2024 - Our Rides in Words, Photos, Maps and Videos

Jeremy, Ras, Chris: I guess nobody of you treats E-Biking as a discipline of sport; I do, and as you may know I took part in as many as four gravel races, two of them being E-Bike Race. You need to navigate on a gravel race as your ride is tracked and you must follow the course. The other situation is competing on Segments. A Segment is a predefined route on which different riders try to get the best result. You need to navigate if you want to be classified, especially if the Segment is defined in a rough terrain with many alternate paths.

The third situation is a Gravel or XC Group Ride, adventure cycling. A big group of riders start together and they follow a predefined course, which is usually off beaten paths (a good Gravel route in Poland shall involve at least 50% off asphalt). Riders are constantly dropped, small groups are formed; someone might experience a flat or another technical issue; on recreational group rides a small group assists the wretch until the problem is solved. You may be last and suddenly you discover you are a way forward than you thought. You simply need navigation to follow the Group Ride, for instance to meet your co-riders at a cafe or a restaurant or a shop on the trail.

Finally, there are all types of long rides where you simply explore an area you don't know. How can one do it without the GPS navigation? Consult the map? Oh, that slows you down, and chances are you'd make a gross navigational error (GPS navigation finds an alternate route for you shall it happen).

Let me guess people: No one of you uses a GPS car navigation? Seriously? :)

View attachment 187503
View attachment 187502
A 92 mile total ride, of which 62 mile was a gravel group ride of 45 riders. (Vado SL). Nobody could do that without any GPS navigation (at least on a smartphone).
Turning Pro Stefan? Good on ya! Ineos recently lost Tom Pidcock, they must be looking for a replacement, give them a shout.

My racing days are long behind me. Didn't have any phone apps back then or phones for that matter, just marshals with flags and whistles.
 
Jeremy, Ras, Chris: I guess nobody of you treats E-Biking as a discipline of sport
Left all discipline behind when Mistress Scarlet and I parted ways. Now I have a Vado SL to make it hurt so good. But this time, I'm the one who must be obeyed.

Let me guess people: No one of you uses a GPS car navigation? Seriously?
Of course I do. Not at all equivalent.

Finally, there are all types of long rides where you simply explore an area you don't know. How can one do it without the GPS navigation? Consult the map? Oh, that slows you down, and chances are you'd make a gross navigational error (GPS navigation finds an alternate route for you shall it happen).
On the bike, I use GPS mapping mainly to see where I am now, where I've been, and where whim might take me next.

On the bike, I generally don't need or want a navigation app telling me where to go, but the gain/pain ratio works out occasionally. Have a good sense of direction and a good read on landcapes. No gross navigational errors yet, but many delightful serendipities to show for it.

There's no "should" here. It's all a matter of taste and temperament. Wife can't go down the block now without her nav lady's instructions. I think it's the silliest thing ever for places she goes often. But I assure you, no good comes of telling her so.
 
Last edited:
Magda: A Xmas Gathering At SCH

I was very afraid of snowing on Sunday. Fortunately, the white cr*p had melted overnight and I could set off before 10:00 to see my daughter in her Social Care Home. Something told me I should wear very carefully for that day! So double merino wool long johns, Gore-Tex trousers, two thermal layers under my sailing jacket, double socks, shoe covers, winter gloves... I was right! It started with +1 C but there was a very strong westerly wind! Suffice to say I was achieving 20 km/h with a difficulty while riding my Vado 6.0 at a massive 60% assistance! Had to assume an "aero position" with my hands on Innerbarends, forearms on the horizontal, my torso huddled, and the helmet top pointing forward, so what I could see was my front wheel and some road surface :) It was occasionally raining, too!

I was on time at the SCH. Sweets and lemonade were prepared at multiple tables.

1734309979082.png

The empty stage soon filled up with the residents playing their roles in the show.

