Home Forums Bike Forum Night riding alone?

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  • Night riding alone?
  • 1
    gooner666
    Full Member

    Good idea or not?

    I ride at night to try and keep my fitness up and not to get “speed thrills”. I generally ride a local blue trail but my wife thinks I am mad (not sure if this is mountain biking in general or riding alone at night – probably both) but I always tell her which route and what time I will be back

    5
    BillOddie
    Full Member

    Done it – mainly on cheeky trails in some frankly silly conditions. Solo Night Snow Ride anyone?

    Being out by yourself with just deer, owls, etc for company, getting to the top of the biggest hill in the Charnwood Alps and looking out over Civilisation* and having a nip from the hipflask is ace.

    Just be careful, take extra clothing/snacks/spares.

    Having your phone ping your location to family isn’t the worst idea either.

    *well, Leicester.

    13
    Drac
    Full Member

    Fine if you have the right Kitt.

    17
    bruneep
    Full Member

    You are never alone on a night ride…………

    2
    scotroutes
    Full Member

    I’ve been doing it for years – well, ever since the first semi-decent lights came out. It felt a bit odd at first, then I’d gradually start encountering other folk with the same idea.

    Riding right through the night and seeing the sun rise is also an amazing feeling.

    alan1977
    Free Member

    I do it, but i stay in less riskier, more travelled areas, and take a it a bit easier.

    It’s a great experience, only time you really get to see all of the wildlife

    didnthurt
    Full Member

    Night riding is great fun, it feels way faster than day riding but probably is half the speed. Love the anticipation of dips in the trail that look like deep pools of darkness but in reality are only shallow. Sometimes I’ll ride trails better at night, especially technical ones, because your can’t see the hazards at the side of the trail.

    You could try joining a local group ride, check out your local cycling club or Facebook, but if you’re set on solo rides then you can set your phone up to share your location that your partner could track, you can also do this in Garmin & Strava if you have subscribed.

    Stick to your regular routes and right within your abilities and I’m sure you’ll be fine. Oh and good lights help, ideally a flood type light on the bars and a more focused beam type light on the helmet.

    5
    Yak
    Full Member

    It’s fine. You are leaving a route/timings and not pushing your limits, so all good. Owls are awesome at night, especially when they silently do a close pass over you. Amazing.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Having your phone ping your location to family isn’t the worst idea either.

    True, though when I moved to Aviemore I actually used a Spot tracker due to the lack of signal.

    1
    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Yep loads.

    I now have watsapp share my live location to my OH so she can keep an eye on me. Although last week it decided to freeze on the ride back through town directly outside a massage parlor!

    Take a foil emergency blanket / poncho.

    5
    didnthurt
    Full Member

    And just remember to ignore ‘the fear’ when the hair stands up the back of your neck with the feeling that someone is right behind you, I’m sure there is no one there…… mostly.

    1
    Duggan
    Free Member

    Its fine, I used to do this all the time and I’m a terrible mountain biker. Life’s for living and sitting on the couch all the time will also kill you, just much more slowly.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    I have google trusted contacts on my phone so if my wife wakes up at 2am and Im still not back she can request my location

    1
    Beagleboy
    Full Member

    Been doing it for years and haven’t died yet. Only ever hit the one deer and owls screeching like banshees only mildly terrify me now. Much prefer riding in company at night, as there’s someone to share the whisky with, but beggars can’t be choosers as they say.

    2
    zippykona
    Full Member

    I just use it to justify buying really expensive lights as a “safety measure” .

    didnthurt
    Full Member

    And try to avoid the dogging carparks, unless you’re into that sort of thing. I’m not sure who was more surprised when our Tuesday night gravel ride burst out the woods amidst a busy carpark.

    Reminds me of this 🙂

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    And try to avoid the dogging carparks, unless you’re into that sort of thing. I’m not sure who was more surprised when our Tuesday night gravel ride burst out the woods amidst a busy carpark.

    I once rode past the same couple twice, kudos to them both for the stamina!

    You are never alone on a night ride…………

    +1

    There’s nothing in the woods at night that wasn’t there in the daylight, it’s just that it’s now awake and hungry.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    I do it, but i stay in less riskier, more travelled areas, and take a it a bit easier.

