Sweat and slate

9 min read

FEATURE

We ride 140 miles through Snowdonia on Cycling UK’s newest and gnarliest long-distance trail

Photos: Samantha Dugon

North Wales is the birthplace of UK trail centres. It’s where Coed y Brenin first introduced us all to a purpose-built and waymarked mountain bike route back in 1996, and since then the area has seen an ever-growing collection of centres and trails, all well maintained, signposted and graded to suit every skill and fitness level.

Those trails offer a wide range of riding, with technical climbs; flowing tree-lined singletrack; steep rock slabs; drop-offs and perfectly formed berms and jumps; rideable in all but the most horrendous conditions.

And with no route planning required, it’s an easy option for an adrenaline fix: just park up, kit up and ride, often with a conveniently placed cafe to return to for a warming cuppa and a hunk of cake once you’re done.

This is all very well, but Wales is surely bigger than manmade trail centres? What about the in-between, the parts you only see from a car window as you’re heading to your curated laps of fun? Those brief glimpses of trail that catch your eye only to instantly disappear out of view as trees flash by in a blur of greens and browns?

The rocky byways that weave upwards towards misty summits? The snippets of dreamy riverside path that whizz below you as you try to focus on the tarmac ahead? Where do those lead?

There’s always a part of me that yearns to be out there, exploring, travelling and moving within a changing landscape; it’s a feeling of freedom, escape and adventure that you just don’t get riding around a well-signposted loop, no matter how much fun it is.

Cycling UK has the perfect solution in the Traws Eryri, a new long-distance route though the Snowdonia National Park from Machynlleth up to the coastal town of Conwy via some of the area’s best trail centres.

Doubletrack descending is best done with a sense of reckless abandon
Wild woods provide a leafy interlude
Time to get cracking on the slate trail
Making good time near Cadair Idris
When the going is rough rather than rowdy, a hardtail hits the spot

The 200km (125-mile) ride has around 4,700m (15,420ft) of climbing and is the sixth longdistance cycling route to be launched by the charity. This time it has been working alongside Natural Resources Wales to encourage visitors to explore the fantastic landscape that the country has to offer in a more sustainable way.

Unlike Cycling UK’s other long-distance routes though, Traws Eryri is no place for gravel bikes. There’s tarmac to cover for sure, along with fire roads too, but there’s singletrack you just wouldn’t want to tackle on a knobbly-tyred road bike.

I took a Mason RAW along, a steel hardtail with geometry progressive enough for enjoying t

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