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blog

A coronation ride to Whiteadder Reservoir

How do you plan your cycle trips? By what you think your limits are? Or by where you want to go? And do your use apps, or a paper map or just follow your nose?

On Saturday 6 May an older man and his wife in England were crowned. Up here in Scotland there was bunting, outrage, apathy, protests and more interest in the ceremony than many were prepared to admit.

The weather was dull, with heavy showers and thunder forecast. I was six months on from my partial knee replacement. I wanted to go for a day’s cycle trip to avoid the coronation. I was also building miles with a view to doing a 100 miler later in the summer. Fifty or so miles I thought. I ruled out Fife. I’d been a number of times recently and it was time for a change. I ruled out the Dalkeith Country Park loop. I’d done that too often, too. East Lothian, I thought. Gifford I thought. The WhiteAdder Reservoir I decided.

The reservoir, in the Lammermuir hills in East Lothian, is 245 metres above sea level. That doesn’t seem much for someone who has cycled over the Himalayas, but that trip was in 2001 and cycling up steep hills is not something I’ve done much of in the last few years because of my arthritic knee.

Given the distance of around 60 miles return I chose my 22 year old pink Cannondale road bike over the heavier more practical Bob Jackson tourer. Light weight with no mudguards it’s fast and easy but not useful for carrying bulky waterproofs. It’s also not ideal on off-road muddy paths.

I looked for my Spokes East Lothian map and couldn’t find it. Not to worry, I thought. I was sure I would remember the route once I was on the road. I believed there was a national cycle network route to Gifford, and after that it’s pretty much straight up.

I set off without a paper map, without decent gloves (I could only find one of them), in shorts, with a woolly hat, an orange cap, and a windproof jacket that would last two minutes in heavy rain.

In Musselburgh I was forced into the door zone of parked cars by the male driver of a private hire taxi. In frustration I gestured to him as he bullied his way past. This turned out to be a mistake. He veered into a parking place further down the street, waited for me and roared abuse as I cycled past. He then pulled out and overtook me again. Again he roared. Finally he took off down a street to the right. I knew what he would do. Sure enough he was waiting for me up ahead. More abuse followed as I cycled past him. Shaken, but not put off, I pedalled onto the shared use path that runs along the River Esk up to Whitecraigs.

From Whitecraigs I joined NCN1, then turned left onto the route that takes you through a farm, up a steep hill, and up onto the Pencaitland railway path. It was oddly quiet, very few folk on bikes, just a couple of horse-riders and dog walkers. Was everyone watching the coronation? Were they put off by the weather? Or were they taking advantage of the long weekend and had gone further afield? The path, smooth red gravel, runs for around seven miles. It’s a pretty tree-lined route and it was busy with low flying blackbirds and floating white blossom.

There’s something meditative about cycling alone on a lightweight bike. I’d brought a bluetooth speaker for my handlebars and, when there was no-one else on the path, I listened to music, humming along, smiling, sometimes breaking into song. I got to the top of the railway path, stopped to watch a hare bounding into a hedgerow, found the NCN sign, turn left onto the road towards West Saltoun, cycled a few miles to East Saltoun and lost the NCN signs. I couldn’t remember whether the NCN continued to Gifford or whether it turned towards Haddington.

Without my paper map, and too lazy to use an online app, I followed the road signs to Gifford instead. While there was little traffic, the road was fast and several times I was passed by drivers who were too close doing what felt around 70mph. As a nervous cyclist (who wouldn’t be after being run over by an HGV driver) it was an uncomfortable ride. I pushed on as fast as I could, willing Gifford to come into sight. Despite the fear, it was exhilarating. Here I was powering myself through East Lothian on my own with my new knee. I felt strong, fit, liberated. What could possibly go wrong?

In Gifford, some twenty miles from Edinburgh, I stopped at the Lanterne Rouge, a much-loved cafe used by all sorts of cyclists. Oddly, there was only one other person there with a bike – an older man with an ebike who looked at me askance when I said I was going up to Whiteadder. It’s steep, he said, shaking his head. I know, I said, smiling. But I’d forgotten just how steep it was. The last time I’d been over the Lammermuirs it had been on an ebike from Dunbar.

It’s around nine miles to the reservoir from Gifford. I treated myself to avocado on toast with an egg on top and bought a fruit scone to take with me to eat at the top. I rammed that into my frame bag and set off up the hill. Google maps told me there were two routes to the reservoir, one that looped round through Garvald (11 minutes longer) and the shorter one that I knew.

