Jump to content

Cycle Route ED to Wimbledon


jimbo1964

Recommended Posts

I used to commute from Forest Hill, which involved using the South Circular as far as Lancaster Avenue. Coming from the East Dulwich direction there are plenty of back routes to get you to Rosendale Road - then a right turn onto the SC for about 100 yards before turning left onto Lancaster Avenue.


After that I went via Lancaster Avenue, York Hill, Knollys Road, Leigham Court Road, Culverhouse Gardens, Gracefield Gardens, Newcome Gardens, Pendennis Road, Becmead Avenue, Garrad's Road, Tooting Bec Road, Upper Tooting Road (this is part of "Cycle Superhighway 7"(!)), Garratt Lane, Wimbledon Road, Plough Lane and Gap Road. Which is as far as I needed to go.


At the top of Gap Road, Alexandra Road takes you into the heart of Wimbledon.


It took me about 45 minutes. I used to go to Wimbledon at about 1.00 am, but the return journey would be during the morning rush and the only real struggle was the traffic around the schools and college from Lancaster Avenue to College Road - the cycle lane is used to allow two lanes of cars! But this obviously wont affect you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I tried cycling to Tooting recently on a Saturday - there via South Circular, back along CS7 to clapham common and then brixton/herne hill. Both directions were pretty miserable! The SC was grim for obvious reasons, but the CS7 route was really congested with heavy car and lorry traffic, lots of cars pulling into the cycle lane and blaocking it to pull into slow traffic, and even with the cycle lane I got stuck having to weave in and out of stop start traffic. There was one part that descended into chaos as the lights seemed stuck on red and people were taking matters into their own hand and ignoring the signal.


Is it always that bad? or was I just unlucky?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've done this sometimes in the past. The best part of the ride, if you can get to it, is to go through Tooting Bec Common, from north to south. It's a lovely bit of off road riding.


That means either going through Herne Hill and Brixton and then down Abbeville Road and Cavendish Road (a bit of a long way round), or across Brockwell Park and wiggling down through Upper Tulse Hill -> Telford Avenue -> Emmanuel Road. This means going up and down a hill. Either way it's well worth it though, because the route is a painful urban slog other than that, with lots of bad junctions and little in the way of good cycle route.


Here is a map of the Brixton route: http://goo.gl/maps/Iwv4F

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There isn't a pleasant route through South London that I've ever managed to find. Tbh, I'd be tempted to go into town over Lambeth Bridge, along the Embankment to Chelsea, through the back of Chelsea Harbour then back roads to Putney Bridge, over the bridge and straight on up and over the hill to Wimbledon. I reckon it's about 3 miles further than the most direct S London route but actually quite quick.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hi, Anyone getting rid of any of these items? Also looking for a dish for air fryer - max 15 x 15cm. Or one person size dish that can go in airfryer or microwave. Thanks.            
    • Noted. I wasn't quite sure from their material whether the 'ad lib' supply by pharmacists had to be mandated; hence the suggestion to check.  There are plenty of individual manufacturers of generic methylphenidate, probably quite a bit cheaper too.  I'm afraid I didn't see radnrach's "can't really take an alternative", so apologies for presuming otherwise.  For myself I'm generally willing to trust that any manufacturer's offering of, say, 27 mg methylphenidate hydrochloride tabs, would contain that, and I'm not too worried about the minor quirks of things like their slow-release technology. I think it's likely that the medicines Serious Shortage Protocol does definitely give pharmacists some degrees of freedom. But it's apparently not in operation here. See the Minister's recent reply to a written question: https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-questions/detail/2023-11-13/1660#.   , which seems to approximate to: we can't apply the shortage protocol here because the drugs are in short supply.
    • I'm not sure pharmacists have any discretion to alter specific medication prescriptions, although they can choose supplier where a generic is prescribed which may be offered by more than one company. This will only be for older medicines which are effectively 'out of copyright' . They can't issue alternatives on their own authority as they don't know what counter-indications there may be for specific patients. GPs may prescribe a specific supplier of a generic medicine where, for instance, they know patients have an adverse reaction to e.g. the medicine casings, so the Nottinghamshire directive to specify only generics where available may not always be helpful. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...