Two More Ways To Get Singletrack Delivered To Your Door

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Looking out the window and not quite feeling the urge to ride your bike? Looking at the pop up ads on the internet and thinking ‘my loved one doesn’t want chocolates, they want adventure!’? We have the solution to both those problems: Issue 117of Singletrack Magazine.

If you want to treat yourself, you can preorder it today and it will be posted directly to your home, so you can read it and think about whether you’re ready to go outside yet.

OR

If you want to treat a loved one to a Valentine’s gift that keeps on giving, you can order them a Gift Subscription In A Box, and our very own Mr Love (yes, he really is called Mr Love) will wrap it with care and send you Issue 117 to open along with a DVD of Mountain Biking: The Untold British Story and a subscription to Singletrack for the year ahead.

Let’s see what’s inside…

What’s the story behind the contents page image? What an image!

We’ve got our usual dose of adventure for you, with three UK based rides to inspire you to hit the trails.

Issue 117, Pete Scullion - coffin road - scotland
Pete Scullion heads deep into the Scottish Highlands

Path of a Prince – Pete Scullion takes us on another historical Coffin Road tour, this time in the wilds of Scotland, in the footsteps of Bonnie Prince Charlie.

issue 117, trail hunter, tom fenton, borders
Tom Fenton goes hunting for more great trails

Trail Hunter – Border Blasting – Tom Fenton heads to the northern fringes of England in search of more of the best trails the UK has to offer, this time skirting the Scottish/English border on a frigid day.

Issue 117, classic ride, tom hutton, dunnerdale, the lakes
Blue sky day out in the Lake District? What luck!

Classic Ride – Duddon Valley – Tom Hutton takes us on a tour on the Western side of the Lake District – away from the big tourist crowds, but still big on scenery.

Maybe one of your rides will have you pondering the meaning of life? In this next feature we take a look at people who have found a new life in the bike industry.

Issue 117
Cy from Cotic wheelie-ing his way to a new life.

Quit Your Job – We look at people who have made the leap from ‘normal’ jobs to working in the bike industry. Could you quit the rat race and turn your hobby into a job?

We hesitate to call this next one a ‘technical feature’, as that might imply a level of skill and competence you’re unlikely to find. But you will get an entertaining read from our Technical Editor, Wil.

Can’t see the video above? Click here.

Bamboozled – Wil takes on a build-your-own bamboo bike kit. Will he glue himself to the frame? Will he be attacked by a panda? Will he build himself a bike, or a bike shaped object? Wil tells us the tale through his epoxy-induced high.

Back on more familiar technical feature territory, we have two test features for you this issue:

Bimbling not compulsory, even without bounce.

Bike Test – Unsprung Heroes – Chipps checks out fully rigid bikes from Kona, Pinnacle and Surly and discovers that no suspension doesn’t mean no fun. It just needs a re-evaluation of your outlook.

Issue 117
Platform pedals piled perfectly.

Group Test – Platform Clip Ins – Wil checks out eight pairs of pedals with platforms for support as well as cleats for security. Full reviews of the best four will be published in this issue, along with summaries of the runners up.

Light relief and thought provoking frivolity are included, because none of us should take life too seriously:

Room 101
Charlie The Bikemonger sets all judicial process to one side and passes his decrees on what will or will not be banished from the cycling world for ever.

Column: Jason Miles
Our award winning columnist is settling in to his new life in Scotland – by going on a ski holiday, where he learns that being a beginner again can be refreshing. And finding a whole new avenue of kit to need.

Want more? Subscribers Get More!

In our subscriber-only section (available to subscribers, directly from our shop, or from our Premier Dealers), you get a whole chunk of extra Singletrack goodness. This issue we’ve got two big features for you to get stuck into:

issue 117, fat bike, austalia, dunes, desert, adventures
About as remote as you can get.

A Thousand Sand Dunes – Four friends set out to raise money by crossing the world’s largest dune desert, The Simpson Desert, in Australia. People tell them not to do it, but they load up their fat bikes and do it anyway and they survive to tell us the tale.

issue 117, adrian carter, interview, pace
We know some of you will be very excited by this bike! Oh, and by Adrian too.

Yorkshire Grit: An Interview with Adrian Carter – Chipps chats to the man behind Pace Cycles, the British brand that’s slipped from view in recent years, but as we find out, this none-more-Yorkshire brand is quietly preparing for a renaissance.

And four columns to make you think and laugh. If you don’t snort out loud at least once reading these, it’s probably been too long since you rode a bike:

Less Measuring, More Doing – Joe Parkin marvels at the ability of adults to take the fun out of fun.

In The Beginning – Olly Townsend says you need attitude, not kit, to get hooked on mountain biking.

Bike Beans On Toast – Antony de Heveningham wonders whether cycling needs to like haute cuisine, or just beans on toast.

Last Word – Charlie the Bikemonger recalls the time he was mistaken for a bear.

Go on, you know you want to… order here now:

Pre Order Here

Gift Subscription Here

Issue 117 – you know you want it!

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Author Profile Picture
Hannah Dobson

Managing Editor

I came to Singletrack having decided there must be more to life than meetings. I like all bikes, but especially unusual ones. More than bikes, I like what bikes do. I think that they link people and places; that cycling creates a connection between us and our environment; bikes create communities; deliver freedom; bring joy; and improve fitness. They're environmentally friendly and create friendly environments. I try to write about all these things in the hope that others might discover the joy of bikes too.

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