Going to watch the Tour de France has been on my bucket list for as long as I can remember, right back from when I first started watching cycling back in 1996. I never thought I would see it in Yorkshire and, two weeks after the event, I still can't quite believe I have seen it in Yorkshire.
I think the thing that stood out for me was the way everyone has taken the cycling to heart, and really got involved. Many- probably most- people who came out to see it probably didn't really understand what was going on. But they were still out putting up the bunting, dressing up the trees, cheering and clapping and waving. It was the same with the Olympics, people gamely trying to discuss the minutiae of a sport they've never seen before and really probably never will again. I think that's the real Olympic legacy, to be totally honest: the desire to watch different minority sports rather than dismiss them out of hand.
Yorkshire was truly beautiful for the two days of the Tour's visit, and the secondary events really were pretty special. I've never seen Huddersfield look so green
and nor, for that matter, have I ever seen Leeds so yellow.
One thing the Tour organisers do understand is that standing around for several hours waiting for the peloton is a bit boring, and that people are a captive audience. I can think of no other reason for the Publicity Caravan, a train of novelty cars from which pretty young things in PR throw cheap plastic tat. It brings out the desire to grab something, anything, because they don't throw things out constantly. I know it did in me, and I was really quite chuffed with my fridge magnet, packet of seeds, cheap Gendarmerie biro and plastic Festina gym bag. I was moderately annoyed I just missed out on the cheap cycling caps from Carrefour.
I was even more chuffed at seeing a giant four-pack of Fruit Shoots career past me at 40mph
Not to mention the giant inflatable Miffys
and a London taxi with a bottle of wine booted to the roof.
After the novelty cars had gone, it was back to standing by the side of a road. Luckily, the view from the "Cote de Oxenhope Moor", as the French organisers renamed the hill above Keighley, was pretty impressive
Eventually, though, the riders did arrive. You could hear the cheers come before them, a small breakaway of a handful of riders, before the motorcycle outriders. And then, finally, what we'd all come to see
The rider making a break for it as he came past us was just the cherry on the cake.
Two minutes later the rest of the peloton came though, riding six abreast at 20mph and shouting at people who dared stand too close to the side of the road. And that was that. Eighteen months in the planning, weeks in the preparation, hours in the getting there and waiting, and seconds in the passing.
And with that they were gone, onwards towards Paris, taking the long way round.
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