By Nick Busca

Published: Monday, 08 November 2021 at 12:00 am


There were 130 kilometres on the clock, and some 3,200m of climbing metres to boot, in a thoroughly exhausting day’s work when the heavens opened to stick in the knife.

Oh, and I’d also run out of food, and there were 30km still to go.

My legs trembled with each pedal stroke, on the cusp of cramping.

I wasn’t climbing any Alpine or Andean monster, rather the steepest hills of Cornwall, and frankly, in that moment, I didn’t know which was worse.

“It always rains in Holsworthy!” A bellow through the fog, as we tipped over into Devon, briefly jolted me into life.

It came from my day’s road captain, local Strava legend Craig Harper, who was cranking up the tempo.

Craig is always sphinx-like, with no grimaces or visible signs of pain across his face at any point. He appeared annoyingly fresh.

He must have been feeling it, though, as this had been a monstrous day in the saddle for the pair of us.

"Two
We sent Nick Busca in search of Cornwall’s toughest century.
Joseph Branston / Immediate Media

Grand plans

We’d set off much earlier that day from the centre of the coastal town of Bude with a bold plan: 160km and 3,500m of elevation.

There’d been no gradual easing into these numbers, either, as the road reared up immediately following a fast descent towards the wide, sandy and rocky Widemouth beach, and straight into one of the steepest climbs of the day.

Millook is gracefully short at 750 metres in distance, but its 14.4 per cent average gradient bites hard and thunders straight into 30 per cent pitches.

It’s tough on a dry day, but in these wet and humid conditions part of the fight was devoted to keeping your front wheel and the tarmac acquainted.

Craig set the tone for the day with a no-fuss seated grind to the summit, while I scampered around in his wake.