Product Details
Cycling in the UK: The Official Guide to the National Cycle Network

Cycling in the UK: The Official Guide to the National Cycle Network
By Nick Cotton, John Grimshaw

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #59439 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-04-19
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

Customer Reviews

A guide that has lost its way.1
I have to say, from the off, that there are some very fine photographs in this book, the paper is good quality and....OK, who am I kidding? Truth-to-tell, there is little about this book that merits the sub-title, "The Official Guide To The National Cycle Network".

What I was fully expecting, and didn't get, were detailed route maps and directions for all the NCN routes.

What I did get, and didn't want, were huge swathes of photographs of people on bikes, bikes propped up against signposts, occassional landmarks, odd 'artistic' sculptures, people on bikes, more people on bikes, and some attractive landscape shots. Oh, and did I mention the people on bikes?

What Sustrans have produced here is a 303 page, full-colour publicity brochure, which they then have the gall to sell you as a guide, which merely cherry picks Sustrans own choice of routes, of which only a few in each of the nine geographical sections are supported by full maps and details.

To illustrate the problem, take the area where I live; The Wirral, Merseyside. The 'guide' includes this in its 'Northern' section; an area stretching from Chester to Berwick (South-North) and Scarborough to Barrow (East to West), a not inconsequential chunk of geography. Yet, out the 18 chosen routes in this vast area, ranging in length from 3 miles to 26 (average length just - 11 miles) only 6 routes, totaling just 96 miles, are supported by full maps and details. One of the chosen routes not supported with maps and details, a route of 18 miles no less, is dismissed in just 85 words, including the useful closing phrase, "... before continuing to the delights of Scarborough's Victorian Seafront - and a well-earned cup of tea". Thanks for that Sustrans. I might not have known I could have a cuppa after this ride unless you had told me.

What Sustrans should have done, is to have produced a book of this size for each of the nine geographical areas seperately and dropped half the photographs, thus affording the space to give every NCN route a full map and adequate route descriptions and in doing so produce a useful recource for cyclists.

My advice? Buy an OS Explorer Map for your area and use it with the route outlines on the Sustrans web site. Alternatively, buy one of Sustrans own maps if, by chance, it covers your locale. Either way, don't bother buying this book. In my opinion it's a waste of money.

Unimpressive on first use2
Having purchased this book last week I was eager to try out one of the leisure rides recommended by it and chose the 21 mile route from Southampton to Portsmouth (part of National Route 2). The book grades this as easy and indeed, with the exception of one or two short uphill stretchs which it omits to mention and which might force less fit riders to walk for a hundred yards or so here and there, it is easy - to cycle, that is.

But the mapping (which is not provided for all routes) is wholly inadequate, and the absence of sufficient National Cycle Network signs on the ground - after the midway point, I saw none - makes significant parts of the ride a confusing, halting progression of short rides punctuated by stops to peer at the map, often with little chance of finding the route again. I am experienced at map reading, but went astray quite a few times, especially in the section between Warsash and Lee-on-Solent, where the ride heads inland and through fields for a few miles. At one point the route was barred by a fence and it took me a while to figure out that the fence shouldn't be there and climb over it (bike and all). Much of the time I found it easier to follw the 'Solent Walk' signs, together with my own knowledge of the Solent area based on sailing there!

One might argue that - inadequate mapping aside - none of this is the book's fault. But it is the 'official' guide, supported by Sustrans and it strikes me that they need to think harder about how the book and the reality work together. One might also argue that Sustrans publish detailed route maps which I could also use. They do, but not for this route.

It's a shame, because I am happy to support Sustrans who are behind some excellent signed routes in South East London where I live, with the support of Southwark and Greenwich councils in particular. But I have reached the conclusion that this book is just a 'chartiy purchase' and gives nothing like enough guidance or detail to inexperienced cyclists or those unfamiliar with the area of each route. Better to invest in their detailed route maps, where available, or a decent OS map where not.

Good Introduction4
Actually this book seems far more useful than previous reviews suggest. It seems unlikely that this book could be a complete guide to all of the Sustrans network. If starting out with family cycling it seems to have good suggestions for all areas. I nearly did not buy this book as reviews so negative but I am glad I did.