I was very much impressed with the Ukrainian carer from Odessa who assumed the responsibilities as a singing and music teacher at SCH. People from Black Sea have no slightest relationship with Poland. Yet, the carer mastered Polish to the level she could flawlessly sing in Polish! What drew my attention, however, was a single defect. Polish "L" is pronounced hard, very hard. The carer had no issue with the "L" except the single word: 'Hallelujah' :) Hers was "Awwe-wujah" as she pronounced the "L" as the Eastern Slavic "Л" :) (Polish has a special character "Ł" to make these two sounds different).

1734310475224.png

The whole crew. Magda is in the centre disguised as a flower.

1734310647044.png

Magda during the "God Is Born", or the most solemn Polish Christmas carol.


Magda was.so happy to see me! We spent a good time together, and I promised to bring her a Samsung tablet on 19th.

The return way was fun! I got a strong tailwind into my back. For the last kilometres, I went on a regular highway (which I hate, such boring it is!) and switched to 100% Turbo :) Assisted by both the motor and tailwind, I went above the speed limiter, and the max speed was 47.1 km/h (29.27 mph)! I was at home in no time! :)

1734311349934.png

Ride map. See how the principal river of the area, the Utrata affects the road system. As I turned south before Kopytów, I could not find a single road heading East!
 
Last edited:
Heavy Raining And A Strong Gale

Over several years of e-biking, I managed to create a nice collection of clothes for any weather :) Monday was the day I needed to ride at least to a pharmacy to collect the monthly portion of my medications. The weather outside looked scary. The westerly wind blew at 36 km/h with gusts up to 72 km/h, and it was pouring! At least, it was warmer than in the days before, 10 down to 6 C. As I had to do the pharmacy ride, I pulled on, i.a., a waterproof trouser/shoe cover, and my waterproof sailing jacket.

The e-bike choice was obvious: it had to be the Vado 6.0 with mudguards and a strong motor. During the weather like that, it is full power TURBO to shorten the ride time!

1734419798234.png
1734419842311.png

After the first ride. The outside of my garb was soaked with water! It was not dramatic inside though thanks to the inner membranes of my jacket and motorcycle gloves. The 12.6 km ride took less than 32 minutes, and I was some 50 minutes outside.

In the evening, I needed to do some grocery shopping. I thought the ride would be short, so I would not spend time to pull the trouser cover on. The TURBO ride took less than a quarter; now, most of my clothes required drying! :)

Only 19.2 km for the day!
 
Thank heaven, we finally got a day where the sun came out, the temp hit 50 degrees and the snow is gone, even the last couple inches that fell two days ago. Called my riding buddy and it was off to the Saratoga National Battlefield, closed for the winter to cars but plowed anyway, and today everything was just wet.

Last Fall a major update was performed here, with all the informational kiosks replaced with new ones and a whole bunch of additional ones installed as well. All the pathways have been repaved and several have been extended so on top of all this amazing history around you, it is all a hell of an even better place to ride. It’s always popular with the local bike clubs anyway… I was amazed that we were the only cyclists out there today, at least that we saw. For anybody in this region, whether as a journey through history or just a damn good bike ride, I highly, highly recommend it.

I’ve posted on this place before, but a couple of quick shots. A cannon overlooking the Hudson river, a nasty surprise to the British army that was expecting a quick trip down to Albany to fight there:

1734480643799.jpeg


And a random shot of Chris coming down off one of the exhibit loops:

1734481108323.jpeg


After almost a month off the bike due to all kinds of crazy weather, this felt great on my Creo today. Hopefully I can get out again tomorrow before it all turns to winter again. Don’t dare ride on regular roads this time of year, you might as well just lay down and let someone run you over. Has to be paths or restricted access stuff like this park. My new mountain ebike has been stashed for the winter, so the Creo is the only option. Not a bad one, obviously!
 

