Plans Are Made To Be Changed
One of the best things about travel, is the part before you even leave home… the planning. Whether you are shortly off on your annual holiday, going away for a short weekend or even embarking on a ‘journey of a lifetime’, it’s great fun to pore over maps, peruse guide books and google away contentedly about your upcoming destination.
But the best thing about making plans is changing them. Sponteneity is the key. Especially on long trips. When life on the road is getting monotonous and dull, or just plain hard, that is the time to change your plans. Suddenly you will find enjoyment and a new interest.

Muddy Feet!
The original plan, for my latest trip, was to bike the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route. But it seemed a shame not to see more of Canada before starting. So we added on a bike loop of Vancouver Island and British Columbia. A mere 2,000km extra! We knew we were already starting late in the season, but by the time we arrived in Banff for the start of the GDMBR, there were far more cold and rainy days than sun-filled ones.

Gravel roads of the Great Divide
We had a fun few days after leaving Banff, but both of us were looking forward to getting south as fast as possible, just so we could get to the better weather. And that just wasn’t fun. So, sat in a small cafe in Eureka, Montana, drinking coffee, delaying leaving…. one of us jokingly said, ‘why don’t we head to Idaho instead of Wyoming?’ and the other said, ‘Well, why not?’ This would mean no longer following the Great Divide, but it would mean heading to Boise where we could meet and stay with other cycle tourers. The idea of having somewhere to stay for longer than one or two days, was a big draw. In six weeks, we’d had only six rest days. We were both tired of cycling.
So we ordered another coffee, dug out the map, replanned our route. In twenty minutes we went from tired and unenthusiastic to raring to hit the road.

Welcome to Idaho
We are now in Boise, Idaho state’s capital; the biggest town since we started the trip. It was the right decision. It was a beautiful journey here and now it’s time to dig out the maps again and plan ahead.

Beautiful Horsehoe Hill, Idaho
Next up is Utah and Arizona. Let’s hope we pass through before the snow arrives!
The Great Divide will just had to wait for another time, when I can leave earlier in the year.
(if you would like to follow my journey, you can do so on my blog, Helen’s Take On…)
Look mum, no hands!
I’m a little bit in love with this epic video: of 50 no-handed bike moves. They start off with the beginner (just one hand) and progress to the absolutely brilliant ‘Tony Blair giving a speech’. A guaranteed smile if you’re stuck indoors today.
The Advantages of Commuting to Work
Living only six miles from work, I have swapped my car for the bike to get me to the office. It’s over a month now of cycle-commuting and the benefits are numerous. I can’t think of any bad points in fact.
With the cost of fuel ever-increasing, the financial benefits are one obvious advantage. Although with such a short journey, it’s a modest fuel saving, it would add up to an annual saving of over £500 and that doesn’t factor in the reduced cost of maintaining a bike. It is of course the environmentally friendly way to travel too.

