Before we even start talking about cycling in Shetland, a quick word about wind. External wind, that is, not the effect of consuming too many bannocks or a too-sudden intake of a scallop supper at Frankie’s in Brae (other chip shops are available).
Shetland has a lot of wind. And along with said wind comes a variety of weathers, ranging (in the course of an average late April/early May day, from blizzards to warm sunshine, utter stillness to roaring, buffeting, ship-sinking and bike-flattening mayhem.
So if you come here to cycle, be prepared. A former colleague, super-fit, triathlon hardened, came to Shetland for work, and headed off from Lerwick on his mountain bike, which he always loaded into his employer’s van for trips away. In what seemed like mere minutes later he was in Voe, a south-easterly tailwind making every twirl of the crank an absolute joy. And then he turned back. The wind, meanwhile, was strengthening.
He managed five miles before, exhausted, calling for a workmate to come and get him.
Having said that, Shetland offers a great deal to the cyclist who’s prepared to deal with the northern weather’s vicissitudes. Almost 1000 miles of well-maintained, relatively quiet roads. Spectacular scenery. and the chance to cycle to the Very End of Britain, in Unst. Or at least within sight of the Out Stack, the most northerly lump of rock in these sceptr’d isles.
And here’s my dirty little secret: you don’t actually have to be all that fit. There is a way to counteract those breezes. No, it's not that ultra-fashionable red fleece I'm wearing in the picture. It's the bike itself...