I went via Garvald. It was the coronation. I was strong. I was fit. I was bold. I was a middle-aged woman at the top of my game. I was also clueless. I had no idea what was coming. The roads were narrow, quiet and beautiful. They were also very steep. There were at least two major fords with the road sweeping steeply down to them and sweeping even more steeply back up the other sides. Twice I had to get off. Not because I was out of breath but I simply didn’t have the strength in my legs to get the bike up what seemed like perpendicular roads.

Around a mile or so on from the second ford the thunder started and the sky smeared troubled grey. The air felt moist, thick.

I stopped, looked towards the hills. Looked back down the way I had come. There was no way I was going back through those fords and Garvald. I was committed. I pedalled up past a lone woman in a long skirt and walking boots (where was she was going?), we exchanged pleasantries, I continued up, and down came the rain.

It was a torrent, a maelstrom, a sudden dreadful sousing sent straight from the hereafter. There was nowhere to shelter. No sheds, no overhangs, not even a tree. I stopped, pulled on my hopeless jacket, and got back on the bike. Up up I went into the hills as the single-track road turned into a stream and then a river. My shoes filled with water. My black shorts slicked around my thighs. Thanks to my friend Al, I was wearing a Stolen Goat cycling cap. It kept the water off my glasses. I could see at least.

A driver loomed out of the dark towards me, flashed his lights and gave me a wave. I pedalled on. Each time I hit the crest of a hill another higher summit loomed into sight. And another. And another. I laughed. I muttered. I sang. I cranked up my speaker. Up I went with Shakira and Sonic Youth and Destiny’s Child and Beyoncé and Bob Dylan and Joan Jett and Patti Smith.

Still the rain came and still I kept going, the speaker spluttering in and out of life. I had no idea how far I had to go. I prayed that my tyres wouldn’t puncture. I prayed that my chain wouldn’t break. My legs pushed and turned, pushed and turned, and then, there it was, the slate glint of the reservoir on my left.

I didn’t stop to look at it. Didn’t stop to take a picture. I turned right onto the ‘main road’ and kept on pedalling. It’s one of the world’s great mysteries that the road is not downhill from there all the way to Gifford. There is however, a row of trees that provides a fulcrum of shelter. I stopped, ate half my damp scone too fast and hiccoughed.

By then my adrenaline had dissipated, my legs were heavy, my fingers red and numb and I was doused through. I was thirty miles from home. The music floundered and stopped. My phone died. I was less liberated and more fucked.

Up I rode towards Gifford. Up and up until the rain trembled and stopped and the sky breached. The downhill should have been a relief but I was trying not to get cold and trying to stop my brakes steaming and grating. Safe in Gifford I asked a local how to get onto the NCN. Turn right at the golf course he said. That turned out to be the same fast road (B6355) I’d come in on. I kept going. Losing my nerve I hugged the edge of the road, knowing that I’d only encourage the close-passers, which of course I did. But at East Saltoun I found the NCN again and I was on my way.

As I cycled back along the Pencaitland railway path I puzzled over whether it was uphill or downhill. For years I’d thought it was downhill towards Edinburgh until somebody recently told me the opposite. Cold and wet, my fingers now numb, I thought most of it was downhill. I do, of course, stand to be corrected.

Back in Edinburgh my hands were so cold it took me a minute or so to get my key into my door lock. It seems I am that person who no longer listens to limits. I cycle where I want to go. I cycle where I think I should be able to go. I follow my nose. I am hopeless at understanding online maps.

That night I ordered a new fancy waterproof cycling jacket from the Netherlands. There’ll be a Brexit bonus tax to pay when it arrives. In years to come we’ll remember where we were for this coronation. I’ll remember it fondly – on an old pink road bike getting a sousing on the Lammermuir hills.

The route I took is here. Take gloves. And a waterproof jacket. And shake that ass up those climbs.

Categories
short films

Safe Cycling for a Safer Planet

Categories
short films

Maisie – a short film about happiness

Categories
blog

How we lit up the night

It started, as it often does, on Twitter. Many of us had been reeling from the murders of Nicole Smallman and her sister Bibaa Henry, Sabina Nessa, and Sarah Everard. There had been constant media coverage about male violence against women. Women across the UK were demonstrating against male violence and misogyny, attending vigils, and running reclaim our streets events.

It was early October. I’d be out in Edinburgh’s city centre at the cinema and was cycling home alone in the dark down the Innocent Path. It’s a long narrow isolated path that has no escape routes and is contained on each side by thick foliage and walls. It can be lovely during the day, especially in summer. However, there are regular incidents of anti-social behaviour involving young men. Many women I knew refused to ride on it in the dark. I had been buzzed several times in the past by lads on fast noisy dirt-bikes. I was nervous.

