CINDER TRACK BIKE HIRE PRICES - Whitby delivery service to the start of the 'Cinder Track '.
All our Whitby prices include: Delivery to Whitby drop off point, Helmet, Lock, Bell, Maintenance Kit & Bike Pump
All tyres are now installed with puncture resistant gel
Delivery times:
10am/10:30am/11am
Please note - Our Whitby delivery service is for two bikes or more.
All our Whitby prices include: Delivery to Whitby drop off point, Helmet, Lock, Bell, Maintenance Kit & Bike Pump
All tyres are now installed with puncture resistant gel
Delivery times:
10am/10:30am/11am
Please note - Our Whitby delivery service is for two bikes or more.
Standard Bikes - Per Day
New fleet for 2023 / 2024
Electric Bikes - Per Day
* Mileage is approximate and subject to many variables.
* Mileage is approximate and subject to many variables.
Top of the Range Electric Bikes - Per Day
* Mileage is approximate and subject to many variables
* Mileage is approximate and subject to many variables
Cycling Accessories
REQUEST YOUR BOOKING - HERE
Or for more information please call us on
07477 167076 TO BOOK
SECURITY DEPOSIT
STANDARD BIKES REQUIRE A £50 SECURITY DEPOSIT FULLY REFUNDED UPON YOUR RETURN.
E-BIKES MAY BE SUBJECT TO A HIGHER SECURITY DEPOSIT OF UP TO £200 - FULLY REFUNDED UPON YOUR RETURN.
PHOTO I.D MAY BE REQUIRED AT TIME OF HIRE
Whitby to Scarborough Track:
From 1885 until it’s closure in 1965 the old railway line from Scarborough to Whitby took goods and passengers up and down the North Yorkshire coast. Now that it’s an off road route through the North York Moors National Park for walkers, horse riders and cyclists, where will it take you? You might decide to make a slight detour and visit one of the quiet bays such as Crook Ness, Cloughton Wyke, Hayburn Wyke, Stoupe Beck Sands or Maw Wyke Hole.
You may prefer to stop for a pint at the Hayburn Wyke Hotel or for afternoon tea in Ravenscar. You can explore our early industrial heritage at the Peak Alum Works - the birthplace of the British chemical industry - where locally mined rock was combined with human urine, brought up by barge from London, to make Alum – which helps fix dye to cloth – for the emerging UK textile industry. You may be confounded by the town that never quite was at Ravenscar.
You can stop to wonder at the 13 spans of the 120 feet (36.5 metre) high Larpool Viaduct over the River Esk in Whitby. Or you may simply want to take a bit of time to enjoy the numerous sights and pleasures of Whitby, Scarborough or Robin Hoods Bay. In an act of great foresight, Scarborough Borough Council bought the line shortly after it closed. Because the track ballast was made from cinders rather than crushed stone, many locals call it the “cinder track”. It now forms 21 miles (34.4 kms) of Route 1 of the National Cycle Network and the Friends of the Old Railway (www.friendsoftheoldrailway.org) are grateful for the support given by Sustrans, Scarborough Borough Council, the Groundwork Trust and the Big Lottery Fund.
From 1885 until it’s closure in 1965 the old railway line from Scarborough to Whitby took goods and passengers up and down the North Yorkshire coast. Now that it’s an off road route through the North York Moors National Park for walkers, horse riders and cyclists, where will it take you? You might decide to make a slight detour and visit one of the quiet bays such as Crook Ness, Cloughton Wyke, Hayburn Wyke, Stoupe Beck Sands or Maw Wyke Hole.
You may prefer to stop for a pint at the Hayburn Wyke Hotel or for afternoon tea in Ravenscar. You can explore our early industrial heritage at the Peak Alum Works - the birthplace of the British chemical industry - where locally mined rock was combined with human urine, brought up by barge from London, to make Alum – which helps fix dye to cloth – for the emerging UK textile industry. You may be confounded by the town that never quite was at Ravenscar.
You can stop to wonder at the 13 spans of the 120 feet (36.5 metre) high Larpool Viaduct over the River Esk in Whitby. Or you may simply want to take a bit of time to enjoy the numerous sights and pleasures of Whitby, Scarborough or Robin Hoods Bay. In an act of great foresight, Scarborough Borough Council bought the line shortly after it closed. Because the track ballast was made from cinders rather than crushed stone, many locals call it the “cinder track”. It now forms 21 miles (34.4 kms) of Route 1 of the National Cycle Network and the Friends of the Old Railway (www.friendsoftheoldrailway.org) are grateful for the support given by Sustrans, Scarborough Borough Council, the Groundwork Trust and the Big Lottery Fund.