Cycling Plus

Donald Wells, 87, rode his 18-year-old Brompton from Land’s End to John O’Groats and inadverten­tly broke a record along the way...

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Ihave been a keen lifelong cyclist and would spend my weekends as a young man riding from my home near Heathrow to the coast of Kent and Sussex. I really took up the long-distance bike trips by myself after my wife Edna passed away 23 years ago. Prior to LEJOG my longest ride has been from southern France along the Camino de Santiago when I was 82. Last year I rode through the Loire Valley, I’ve also taken my old Brompton along the Rhine, the Danube, through parts of Italy and along the Romantic Road in Bavaria.

I usually follow the Cicerone cycling guides but for LEJOG I did veer off their course a bit. It took me five weeks and two days. I wanted to go at a leisurely pace and I’ve had the bike adapted by my local bike shop in Emsworth with smaller gears and a smaller BMX gear cog. I didn’t set out to break the record (Tony Rathbone holds the current Guinness World Record for completing the journey in 2014, aged 81), though I’m awaiting official clarificat­ion that I am the oldest man to cycle it. I kept all my receipts and took 700 photos along the way as evidence too. People I met would offer to sponsor me but I tell them there’s no need – it’s just my annual holiday! I didn’t allow for the Hay-on-Wye festival taking place and found that everywhere between Monmouth and Hereford was booked up, so I spent the night on a bench outside Asda! The next day a couple who’d heard about me stopped me on the road, took me in for dinner and put me up for the night. They were popcorn importers – you do meet the most interestin­g people. I really enjoyed the long climb up the Trough of Bowland, when I looked it up afterwards I found out how it’s a tough training course. I tell people I have four gears, three on the bike and one for hills - walking! Scotland was very pleasant indeed. I enjoyed staying at Crask Inn, riding through Glencoe, Lockerbie and along the River Clyde cycle way. I felt fine after I finished the ride – no aches and pains. I don’t rush and tear around, I take it easy.

I tell people I have four gears, three on the bike and one for hills – walking!

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