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Adventure Week 39
  • Week 1 - Adventure Racing
  • Week 2 - Serious Surfing
  • Week 3 - Orienteering
  • Week 4 - Sailing
  • Week 5 - Dixons Hollow Sklls Course
  • Week 6 - Traditional Climbing
  • Week 7 - How Stern Gorge
  • Week 8 - Power Kiting
  • Week 9 - Try Windsurfing
  • Week 10 - Walk the Cleveland Way National Trail
  • Week 11 - Try Gliding at Sutton Bank
  • Week 12 - Swale Charity Paddle - 21 - 22 March 2009
  • Week 13 - 5 Day Tou of the Dales
  • Week 14 - Go Geocaching
  • Week 15 - Scotton 100 Cycle Event
  • Week 16 - Sea Kayaking
  • Week 17 - Three Peaks Fell Race
  • Week 18 - Fishing
  • Week 19 - Trekking Centre
  • Week 20 - Etape du Dale Cyclospotive
  • Week 21 - Gaping Gill - Open week
  • Week 22 - Settle Loop
  • Week 23 - Go Ape at Dalby Forest
  • Week 24 - Ballooning
  • Week 25 - Dalby Forest Walk and Play
  • Week 26 - York to Selby Cycle Route
  • Week 27 - Try Paragliding
  • Week 28 - Thixendale Round
  • Week 29 - Go down a showcave
  • Week 30 - Moors to Sea Cycle Tour
  • Week 31 - Washburn Paddle
  • Week 32 - Ryedale Rumble Cyclosportive - 9 August 2009
  • Week 33 - Guided Caving Trip
  • Week 34 - Malham Trailquest
  • Week 35 - Cotter Force
  • Week 36 - Lancaster to York Cycle Ride - 5th Sept
  • Week 37 - Boots and Beer Walking Fesival
  • Week 38 - Climbing the Big Three
  • Week 39 - 3 Peaks Cyclocross
  • Week 40 - Husky Trekking
  • Week 41 - Saltergate Fell Run
  • Week 42 - Multi day horse ride at the North York Moors National Park
  • Week 43 - Whitby to Scarborough Cycle Route
  • Week 44 - Caving
  • Week 45 - Bike Trials
  • Week 46 - Tramper Route to Old Gang
  • Week 47 - Guided Walks
  • Week 48 - Mountain Biking at Dalby Forest
  • Week 49 - Open Access Walk
  • Week 50 - Bouldering
  • Week 51 - Try Surfing
  • Week 52 - Ingleton Climbing Wall
What's this? »
Three Peaks Cyclocross

Three Peaks Cyclocross

29th September

Week 39 - On Wheels

Three Peaks CyclocrossLevel of Fitness
Black
.  This is viewed as the toughest cyclo-cross event in the UK

The Experience
The 3 Peaks Cyclo-Cross is staged in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. The Three Peaks, the tough testing course for the Dales walker were first conquered on a bicycle by a 14-year-old Yorkshire schoolboy -. Kevin Watson, of Ridgeway, Raikes Road, Skipton, a pupil of Ermysted's Grammar School, Skipton.

He rode, pushed and carried his bicycle 30 miles to the summit cairns of Whernside (2,419ft.), Ingleborough (2,373ft.), and Penyghent (2,273ft.). This was in 1959 and the first organised event was held two years later in 1961.

The first two places in the first Three Peaks Cyclo-Cross were taken by 21-year-old John Rawnsley of Bradford and Harry Bond, a 22-year-old Eccleshill plumber his Bradford R.C.C. colleague. They were close enough together to be credited jointly with the new record of 3hr. 21min. 35sec

Before the race started It was labelled "the most severe event in the cyclo-cross riders' calendar." Nobody quarrelled with that claim when it was over. Cramp-stricken Rawnsley said: "Each step up Ingleborough was agony."

Its reputation is unchanged today and it is still regarded as the toughest and biggest Cyclo-Cross event in the UK.

Have a go
The date for the 3 Peaks Cyclo-Cross will be 29th September 2009

This is your only chance to ride to the top of the Three Peaks as most of the off-road sections are over footpaths and/or private land. This means that no training on a cycle is allowed on those sections - it is illegal to ride on their except on the day of the race.

To find out more and for details of how to enter, click here 

Find out more
Cyclo-Cross (often abbreviated to 'Cross) is generally an autumn and winter sport. Massed starts make for exciting races, usually no more than an hour in length - and shorter for juniors, women and veterans.  There are usually free-to-enter races for younger riders. Some organisers are now starting to run summer series, which are proving very popular.

Cyclo-Cross races are usually multi lap events, held on short (typically less than a mile and often less than half a mile), grassy courses, generally in public parks or on school playing fields. Less technically demanding than Mountain Biking, Cyclo-Cross often requires riders to dismount to clear artificial obstacles.

Cyclo-Cross machines look very similar to road bikes, with dropped handlebars and thin tyres - however the latter have a  knobbled-tread for grip, powerful brakes, low gears and better frame clearances to prevent clogging with mud, all of which adds up to make them easy to handle on the rough.