Category: Frome VeloJam

  • 2010 BCC Calendar

     

    Now I might have left this a bit too late, but… I hope to put together a 2010 Black Canon Collective Calendar which will be ready in time for Christmas! The calendar will be sold for a reasonable sum to raise funds for some of the projects which we are working on (skills area and Groovy Blue trail). Now we are dealing with a very short time scale and I need pictures FAST! I want the calendar to show all the different aspects of bike riding (XC, DH, Velodrome, cobble wobble) digging, racing or general ride related faffing that BCC members get themselves into. The only rule is that the photo must be of a BCC member and it must be of sufficient quality to be printed on A5, but the rest is up to you. To have any hope of this project working, I need YOU to get all your best photos and upload them onto the Black Canon Collective Flickr account before Sunday 15th November.

    http://www.flickr.com/groups/blackcanoncollective/pool/

    A select panel of judges will then select the finest 12 photos for the Calendar.

    If you have any questions please e mail me on simon.truelove@blackcanoncollective.co.uk

    Ta

    Simon

  • Cobble Wobble – Full Results (updated)

    Only a few days left until prize giving at Live2Ride on Saturday, so if your category details are wrong or missing please let us know so that we can correct them.

    Prizes will be given for the winner and runner up of each category, contact Live2Ride for full details.

    http://www.live2ride.co.uk/

    edited results

  • King for a Year (or a day at least)

    Throne

    When I was told that there was to be a race up Catherine Hill in Frome a few weeks ago I got a little excited. This sort of event is perfect for me and I was really confident about it. Luckily Rich from Live2Ride kept asking about entry as I probably wouldn’t have ever sorted it out!
    At the last minute I volunteered to marshall for the event and went along to a familiarisation session with the other volunteers who consisted of members, friends and family of the BlackCanonCollective (big thanks to you all, without you, this event would have just been a pipe dream). I was surprised to see a few people practising going up the hill. I was quite jealous and wished I had a bike to give the hill a bash. Rumours were bandied around about 39 seconds this, 29 seconds that. All these times seemed fast and anybody who’s ever walked up Catherine Hill will realise just how quick that was. I decided not to have a go and wait till the big day to give it some.

    Sadly on the Wednesday I finished work late and so did my future Queen. We had arrived a little late to help marshall, there was already loads and they were doing an admirable job.
    There were people lining the course, I couldn’t get past. Cheers and beers were the order of the evening. Flags, bells, and clackers assaulted the senses.

    I was glad to see so many differing cycle enthusiasts tackling the hill. Especially the kids riding, they were amazing! Credit has to go out to the one kid who gave it all on a highly geared bike, he was barely moving when he decided to get off. He will go all the way next year for sure.

    20 or so riders through my stomach was full of butterflies. I was checking out the different bikes and working out what was best. Road bikes with hard tyres were skipping and sliding everywhere (waaay too much lycra at times), the folding bikes were bending and a flexing. As for the guy in the 3 wheel recumbent thing, you are crazy!
    The best bikes seemed to be mountain bikes with slicks and fastest looking was Damian Mead was on his 24” race bmx cruiser. I was contemplating getting my race bmx but stuck with the road bike.
    Lots of people were going for warm ups and sweating before it all started, I wish I had too but I was having too much fun clapping and cheering. I had one sprint up Bath Street and pedalled back down. Time for my run.

    My bike was held (by a very brave Caroline) so I could clip into my pedals, my gears already selected, all I had to do was go after the count down.
    3, 2, 1, go… I held my breath and I started lifting and pushing on the pedals, minimising bouncing up and down to keep traction on the cobbles. The first corner came up real fast and my plans to stay right of the drain didn’t work. As I was turning, the bike was drifting a little so I just kept pedalling and aimed for drain and tape. Wow, that was close and fortunately I kept all my speed and just picked up more cranking harder and harder. The crowd was nuts, my concentration was on the gradients and keeping my upper body still. I thought I saw the finish line and hung up a little but then I saw the line further in the distance so got back on to the pedals and gave it some. Coming up to the line I was moving real fast and people had stopped cheering. I realised at this point that there were too many people standing just behind the line and I wasn’t going to stop so had to back down a little and swap my hands to the brakes and grab the anchors.
    Time to breath again and breath hard I did for 10 minutes after. Marjory from the Club came running over and kissed me and told me I was King now. I wanted to know how much under 27 seconds I was so I had to check. 23.54 seconds, nearly 4 seconds faster. I was confident that in the remaining 30 minutes nobody would get me off the throne. Taking my crown and sitting in the throne I ended up chatting to the Tour director and was kissed by the naturally beautiful Tour girls. Amazing!

