If you havent seen this on TBM this follows on from my epic rebuild project as the DR has been in regular use. Have to say that Im very attached to the old DR and enjoy every ride on it, despite having owned much more modern bikes.
Its comfortable, pulls like a train and feels light and easy to ride, what more could you ask for.
Those pics from the first trail rides back in May. Onto June and helping out at a mountain-bike event near Tidworth:
So, so, much fun on hilly and varied terrain over quite a few miles, brilliant.
In July we had another of our Southern-TRF events at a local enduro track, very, very wet but the DR lapped it up.
Compared to another later in September which was much drier!
Where the DR proved great fun, and I reckon as quick as a 400-EXC on the smoothish track. But before this in July the old-girl got treated to a new tyre!
Yeay!
Well, when I say new I mean newer and free, but the improvement in grip was quite something compared to the previous, very second-hand, tyre. This was prep for another event - Larkhill horsey thing on Salisbury Plain, in July:
Note that the wobbly old number-plate/light unit has been removed makes the bike look so much better.
Brilliant fun on a wide open grassy track that twisted and turned up and down a shallow valley a top day. And right in the middle of a huge network of byways:
Love the Plain, even when having to fight my way along trails to get there:
Another early-morning start:
Next pic is from another trip round the Plain, the east side, near Tidworth:
Some really nice byways round there. Then heading home towards Thruxton Race Track:
Very nice. More to come in part II...
-- Edited by thedktor on Saturday 22nd of December 2012 05:52:39 PM
-- Edited by thedktor on Monday 24th of December 2012 11:01:42 AM
Going in the opposite direction to Salisbury Plain, east from my home, eventually ends up here looking down on Chichester, the sea, and the Isle of Wight (just visible on the horizon on the right).
Hmm, not my usual camera and a bit fuzzy. Anyway this is about a mile from Goodwood, and interestingly the view looks quite similar to another a long way further north on a trail that forks off from the A34 south of Newbury:
On the horizon is not sea this time but the South Downs which stretch east to where the previous pic was taken from. Continuing along:
Lovely, long trail, one of my favourites. Continuing west takes you to Combe Gibbet, which you can *just* see on the top of the hill in the distance, centre of the pic:
.
.
See, you really can!
But here it is close:
Where bizarrely this pheasant came right up to me, tame as you like, odd.
Wont last long in the shooting season
The previous pic gives a nice view of the ridge looking back east, and the curve is natural, not the camera lens. In the same area a crackin slippery chalky hill awaits over the brow here:
Another second-hand (free!) tyre had to go on recently after a few months use shredded the previous one.
8mm of mud-ripping tread a Trelleborg Army Special a good trail tyre I reckon. That was prep for the next Larkhill horse event on Salisbury Plain, in early Nov. An hours ride from home in the most hideous conditions ever - pouring rain and temperatures just above freezing.
Grim and more grim. I was completely frozen but the smooth-running DR remained unfazed by the whole experience making the ride a lot more bearable.
The rain eventually stopped:
Rainbow yay!
and had a great day in the end - the bike was a lot of fun with its punchy pick-up and endless drifts round the damp grassy course. Fantastic.
Seem to have carried a lot of the grass round with me by the looks:
Another ride on a much warmer summers day has me heading further west on Salisbury Plain to visit Imber Village, open for just a few days each year. This is on the track in, normally out of bounds:
An adjoining road was named after the American soldiers trained here prior to the D-Day landings, WW2
And shows the church in the background, the only building untouched by the military. Unlike this:
And the old manor house:
The spent-cartridge demonstrates the areas current function, as does the road out west:
But home is in the other direction for me where this loose graded beauty awaits:
(do I need to say big wheelie). There are lots of more challenging dirt trails in the area but this one on the perimeter path is entertaining, dropping down and up steeper than it looks:
And we finish with a vintage-tractor ploughing match on the N edge of the Plain, Westbury-ish. It seems strangely apt:
The furthest point west I ever go at the end of a crackin chalky climb. Neds a bit of road to get here but its well worth it. Bognor Regis can be seen looking south and a bit east from here.
Quite muddy - most of it was actually!
Goodwood Race Course, a mile or 2 north from the motor circuits.
And nearing home, the sun is low, and the bike looks way shinier than it is in real life:
The old bike has run superbly and a very nice few hours out.
Next couple of runs and the top of Butser Hill:
Same area, looking towards East Meon:
My favourite picnic spot N of Chichester:
- The end of a long trail, sunshine and a bench - perfect!
And on the way home, this near Soberton:
Last two for now as the bike is out of action temorarily to replace some worn-out bits....
Try not to look at the black discs:
On a crackin trail south of Newbury, and part of the "Wayfarer's Walk"
Cheers all :)
-- Edited by thedktor on Monday 24th of December 2012 11:03:04 AM
Cracking pics, Great to see the old girl is getting a new lease of life after being abanonded by the previous owner! Looks like some awesome trails aswell
Sorry for the bump just doing some "admin". Yes we have some good trails round here, I'm in Hampshire, with plenty of trails to the west in Wiltshire, a reasonable amount east into West Sussex, and a reasonable amount north into Berkshire.
I say "reasonable" as pre-NERC we had perhaps double the amount of trails
That is why my bikes are always set up to be usable on the road with sensible gearing and balanced wheels - I have a lot of fun on the tarmac between trails
Steve, thanks for the reminder to go and ride at SPTA again this year, did a weekend with some close riding friends last year and covered many miles. Would like to know more about lanes outside of the plain, do you have marked maps that i could copy ?
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Took the Queens Shilling and disappeared for 23 Years !!
Without wishing to sound a bit precious we don't have any official maps these days because of being right royally shafted by Hampshire CC during the NERC saga.
HCC have a website that shows the "official" routes you can use, but there are some other trails we use, with discretion, that are theoretically illegally , and indeed some official routes that are best avoided!