Looking out toward what used to be Stantonbury Manor, which is now just a field, although the Church of St. Peter still remains.
Belonging to the national trust, they’ve just planted a tree from a cutting of the sycamore on sycamore gap, Hadrian’s Wall, which was felled by vandals a couple of years ago.
Tree of Hope – Grown from the sycamore gap tree
Wondered what the guys were doing putting the big fence up around it…it’s so they don’t cut it down again.
Stantonbury Manor
Another one of these stately homes that came to nothing. Seem to be pretty common for these parts….
This one was wiped out by fire less than 120 years after it was first opened in 1658, from what I can make out.
Stantonbury Manor
Only the church remains which was in usage right up to the 1950’s.
It took me about a week to fit them, and it snowed whilst I was doing it.
Once they were in, I didn’t really notice the difference. That’s because I was just getting home from work most of the time, lighting the fire, throwing a bit of fuel on and going to bed. Rinse and repeat.
The windows themselves don’t warm the boat up, except that they let more sunlight in without people gongoozling through them, they just keep heat inside the boat from escaping.
Given a couple of hours to warm up, I can realise now that they are much, much better than the old ones.
I’ve moved up so far as to say I’m in Milton Keynes proper now.
Had one stop in-between. That was at somewhere called ‘Peartree Bridge’ which I guess is the South East edge of Milton Keynes. It’s on the edge of a park, surprise surprise. I didn’t mind it there. My bike wasn’t quite working, and I didn’t really have chance to do anything cycling wise, so there aren’t many pictures or adventures.
Mooring at Peartree Bridge – Milton Keynes
I did manage to fix the problems with my Trek hybrid bike, that was that the gears were shifting, also they would crunch and the chain would jump off of the front sprocket, or chainring, as they call it on pushbikes.
Fixing the ‘Ghost-shifting’ on my bike
Problems first started when I replaced the rear wheel. I replaced the chain shortly after.
After this, the new chain used to jump continuously off the front or back sprockets and make a crunching sound under any pressure. This made it impossible to ride up hills and unsafe to ride in traffic.
I used Gemini AI, and we gently worked through the problems. These are the steps I took to repair the problem.
Fit new chain: 8 speed chain from Halfords. Didn’t sort the problem, made it worse. Split pin chain, anyone can fit one of these although it is fiddly. Cost £9.
Fit new front chain-ring: This is the front set of gears. I have three rings. The original gears made it difficult on steep slopes, (28x38x48t). When I replaced the front chainring, I got a higher geared alternative (24x34x42t). I also increased the stem size on the crank by 5mm. This is not noticeable, but it meant I could get the gearing I wanted. I bought it off Amazon. Cost £27.79. Also required a Crank Puller to get it off. Total Cost £3.99 + £27.79
Replace front derailleur: After I changed the front chainring, a problem developed. It would no longer shift gears. I had to buy a new front derailleur that was compatible with the new number of teeth. Once I’d done this, it shifted correctly. Cost £18.25
Rear cassette: The chain was still jumping. Ghost shifting. I put it to Google what the problem might be. As a result of me having carried out all the previous steps above, which I’d fed back, Gemini was fairly convinced that the problem would be a worn rear cassette. I replaced the rear cassette with an identical (spec) one from Amazon. Cost £19.88
When I followed all of these steps, the problem was solved! I did all the work myself, of course. A total cost of £78.91
That’s where I am now. It’s south Milton Keynes. Not seen any tinkers around yet. I have located the bridge.
Alan Turing’s house whilst he worked on the Bletchley Park enigma code is just around the corner. It’s a thatched cottage.
Alan Turing’s old house in Simpson near Milton Keynes
It’s close to a large lake and park here and I went for a walk around the today whilst it wasn’t raining which it was trying to do in the morning and couldn’t make it’s mind up for the rest of the day.
Worked out to be around 5 miles, so quite a long walk.
Simpson Manor
On the way down, you walk past the location of an old, and no longer existant, regency home named Simpson Manor. Mentioned in the Doomsday archive, Edward the Confessor’s wife, Edith used to live here before the Norman conquests.
That time, I didn’t really stop in Milton Keynes. I remember coming through and stopping at the Tesco in Leighton Buzzard.
The canals on the Grand Union are a lot deeper. There’s absolutely 0 chance you’d be able to cover that amount of distance on the narrow-gauge canals of the Lower Oxford. The small and convenient size of the Oxford Canal locks are more than off-set by the forced low cruising speed in the 3-4 deep water.
Bike is fixed!
Mostly fixed… After disassembling the rear wheel, I saw that the bearings housing was deteriorated to the point of flaking off into the bearings, which is why it was making the squeaking and crunching.
I looked into the new wheel option. Halfords was not the cheapest. But, unlike Tredz, they offer a click and collect service, rather than delivery by DPD which has always represented a pain in the ass in the past.
I think it was £5 more. Not a lot really. Arrived at the Halfords store after a few days for me to pick up.
New rear wheel – KX 700c from Halfords
More or less slotted it in using the tools I’d purchased beforehand.
The only other thing was applying RIM TAPE, I looked around in Halfords and online, and it seemed overpriced, £7 for some what looks around 2m of electrical tape. The old wheel had it’s RIM TAPE intact. Rather than buy some, just gently pried it off the old wheel and slipped it onto the new wheel. Worked like a dream….
The bearings were ready greased and once the cassette was on, it was ready to roll. Literally. Took about 25 minutes.
Chain whip SRAM spanner fitting
The repair in total cost £10 for the tools. £55 for the wheel.
Went for a ride up the canal towpath toward Wolverton first day when the rain had stopped.
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