Cycling Plus

Ned Boulting

In the end, on the other side of this virus, maybe the bicycle wins...

- NED BOULTING SPORTS JOURNALIST

Ned looks ahead, beyond the crisis

“There is a constant, faithful touchstone. It’s sitting in the bike shed. And it’ll wait until you’re ready”

It certainly won hearts and minds when Gan Ruyi, a 24-year-old doctor from the Jingzhou province of China rode over 300 kilometres through freezing weather to volunteer her services at the peak of the Wuhan Covid-19 outbreak. Sometime after that, in a hugely evocative video posting, one of her colleagues in the locked-down ghost city posted a video of the horrifying work she was undertakin­g. After a long shift battling the symptoms of this epoch-defining virus, she rode home through the grey, deserted streets, completely alone, singing to herself. Somehow, the fact that she was on a bike made this a profoundly affecting moment.

At the end of the 2018 Tour de France, I picked up a second-hand book, wanting to distract myself from the race. It was a work of science fiction called Ravage by a significan­t author called René Barjavel. Set at some distant point in the future, it describes Paris as a dystopian city, whose skies are filled with electric rockets and whose citizens live in a technologi­cal bubble that alienates them from both the planet and from each other. The crux of the drama comes when the electricit­y fails. Everything crashes and before long the French capital is on fire. A handful of fugitives escape the inferno by heading for the suburbs, where an eccentric former racing cyclist has kept an antique collection of push bikes. The bicycles turn out to save the lives of our band of heroes. Together, on these old-fashioned steeds, they head south to rural Provence, where they find clear running water, orchards, meadows and salvation.

It’s an enjoyable, heavy-handed parable. But I love the fact that it has at its heart, the bicycle. The quaint 19th century invention has not greatly been altered in over 100 years. Strip away all the peripheral performanc­e gubbins and you still have the chain, the pedals, the bar, two wheels, a saddle and a frame. The anatomy of a bike is immutable. And its antiquity is its potency. There is some evidence that during the outbreak of Spanish flu at the end of WW1, the bicycle industry enjoyed a minor resurgence, as people sought to self-isolate from mass transport. I wonder if there will be evidence of a similar phenomenon when all this awfulness passes.

Beyond its obvious practical benefits just now (and they have been the same for decades; health, wealth and reliabilit­y), there is a deeper message contained within the impulse to turn to the tried and tested in moments of great uncertaint­y. It’s the analogue urge in a digital age. In these days of crisis I have spent less and less time searching out immediate news feeds, and more and more time leafing through pages of fiction by novelists I’d never read before, and have thus been transporte­d to provincial Austria in the 1980s and 16th century Constantin­ople. These places seem preferable to the here and now.

In a way, that impulse to change reality is what has driven people onto bikes ever since they first became a thing. They literally altered the course of genetic evolution in the countrysid­e, as people started more readily to forge relationsh­ips with villagers more than a day’s walk away. And they continue to provide answers that are startling in their simplicity when faced with intractabl­e-seeming problems. They transport you, literally and figurative­ly, to whatever destinatio­n you care to reach. They are magic.

It is because she was on a bicycle that the Wuhan doctor started to sing. Had she been behind the wheel of a car, she would not have felt moved to do so. She would not have been breathing the same dank air, nor feeling the same eerie emptiness. I want to tell you, in the happier times which will come, that, despite all the upheavals in your world, there is a constant, faithful touchstone. It’s in the bike shed. And it’ll wait until you’re ready.

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 ??  ?? Ned is the main commentato­r for ITV’s Tour de France coverage and editor of The Road Book, now in its second edition. He also tours his own one-man-show.
Ned is the main commentato­r for ITV’s Tour de France coverage and editor of The Road Book, now in its second edition. He also tours his own one-man-show.

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