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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Cycling: Finland (26 – 27 August 2009)

A groggy awakening on the ferry was followed by a ravenous descent upon the breakfast buffet. It’s amazing how much you can eat while cycle touring. A few hours were spent wandering around Turku, bikes everywhere, and a different sort of feel to the city – we’re not in Scandinavia anymore.

 

Arriving in Finland

 

We ended up on the 110 road, heading towards Helsinki in the rain. It didn’t take long to reach the conclusion that the Fins really need to hire a new animator. It felt like we were constantly scrolling through the same set of hill… valley with farmhouse… hill with forest… with a few random crops and a roadsign or two thrown in to spice things up. It didn’t help that the sky was miserable, grey and overcast, and we were being consistently mizzled and drizzled on. Add to that the fact that the only people we saw glared at us, and it was a fairly uninspiring experience.

 

The Finnish moose sign, and one of the well-known segments of road – this would be followed by a descent into an open area with a farmhouse and some crops, then you’d cycle up the same hill with forest and a roadsign again.

 

 

More repetitive road

 

This continued on the second day in Finland (with a big thunderstorm thrown in overnight), and we finally made it to Helsinki with some relief – at least the scenery was different. Some sight-seeing, and then tickets were purchased for the 5.30pm ferry to Tallinn: finally, escape from this miserable, grey place (yes, it’s possible that the weather really does colour your judgement of a place).

 

The Sibelius monument, Helsinki (created in honour of Finnish composer Jean Sibelius)

 

Distance: 194km
Flaginess levels: Moderate
Wifi availability: I don’t think we actually checked for any, due to the rain (although the ferry from Helsinki to Tallinn had free wifi, so that was handy)
Days of rain: 2/2
Mooses: Our time in Finland was entirely moose-free, despite the signs advising of their presence.
Random fact: All terrestrial life in Finland was completely wiped out during the last ice age that ended some 10,000 years ago, following the retreat of the glaciers and the appearance of vegetation.

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Cycling: Sweden, the Return (22 – 25 August 2009)

Pining for the fjords

 

The plan was to take a train to Kristiansand, Sweden from Oslo. After arriving at the station a bit later than we planned to, we discovered there was no train, but a bus. And there was no other way to get out into Sweden by train – at least, not for another couple of days. So, the bus it was – except we’d missed the early bus now, and booked onto the 6pm departure. Lunch in the park with the drug dealers is followed by a wander around town with Daniel (we go to the Opera House and watch a guy in a tuxedo patterned g-string scull several beers then paddle across the water to rescue a blow-up doll). Then it’s back to pack up our bikes for bus travel.

Our bus is wireless enabled! Free wireless internet! I am amazed by modern technology. While waiting for my flying car to be delivered, I start losing my voice, and we realise how far we’d have to cycle tomorrow if we start in Kristiansand. The decision is made to pay the extra and stay on the bus until Örebro. We arrive in town after 11pm, reassemble bikes and find a patch of forest outside town to camp in not too long after midnight.

 

Buckets, and a sample of the standard Swedish scenery

 

The following day is spent largely lazing around in the tent as I try and coax my voice back into action. We watch The Empire Strikes Back over lunch, reliving our Rallarvegen experience (the Hoth scenes were shot around Finse), before finally packing up and cycling the enormous distance of 11km on the gentle Swedish roads (what a difference from the hills of Norway!). Our home for the night is courtesy of Erik and Mia, who extended an invitation out of the blue, offering us a place for the night if our trip happened to take us through their neighbourhood. In their ancient old farmhouse we have the tastiest meal we’ve had all trip, and learn all sorts of useful things about identifying wild chanterelle mushrooms as well as meeting their dogs, chickens and rabbits, and generally having a great time.

 

Sweden homestay

 

Finally on the road again, we marvel at how fast we can go on these nice sealed roads with their lack of big hills. A few hours later, we both realise we’re finding the scenery just a little boring after Norway, cycling through constant farmland and forest. An early camp in a forest, after a huge 125km day, then we’re up and pedaling for Stockholm to make the ferry for Finland.

 

6000km

 

Of course, once we reach the outskirts of Stockholm the signs to the city centre disappear, and the bike paths all go in odd and confusing directions. We luckily run into Alpo, a cycling angel who offers to lead us into the centre, and gives us lots of useful information and tells us lots of interesting stories along the way. He says he’s thinking of making maps for the poor confused cycle tourists he comes across who are as baffled as we were by the difficulty of making it into the centre of Stockholm.

 

Sunset over Stockholm, waiting for the ferry

 

Safely into the centre, we stock up on a few essentials, wander around having a look at the city, and then dine by the river before joining the ferry queue. Checking in with the cars, we get waved on first, then lean our bikes up against a handy surface and find a spot on the ferry to spend the night. The Stockholm-Turku ferry seems to be mainly a party ship, as going via the Ã…land islands (exempt from the abolition of duty-free within the EU) means they are able to sell duty-free liquor. From our corner we watch the latest Harry Potter movie before falling into a restless slumber some time after midnight.

Distance: 257km
Flaginess levels: High!
Public toilets: Available
Wifi availability: Good
Days of rain: 1/4
Bike friendliness: Ok

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Cycling: Norway Part II (16 – 21 August 2009)

West Coast. The Rallarvegen. The return to Oslo.