Attachments

  • 1734480712924.jpeg
    1734480712924.jpeg
    916.4 KB · Views: 14
A Tablet For Magda and A Meeting of Old PUNKS

I need 9,000 km this year! Also, competing hard with foofer on Strava Club :) (He is a hard competitor!)

1734679377528.png

First, it was a fast ride to SCH in Bramki to hand out a Samsung tablet to my daughter Magda, and to teach her operating the device. 53 km.

After the dark, I went for another ride to a meeting of the oldest Warsaw PUNKs of 1970 still being alive. The pretext for the meeting was a release of the first Polish live recordings of the seminal band The Boors/KRYZYS. We were behind the Iron Curtain in those times, and we only formed the PUNK crew in 1978 with the first concerts in early 1979. The April/May gigs of Kryzys can be compared to the seminal Sex Pistols and Buzzcocks concert in Lesser Free Trade Hall in Manchester on June 4th, 1976, where a small group of audience later formed several bands important to the British music. So was the effect of the Kryzys "Recorded'Anin" gigs of 1979 on the Polish alternative music.

1734679833951.png

Bajerka (left) was the first female in the Warsaw PUNK movement, and she later played bass. I and Ada (centre) were publishing the first PUNK fanzin 'SZMATA' (The Rag) also in 1979. The man on the right also belongs to the crew, and is a singer. Far left: the album producer and publisher.

You could be surprised how well a Samsung S24 Ultra can record live music!

It was a 51 km ride. I enjoyed slightly higher temperature even reaching +10 C!

1734680267538.png

104.6 km for the day.
 
Last edited:
The goal on last Sunday's coast ride south to Cardiff Beach was to stay off the Coast Highway and on quiet side streets and protected MUPs and bikeways as much as possible. And some 60% of the route turned out to do just that.

20241215_115522.jpg

The star of the route was the south Encinitas segment of our discontinuous regional Coastal Rail Trail. This wide paved MUP, well separated from any auto traffic, runs 2 mi from the downtown train station to Chesterfield Ave. Commanding views of the Pacific most of the way.

20241215_115624.jpg

The MUP was busy on this beautiful Sunday morning in December, with pedestrians outnumbering cyclists maybe 20 to 1. Not sure what happened to this pedestrian, as everyone was surprisingly well-behaved.

20241215_115711.jpg

Most of the pedestrians did a passable job of following this much-welcome guide to cyclist-pedestrian relations. Must be something in the water in Encinitas, cuz that's NOT how it usually goes in Carlsbad, the next beach town north.

20230626_162612.jpg

From Chesterfield, took the southbound barrier-protected bike lane on the Coast Highway all the way to Cardiff Beach. This bikeway is a one-way, single-lane version of the one above.

Walkers and runners are generally bigger threats than cars here, as some just can't seem to stay in their own lanes. And with such unpredictable intruders in play, I think these low curb-like bike lane barriers make the bikeway LESS safe. No room go around oblivious intruders with one bike lane hemmed in, and still too little room with the two lanes hemmed in above.

20241215_121047.jpg

Sand and beach cobbles covered a good third of the Cardiff Beach parking lot after an exceptionally high king tide the night before. This took place 1 night before the last full moon before Earth reaches perihelion on January 3, 2025. Must've been some decent surf to lift that much rock.

20241215_120958.jpg
20241215_121022.jpg

Had a nice chat with a lifeguard who also covers the Carlsbad beaches closest to my house. Meant to ask if he had anything to do with that Christmas tree on the beach in front of the guard tower.

20241215_122407.jpg

A big surfing contest for school kids 18 and under was underway.

20241215_122739.jpg

20241215_122859.jpg

Interesting to listen to the surfing lingo as the announcer described the waves and called contestants' performances. Chatted with a surf mom (our equivalent of soccer mom) as she waited for her son to catch a wave.

20241215_122503.jpg

20241215_122521.jpg
Several vendors had booths next to the commentator's tent. We're still talking about surfing, right??


.
 

