So the tour is complete, and the story of the tour can be found on the Tours subdivision of this forum,
here. Thanks for all the well wishes, and Matt2matt yes we did prioritise pleasure, as readers will see.
There are some comments about the bike but the tale focuses mainly on the six-day journey. I learned a little bit more about the bike on this trip but not all that much.
First, here is how it was loaded. Ultimately, this configuration fell under the classification "Tried to be clever".
Tellingly, I can't even remember what I'd thought would be so clever about it. Possibly I was worried that if I didn't do it this way I would have too much space, as I possessed only two Ortlieb Back Rollers that I could have substituted for the Trunk Bag.
Taking only the three bags left me very tight for space and I ended up with 4kg on each side of the fronts rack. So here is the first observation I can make about the bike: the ST fork handles 4kg a side with aplomb, but the low-speed steering does get a bit weighty. Doubtless that is because Andy Blance went for a mid-trail geometry rather than the presently fashionable low-trail, so that the bike would steer nicely unladen. Andy observes in (I think) the Thorn Megabrochure that the Mercury is designed to carry most of a load at the rear.
I'll note though that there was no particular problem with the steering being loaded in this way. It just felt unnecessarily heavy - unnecessarily, given that I coukd have carried much more of the weight at the rear if I'd had more space.
Also, the heaviness became more obvious as my speed decreased, and it was most noticeable on steep climbs. On steep descents, the extra weight probably helped. Certainly, the Mercury steered beautifully through through high-speed bends when laden this way.
What else? It was nice to be bolting on the front racks, because the bosses were perfectly placed and maximally available. Where my late-'90s high-end Trek hybrid supplied au unthreaded through tube in the fork that accepted a long bolt that tightened only against the tube, the Mercury has a threaded lug on each side.
I learned that on corrugated gravel roads the bike rides terribly unless you drop the tyre pressure well below maximum, and beautifully when you do. More detail on that one is
here.
Finally, there were no issues at all with ridgidity under the 12kg load that I carried. This was made particularly plain on the several winding high-speed descents we encountered. I had absolutely no sense that the bike was struggling to keep its wheels in line under the load (my body weight was about 84kg). Rather, it felt magnificent and steered perfectly. Andy rates this model as capable of carrying 18kg with relaxed, sweet handling on rough dirt roads and I could have reached that figure by adding just 6kg at the rear. I found no reason to doubt that assessment.