    I then had to go into the main arena for the presentation with the Mayor of Frome. What a top bloke and he was talking about doing the same thing next year. That’s all I remember talking about as I was giddy from all the excitement! The presentation was on a ramp in front of hundreds, I was back with the Tour chicks but no kisses this time and was presented with the best trophy ever for a cycle enthusiast; a mini bike frame made by Curtis bikes embedded in local stone.

    Time now to collect my girlfriend to watch the fireworks and then head off with the BlackCanonCollective members to The Griffin for a large round of Cobble Wobble ale. After all, I am the King of the Cobbles.

    Ingredients for 23.54 seconds:

    57cm Trek ALU road bike
    Clip in pedals
    50 x 23 gear selection (for the geeks) with no changes
    25c rear tyre at 80psi
    2 x Helen’s Millionaires Slice
    1 bottle of water
    1650W of leg power (had a go on a WattBike a few months ago)

    Thanks to all those who marshalled, the BlackCanonCollective, Live2Ride, Frome council members for being so cycle friendly, all the crowds and finally my lovely lady Helen.

  • Cobble Wobble – Stewards Enquiry

    With a cobble wobble time of 23.54 seconds Neil Cousins obliterated the entire field, but many people have raised serious concerns over the feasibility of such a blisteringly fast time…

    …so in the interest of fair play the BCC cobble wobble stewards have launched an enquiry:

    Initial findings do suggest that an unfair advantage may have been gained by the addition of a 850W McKeller angle grinder.

    It’s believed that the modified power tool was used to accelerate the rear wheel of the bike, providing a massive advantage for the start, middle and end of the race run.

    If you look closely you can see how Neil carefully strapped the grinder to his bike, a mod that went unnoticed at the start of the event.

    Neil has refused to comment at this stage, sighting a recent diet of home made cakes and local ale as valid explanations for his superhuman performance.

    Despite many attempts we’ve been unable to start the power tool in question, so have closed the enquiry. However, should any further evidence of foul play come to light we will re-launch the investigation.

    Race Wining Bikeor illegally modified machine?

  • Cobble Wobble – An Annual Event

    The town is still buzzing, and it seems that the Mayor is already thinking about next year. Great News!

    The Mayor of Frome, Councillor Damon Hooton, who flagged the riders off in Frome and travelled to Bideford to see them race across the finish line, said: “There are real benefits to the economy and regeneration in having a race of this stature coming to a small market town. Last night in Frome we had 3,000 to 5,000 people out on the streets enjoying the Velo Jam, and no trouble – the police joined in the Cobble Wobble. We will go ahead with the Velo Jam and the Cobble Wobble again next year; we can build a whole weekend of events, and if the race wants to come back to Frome, too, we’ll welcome it.”

    www.thisissomerset.co.uk

  • Cobble Wobble – Full Results

    We’ll be publishing the results with category breakdown over the weekend.

    Prizes will be awarded on Saturday 26/09/09 to the King of the Cobbles, and the winner and runner up in each class.

    Red cells mean that we have no category info for that rider, so if your category info is missing, send us an e-mail by Friday 25th and we’ll update the results.

    Cobble Wobble - Full Results

  • Cobble Wobble – Rave Reviews

    It seems that our little cobbled hill climb has been very well received:

    Hugh Roberts, Chief Executive of The Tour of Britain, said: “Last night in Frome was something special, especially the cobble wobble, and today the crowds are impressive. The best thing about it is the amount of school kids out there in every town and village really getting behind the race. It’s heartening to see and this is exactly what The Tour is all about..”

    www.devon.gov.uk