A pensioner from Surrey has been revealed as Britain’s most enduring female cyclist after riding more than 600,000 miles – that’s equivalent to going round the globe around 24 times – over the past five decades.
Former hospital worker Sue Swetman, from Epsom, took up cycling at the age of 13, admits she is “not very good at sitting down” and rides she has completed include Lands End to John O’Groats and an 800-mile journey down the West Coast of the USA. She has also cycled around France and New Zealand.
However, Mrs Swetman told the Epsom Guardian that most of the 609,721 miles she has ridden, recorded in a series of diaries, have mainly been as a result of local leisure rides, rather than endurance events.
Mrs Swetman, who continues to ride with her husband Pete, who is himself likely to break the 400,000-mile barrier this year, told the newspaper: “When I was younger we would be able to go on holiday and rack up 1,000 miles in a fortnight. These days we struggle to reach 10,000 miles in a year, but we don’t do it to reach a target mileage.”
She continued: “The cycling is just part of my way of life. It is something I started doing with my family at a young age and something I still do, and happen to still really enjoy.”
Mrs Swetman, who is a member of the 300,000 Miles Club, joined Kingston’s Festival Road Cycling Club while still at school, and once represented Great Britain on the track during a tour to the former East Germany.
She added that nowadays she and her husband prefer walking holidays, however, and the pair have undertaken trips to Spain, Switzerland and the Cotswold Way, and are planning on climbing Ben Nevis this year.
Add new comment
1 comments
600,000 miles is equivalent to doing my commute for 120 years!