My experience of starting to cycle during lockdown, having not done it since I was a child, was quite interesting (I was previously active and played sport, etc. so it wasn't completely different, but just much longer duration/less easy to fix things if going low).
I prefer to leave home with no short-acting insulin on board, if it's a short ride (1-2h) I can live with having some still remaining, but will then also make sure I have ~2x my usual carbs for whatever remains in my system before I leave - I don't think about it quite this hard at the time, but this is basically what I'm doing. For a 1h ride I might just wing it but I do have probably 100g of mixed carbs in a framebag even for short rides (more for longer ones) and I'm not going to get far from home in that time, so that's fine.
My blood sugar will normally rise gradually over the first hour anyway (high anaerobic-type effort raises my blood sugar at any point in a ride too) but I will generally then need to start eating food from 1h30 onwards.
For longish rides (100km+) I will usually knock my basal down to ~3/5 of the normal dosage and have an uncovered snack/small breakfast before I leave. This means I tend to run a bit higher initially, but by 2h30 into the ride I'll need to start eating. I always take ample food (I started riding during lockdown, and made a few mistakes early on - not reducing basal being the main problem, but thankfully close to home).
Interestingly I did a 6h ride earlier in the year having halved my basal and my blood sugar stayed stubbornly above 10 for the whole duration. I was reluctant to take any short acting as I expected to eventually start running lower. While it's nice to not need to eat (unusual for a diabetic doing sport), on this occasion I really did quite fancy something by the end of the ride!
I note that I need to eat earlier when riding than I would when not, as I assume digestion speed is reduced (I try to eat normal-ish food rather than dextrose tablets and gels), this can result in running temporarily high when you stop. Equally when stopping for lunch/cake, I have to be careful to not take much (or indeed any) insulin (depending on how long I'll be stopped for and what my BG is) because, if I'm already a couple of hours in, as soon as I start riding again it will drop my blood sugar if there's any short acting insulin left on board.