Recent Posts

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Cycle Tours / Re: Scotland’s ‘lost’ highways and byways
« Last post by Matt2matt2002 on Today at 09:42:26 AM »
I can recommend The Pier in Lairg for food. One for the ‘to do’ list.

Ha ha. I recall The Pier in Lairg.
I had stopped to chat to another cyclist there and started telling him about my recent tour in Ethiopia. I was quite chuffed with my adventure. He then mentioned he had just returned from a round the world trip!
My bubble was burst!
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Cycle Tours / Re: Scotland’s ‘lost’ highways and byways
« Last post by in4 on Today at 08:03:58 AM »
I can recommend The Pier in Lairg for food. One for the ‘to do’ list.
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Bikes For Sale / Re: Sherpa 535L
« Last post by steveparry on July 02, 2026, 06:29:54 PM »
Sorry, I should have marked as SOLD.
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Bikes For Sale / Re: Sherpa 535L
« Last post by robbieonthenet on July 02, 2026, 05:22:22 PM »
Hi is this still available?
Robbie in Bournemouth
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Cycle Tours / Re: Scotland’s ‘lost’ highways and byways
« Last post by Matt2matt2002 on July 02, 2026, 09:17:03 AM »
Excellent ride. I have passed through Lairg a few times and also stopped at the Crask Inn but not taken some of the roads mentioned.
It's now on my ( when fit enough ) to do list.

Cheers.
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Cycle Tours / Scotland’s ‘lost’ highways and byways
« Last post by in4 on July 02, 2026, 07:27:55 AM »
Interesting read, dressing similarly entirely optional.

https://apple.news/Ay9j7Pl0vQEaBFmNjMBW_2g

There’s a GPS link too ( almost hidden!)

https://ridewithgps.com/routes/55551051

I’ve ridden parts of this route and yes it’s the antidote to NC500.
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Bikes For Sale / Re: Thorn Raven Sport Tour
« Last post by MarkG on June 30, 2026, 06:13:48 PM »
Hi Andy,

Thanks for the update on postage and congrats on the new bike  :)  (post some pics when it arrives). I've managed to find a box big enough to pack mine, so fingers crossed.
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Bikes For Sale / Re: Thorn Raven Sport Tour
« Last post by Andyb1 on June 30, 2026, 05:51:37 PM »
Mark,
Just following on from your previous thread…… I have just bought another bike (alloy / carbon road bike, 700c wheels, very different to my Raven) and it is being sent to me by Parcelforce 48.  In a box 1.50m long and under 20kg it cost £18.25 which included £150 compensation.  So if you can get a cardboard bike box from your LBS and some old bubblewrap, sending your bike to it’s new owner means a little work but is surprisingly cheap.
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Bikes For Sale / Thorn Raven Sport Tour
« Last post by MarkG on June 30, 2026, 12:54:00 PM »
Thorn Raven Sport Tour for sale.

Reynolds 853 Tubing, fitted with Shimano Alfine SG-S501 8-speed internal gear hub and Shimano V-Brakes.

Size: 486L

Tyres / Wheels: 26 x 1.75  42 - 559

In good condition with only little bits of wear here and there.

I'm in Scotland, but I can package it up and ship anywhere in the UK.

If you'd like anymore photos of specific parts then just let me know.

£450 ono + p&p

Kind regards

Mark
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Actually, I can, Andre...an Art-Deco cross between a full-sus Moulton AM-7 separable spaceframe and a Dursley-Pedersen.

You're so quick, Dan. I had to look up the Moulton AM-7 -- I came into cycling only in 1990 when I gave up the car altogether so it was before my time.

The Dursley-Pedersen is definitely of the same clay as the classic Citroens: exactly enough of sophisticated technology to serve a purpose, and the rest agricultural to last forever. I'm a big fan of the Pedersen, especially in the fat-tired recreation by a now sadly late German businessman.

I'm not so sure of Art Deco though. One didn't see Art Deco in Citroens when it was current as a dominant style, especially in France, say in the Traction Avant on the leather covering the door cards. Citroen never added anything merely decorative to their cars; everything had to serve a purpose, and, surprisingly for a car with so much original design in it, everything can be justified by engineering purpose, rather than as merely tacked-on design. It is, in large part, why the real Citroens have aged so well, why 'timeless' is the adjective most heard about the DS: there's nothing, like Art Deco, to fix it to any period; it is sui generis.

I think a case can be made that runs the other way, that Citroen set a certain tone that fed into art styles and movements. I've given up counting the movies in which a DS was used as a contemporary car in a setting far into the future, a symbol more than merely an artifact. My favorite is one of the Highlander movies where we see Christopher Lambert sitting in a bar looking out at a pall over a city, clearly a future environmental catastrophe, and then he gets up and walks out his car, a Citroen DS. There I burst out laughing -- it's just so hokey -- but not everyone is convinced the director intended self-parody.

You'll know that cycling has become an art form when a mainstream rather than a cult movie has a main character crack a joke about Peugeot bikes in the 1970s.
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