Attachments

  • 20241215_115522.jpg
    20241215_115522.jpg
    929.6 KB · Views: 14
  • 20241215_115624.jpg
    20241215_115624.jpg
    333.4 KB · Views: 13
  • 20241215_115711.jpg
    20241215_115711.jpg
    387.6 KB · Views: 11
  • Screenshot_20241220_081714_Ride with GPS.jpg
    Screenshot_20241220_081714_Ride with GPS.jpg
    148.7 KB · Views: 15
Last edited:
The goal on last Sunday's coast ride south to Cardiff Beach was to stay off the Coast Highway and on quiet side streets and protected MUPs and bikeways as much as possible. And some 60% of the route turned out to do just that.

View attachment 187659
The star of the route was the south Encinitas segment of our discontinuous regional Coastal Rail Trail. This wide paved MUP, well separated from any auto traffic, runs 2 mi from the downtown train station to Chesterfield Ave. Commanding views of the Pacific most of the way.

View attachment 187660
The MUP was busy on this beautiful Sunday morning in December, with pedestrians outnumbering cyclists maybe 20 to 1. Not sure what happened to this pedestrian, as everyone was surprisingly well-behaved.

View attachment 187661
Most of the pedestrians did a passable job of following this much-welcome guide to cyclist-pedestrian relations. Must be something in the water in Encinitas, cuz that's NOT how it usually goes in Carlsbad, the next beach town north.

View attachment 187662
From Chesterfield, took the barrier-protected bike lane on the Coast Highway all the way to Cardiff Beach. This segment is single-lane version of the one above.

Walkers and runners are generally bigger threats than cars here, as some just can't seem to stay in their own lanes. And with such unpredictable intruders in play, I think these low curb-like bike lane barriers make the bikeway LESS safe. No room go around oblivious intruders with one bike lane hemmed in, and still too little room with the two lanes hemmed in above.

View attachment 187663
Sand and beach cobbles covered a good third of the Cardiff Beach parking lot after an exceptionally high king tide the night before. This took place 1 night before the last full moon before Earth reaches perihelion on January 3, 2025. Must've been some decent surf to lift that much rock.

View attachment 187665View attachment 187664
Had a nice chat with a lifeguard who also covers the Carlsbad beaches closest to my house. Meant to ask if he had anything to do with that Christmas tree on the beach in front of the guard tower.

View attachment 187666
A big surfing contest for school kids 18 and under was underway.

View attachment 187669
View attachment 187670
Interesting to listen to the surfing lingo as the announcer described the waves and contestants' performances. Chatted with a surf mom (our equivalent of soccer mom) as she waited for her son to catch a wave.

View attachment 187667
View attachment 187668Several vendors had booths next to the commentator's tent. We're still talking about surfing, right??


.
Blue skies, surfing and sunny days 😎- we went from minus 27 Celsius two days ago to plus 10 today with those Chinook winds blowing in from the west, had to look up perihelion, (around the sun, at our closest) should have known that having taught earth sciences many "moons" ago
 
Szczodre Gody x MOSTy (A Charity Ride)
9,000 km This Year!


Szczodre Gody (literally archaic: Generous Eve) is a pre-Christian celebration of Winter Solstice by our Polish ancestors; it is similar to Yule, and was celebrated as Koliada in other Slavic lands. Gravel.Love had organized a charity event: You were expected to make a donation and then do a group or a solo ride on one or two or three predefined routes this weekend. I chose the MOSTy (BRIDGEs) route for Saturday.

Imagine you had totally prepared your ride, winter clothes, necessary pannier contents and you are rolling your e-bike out of your flat and then hear a worrying noise but you are on a tight schedule to catch your train! It took me a few minutes to swap my Vado SL for Vado 6.0, with replacing the spare battery as well! I was at the train station at the last moment!

As I cycled from Warsaw City Centre down to the Mermaid, I met several gravel cyclists ready for the ride. A big surprise was meeting my cycling mate Krzysiek who is senior to me, and who always rides vintage bikes!

