






The cycling equivalent of a life laundry continues. Further foraging has uncovered a set of unused Cinelli Spinacchi mini-tri-bars. Once popular amongst the professional ranks thanks to their provision of alternative hand positioning without falling foul of UCI ,they've largely fallen into obscurity. However, They're ideal for the Holdsworth build- offering useful aero advantage on ten mile TT courses (my chosen outlet for the constructive exorcism of inner demons) without detracting from the classic lines/period feel.
Stout and sure footed as the Ilpompino's 38mm WTB rubber may be, an mtb configuration remains my chosen steed for ice and snow. On the subject of big freezes, this is precisely what my bank has actioned on my account thanks to the antics of online thieves (describing these people as "hackers" gives them an unwarranted air of legitimacy/honour) further adding to my fiscal frustrations.
The Cleat again...Sounds like a sequel to a 50's horror flick. The recent chill has seen me opt in preference for my mtb race shoes with stainless Spd pattern cleats-primarily as the rancid odour from my trainer type was stripping wallpaper. Cursory inspection of cleat integrity suggested they were good for another few thousand miles. Updating the Univega's pedals in favour of more contemporary Spd designs raised a compatibility question mark and explains my relative nonchalance at their failure to clunk, clip every trip. Rapidly nearing the lane's end, feet fully engaged I was relaxed and enjoying the ride. This casual indifference was once again to prove my undoing upon my return home...
Releasing my right foot, my left flatly refused to disengage. Desperation set in after a couple of minutes and only after exiting my foot from the shoe and manipulating it in every conceivable direction effected disengagement. Today's culprit? Rider indifference and loose cleat screws...Lessons have be learned.... Now where have we heard that before?
My other notable deviation from the concors script is my preference for 700C hoops. I’d a set of 27 inch, thirty-six hole Mavic Super Champions hanging up somewhere but tyre and hub choice are limited at best. Something along the lines of Mavic Open Pros laced two cross to a pair of colour coordinated, large flange, sealed bearing IRO hubs topped off with 25mm continental rubber would, forgive the pun, round things off nicely
On the component front, Arty the border collie and I have been stocktaking. We've uncovered a bevy of component beauties including a set of Nitto TT bars, high lustre stem, Ahead adaptor and there’s a choice of On-One Twelfty, Thompson or Campagnolo victory seat posts topped off with a twenty year old Brooks B17 saddle.
Sharon (my girlfriend) masterminded colour selection and we’ve entrusted Maldon Shotblasting and Powder Coating with the task of blast cleaning and applying paint code 5012 to its tubes- a slightly different shade to the existing, neatly brush painted Greeves “Mooreland" blue in the photographs. For the uninitiated, Greeves were a highly respected small-scale British manufacturer of trials motorcycles, regarded by many as being ahead of their time before managerial incompetence, more dependable Japanese imports and widespread car ownership sounded the industry’s death knell in the early 1970s. Joshua now seems convinced Santa will arrive astride a 50’s Road Path Bike sporting studded snow tyres and towing a 4130 cro-moly trailer full of goodies (five year olds are blissfully unaware of the present economic climate!). Followers in North America and cooler European climes will be laughing uncontrollably at the suggestion the UK has snow, let alone cold snaps. Having spent some of my formative years in Utah, I know the true meaning of chill winters- snow chains on cars until late spring, the sound of snow-blowers racing around suburban lawns etc, etc. Here in England, the merest mention of the white stuff grounds the nation and its infrastructure to a resounding halt!
Ignoring the mirth and mockery for a moment, we’ve been chasing through the lanes, I captaining the faithful, geared Univega RTB (wouldn’t manage trailer tugging’ in these parts on a fixed given the gradients) and my young apprentice aboard the single speed tag-a-long. I get some resistance training whilst he indulges in the scenery, a growing passion for cycling and there's usually opportunity for both to reflect upon life in general. In fairness, so long as we regularly brake for cake and something warming he’ll motor up the climbs like the proverbial mountain goat.
Towards the end of his life and despite crippling illness, he revealed how they were building to a maximum design life of twenty five years. The notorious Magnox reactor had been in continuous service for considerably longer before the official decommissioning in 2002, courting further controversy when Nyrex proposed a nuclear waste dump at the site some sixteen years previously.
Local protests saw the project shelved but the regret of not putting down the torch, turning off the shielding gas and walking away tormented my grandfather until his death in 1998.
Once again, the site is being earmarked by the nuclear industry for new generation reactor despite mounting local opposition. It is widely acknowledged that fossil fuels cannot last indefinitely; neither should they be depleted to the point of exhaustion.
However, nuclear energy opens a real Pandora’s Box- as Three Mile Island and Chernobyl clearly illustrate. There are many alternatives but it would appear once more, the commercial interests of the few are riding roughshod over the welfare of millions.