    It’s a great experience, only time you really get to see all of the wildlife

    I prefer road riding alone at night, figure the mad axe murderers are hiding in the woods waiting for you lot. Prefer one other with me off road

    1
    tthew
    Full Member

     … last week it decided to freeze on the ride back through town directly outside a massage parlor!

    Take a foil emergency blanket / poncho.

    Why would you need an emergency blanket in a knocking shop?

    2
    IdleJon
    Free Member

    I prefer road riding alone at night, figure the mad axe murderers are hiding in the woods waiting for you lot.

    But axe murderers tend to drive to the woods to axe-murder, and they’ll pass you on a long and lonely highway, all lit up like a neon target….

    (That’s why we don’t get axed into little pieces, they’re busy dealing with you.)

    1
    DT78
    Free Member

    I used to do it loads pre kids, 5 nights a week around the local trails in all conditions – just take it easy and ride familar trails.  I’d ridden these routes hundreds and hundreds of times.  You need to know the trails exceptionally well as you can’t see far ahead and everything looks very different –

    I got completely freaked out on one ride, kept hearing a sound like someone was chasing me, every time I stopped and looked around there was nothing there.  Later on after numerous stops realised I had a small branch with dead leaves jammed in the rear derailer which was dragging along the forest floor as I pedalled making a rustling sound.  fun times

    5
    teethgrinder
    Full Member

    Take your own axe.  The chances of there being two axe murderers in the woods are slim to none.

    2
    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Why would you need an emergency blanket in a knocking shop?

    Don’t kink shame me.

    1
    flyingpotatoes
    Full Member

    Drac

    Full Member

    Fine if you have the right Kitt

    Brilliantly done ?

    1
    stany
    Free Member

    Been doing it for years. Since kids, night rides are my main outlet. Agree with the comment above; feels faster, and sometimes makes the trails easier as you don’t see half the distractions that often try to take you down.

    Not met the axeman yet!

    IdleJon
    Free Member

    Not met the axeman yet!

    It’s werewolves that spook me, and tonight is our regular night ride and tonight is a full moon. Actually it’s tomorrow, but it will look full enough tonight to fool a partially sighted werewolf!

    kayak23
    Full Member

    Fine if you have the right Kitt

    Deserves applause.

    chakaping
    Full Member

    There’s nothing in the woods at night that wasn’t there in the daylight, it’s just that it’s now awake and hungry.

    Not as hungry as me, usually.

    Honestly, I don’t even think of it as a risky thing. But I do stick to places I know really well.

    paule
    Free Member

    I’m a big fan, and really need to do more night riding – alone or otherwise.   I think the mouse in the Gruffalo said it best “I’m the scariest creature in this wood”… But I do admit to frequent attacks of the fear, particularly if it’s a really quiet night and the sound of my own breathing could easily be that of someone following… Although so far it never has been!

    Carrying a spare warm jacket and hat in case of a walk home, shared location on Google maps, Strava or WhatsApp and a flask of hot drink in the bag all work well for me too.

    onehundredthidiot
    Full Member

    If you have a Garmin or Garmin connect on your phone activate the crash notification.

    Someone will tell you they once ran over a leaf and the bump set it off.

    I crashed heavily on Sunday and thought I’d broken my leg. It was on a wooden bridge. It’s a route I ride in the dark and alone. If I had broken my leg as badly as feared there’s no way I’d have been ina state to contact anyone but at least Mrs 100th could have started the life assurance claim.

    SSS
    Free Member

    Ride at night all the time, dont vary trails, just do what i do. I tell Mrs SSS where im going and use Strava Beacon so she can see where i am upto if solo, and Garmin crash alert.

    I send Mrs STR a Strava Beacon too for every ride I do so she can see where I am at any point in the ride

    HoratioHufnagel
    Free Member

    I’ve done it a fair bit too. When the kids were young it was the only chance for a bike ride!

    I’d generally ride an off-road route from home that me and my OH know well, so if fell off and wasn’t home on time, she’d ring the emergency services. I think…

    1
    IdleJon
    Free Member

    Honestly, I don’t even think of it as a risky thing. But I do stick to places I know really well.