The first 16 km were fabulous. We had a beautiful sunshine! I rode my Vado at 60/60% assistance, and that even let me be in the lead for several kilometres! (Bear in mind Vado 6.0 is a 45 km/h e-bike).

Past the Praga Harbour, and reaching the Meadow-Upon-Vistula, I felt I needed to take a short rest. Now, I regret it as I could have completed the ride together with my buddies in an exceptionally good time!

1734820230194.png

Warsaw New Town as seen from the right bank of the Vistula.

1734820369665.png

My Roadrunner (Vado 6.0). Dirty but happy! :)

1734820509175.png

Meadow-Upon-Vistula. Gdański Bridge in the background. It was one of a very few muddy segments!

1734820584776.png

After 38.8 km ride, I could upload this ride to Strava...

1734820688859.png
1734820750526.png

Guys! I could eventually make the 30 km Strava E-Bike Segment! Usually, Strava Segments are short. To make a very long segment, you must ride the course to the T! Woo-hoo! :) Besides, I advanced to the 12th place on the popular "Suzuka (e-bike)" segment.


Later, I returned home "on the wheels". Eventually, rode to a grocery shop to make the 9,000 km this year! (Of course, I am not in the position to match Rab!)

1734821053981.png

The five rides on the Winter Solstice 2024.

It was all OK with my Vado SL. The front wheel had just been rubbing against the mudflap stay... :D
 
Last edited:
e-BRIDGEs E-Bike Segment Effort: The Result Improved By 14 Minutes!

I was expecting raining on Sunday. As I could see an opportunity to ride dry around noon, I was at Warsaw Mermaid at 11:40.

1734911263424.png

I met a group of seven riders there! It was the group for Generous Eve by Gravel.Love (two riders including the organizer Paweł K left the scene before I could take the photo). The main group rode for 50 miles in the rain. The red bearded man and Paweł K rode for 100 miles on that wet and cold day! KUDOS to them!

1734911424419.png

At the e-MOSTy segment start.

I was riding from Mermaid to the segment start line at a moderate speed as the sole objective of the ride was to improve my result on the 30.0 km E-Bike Segment. There, I prepared myself:
  • Number one :)
  • Installing a fresh battery and verifying assistance levels (SPORT 75/75% for the main ride and full TURBO for climbs)
  • Drinking hot tea and fixing the clothing (cleaning my goggles was important).
I was determined to not to stop on the Segment at all! It was raining on my ride from Mermaid but it stopped raining for the Segment as forecast!

The ride was just fun. I was familiar with the Segment so I was zooming as fast as I could given some mud on the trail. As I completed an extreme climb up Praga Harbour, I stopped for several seconds, grabbed the water bottle, drank the half of the contents and rode again! The next forced stop was red lights at Gwiaździsta St, where I finished the contents of the bottle.

1734912148287.png

At the finish line.

1734912201774.png

I could not wait any more! I uploaded the ride to Strava to discover I improved my result from 1 h 33 min 19 s to 1 h 18 min 59 s, that is, by 14 minutes and 20 seconds! The total stop time was 1 minute and 16 seconds.

1734912579252.png

Happy, I could now finish my tea! :)


Fun-fact: Public toilets are paid in Germany but free in Poland (I mean, public not private ones). There is a Metro station just by Mermaid, and there is a big lift. Two levels down and a beautiful clean and free loo waited for me there! :) I'd say it is yet another thing making the life in Poland so good! :)

Delighted with my success I simply rode home "on the wheels" to record 70.8 km for the day :)
 
Last edited:
1735058424408.png


My bike made it past 36000 miles and my yearly mileage surpassed 6500 miles today!

