dominic Confortis, Ian De Bruyne, Stephen George, Leon Malzinskas, Gary Payne, Anne Reilly, Christopher Rogers, Malcolm Shaw 100km, 18-Apr-04, Adelaide, Gawler Gallop Alan Capell, Avis Pearce, Gwen Pye, Michael Southren, Dan Taylor 42 100km, 18-Apr-04, Melbourne, Wangaratta Wahine Michael Fitzsimons, Max Fletcher, Lawrence Foley, Anne Ford, Kelvin Ford, Don Halton, Enid Halton, Martin Haynes, Tony Jago, Terry Kirby, Michael Maher, Ann McDonald, John Myles, Tony Porrit, Andrew Raadgauer, Tony Ransom, Jarrod Riches, Stuart Russell, Colin Stokes, Peter Stoneman, Paul Thomas 100km, 24-Apr-04, Queensland, Woodford Wanderings Andrew Claus, David Horton, Catherine Johnson, Vaughan Kippers, Dino Morganate, Bert Ockhuisen, Nicholas Ockhuisen, Philip Rowley, Andy Woodman, James Woodman 200km, 2-Nov-03, Melbourne, Spring Rail Trail Mania Geoff Austin, Lawrie Piko, Chris Rogers 200km, 15-Nov-03, Melbourne, Seaford Loops Stephen Chambers, Kevin Dawes 200km, 2-Dec-03, Hobart, Ride of the Cornflowers Kevin Bushnell, Greg Dwyer, Clive Jackson, David Wylie, Frank Zuchi 200km, 14-Dec-03, Sydney, Hawkesbury Valley Randonnee Douglas Kennedy, Belinda Pursey 100km, 25-Apr-04, Tumut, Festival Ben Casauria, Tania Doyle, Bruce Giles, Jim Goode, Don Hobson, Simon Mann, Jan Mohandas, David Obrien, Margaret Sheens, Charlie Tayloy, Duncan Watt, Celia Woolcott 200km, 18-Apr-04, Wangaratta, Wangaratta Wahine 200 100km, 1-May-04, Maryborough, Maryborough Meander 200km, 18-Apr-04, Adelaide, Gawler Gallop Matthew Bradbury, Gillian Brook, Stephen Brown, Susan Brown, Chris Cornish, Felicity Ennis, Gareth Evans, Bente Furneaux, Howard Gibson, Richard Guest, David Hare, Rod Herron, Richard Hodgson, Michael Konstandinou, Scott Lacey, Ken McDougall, Peter Neville, Peter Plymin, Tracey Plymin, Tony Porritt, Dale Price, Ian Robert, Wayne Saunders, Peter Silver, Dale Slver, Arthur Tziaus, Paul Volk, Alan Walker, Bill Weefen 100km, 8-May-04, Melbourne, Cobden Phil Adams, Owen Barr, Adrian Bell, Gill Brook, Steve Carlin, Carl Cole, Ken Densley, Bruce Fry, Christopher Hammond, Geoff Hunter, Neil Jackson, Carl Leahy, Graeme Martin, Ken Morgan, Steve Murphy, Grant Palmer, Alan Paton, Shane Plummer, Kevin Saunders, Julie Sinclair, Philip Soderstrom, Robyn Spering, Alison Vanderschans, David Wall, Stephen Watson, Neil White 100km, 8-May-04, Queensland, Psych Hell Howard Brandis, Brad Christiansen, Vaughan Kippers, Dino Morgante, Andy Woodman, James Woodman 100km, 8-May-04, Wollongong, Saturday Coffee ride Henry Webster Boardman, Richard Pinkerton, Arnold Birrell, Hans Dusink, Keith McCulloch, Gordon Moore, Steve Murphy, Garry Skeers Allan Dickson, Matthew Rawnsley 200km, 8-May-04, Adelaide, Super Catch Up Ian Peak, Ray Taarnby 200km, 16-May-04, Melbourne, South West Match’n Mix Russell Freemantle, Trevor King, Keith Lowe 300km, 13-Dec-03, Melbourne, Eildon Endurance Hans Dusink, Russ Hamilton, Ray Watt 300km, 8-May-04, Adelaide, Super Catch Up Roger Holmes 400km, 6-Dec-03, Adelaide, 400 Allan Dickson, Matthew Rawnsley 400km, 13-Dec-03, Melbourne, Eildon Endurance Bob Bednarz, Raoul Mills, Christopher Rogers 600km, 8-May-04, Adelaide, Super Catch Up John 100km, 16-May-04, Melbourne, South West Mix n’ Match Ryan Bath, Ian Boehm, Gordon Cockroft, Bernard Collins, Peter Curtis, Robyn Curtis, Charles Day, Paul De Podolinsky, Malcolm Eley, Bruce Hicks, Helen Lew Ton, Peter Mathews, Raoul Mills, Tony Porritt, Anne Reilly, Maxine Riggs, Geoff Robinson, David Temby, Kathryn Temby, Claude Urbini, Andrew Webb, Neil White, Robert Wilkenson, Wright Wright 110km, 17-Aug-03, Melbourne, Mike Rossiter Memorial Ride David Arnup, Phillip Dell, Shane Dove, Reg Goltz, Richard Jeffrey, David Koschade, Maree Langshaw, David Murray, Kevin Perry, Anita Pickering, Ted Pickering, Domenic Sabatino, Marshall Thompson, Wayne Ware 200km, 25-Oct-03, Sydney, Hunter Valley Explorer Douglas Kennedy, Daniel Morgan 200km, 25-Oct-03, Melbourne, Noojee Loop Bob Bednarz, Peter Curtis, Howard Duncan, Reg Goltz, Phillipe Grant, Martin Haynes, Mal Shaw, Ross Smith Richard Connely, Allan Dickson, Oliver Portway, Matthew Rawnsley, Christopher Rogers GSR Great Southern Randonnee 100km, 28-Feb-04, Maryborough, Goldfields 300km 400km 600km 1000km 1200km 25-29 October 2004 Angelsea, Victoria Australia Peter Moore gsr2004@audax.org.au 27 Swan St, Richmond VIC 3121 Need your bicycle serviced or repaired in Melbourne? Peter Moores Abbotsford Cycles @ Richmond Station www.abbotsfordcycles.com Telephone 03 9429 6889 Fax 03 9429 9262 27 Swan Street (under Richmond Station) Riding at Night OPEN: 8am to 6pm weekdays 9am to 12:30 Saturdays Service and Repairs Winter is well and truly upon us; time to look at lights. Abbotsford Cycles has a range to suit everyone from commuter to riders tackling four nights in the Great Southern Randonnee. Front LEDs bright spark is the Adder which gives a sensational light to see by or a fast flash to be seen from a distance. The Smart dual headlight