    Long ramble coming up….

    Like plenty on here I’ve been night-riding since before decent lights were a thing. After a while it’s just something you do and you forget that it used to scare you. However, there are places I feel safe and some that make me uneasy – could be all sorts of logical reasons but a  very small number of places don’t feel ok in the dark.

    An illogical example, there is a hill near here that I’ve been using for all sorts of things since I was a boy. I know every inch of it. My bedroom window when I was about 8 faced this hill and I have a distinct memory of my brother and I playing in our room facing that window and seeing a bigfoot type thing striding along the hill, dwarfing the low trees around it. I always put it down to childhood exaggeration, even when about 12 years ago my brother, unprompted, mentioned the same event. We had probably seen someone walking through the trees and egged each into believing it was a giant yeti. A little before my brother mentioned this event, I was riding up there with a friend, a GP,  and he was spooked by a glass bottle being launched at him. Probably kids or druggies, was my response. Odd that we didn’t hear any other movement, see lights, or hear conversation or laughter.

    Then, one day more recently, one of my kids mentioned the bigfoot on the hill. When I pressed her, she looked sheepish and said it was something to do with the ‘pawprint’ on the side, an old quarry which you could see from their school. The same school I went to many years ago. So, some sort of tale passed down from person to person, even though I don’t remember anyone in school ever saying anything about it? I’m still puzzled about why my kids would refer to a bigfoot – they aren’t exactly a modern thing. And, let’s assume something lived up there, where? It’s not a huge place! So many questions!

    Anyway, I still go up there in the dark, but, irrationally, it is somewhere I wouldn’t wildcamp.

    montylikesbeer
    Full Member

    I ride out mostly on my own and  night rides are no different.

    My rides are gravel over ‘t Pennine moors on trails I know very well and are not “technical”

    I’ve seen badgers, deer, owls, stoats, foxes and a few folk……. ahem at it when off trail dropping into a bomb hole (easy please at the back)

    20 years in and every night ride is as fun as the first.

    1
    stevemtb
    Free Member

    You will freak yourself out, remember years ago getting most of the way up Glentress and looking around the valley to see pitch blackness all around without another set of lights in sight. Talked myself into it being too dangerous and took the blues down as slow as possible. Was pretty much at the bottom when I saw multiple groups heading up, I was just sharp out before the rush and missed a great night for it. Having people expecting you or a text is a great settler for me and normally shuts my brain up!

    However, it is much nicer when riding on the turbo clicks like it has for me this year as there is no safety, driving, cleaning or bike maintenance to worry about!

    1
    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Riding alone through crisp snow, lit up by a bright moon, is one of the best feelings ever. Even if I’m out with a group, I’ll usually slow down and ride tail-end Charlie for the opportunity of that peacefulness.

    fathomer
    Full Member

    I do, since moving house I’ve not found a regular mid week group to ride with so just go on my own. It’s lovely being out in the countryside in the dark on a clear night.

    didnthurt
    Full Member

    As for riding in scary places, I ride regularly through several places that should be spooky yet feel totally fine, which makes me think that ghosts are something that your brain creates when either tired or stressed.

    Some of these ‘spooky’ sites are:

    • Rive Avon path and Kettlestoun Mains where the Battle of Linlithgow Bridge took places where an estimated 3,000 died.
    • Muiravonside country park graveyard, the graveyard is tiny but the trail goes right through the middle of it.
    • Abercorn Graveyard, the path used go through the corner of the graveyard of an 11th century church, complete with skull & crossbones tombstones
    • Callendar estate, Falkirk, where the battle of Falkirk took place and William Wallace was defeated, with an estimated 4,000 died.

    And various other abandoned industrial areas including mines, brick works, steel works etc where there must have been work related fatalities, and I’ve never experienced anything paranormal.

    1
    thegeneralist
    Free Member

    Loads. With the awesomeness of new lights I didn’t tend to bother much about whether it was early or late. Set off to do various Munros on the evening of many family holidays. 7pm ” I’m off up Being a Bhuird dear, don’t panic till 01:00 at least”

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