Commuting to Work
Surprisingly it doesn’t take any longer to get from home to office when you take into account, when driving, the time it takes to find a parking space and walk from the car. Thankfully there are facilities so I can shower at work, as I wouldn’t particularly wish upon my colleagues a faint odour of my sweat permeating through the air-conditioned office!
There are then, of course, the health benefits of regular exercise. So if you’re looking to lose weight, the 45minutes a day of exercise it takes for the round-trip is a great help. And if you’re not, you can indulge in that chocolate bar without feeling guilty – that’s what I usually do! Either way, it keeps you fit.
Because I am now regularly cycling to work, I don’t need to spend my evenings exercising. No runs and no gym. And that, in my opinion, is the greatest reason of all. I hate the gym and now I have more time to plan the next big trip – biking the Great Divide.
My touring bike is all fixed now ready for the US tour, so I’ve been using this bike to commute. It has the racks on already, so I just stuff a pannier with a change of work clothes and my lunch and I’m off (shower kit stays at work).
Cycle Touring Travel Insurance
It’s now only 3 weeks until I fly out to Canada for the start of the Great Divide ride and once again I’ve still got plenty to organise.
I have my flight booked, somewhere to stay when I arrive, my bike is repaired and ready to ride and I know the route I’ll be cycling.
But there’s plenty more to sort out…
Like any holiday, I’ll be needing to get travel insurance. Negotiating the myriad of insurance companies and trawling their terms and conditions to find one company that will cover a long cycle-touring trip is always a chore. Generally, travel insurers aren’t keen on cycle tourers and often won’t provide cover, or only on an incidental basis, or they add on a massive charge as they consider cycle touring a high risk sport. Forget trying to get your bike insured (it’s easier to add it to your home insurance). Just stick to the essential accident and medical cover.
There are plenty of long-term cycle tourers who don’t bother with insurance – Of 25 asked by the Travelling Two, a third don’t.
I used American Express for my 2-year Africa tour. It was the only company that would provide cover for 2-years cycling in Africa. I checked out at least 20 other companies. Fortunately I never had to make a claim. Was it a waste of money? Chances are, in many of the regions I was travelling through, if I had got seriously ill or had an accident, there would have been no fast rescue service. Had I needed to go to hospital, treatment would have been relatively cheap and probably I could have covered the costs myself. I probably would have tried to avoid hospital anyway. I carried a comprehensive first-aid kit and may well have been better equipped than some of the local hospitals. Having the insurance did give me peace of mind however. It was there if I needed it. But if I was doing the same trip again, I probably wouldn’t bother.
But that was Africa. And this next trip is to the States. Medical care in the US is excellent. But excellence comes at a price. This is one country where I would definitely get travel insurance for. And just to prove my point… the last time I went to the US, I spent a couple of days mountain-biking and fell off. Fell off, over the handlebars, face-planting onto the trail with bike flying off into a nearby bush. I hurt my leg and my friends had to call the emergency services. Six hours later, having been stretchered off the trail and I arrived at the hospital, high on strong painkillers. The bill, which came to a few thousand dollars, was paid for by my insurers (STA Travel).
So the search for insurance continues… at the moment I’m heading towards World Wide Insure, but I need to read the small print first.
Crazy and the Great Divide
Some people think I’m crazy… crazy to quit my job so I could cycle through Africa. The same thought, albeit fleeting, went through my mind before I actually set off.
But craziness, like many things, is relative.
So that when you’ve just cycled 25,000km through Africa, the idea of cycling 4,400km through the US, seems like a holiday.
But when I mention that I’m going to cycle the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route, an off-road route that crosses the continental divide some 80 times, and I’ll have to pedal or push up so many hills that by the end I will have effectively scaled the height of everest 7 times…. people still say I’m crazy.
But even I have my limits, and the borderline for craziness to me is cycling that same 4,400km route as a non-stop race. Yes, that’s 4,400km with all those hills, cycled in about 3 weeks. Now why on earth would you want to do that?! Well, several people do want to do it. And they do….
Well, actually I do understand – it’s for the challenge, to physically push yourself to the limit, to see what your body can withstand and it’s to satisfy the mildly masochistic nature that lies within some of us and drives us to undertake such seemingly pointless trials and adventures.
The Tour Divide, the race, is currently underway. It started on the 10th June. Of the 66 riders who started, two have already finished and 14 have dropped out. The others are still racing. The winner made it in just 15 days! (I shall be taking much longer…)
You can follow the rest of the crazy racers on the Tour Divide website (www.tourdivide.org) and see a map of the route which I’ll be following later this year.
The craziest of all, have to be the three men on single speed bikes. I have no idea how you cycle up the hills with only one gear. I’m just glad I don’t have to!
A Bike of Many Parts
It’s a few weeks since I arrived back in the UK. The short cycle from the airport was the least smooth of the whole journey. Nothing to do with the roads this time though. When it came to re-assembling the bike, having been packed in a big box for the flight, the pieces just didn’t seem to fit together. The gear cables wouldn’t connect to the hub so I couldn’t change gear, the brakes barely worked (although that had been an increasing problem over the final weeks) and the forks didn’t fit in quite right into the frame so I had to leave a few of the spacers out. And then there was the wobbly back wheel which nine months after I first noticed it, was now, well, very wobbly. Never mind, I could still cycle. And it wasn’t far.
So for the last few weeks I’ve been without the use of the bike (although fortunately I have a moutain bike too, which is getting well-used instead). Time to get it fixed. First I took the back wheel over to SJS Cycles, where Dave had a quick look at it and said he could have the hubb all fixed up in half an hour. And sure enough, after half an hour, I walked out of the shop with a replacement hubb, and new sprocket fitted too. Very impressed. I also stocked up on three Schwalbe Marathon XR tyres.
Yes I know a bike only has two wheels! In any case the tyres that took me through Africa still have some life in them. But Schwalbe no longer manufacture these tyres and there’s just no other tyre that will stand the test of touring time. These should keep me on the road for a while longer. My legs are bound to give up before the tyres give out.
But the rest wasn’t going to be quite so simple. Simply because I’ve decided to fix the rest of the bike myself.
I thought I had the spare parts I needed. And so on Sunday morning, with multi-tool, pliers and a good supply of WD40, I set about taking off the old parts that needed replacing. On closer inspection, this turned out to be most of the bike bar the frame, wheels and new hubb.
Having removed several layers of bike oil and grease from my hands and body, the afternoon was mostly spent on the internet searching out the replacement parts I need… brake cable set, gear cables, headset bearings, chain, chainring, a new twistshifter assembly and the only part that sounded remotely interesting which was the ‘noodles and boots’ (and they’re nothing but small bent metal tubes that the brake cables fit through).
So until I get the new parts through, the rack is on my mountain bike so I can head off to the hills at the weekends. In the meantime, my trusty tourer is scattered about my room in several rusty or dirty pieces.
I think I forgot to mention – the next tour I’ll be cycling the Great Divide from Canada, through the USA, to Mexico. You can read more about it on my new website, Helen’s Take On…
And over the coming weeks I’ll be posting more on the Togblog about how the preparations for the trip are going.
About us
Recent Posts
- How to look after leather walking boots.
- Never The End…
- #Walkwednesday – East Knoyle round walk via West Knoyle
- Water Travel, Like a Local
- Farnham round walk or off road cycle – take your pick!
Hang out with us




