I have completed coast to coast bike rides in Northern England with four of my children, namely.
I would unreservedly recommend Morecambe/Scarborough. Not only was this the easiest, but embraced a day at Flamingo Land, a swim beneath Hardraw force and the best cycle track in England amongst many attractions. What follows are my reservations about the C2C route. The start and finish towns are dumps. I'm sorry, if you come from Whitehaven or Sunderland, but they are industrially based, with no beaches, donkeys, waffle shops or parks. The start and finish points are as far away from the population as you can get. For anywhere south of the A66 considerable extra expense and time is required to reach the C2C endpoints. This would not be so bad if the route was significantly more quiet or beautiful, but it is not. The Lake district is a microcosm of natural splendour, the Northern Pennines are sweet, but the other routes embrace the Pennines, and the North York Moors or Yorkshire Wolds. The view from Morecambe tops that from Whitehaven, and the Ribble Valley, Ingleton, Ingleborough, Ribblehead, Hawes and Ampleforth are gorgeous. The official guide is expensive and was unobtainable. We could not buy one at WH Smith in Whitehaven, and the local bookshop sold us 'The Ultimate c2c Guide by Richard Peace. When we did stop and scratch our heads with fellow travellers looking at that official map, we were bemused. (The official guide costs £5. You cannot download a decent map from the web.) I feel more comfortable with an Ordnance survey map that can be used for other purposes, justifying the extra expense. My tip is photocopy where you intend to go, then you can write on them, get them wet, and chuck 'em. (But buy the maps!)
Britain's 'flagship cycle route'. (yes it says 'cyclists dismount')
Words fail The choice of route is just plain poor. I reckon there must be 9,000 foot of climbing on the C2C. Maybe I'm wrong, but the scale of effort needed is truly Pyrenean. Coupled with this, many downhills are unsuitable for all but the bravest descenders, meaning that much effort is wasted, notably Loweswater, and Whinlatter. Many others cannot be taken without braking. When a cycleway is really needed (Hartside, Whitehaven, Keswick, and Sunderland) they are either token or non-existent. They say the proof of the pudding is in the eating. We saw many people doing the route. Two females, Ella and Edel-Marie from Norway. Every other cyclist was a male between 18 and 50, and there must have been about 50 of those. Sad to say that my overriding memories of my c2c cycling holiday were anger and bitterness at the tokenism of it all. I approached the route with reservations, and much of it was beautiful. I met friends, had a good time and Ella was constantly cheerful, strong and amusing, an absolute inspiration. But it could be so much better.
My advice to you would be, if you were going to do a coast to coast route, consider others. On the positive side some of the C2C is Gorgeous, We did not strictly adhere too it, so there are parts I cannot comment upon. If you do the C2C, especially with children, stay at Askhill Farm on your first night, left opposite the 'phone box in Loweswater, Tel 01946 861640. Glance through our travelogues and see if you fancy one, or work out one for yourself. Buy ordnance survey maps. Support Sustrans. They have their hands tied in many cases. To Sustrans, lose the sculptures until you've paved the routes. Press for compulsory purchase, God knows you deserve it. Focus on which user group you are catering for. Don't forget that mountain bikers can always leave an excellent cycle route. People who want to get from A to B expending the least amount of energy possible do not have that luxury. As it stands the C2C route does not maximise it's potential to encourage cycling. Please contact me with your comments or enquiries steve@kiddxxx.fsnet.co.uk.
The end (What a dump!)
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