As I came out of the tunnel, I saw a male cyclist with no lights far ahead of me. We were doing around the same speed. And then he disappeared. The hairs went up on the back of my neck. Where was he? How could he just vanish? I am not normally afraid, but the media stories had been getting to me. I slowed. My heart pumped. I took a few deep breaths. I felt ridiculous. I considered turning around to go back. But the alternative on-road route had fast heavy traffic. I was stuck. Dangerous aggressive drivers or a creepy path with a man who had just disappeared, presumably into the bushes?

I continued, and as I got around halfway down the path the man came out of the bushes twenty or thirty metres ahead of me, got on his bike and set off. There was no one else around. I kept behind him and finally lost sight of him when I emerged at the Duddingston Road West crossing.

Nothing happened to me. But I was spooked. I got home and took to Twitter. I told the story. I had an incredible response. So many women came forward and said they dreaded having to choose between dangerous drivers and secluded off-road paths. Some women said they stopped cycling in the winter. Others said they sometimes cycled on the pavements. There were reports of abuse, bullying and assault on the off-road paths, including along the canal tow path. Some men said they wouldn’t use the paths on their own at night either and preferred to cycle in groups. It was clear to me we had a problem. But what to do?

The City of Edinburgh Council has ambitious plans for new cycling infrastructure as part of its City Mobility Plan 2030. And during covid, new Spaces for People pop-up infrastructure went in. This included stretches of road with bollards and defenders used to provide temporary protected cycle lanes. The Council intends to convert much of this temporary infrastructure to permanent schemes, and the process is underway.

However, current infrastructure is woefully inadequate, and major cycling projects in the city have a history of long delays and objections. Additionally, the Council’s plans are not supported by everyone. At least one councillor has insisted that cyclists, including women, should use an isolated unlit muddy off-road path rather than having road space reallocated away from cars for active travel. This is despite sensible national policy on the travel hierarchy, which puts cycling above private car use.

I took to Twitter. I proposed a women’s evening critical mass/reclaim the streets ride in Edinburgh. Would anyone be interested in getting involved? Again, there was an overwhelming response. Yes, women said. We can help, women said. Great idea, women said. We can dress up, women said. A light up the streets vibe, women said.

Light up the streets vibe with the cargo bike.

And so, a group of amazing women came together. We had a meeting. We picked a date. We aligned with the UN’s 16 days of activism against gender-based violence. We recruited more women to help via Critical Mass Edinburgh and friends of friends. We set up a twitter account. We designed logos. We got invites out. We went to work on social media. We spread the word. We did risk assessments and chose a route and wrestled with roadworks and changed the route. We did recces of the route and inspected junctions and roundabouts and road surfaces.

We made films and took pictures of the off-road routes at night. We organised a photoshoot and wrote the press release. We borrowed a sound system and loaded it onto a cargo bike. We organised ride marshals. We selected the first aider. We borrowed tabards for our marshals. We weather-watched and we weather-watched and we weather-watched. We even baked (the word ‘we’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting here). All of this by a group of women who had never worked together before and were all juggling other responsibilities.

The day arrived. We were ready. It was clear and crisp, around two degrees. We knew of at least two feeder rides; from Portobello and Corstorphine. We didn’t know how many people would come. We were hoping for around a hundred. We would have settled for just ourselves. We got our gear on. We taped flashing colourful lights all over our bikes. We pulled on extra socks and extra sweaters and extra thermals. We did selfies for Twitter. We arrived at the Meadows for a final briefing.

And we watched the Meadows light up.

Marshals and riders

It is hard not to get emotional about this. 170 people came on a ride led by, organised by, and marshalled by women. 170 people came to tell councillors that we must have night-time cycling infrastructure that is safe for women and girls. 170 people came to reclaim our streets from traffic, just for an hour.

I stood on a park bench and gave the ride briefing. We held a minute’s silence for women and girls who have been killed on their bikes by drivers. We broke the silence with a wonderful mass bell ringing. And then we set off, the slowest and least confident riders at the front.

For the full visuals you’ll need to check out #LightUpTheNight on Twitter. Trust me, it was fabulous. So many smiles. So many waves. Friendly toots from drivers. Cheers from large groups of people waiting to get into clubs and bars. Cheerful nods from bus drivers. We took the streets. No, we reclaimed our streets. We were empowered. We were a carnival and we were fabulous. Our marshals zipped up and down the streets keeping the group safe, holding back drivers at junctions, and passing messages between the front and the rear of the ride. The wee girls behind the ride leader shouted instructions to those coming behind – slowing slowing! Stop stop! (Later we were told that one of these wee girls had lost her voice the next day, such was her enthusiasm.)

