Has anyone ever done an overnight cycle?
Has anyone ever done an overnight cycle?
I wanna try doing this some day
(By overnight I mean set off in the evening (well rested) and cycle until the morning)
Has anyone ever done an overnight cycle?
I wanna try doing this some day
(By overnight I mean set off in the evening (well rested) and cycle until the morning)
I haven't; however I do shorter night rides in the country (mountain valleys mainly) sometimes (2 hours max).
The problems I noted :
Overall, my personal experience is quite opposite to the experiences I had read before: not so much peace and relaxation for me. Except when going up, when my speed is low, but then this is switching to another kind of suffering :-D
PS: ah, and there is also the question of clothing. I found it rather difficult to judge what to wear when leaving home; the cold of the night (and the temperatures which will probably drop as time goes) versus the heat of the effort. On the other hand, I only practice leisure cycling, which means that before I started riding a bit at night, I could almost always pick the day and generally the time of my rides, so that they were all sunny and dry and warm(ish) or hot, and I would typically go with a just a jersey (simply adding a vest for the morning start of 10-12 hours rides); someone who commutes or trains for competition is already used to plan for riding in shitty and changing weather & temperature conditions.
Thanks for these points, they are very useful to know
I used to work with a guy that did this - rode overnight for about 12 hours to meet his friends at the beach. He told me it was really peaceful especially riding through small towns around 2-4am.
Yes, I think it must be a wonderful feeling
Sounds awesome. I've done full moon rides where you specifically start after dark, but not a full overnight
Sounds dangerous, would this be on the road or on a trail?
Probably on a road though countryside, although obv well lit
although obv well lit
A few personal advices about that:
On one hand, car would more likely to speed at night making it more dangerous. On the other hand, if you have good lighting and wear retroreflective clothing you're gonna shine like a beacon, making it safer.
About cars, my experience (in the country/mountain) is :
This is more concern than most drivers ever show in day time, and according to my theory, it puts people into a different state of mind. Naturally you also occasionally encounter the guy who takes night for a chance to drive like a rally driver. Then you just hope that the presence on the road of a cyclist in the middle of the night is something that appears sufficiently suspect and incongruous to the driver's eyes, that it will exert extra care when closing in.
One other point to take into account is the drinking habits in the area: the guys who can get a bit hot in the late evening, and those who are wasted/tired when they drive home from parties and clubs between 4 and 6 AM. It also depends on the local driving habits: in the area where I live now, they really drive like shit in day time, in normal condition (they don't drive fast like where I grew up, they just do whatever & anything all the time). So it doesn't get much worse when they are drunk :-D
As far as I am concern, I am wary of dusk and dawn (and wait for the night to be almost pitch black to start), for at dusk/dawn there may be one of those few drivers who drive without a light, either because they forgot to turn them on, or because they believe they know better and don't need lights.
(In my answers in this thread, I often say 'I' and 'my' because I believe that one's experience can vary a lot depending on the area, the specific roads used, and one's riding habits and goals. For example, I have the feeling that English cyclists commonly ride on highways on which I'd refuse to put a tyre).