I have been waiting for 10 days to get back out on the bike to make it to 36000 miles overall and reach 6500 miles for the year on the same ride, the weather at home was truly awful but I saw an opportunity to head for the east coast where there was a chance of a dry day but very windy! I drove to the village of Elie on the East Neuk of Fife and planned to just ride around the local roads for 50 miles, little did I know just how windy it was! The forecast was showing 35mph gusts, it was way stronger at times and my bike blew over twice in the car park at Elie! 😂

Thankfully not into my car!

1735059600048.jpeg

The sun had just risen as I arrived just before 9am, not that there was much sun about!

1735059698413.jpeg

The wind was from the WSW so I decided to enjoy the tailwind out to Crail which is 9 miles from Elie where I set off, my average speed was nudging 19mph when I arrived in Crail so you can tell how strong the wind was!

Crail harbour!

1735065436592.jpeg

Looking out to the North Sea with the Isle of May Nature Reserve in the distance!

1735065764225.jpeg

1735065614279.jpeg

North Berwick in the distance here I believe!
1735065665063.jpeg

At Crail I followed the coast road NW to St Andrews, this is the view of the beach and the town from the caravan park at the top of the hill!

1735065876944.jpeg

1735065900828.jpeg

The view north out to sea!

1735065934027.jpeg

From St Andrews I headed south with a 5 mile climb to get my heart pumping, the crosswinds were horrendous at times on the exposed parts but the roads made up for that!

I passed Cairsmill Caravan Park!

1735066063056.jpeg

1735066140760.jpeg

One of the steeper parts of the climb, the wind was blowing like crazy going up that one!

1735066198947.jpeg

Finally some descending on roads I have never ridden before, I look forward to riding them when the weather is better!

1735066226124.jpeg

I then turned west directly into the howling wind on the road to Cupar, this was much more enjoyable than those crosswinds!

A few photos on the way!

1735066561292.jpeg

1735066574056.jpeg

The eastern side of Cupar!

1735066610486.jpeg

Once I reached Cupar I turned south again so it was time for more crosswinds and another road I have never ridden before, it was quite a rollercoaster in parts and luckily I had quite a bit of tree cover which was very welcome!

1735066817755.jpeg

The roads were in great condition also which is always a bonus!

1735066866407.jpeg

1735066878616.jpeg

1735066890665.jpeg

This descent was just amazing and the tree cover made it feel like the wind had disappeared!

1735066967055.jpeg

The road eventually joins the main road at Lundin Links and Lower Largo where it was time to turn east and enjoy a nice tailwind again! I soon reached Upper Largo and stopped for a couple of photos looking out to sea!

1735067192800.jpeg

1735067206024.jpeg

I was nearing the turn off for Elie just after passing through Drumeldrie but I decided to continue east through Colinsburgh and then take the road south into Elie, as I reached the road into the car park I had covered 49 miles so I passed the turnoff and continued east for half a mile before turning back to bring up the 50 miles! I spotted some brave souls on the little beach east of Elie, it looks like they were protected from the wind though!

1735067551196.jpeg

One final photo as I arrived back at the car!

1735067593726.jpeg


I'm so glad I decided to go for the ride, despite the winds! It was around 140 miles in the car but well worth it, the bike remained unscathed from the 2 falls thankfully! I was breaking in a new chain and cassette and rear brake pads, the bike performed flawlessly once again!👍 36005 miles now and it still rides like new, I think after 6.5 years I have had more than my money's worth!
 

Attachments

  • elevation_profile367.jpg
    elevation_profile367.jpg
    21.4 KB · Views: 5
  • trip-244031662-map-full367.png
    trip-244031662-map-full367.png
    202.9 KB · Views: 7
View attachment 187719

My bike made it past 36000 miles and my yearly mileage surpassed 6500 miles today!

I have been waiting for 10 days to get back out on the bike to make it to 36000 miles overall and reach 6500 miles for the year on the same ride, the weather at home was truly awful but I saw an opportunity to head for the east coast where there was a chance of a dry day but very windy! I drove to the village of Elie on the East Neuk of Fife and planned to just ride around the local roads for 50 miles, little did I know just how windy it was! The forecast was showing 35mph gusts, it was way stronger at times and my bike blew over twice in the car park at Elie! 😂

Thankfully not into my car!