Webtogs on Twitter
- RT @cool_camping: Congratulations to Henry's Campsite, who have just been announced as winners of the @coastmag Best Coastal Campsite. W ...
- RT @happy_rambler: Hey guys I'll be talking about this on BBC radio tomorrow. Any more sarnies for me to mention? http://t.co/9GUEi3XO
- @mixedupmessedup @SocialHiking w00t way to go Phil!
Blogroll
- Backpacking Bongos
- BlogCatalog
- Blogpackinglight
- Die Beuteltiere
- Flight of the Bumblie
- Helen's Take On…….
- Helen's Wondering Wanderings
- Jonesnow
- Lightweight Outdoors
- Live For the Outdoors
- McAlisterium
- Mountain Tracks
- Must Be This Way
- Off the Sofa
- Outdoors Magic
- Shed Dwellers Moments
- Social Hiking
- Staying Alive
- Stve Horner
- Survival Bushcraft
- T e r r y B N D
- The Active Photographer
- The Girl Outdoors
- Walkabout in the UK
- Walking with Fatty – Deaf Blind climb
- Webtogs
- Webtogs – All our products
- Wholeland
Tag Cloud
advice Alps America bike Brands breaker Camping Climbing competition cycling desert dorset eCommerce Gareth gear girl outdoors gore goretex Helen Helen's Take On Helen Lloyd Hiking ice icebreaker Keen merino Nemo Nick Parks north face outdoor outdoors sleeping bag Snow stock take on africa tent the girl outdoors video viewranger Walk Walking waterproof webtogs wild camping woods
WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck requires Flash Player 9 or better.
Categories
- camping
- Clothing
- Customer Services
- cycling
- eCommerce
- Footwear
- Gareth
- General Outdoor
- Helen Lloyd
- Planning
- Trips
- Uncategorized
Archives
- May 2012 (3)
- April 2012 (3)
- March 2012 (4)
- February 2012 (2)
- January 2012 (4)
- December 2011 (4)
- November 2011 (6)
- October 2011 (4)
- September 2011 (5)
- August 2011 (3)
- July 2011 (4)
- June 2011 (11)
- May 2011 (10)
- April 2011 (4)
- March 2011 (9)
- February 2011 (7)
- January 2011 (1)
- December 2010 (2)
- November 2010 (4)
- September 2010 (2)
- July 2010 (7)
- June 2010 (2)
- May 2010 (4)
- April 2010 (8)
- March 2010 (6)
- February 2010 (1)
- January 2010 (2)
- December 2009 (5)
- November 2009 (5)
- October 2009 (7)
- September 2009 (6)
- August 2009 (6)
- July 2009 (11)
- June 2009 (3)
- May 2009 (3)
- April 2009 (10)
- March 2009 (9)
- February 2009 (7)
- January 2009 (5)
- December 2008 (4)
- November 2008 (4)
- October 2008 (4)
- September 2008 (3)
- July 2008 (1)
- June 2008 (2)
- May 2008 (2)
- April 2008 (1)
- March 2008 (1)
- February 2008 (2)
- November 2007 (3)
- October 2007 (2)
- September 2007 (2)
- August 2007 (5)
- July 2007 (6)
- June 2007 (3)
- May 2007 (9)

