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WHAT WOULD MARY DO?

Back in the summer of 1936, 17-year-old Mary Harvie set out from Glasgow with her two sisters Ella and Jean to ride their bikes more than 500 miles between youth hostels in the Highlands of Scotland. Last year, her son presented Hostelling Scotland with the diary she kept during those magical two weeks. In the Winter of 2021 - 85 years after Mary's trip - Philippa, Alice & Lee follow in their tracks bikepacking their way north to Torridon, via The Great Glen and Isle of Skye...

When Lee Craigie received an email from Hostelling Scotland, asking if she and two pals would be interested in a commemorative ride of Mary’s bikepacking journey, Alice Lemkes and I fortuitously happened to be sitting next to her – there was no question in our minds that we were the two gals for the job (and didn’t even wait to be asked!). We would approximate Mary’s 1936 route staying in hostels along the way, collating our own diary entries, and take keen photographer and film-maker Maciek Tmoiczek along for the ride to help us tell our own story…

DAY ONE

Setting out on this trip made me reflect on my first cycling tour of the Highlands six years before. I’d headed up from London alone on the Caledonian sleeper, so nervous but also blissfully ignorant of what such a trip might entail. I had with me: a coffin like tent; minimal tools (and skills to match); and a pair of borrowed panniers on a 1970’s steel Peugeot with woefully insufficient gearing. I hadn’t even brought a stove, and after two nights of wild and windy camping realised I had bitten off more than I could chew.

I decided to focus on the riding, opting to stay in hostels and bunkhouses instead, and promptly posted the tent home. I had no smartphone then; armed only with paper maps and a Rough Guide to the ‘Highlands and Islands’. Looking back it must have been a liberating trip, I couldn’t even check the weather and let it influence my plans. Instead I’d wake each day and head into whatever the Scottish weather and terrain chose to throw at me, hoping only to make it to the next available hostel en route.

DAY TWO

It is amazing what can and has changed in those six years. Back then I had few friends who thought a weeks cycling and camping in Scotland was a good use of precious holiday days, let alone want to join me! Now I find myself surrounded by a growing community of incredible like minded women (and men) with friends like Lee and Alice at its core. We seem to share similarly ridiculous ideals of what constitutes a good time on a bike, and absurd jaunts, filled with laughter and optimism are where comfort zones can expand when facilitated by the company and support of others. On our rides I am pushed, pulled and stretched – mentally and physically, each time springing back a more resilient version than before. Each time the world a little less daunting, and more enticing place to explore.

DAY THREE

As tends to be the theme with riding in the Highlands with Lee and Alice, we don’t often take the path of least resistance to get from A to B. It is a privilege to pass through wild and remote places afforded by the advances in bike technology since Marys journey in 1936. For Mary and her sisters the often poorly surfaced roads were too much to bare, sensibly opting to flag down a lorry instead. For us though, big tyres, plenty of gears, lightweight kit and experience means travelling far off the beaten track seems like the only sensible and often safer thing to do.

On my first cycling tours I had no idea that turning off a road onto a bumpy track was a) something you could do, and b) would lead to such beautiful landscapes. The gradual realisation that between the roads dominated by fast travel lies vast expanses of timeless wilderness; in-between places where we are offered slow, calming respite from the rush and reminders of the modern world.

DAY FOUR

Bicycles have always been associated with freedom, from the rush a child experiences when they realise they can propel themselves into ever-expanding worlds, to women in the suffrage movement centuries ago. Where the quote below from Susan B Anthony – a woman’s right activist – seems as relevant today as in 1896:

“I think [the bicycle] has done more to emancipate women than any one thing in the world. I rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a bike. It gives her a feeling of self-reliance and independence the moment she takes her seat; and away she goes, the picture of untrammelled womanhood.”

Travelling by bike over the years has certainly changed my view of the world and how I can pick my way through it. I remember the sense of satisfaction I felt after fixing my first puncture, alone out on the road. This was the start of an ever growing faith that I could fix my own problems and maybe rely on myself – an empowering thing, often more so as a women. Trusting ones capabilities to get out of a mess, fix mechanicals, or bounce back from a mental low are all useful tools to have, and the gradual liberation from a long list of limiting fears, has allowed me to navigate life in a way I didn’t realise was possible…

DAY FIVE
DAY SIX

Since the trip we’ve often been asked to describe ‘the challenge’ we took on, however in our eyes it wasn’t a challenge at all. Not to say it was a picnic – elements of most bike rides pose constant demands on ones sense of humour – the wet, cold, hunger, sore knees, another hill to push over… However these are all small things to manage in the moment, rather than a finite ‘challenge’ to conquer or complete. We set out with a loose plan, an ambitious route, and mutual objectives to enjoy ourselves and allow time to take it all in. Often the biggest challenge is letting go of rigid or purist ideals and prioritising what is kinder and beneficial for us, as friends and bike riders. Slowing down and covering 20km in 4 hours in order to experience a jaw dropper of a remote glen, makes perfect sense if you don’t then beat yourself up for hopping on a bus to avoid a stretch of busy road…

…because, like Mary and her sisters demonstrated, there is no right or wrong way to ride bikes or go on adventures.

CREDITS

BIKEPACKERS
Philippa Battye
Alice Lemkes
Lee Craigie

PHOTOS
Maciek Tomiczek

WORDS
Philippa Battye

PARTNERS
Adventure Syndicate / a collective of endurance riders who happen to be women
Hostelling Scotland / sixty affordable, welcoming accommodations in some of the best locations across Scotland

Journey | CENTRAL HIGHLANDS, SCOTLAND

RAINSPOTTING

Six of us alight the sleeper train at Corrour - the highest, remotest station on the West Highland Line - and 'go for a w̶a̶l̶k̶ ride' through the wintry, gloomy Grampian Mountains of Scotland. We track the old-established north-south drove roads and, in true drover style, explore the alluring moorland voids in between...

by STEFAN AMATO & DAVID SEAR
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Journey | SCOTLAND (UK)

DISTILLERY DROVING

Bikepacking an alternative West Highland Way - a point-to-point trip between two distilleries in Scotland...

by Stefan Amato & Jordan Gibbons
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Journey | UK

A North Coast 500 (NC500)

Discovering the rugged coastal roads on Scotland's official cycle touring route...

by Chris Morrison
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