On Sunday 6 September 2015 we decided almost on the spur of the moment to go and watch the Tour of Britain Stage 1 finish in Wrexham.
On the way I took the opportunity to climb 100 Climbs #90 - Horseshoe Pass. We parked in Llangollen and I initially rode the "wrong" way to warm up a little before turning around and starting the climb. I was not sure what to expect as it was classed as a 7/10 and 22 minutes of climbing. It was a reasonable day but there was some wind blowing. The road climbed gently out of Llangollen with nothing too taxing but then it gradually started to steepen. The lack of a proper warm up soon became apparent and my heart rate was too high and it was hard work even though it was never too steep. After a mile or so I realised that I had forgotten to start my Garmin Virb and did not start it until just before the cattle grid. Around this time I had also started to get my heart rate under control by easing off the pace slightly and I began to feel more comfortable as well.
I passed a couple on matching his 'n' her Giant bikes - we'd seen them cycling on the A5 towards Llangollen earlier, so they were making slow but steady progress:
A little further on this rather alarming sign appeared
A few hundred yards beyond the top is the "Ponderosa Cafe" - clearly a very popular motorcyclist haunt.
A quick turn around and small climb back to the top meant I was back on the proper descent. I saw the Giant pair again a few 100 meters from the top. The first pat of the descent was not great - I needed to avoid both potholes and sheep. However once through the horseshoe the surface was super smooth and I got up to 40mph on the descent for a couple of reasonable periods. Taking the cattle grid at 40mph was a moment of focus!
All to soon (after a short small climb) I was back in Llangollen and back at the car
Strava gave the stats here as:
Distance = 3.8m
Height Gain = 1026ft
Average Gradient = 5%
My Time = 22:15
My Average Speed = 10.3mph
Position = 1235 / 5616
I was pretty pleased with that. It was a 7/10 in "The Book" but I don't think it was that hard. The hardest part was at the bottom as the gradient kept changing making it hard to get a decent rhythm but as the climb progressed it become more consistent.
Here's a video from my Garmin Virb:
I do this climb quite often as I only live 11 miles from the summit. I usually bunny hop the cattle grid on the way down though! ;)
ReplyDeleteYes - I think its a case of being bold and taking the grid as fast as possible and trying to "float" over it
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