At some point I wished it would never end. But end it did. We pulled into the Meadows ringing our bells and headed for Sarah’s tree, down the specially lit boulevard on Jawbone Walk. There, we ate cakes, drank hot drinks from flasks, shared both the joy of the ride and the sadness behind its purpose. And on everyone’s lips? When is the next one? Spring, I said. Early Spring.

The end of the ride at Jawbone Walk

If you’d like to get involved with the next Light Up The Night cycle ride in Edinburgh, please contact lightupthenightcycleride@gmail.com

Categories
blog

Why we can’t have (safe) nice things – a list

We need parked cars to protect our houses from traffic noise.

We must prioritise pedestrians (then drivers) to save the NHS.

It will take eighteen months to get the double yellow lines in. So no point.

Double yellow lines? What double yellow lines? Where else will I park?

Pavement parking protects our children because otherwise drivers will drive too fast.

Drivers go faster now the protected cycle lanes are in.

Old people will trip over the defenders (in the road).

Sorry, there are not enough resources for enforcement.

Dropped kerbs are for parking on. Where else will I park?

Don’t be stupid, no one cycles in this busy dangerous road.

We have to park on the pavement otherwise emergency services won’t get through.

A single yellow line is sufficient for safe cycling and only at school times.

Wanting protected cycle lanes means you don’t support access for disabled people.

Wanting protected cycle lanes means you hate disabled people.

Don’t be stupid. Disabled people don’t cycle.

Children should walk to school, not cycle. Everyone walked in my day (1950s).

What do you mean it’s not safe? I cycled to school alone every day in that street (1950s).

Speed cameras and parking fines are revenue raisers for the clowncil.

Our business will die without the parking space outside it that we use to park our own cars.

I’m proud of my campaign against the 20mph roll out.

Fix pot holes and pavements instead of putting in expensive cycle lanes.

(In this densely populated neighbourhood) our customers all come by car (to buy small things).

Cyclists don’t shop.

Cyclists take over our villages and our cafes.

Cyclists are noisy.

Protected cycle lanes increase air pollution.

I’m a cyclist myself, but…

I’m all for cycling. But not this scheme. Or that one either.

Low traffic neighbourhoods lock disabled people into their houses.

Traffic evaporation is a lie, made up by the people who made up climate change.

Traffic inducement is also a lie, made up by the same idiots that made up traffic evaporation.

They can’t have a low traffic street because I live in a heavily trafficked street. It’s not fair.

People who live in low traffic neighbourhoods should pay higher council tax.

I will have to drive further and that will cause more pollution.

My visitors will have nowhere to park (I have two off-street parking spaces instead of a garden).

Drivers need to drive more miles and more often to maintain their skills during lockdown.

Cyclists need to understand that they make drivers nervous.

Closing that street to vehicle traffic will kill the high street (from the people who shop in out of area supermarkets).

We can’t have drivers queuing up behind stopped buses and therefore there’s no room for a cycle lane.

I’m just going in for a coffee, so is my mate and his mate, all morning.

I know there is a parking space over there but I’m parking here (on DYLs). So F*** off.

You can share that bus lane with buses and taxis, although it doesn’t operate 24 hours a day, and no, it isn’t scary at all.

The majority of people in the consultation want to keep the space for driving and parking – so that settles it.

You never use the (parked in/full of glass/isolated at night/just paint) lane so you aren’t getting any more.

Business said we shouldn’t do it (we helped with the press lines).

We weren’t individually consulted (if we were we would have vetoed the scheme).

We have to park on the pavement because that’s outside our house

SMIDSY.

Bloody cyclists don’t pay road tax or insurance or wear a helmet or hi-vis.

We need to build more capacity for cars. Two lanes each way isn’t enough.

Air pollution? What air pollution?

We can fix it all with electric vehicles.

CONGESTION!

Hard pressed motorists.

The war on cars.

We need the money for the bypass/dualing/extra lane/new roundabout.

It will increase journey times for our car journeys under five miles.

The Disabled.

The Economy.

The Inconvenience (of motorists).

I can’t find my way around the city any more in my car. It’s outrageous.

Cyclists filter past when I’m queuing in traffic. Wankers.

Cyclists jump red lights and ride on the pavement and ride three abreast.

A cyclist once almost ran me over.

