So yesterday we fetched the van to check on it; it looks like the precautions we're taking are sufficient as despite a cold snap and storm force gales the van started-up straightaway and everything inside looked fine. A quick trip to Leek enabled us the check the tyre pressure and we wandered ourselves home via Ashbourne and Hartington stopping off at The Charles Cotton Hotel for a tasty lunch by a log fire, followed by a short walk a little way up the Dove Valley towards Pilsbury. The landscape is looking very wintry now, all the leaves have fallen and the tracks muddy after the recent storms.
We kept the van on the drive overnight. The plan was to play with some new toys today. After much deliberation we finally took the plunge and bought two electric bikes. It was a toss-up between the Chinese built budget models - a local shop sells Juicy Bikes, not mind crunchingly expensive and jolly looking, available in a variety of colours - or, more expensive German built models, similar to the e-bikes we hired in Austria last summer.
We knew that lifting them onto the bike rack was not going to be easy. E-bikes are heavy, around 24kg. It's certainly a two person job to get them up onto the bike rack. We struggled a bit getting them on at first, but after a couple of goes on doubt we will work out exactly the best way to load eack bike and the easiest places to secure them.
We cycled six miles or so down the nearby Tissington/High Peak Trails. Originally part of a railway line connecting Buxton to Ashbourne at least the trails have gentle gradients. It takes a bit of practise to coordinate the gears with the boost you get from the electric motor, but both of us are experienced, if un-practised cyclists, and we soon were beginning to get the hang of it. At Parsley Hey, near Crowdicote, the track forks. We headed down the High Peak Trail, mainly because it is less exposed than the Tissington Trail and the cold blustery breeze was unpleasant. We've cycled these trails in the past with the kids, a head wind makes for hard-going usually, the bit of extra oomph you get from the motor certainly made a difference.