View attachment 187721
The sun had just risen as I arrived just before 9am, not that there was much sun about!

View attachment 187722
The wind was from the WSW so I decided to enjoy the tailwind out to Crail which is 9 miles from Elie where I set off, my average speed was nudging 19mph when I arrived in Crail so you can tell how strong the wind was!

Crail harbour!

View attachment 187724
Looking out to the North Sea with the Isle of May Nature Reserve in the distance!

View attachment 187727
View attachment 187725
North Berwick in the distance here I believe!
View attachment 187726
At Crail I followed the coast road NW to St Andrews, this is the view of the beach and the town from the caravan park at the top of the hill!

View attachment 187729
View attachment 187730
The view north out to sea!

View attachment 187732
From St Andrews I headed south with a 5 mile climb to get my heart pumping, the crosswinds were horrendous at times on the exposed parts but the roads made up for that!

I passed Cairsmill Caravan Park!

View attachment 187733
View attachment 187734
One of the steeper parts of the climb, the wind was blowing like crazy going up that one!

View attachment 187735
Finally some descending on roads I have never ridden before, I look forward to riding them when the weather is better!

View attachment 187736
I then turned west directly into the howling wind on the road to Cupar, this was much more enjoyable than those crosswinds!

A few photos on the way!

View attachment 187737
View attachment 187738
The eastern side of Cupar!

View attachment 187739
Once I reached Cupar I turned south again so it was time for more crosswinds and another road I have never ridden before, it was quite a rollercoaster in parts and luckily I had quite a bit of tree cover which was very welcome!

View attachment 187740
The roads were in great condition also which is always a bonus!

View attachment 187741
View attachment 187742
View attachment 187743
This descent was just amazing and the tree cover made it feel like the wind had disappeared!

View attachment 187744
The road eventually joins the main road at Lundin Links and Lower Largo where it was time to turn east and enjoy a nice tailwind again! I soon reached Upper Largo and stopped for a couple of photos looking out to sea!

View attachment 187745
View attachment 187746
I was nearing the turn off for Elie just after passing through Drumeldrie but I decided to continue east through Colinsburgh and then take the road south into Elie, as I reached the road into the car park I had covered 49 miles so I passed the turnoff and continued east for half a mile before turning back to bring up the 50 miles! I spotted some brave souls on the little beach east of Elie, it looks like they were protected from the wind though!

View attachment 187747
One final photo as I arrived back at the car!

View attachment 187748

I'm so glad I decided to go for the ride, despite the winds! It was around 140 miles in the car but well worth it, the bike remained unscathed from the 2 falls thankfully! I was breaking in a new chain and cassette and rear brake pads, the bike performed flawlessly once again!👍 36005 miles now and it still rides like new, I think after 6.5 years I have had more than my money's worth!
Congrats on an awesome milestone!
 
The most crazy bike path system in Warsaw...

1735162956906.png

It is along General 'Grot' Bridge. Trust me guys, you would get instantly lost if you hadn't a good GPS navigation there! :D There are ramps, ramps, and ramps with numerous junctions over there. Once, I was to attend a funeral of a friend in the right-bank part of Warsaw, Missed the correct exit and then had to pedal for several kilometres totally unable to turn towards the cemetery, which was on a parallel road!

166 km this week :) I may report later. Merry Christmas!
 
Last edited:
My Xmas Rides In Short

I was riding from Monday through Wednesday. On Monday 23rd, I had to hastily ride to an electronic store in Pruszków to buy a new smartphone for my daughter Magda. I also did the last shopping before the Christmas time. It seemed the people had gone mad! No spare places in the shopping mall car park. Not enough supermarket trolleys! Bread bought out!