lead-acid battery unit will get you through the night on low beam with high beam for fast descents ($110). Our speciality. Check the website for a full explanation of what we do. We will normally have your bike back to you within two days. We now provide a full repair service on site for steel frames. Painting costs just $140 for one or two colours. Our range of touring gear includes Ortlieb and Avance panniers and German made Tubus pannier racks. The Australian designed Niteflux Vision Stick has Nicad and NiMh versions running 5, 10 and 20w lights. Prices start at $115. We make up two LED rear lights screwed to an aluminium strip, drilled to go straight to a reflector bracket only $45. If you dont want the hassles of finding lights, batteries and mountings, dont forget Shimano have a hub dynamo for $115 which will run a 6v 3w globe. Audax reflectors in stock - front and rear for only $5! And dont forget our mudguards, starting from $19 for protection from spray. The new SKS Race Blade clip-on road mudguards are worth a look. Discount Audax Members receive a discount of 10% on every item except labour, but including Specials. We accept telephone orders with credit cards, or by mail with cheque. Postage is extra. We stock an extensive range of the good quality moderately priced BBB and Cyclo brand tools. The BBB Pullstar is an excellent cartridge bottom bracket removing tool. Interesting Bits We sell the BOB trailer - and have one for hire if you want to try it before you buyThird Eye Chain Watcher prevents chain dropping off the inside of cranks, $31. Sugino chainrings top quality for 6/7/8speed, 130, 110 and 74 pcd, most 90 cents/tooth. We now have kidney bags to strap to your bike frame. They are still very rare but at Abbotsford you can name your own colour as long as you want red, green,blue or yellow. A steal at $10. Our favourite lube, nice clean Prolink $16 Direct from America! CueClips ($12) -at right- are now back in stock as we have been able to source them direct from the manufacturer. We have also finally tracked down a stock of Kevlar Fiberfix spokes ($22), a temporary fix which will get you to the end of the ride. If you are carrying spare spokes we have also found a replacement for the Hypercracker to remove the cassette lockring on the roadside. The Mini Cassette Lock will be back in store by the time you read Checkpoint. Our small shop in Melbourne is dedicated to the upkeep of all kinds of bicycles. We sell most things you need, except new bikes, shoes and clothing.We take the time to source the unusual and useful gadgets that often seem to disappear from bike shop shelves. Come in and have a look or check out our ever evolving website. Abbotsford Cycles is a proud supporter of the Cycling Promotion Fund 43 If undeliverable return to Audax Australia Inc. PO Box 12144 A’Beckett Street Melbourne VIC 8006 SURFACE MAIL POSTAGE PAID AUSTRALIA Print Post Approved PP327687/00033 Checkpoint Winter 2004 Issue No. 20 Association No. A0014462N 625 members (11/6/04) Audax Australia is proudly affiliated with: Audax Club Parisien www.audax-club-parisien.com Les Randonneurs Mondiaux www.lesrm.be Cycling Australia www.cycling.org.au Are your address details above correct? Notify changes by email to membership@audax.org.au or by phone on (03) 5783 2427. The Audax Clothing Shop 6A Ebor Avenue, Inverloch VIC 3996 (03) 5674 2157 www.audax.org.au Jerseys - $10 off (limited time only) Long Sleeve Audax Jersey now only $63.00 Size (S/M/L/XL/XXL): ____ Your chest size: ____ cm Short Sleeve Audax Jersey now only $60.00 Size (S/M/L/XL/XXL):____ Your chest size: ____ cm Audax Knicks $60.00 Size (S/M/L/XL/XXL): ____ Audax Socks $7.00 Size (S/M/L): ____ All items can be viewed on our website, www.audax.org.au Postage First item $5.00, each additional item $2.50 No postage payable on socks if ordered with other items. Mail order Complete the details above, then return this entire page (or a photocopy) including your address label, to the above address. Include a cheque or money order payable to Audax Australia or supply your credit card details as follows: Mastercard/Bankcard/Visa (please circle one) Card No. __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ Expiry date: __ __ / __ __ Cardholders signature _______________________________ Internet Simply go to www.audax.org.au to order and pay on-line with your credit card. Phone Phone Liz Haynes at the Clothing Shop on (03) 5674 2157 after hours and pay by credit card, or simply phone for assistance in choosing your products. Note that clothing sizes are on the small side. Your email address and/or phone number:_____________________________________________ 44 Phone if in doubt.
Similar documents
Phil Bellette Alpine Classic audax.org.au
Club History: Twenty years ago . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 My first 1000km ride - Ian Boehm heads interstate to ride the Parkes 1000 . . . 36 Brevets - ...
More information