Hi All,
British cyclist David Piper has come up with a very interesting route variation for LEJOG. For those in other parts of the world who may not familiar with this very famous British End-to-End route, LEJOG stands for Land's End to John O' Groats. It has been completed by cyclists, walkers, and any manner of transport with records both made and broken in the traverse. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land%27s_End_to_John_o%27_Groats .
David's is not the fastest route -- far from it -- but it is one of the most scenic, tracing its way along B-roads and some truly scenic cycle tracks. Piper is a very experienced cyclist and tourist, so when asked by a charity to plot the route, he was happy to do so.
In the far north, he was able to use little-trafficked main roads; other places, he employed as many Sustrans NCN routes as he could, mixing them with roads having low traffic density. There's some occasional off-road in his routes, but not bad from the sound of it. He said he could handle the fine pea gravel on the many canal paths with his standard-width road tires. In Scotland, part of the route follows an old railroad bed, and should be expanded in years to come. The largest climb on the entire route is Kirkstone Pass, before dropping down to Windermere. Remember, this is not a true off-road route, but a scenic low-traffic route that chooses byways.
Start is in Caithness, Scotland, the finish is truly at Land's End. Total distance is about 2,000km/1,240mi.
The root link to David's home page is here:
http://www.tra-velo-gue.co.uk/home.htmHis LEJOG page is here, with a mapb-based daily log-summary:
http://www.tra-velo-gue.co.uk/trip01.htmHis GPS-based route -- complete with downloadable tracks and waypoints, and turn-by-turn directions for some Garmin devices, is here:
http://ridewithgps.com/routes/1307372I'd go in a minute if I could. It sounds wonderful. Looking forward to hearing from those who have already done LEJOG and are therefore qualified to comment on this variation.
Best,
Dan.