| |
 |
Peddling two-wheeled dreams, Tim Dawson (1997)
Original article that first appeared in The Sunday Times 22 June
1997
|
Those parts of Scotland that lie between Edinburgh and Glasgow do not
receive a good press. It is hard, travelling from one city to the other,
to form a favourable impression of that which separates west from east.
The journey by road is by repute the most boring stretch of motorway in
Britain.
The train is not much better. Like the car trip, it is difficult not
to resent the time it takes. Somehow, the motley assortment of shale-oil
bings, derelict mine workings and a disintegrating old hospital obscure
whatever views there are. The more jaded with the journey you are, however,
the more of a revelation the Edinburgh to Glasgow cycle route will be.
Between Scotland's largest cities lies a huge expanse of stunning countryside.
And you can ride through its heart on a tiny rolling ribbon of road from
which faster forms of transport are invisible. It takes you across moorland,
beside dense forest, over fields and past a mighty reservoir. The melancholy
remnants of long-dead industries punctuate the landscape and sculpture
is sprinkled along the route.
First the bad news. The Edinburgh-Glasgow railway path joins the towns
of Airdrie and Bathgate, not the rival cities. Sustrans, the lottery-funded
charity that developed the route, plans to complete the track by the millennium
or thereabouts. Until then, you have to get to the start by more conventional
means. It is quite possible to cycle from the centre of both cities by
braving big fast roads. It is a short drive, however, from either city
or you can take your bike on the train to Airdrie or Bathgate. The route's
other great drawback is awful signposting.
Access points to the path are hardly marked at all, and the information
boards along the route are too complicated. In Bathgate, at the centre
of the town, turn down Whitburn Road. Go past the John Menzies Jubilee
Social Club and pick up the path that starts beside the Ani Bradken steel
works. In Airdrie it is slightly easier - head out of town on the A89
and look for the sign for Drumgelloch station - the route starts where
the platform ends. Once you are on the track, stick with it, and do not
take turnings to the north or south.
Perhaps because it is hidden, to join the path is to enter a different
world. On the line of an old railway, some of the route lies in a cutting
whose steep sides are thick with indecently vigorous greenery. Wild orchids
grow on the banks, swifts and kestrels swoop overhead. Only the bits of
old platform that rise from the grassy bank give away its original use.
Although it celebrates its fifth anniversary this month, the route is
little known. England's flagship cycle path, from Bristol to Bath, has
become the velocipede's equivalent of the M25, such is the two-wheeled
congestion.
By contrast, you can sometimes pedal through West Lothian and North
Lanarkshire without seeing another human being. Riding among the sheep
and cows on the first part of the route out of Bathgate has an almost
eerie feel. The path is a fabulously smooth strip, barely 6ft wide. Away
from traffic noise and any real signs of development, only the wind in
your ears fills the quiet.
The sculpture along the way celebrates the area's industries, present
and past. At Bathgate stands a massive pouring crucible. There is a series
of collapsing metal boxes at one turn and a pair of fishermen fashioned
from scrap canisters further on. Best of all is the gateway at Aramadale.
To enter or leave the countryside proper, you must pass through a massive,
rusting steel keyhole. The real quality of the sculpture is that it blurs
the distinction between that which has been specifically placed beside
the path and the bits and pieces left over from another age. A curious
concrete telephone box in the middle of a field, for example, has all
the sculptural quality of some of the carefully designed pieces, but is
untouched by artists' hands.
As the path reaches the Hillend reservoir it swoops down along the shore.
Across the water lies a dense green forest, at the far end the out line
of Caldercruix peeps over the trees. There are boats for hire and a pub,
the only refreshment stop for those without a well-stocked saddlebag.
Tony Grant, regional manager of Sustrans in Scotland, accepts cycling
is not yet a part of the culture here. But he believes as more routes
open, a new generation of cyclists will be attracted to them. "Our
real objective is to get people who don't use their bikes at all on to
the paths," he says. "Our routes may never be as busy as some
in England because they don't run through such dense centres of population.
But you can be sure of an uncongested, safe ride, whatever your previous
experience on a bike."
Airdrie-Bathgate is just one of several cycle routes now open in Scotland.
The oldest and most popular links Glasgow with Loch Lomond. Pick up the
path on the river side of the SECC, from where it goes down the Clyde
and, at Dumbarton, up beside the banks of the Leven. Dundee has just opened
a 26-mile route around the city that takes in railway paths, minor roads
and specially constructed tracks - it is fairly well signposted from the
city centre. And in Fife, plans for a massive network of cycle paths are
well under way. A series of routes in the Howe of Fife open this summer
- the Alloa to Dunfermline route should follow closely behind.
For the really ambitious, Sustrans now produces comprehensive maps of
its routes from Carlisle to Glasgow and Glasgow to Inverness. Both routes
take in minor roads as well as converted railway paths. Their combined
length is more than 400 miles, so plan for plenty of practice runs before
you set out to cross the country.
Tim Dawson June 97
|
Bookmark this on Delicious
|