France Part 1
The route
Three of my bike buddies, aged in the range 50 -70 years asked me in Dec last year if I would like to join them on a cycling trip to France for 15 days starting on the 28th of May 2011. They had based the idea on an organised CTC holiday that runs every year to France but has a limited numbers of participants. We decided to do our trip independently and based our plan on the route and travel arrangements used by the CTC. However we modified our trip to allow for our own stay schedule and daily mileages. One of our group is still working for a living and therefore the trip had to be contained within a 15 day period so that he could return home in time to resume his work. This meant we were not able to fit in a trip that included the full Calais to Montpellier distance. We sat down together for several pre-trip meetings to organise the mileage intervals, stop lengths and hotel booking arrangements. We reckoned that we could handle about a max of 100km per day with a min of 40 taking credit card, panniers and a front bike bag.
The hotels we are staying at are already booked by us and are of the bed and breakfast type. Some are small towny affairs and others are country farmhouse residences that offer patios for outside meals in good weather and the usual labrador dog to clap. This is the schedule:
| France 2011 | Date | Dist km | |||
| Nemours | 28th May | 0 | |||
| St Benoit sur Loire | 29th May | 71 | |||
| Tavers | 30th May | 76 | |||
| Limeray | 31st May | 44 | |||
| Loches | 2nd June | 50 | |||
| Celon near Argenton sur Creuse | 3rd June | 100 | |||
| Plazanet | 4th June | 116 | |||
| Mauriac | 5th June | 92 | |||
| Sansac de Marmiesse | 6th June | 67 | |||
| Estaing | 7th June | 81 | |||
| Mayrueis | 8th June | 100 | |||
| Arrigas | 10th June | 73 | |||
| Ariane | 11th June | 70 | |||
| St Jean De Vedas | Montpellier | 12th June | 66 | ||
The total distance will be 1006 km. Some of the terrain will be very hilly and I have yet to identify precisely where but I know it is going to include long tortuous road work in boiling heat. I hope!...typical Scotsman. At the outset of the plan one of the experienced tourists in the group asked me what bike I was going to take. I replied my usual general purpose racing bike, the one with the steel frame!... strength for the panniers you see! "Well you'll need a bit of strength to push the gears you have on it" he replied. "Whadya mean" said I...."I have a road triple on it!" "The gears on your road bike are far too high for touring in France" he said. "What you'll need is a chainwheel with less teeth than your biggest rear sprocket for this trip and that's no mistake".
I thought about this dilemma at great length and......................................(continued in Part 2)
This is requiring a good deal of forward-planning both in terms of the route and of equipment. Ian, being one of life’s enthusiasts, is happy to share his affliction with anyone who is interested and has agreed to supply us with a blow-by-blow account of his experiences in the hope that it may interest and inspire others.
Rather than go and buy a tourer complete from the bike shop I thought that I would take on the technical challenges, if possible build one intelligently with minimum effort after due consideration and learn something about touring machines on the way, just in case of breakdown in foreign parts. I then investigated a 'Bob Jackson World tour' frame, from 'off the peg' as it has everything on it you would need. Mudguard, carrier, cantilever bosses, brake bridges and option of 135mm spaced rear forks for MTB wheels and a delivery in time for my trip. Using an off-the-peg design with the essential rear fork modification described enabled the use of an MTB drivetrain, preserving the chainline for MTB and thus achieving some degree of ultra-low gearing and at the same time the infrequently used high gears to give a wide selection from 17 to 108 inches.




















Okay, so we have baulked at our import sourcing method, so we are left looking at a very simple device that could, with a bit of lateral thinking be contrived from something lying unused in the garage tool box. Scratching my head over this I stumbled upon a drawer with plumbing and garden hose parts and picked out a plastic hose union. Now the bar bracket supplied with my 'Raleigh' light is made to fit on 31.8mm oversize bars with rubber shims to reduce it for standard diameter bars. The hose union was 1 inch dia (25.4mm) so packing with the rubber shim supplied with the lamp bracket, the assembly fitted neatly on to the threaded union and the threads pressed into the rubber shim holding it very tight. See pictures. This proved to be a promising solution which emulates the Gino perfectly at no cost. I think plastic hose unions are fairly cheap items these days.