Every day I am nearly hit by cyclists.

These things take time. Be patient.

We need to take the residents with us.

My cousin’s old auntie was nearly hit by a cyclist.

When I see them I drive at them deliberately.

You don’t live in the area and can’t have a say.

I drive through this area, why don’t I get a say?

Low traffic neighbourhood filters will cause lots of u-turns and be dangerous for children.

Residents should be consulted (a referendum so that they can maintain the status quo).

‘Go away, you’re rude’ (driver of SUV with engine running, and blocking a cul-de-sac outside a nursery when challenged on air pollution).

My elderly neighbour is having their mobility reduced because I drive them to the GP surgery, 300 metres away, and it will take two minutes longer.

Last night I saw an invisible cyclist with dark clothes and no helmet. INVISIBLE!

This list was compiled from from things I read, saw and heard last year as reasons for blocking the installation of protected cycle lanes, and ending pavement parking. Additions were made by people on Twitter.

Categories
Uncategorized

Podcasting

The Porty Podcast is produced by David Calder. Launched in late 2016, David highlights events and issues relevant to Portobello. For several months, David and I have been discussing the idea of a podcast featuring Spokes Porty. Spokes Porty campaigns for better walking and cycling infrastructure in and around Portobello. We’re always looking for interesting opportunities to communicate active travel issues with the people who live and work here.

We needed a hook though, and when the hooks came along the timing was never quite right for one or the other of us. We finally got our opportunity to put something together when David offered to use the audio files from the Spokes Porty short film series (still in production). We did the podcast interview over Skype, using a lav mic plugged into headphones to get decent audio quality. I’d bought the mic for a tenner for use on the film productions. David worked his edit miracles and the Spokes Porty podcast went live today. Thanks to a bit of lateral thinking, and some great collaboration, David made his podcast, Spokes Porty got some profile, and we got to use our film audio files twice.

Categories
short films

Yassine and Rayyan

Towards the end of 2019 I signed up for Edinburgh University’s Introduction to Filmmaking course. I had commissioned and produced three short films before, but I’d never directed or edited a film myself. In the first ten minutes of the first class, our tutor, Andrew Rooke, told us we were all there to make a film. We nodded and smiled. I don’t think I really believed him. But that man worked miracles. Over a ten week period, we went from concept to storyboards, from cinematography to sound design, from lighting to directing, and finally from editing to publishing. Every Thursday evening for three hours we slogged through theory and practice. Deadlines came and went, and I met every one of them. The last class was a mini film festival. We ate popcorn, showed our films, took questions from the tutor, and bowed. I was stupidly proud. I still am.

My initial concept proposal was to make a short campaigning film for Spokes Porty. Spokes Porty works to make walking and cycling safe, fun and practical for everyone in and around Portobello, Edinburgh. I thought it would be straightforward. No actors required. No script. No fancy lighting. All I had to do was find a cinematographer and some willing volunteers to get in front of the camera and talk about cycling.

However, as with all projects, things changed along the way. Despite intensive and careful planning, detailed call sheets and shot lists, everything that could go wrong did so. Filming on dark dreary Scottish winter days is not ideal. People get ill. Technology fails. I forgot how some things worked. I was stressed about recording the audio. I’d never fully understood that sound is more important than visuals. People will accept poor quality visuals if the sound is good. It doesn’t work the other way around.

But many things exceeded my expectations. Simon Russell, the cinematographer, was happy to work with a first time director for free. And the stars, local people aged from nine to ninety five, gave up their time to sit in front of a camera, speak into a microphone, and tell us about themselves with clarity, honesty and humour. It was humbling, inspiring, and fun.

Like everyone who goes out to record people’s feelings and experiences, I ended up with too much material for one short work. I didn’t want to waste it. So instead of making one film featuring four local people, I’m in the midst of making five films: four shorts and one longer version. I’ve been back to one person to record more audio, and I’ve put a GoPro on bike handlebars to get some more footage to use with it. I’ve also given the audio files to Porty Podcast. Podcast 151, supporting the films, is available from 4th January 2020.

This first film, launched on social media on the 1st January 2020, features Yassine and his son, Rayyan. It’s a simple love story about a father and son who travel around together on a bike. There was no time to cover the importance of character in documentary in the university course. Working with Yassine, I stumbled on it inadvertently. Yassine taught me that character is everything. First, find a character that is engaging, authentic, and has something important to say. Second, provide the conditions for that character to engage on screen and make an impact with an audience. Yassine did the first part. I hope we have managed to do the second.

Yassine and Rayyan – A short love story from Spokes Porty

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