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One day rain for the East coast (perhaps 50 mm), the next day rain forecast for the West. |
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You will be passing my house in the northeast could pop in for a cuppa, maybe do a few local lanes upto Alnwick or take the coastal route to Berwick, Once over the forth bridge head for Perth then head for glen-she though the Cairngorms upto Inverness, once you hit Alness you can take a easy road round the coast or cut across do some great rural camping, all great riding road what ever you do m8 |
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Walkabout, I don't like that weather forecast at all...To follow the sunshine I would have to do some slalom there... ROYMACNIC, reggie3cl: Thank you for your recommendations, I will add them on to my plan. Seems like my plan will have a quite good shape now. I wish I could have some more time. |
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I am based in Sutherland - some great biking roads to be had. The route up the east coast to John o Groats - A9 is fine. Your suggested route along the north coming down the west coast is fantastic. The A9 actually start near Dunblane. Be very aware of the average speed cameras all the way north and south on the A9. having said that the scenery is good so enjoy the 60 mph speeds.
Great campsite at Clactoll just a few miles from Lochinver Some places for good food. House of Bruar. Blair Atholl. Just off the A9. Might appear at first instance expensive but huge portions. Lairg- The Pier. very popular with bikers who do the loop from Inverness round through Ullapool easily done in a few hours or longer Kylesku hotel- fantastic location - the local seafood is very good. Fish n chips Lochinver. The Bistro. Just as you enter the village on the right. Island hopping is good too- from Ullapoll to Stornoway then the Uists. The ferry from Lochboisdale to Oban is worth a trip. Divert to Mull and head for Iona. Or if time is an issue just take the road south from Durness in the north all the way south to Ullapool A835. Divert on A832 for Poolewe and Gairloch. For breath taking ride divert to Applecross just north of Kishorn - "Belach Na Ba" Good camping at Applecross and the local hotel serves greta food The A87 is another great biking road to Kyle of Lochalsh and the bridge to Skye- where there are some good B & Bs and camping- Sligachan is good- a bit rough camping but the scenery is awesome. From Skye take the ferry from Armadale to Mallaig and pick up the A830 to Fort William - now this is a great biking road with long sweeping bends and scenery too. Rough camping at Arisaig on the beach. I could go on and on- but you can't go wrong with the highlands in what every route you take. My advice though is to take some midge spray- the little bastar** are nuisance Good luck and safe riding |
I'm a p/time coach with durham FA and some of my weekends are took up, if closer the time I'm free then yes I'll take you up some of the lighter lanes
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Thank you for so much for such a useful info MR Sloane, much appreciated. I'm currently undecided if I should take a ferry from Ullapool to Isle of Lewis or if I should continue to Isle of Sky and take a ferry from there. This "Belach Na Ba" near Applecross sounds really tempting.
If I took a ferry from Ullapool and then took a ferry from Barra to Oban, I still probably could head north from Oban to experience this famous "Belach Na Ba". It all depends on timing, I have currently no idea how fast will I be going and what is the distance I will be doing per day. I've heard about the midges and I hope the mosquito spray will solve the problem |
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The pass of the cattle is a case in point: ideally, you would ride it in both directions - it is not a particularly long way from, say, Lochcarron to Applecross but you just have to stop and take it all in. From the top, Scoth mist allowing, you will see a great view of Skye. Similarly, winding roads following the coast do take time to traverse - the single track road to Ardnamurchan "goes on for ever". |
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Updated 2015 route file (GPX) here. |
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I wish there was a good app for the phone that could open your gpx file, it works perfectly on my laptop with garmin basecamp but with basecamp on the iphone it just shows all the waypoints connected with straight lines which is not very useful. The same with other apps I tried: OSMANd MAps, GPXviewer and GPX tracker. Does anyone know a good app that can edit gpx files? Have a great trip Tim, you must be starting sometime soon |
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1. Within Scotland your route is usually channelled by the landscape/geography. So waypoints to aim for will do the trick IMO, rather than trying to follow an "exact" route. 2. I've just loaded the GPX download provided here into Mytrails running on a smart phone (I am experimenting with Mytrails at present). I saved it into my phone as Tracks rather than a set of waypoints. The result is that it also shows as mainly straight lines between the waypoints except for 2 or 3 routes/tracks that follow roads around the north york moors. |
All news to me
This might be what is happening with the file download:-
"Choose either TCX or GPX file format and click the DOWNLOAD button: TCX - includes any turn by turn directions/notes and lets you specify a Virtual Partner speed/pace GPX - no directions or notes, just the route (less storage space needed)" - - abstracted from looking around the web (my red highlighted text). |
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I'm riding a KTM 690 Enduro with black panniers, might see you on the road. Ride safe and have fun. Tim |
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http://nycc.org/message-board/garmin...rections/57226 Garmin have their own ways of handling data! :innocent: I would just follow the waypoints: Scotland is not a complicated network of roads, outside of the cities. |
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