Xmas Eve, December 24th, 2024

1735212431472.png

At 10:00, I met Magda at the SCH. She had an Honor 7X phone for seven years (some Chinese ware is really good!) but the device got eventually damaged. I brought Magda a Xiaomi Redmi Note 13, and we spent two hours configuring the smartphone and sipping tea together. In the end, Magda showed me one of the presents she got, a Harry Potter Gryffindor shawl!

1735212672818.png

Then I rode up north to Klimatyczna for a poppy cheesecake :)


The day was windless and easy to ride. My Vado 6.0 at 60% assistance and with my effort was zooming like a rocket! Suffice to say, the last 20.0 km segment was ridden at the average speed of 30.7 km/h, which is one of the fastest rides I ever had! :)

Xmas Day 1, December 25th, 2024

I wanted to take the benefit of empty streets on 25th, so I planned a 50 mile ride for Warsaw Northeast. As I announced my intention on FB, a female e-biker friend of mine Anna invited me for a holiday late breakfast together with her big family! (No pictures because of the privacy concerns, sorry).

1735214890878.png

21 km. Warsaw City skyline as seen from the west. Notice how well the PKiN (the Soviet building) is hidden from the view despite being the second highest in the city!

1735215014101.png

As I got in Nowogrodzka Street, I took an attempt to beat the Course Record on an e-bike segment! Trust me, that's not easy. There are bike lanes along this narrow street, and you must pay attention to the incoming traffic on the junctions. There are speed bumps, too. I would get the CR if not the red lights on the Chałubińskiego intersection! Now, I am a co-King with another man who also got 2 min 32 sec there, and he holds the CR.

1735215409278.png

The e-bike segment in Warsaw South Midtown. Due to total absence of traffic, I did the "Idaho Stop" on the red lights but that cost me precious seconds!


I had a very nice meeting with Anna's family in Rembertów (it is still Warsaw), ate a lot of good vittles :) and after an hour I set off for the return ride.

1735215740040.png

The very top of the Kawęczyn Smokestack, according to some sources the same height as of Varso Tower (310 m or 1,017 ft), one of the tallest structures in Poland. Other sources claim the height of 300 m/984 ft, which makes the chimney the part of the Big Five of Poland's smokestacks. The chimney is extremely well hidden from the view!

1735216008686.png

'Mass first, sculpture next!', or the opinion on bodybuilding expressed by Robert Burneika, a Lithuanian bodybuilder and martial artist also known as "Hardcore Coke" :) Burneika is loved by Poles for his great sense of humour and his broken Polish :) As you can see, the Burneika's establishment in Warsaw can provide body mass first, and body sculpture next! :D

1735216318317.png

Żerań Power & Heat Plant as seen from General Grot (Stefan Rowecki) Bridge. The main smokestack of the plant is only 200 metre (656 ft) high!

1735216517436.png

The City of Warsaw skyline as seen from northeast. It is clearly visible Varso is indeed a very high building!


An accident on the trip
As I was riding westwards and found myself in the Marymont (Mary Mount) neighbourhood, I saw a police car and an ambulance blocking the bike path. I stopped, and eventually walked my Vado around, too see a collapsed electric skateboard and a pool of blood on asphalt. Now, I could understand what had happened. Some poor lad must have ridden the skateboard at high speed, lost control, and certainly banged his helmetless head against a steel railing. Judging by very slow behaviour of policemen and paramedics, the boy could be dead by now; if he were alive, the ambulance would take him to the hospital immediately; if it were a minor incident, the servicemen would not spend time on documenting the accident...

ALWAYS WEAR A HELMET ON YOUR RIDES!

1735217045996.png

After I left the accident scene, I was shattered, so found a bench and reported the accident to my FB friends. Very very sad day for some family...

1735217240779.png

'To the defenders of Motherland', a monument in Marymont.

1735217711789.png

Ride map and POI.

I'm taking a recovery day today. Tomorrow? Perhaps a Southeast ride? :)
 
Last edited:
Back