 

We’ve come to the conclusion that if we don’t get ourselves some Australian flags, we at least need a sign that simply reads: “We’re not German”. It’s the standard assumption in Scandinavia, to the extent that we had a couple of German cycle tourists come out and start speaking to us in German a few days ago. Several Scandinavians have tried speaking to us in German as well. It happened in the Netherlands too, so I can only assume that we either look incredibly German (well we do have German panniers), or that the European epidemic of German cycle-tourists has reached such plague proportions that they out-number other nationalities by a huge percentage.

 

By Fedafjorden

 

After an indoors stay last night our wet clothes have dried. Our bike shoes, unsurprisingly, have not. After a quick brake pad replacement (they wear very quickly on the steep gravelly wet roads around here) we’re off to Storekvina, where we’ll catch the train to Stavanger. Unfortunately this means skipping a whole section of awesome fjordal coast riding, but we really like the idea of cycling the Rallarvegen, and other time constraints now mean we can’t do both. The ride to catch the train takes us alongside Fedafjorden, along an old road with a steep drop off down to the water/valley, and more cliffs and waterfalls above.

The standard deal with Norwegian trains seem to be to remove your panniers, hoist bike and panniers into the guards carriage (generally at the back of the train), and then pay an enormous amount of money for you and your bike to get anywhere. But at least the train is fast and dry, and soon enough we’re in Stavanger. Where it immediately starts to pour with rain as soon as we step outside the station. As we pedal away a Scotsman remarks to Alex: “You’re a better man than me”.

 

The narrow cobbled streets of Stavanger

 

It was a short-lived shower, but we’re now nice and wet and don’t feel like hanging around, so make a beeline for the ferry terminal where we cycle straight on and grab a seat. After the first stop at Kvitsøy the sea gets very rough. The ferry is tilting and crashing into troughs. Several small children fall and hurt themselves, and a chorus of caterwauling begins. I start to feel a bit queasy, and try not to think about people dangling chunks of bacon fat down their throat with a bit of string as a cure for sea-sickness.

An hour and a half later we roll off onto the island of Karmøy – rugged and wild looking with crashing surf, it reminds me of the wild parts of Donegal. We read a story that tells of two girls from the Shetland Isles who rowed out to a nearby island to milk some of the cows grazing there – but on their return a strong storm blew their boat to Karmøy, where they ended up staying and marrying locals.

 

Karmøy

 

 

Riding through Karmøy to find a camping spot

 

I wake during the night to hear rain, and an odd creaking noise. Creak…. creak…. I wonder what on earth that is…. creak… is it a tree? It’s quite regular… creak… oh well, I’ll just ignore it and go to sleep again…. SNAP! *side of the tent vibrates* What the? Oh. That’s another tent pole snapping then. Not much we can do about it now, we don’t have any more splints anyway. Back to sleep. (Over the course of the trip five tent poles snapped – we managed, and the tent was great otherwise)

Onwards through Haugesund, and more ferry hopping across islands, and the bike route signs have started pointing to Bergen (instead of just reading Nordsjø, as they did between Stavanger and Haugesund). We cycle in to SagvÃ¥g, and head onwards, with the North Sea Route mostly sticking to roads (some really nice ones too). Then it’s another ferry from Fitjar across to the mainland, and suddenly we’re nearly at Bergen.

 

Island hopping across giant bridges – some of the islands have nothing but bridge on them

 

Getting to Bergen is hard going, there’s a lot of steep up and downs, and we lose the marked cycle route in the city, picking our way as best we can towards the city centre. That night we stay with hosts from warmshowers.com, and enjoy the luxury of a real bed for the night, as well as a warm shower.

 

The scenic cabbages of Bergen

 

We’re back on a train again the next day – thanks to a missing ferry connection you can’t cycle all the way along the Route 4 here, so we arrive in Stranghelle, out east of Bergen, the easy way. Cycling out of there and beyond Dale the hills begin, and we cycle past waterfalls and huge amphitheatres of towering rock, mossy roadsides and sheep with bells. It’s all wonderful terrain to be cycling through and we’re incredibly glad we met the Belgian who convinced us we should cycle this section.

 

Tunnels abound – the dank, dark, dripping rough-hewn sort

 

 

Waterfalls are everywhere too

 

 

This sheep had its head stuck through the fence. As we left, it was attempting to extricate itself by sticking it’s head round into one of the adjoining holes.

 

 

Nearing the pass

 

After slogging uphill for quite some time, we pass through Eskingdalen and stop and camp just after cresting the pass. It’s not particularly flat but there’s a great view (and more sheep with bells).

 

We found a flat spot above the road to camp just near here

 

The following morning seems suspiciously warm, but as we roll downhill, we realise it’s because of an inversion; and soon we’re shivering in the cold and misty valley bottom. Arriving in Voss we stock up on groceries for the Rallarvegen, then follow road 13 out of town.

 

Morning downhill

 

 

Cold and misty in the valley bottom

 

We haven’t seen any signs for the cycle route, but it feels as if we’re going the right way. The altitude profile is right, the direction is approximately right, and both of us assume the other one is paying close attention. Fifteen kilometres later the road suddenly starts going steeply downhill. We’re going the wrong way! And we have to arrive at Upsete train station in time to catch the train through the tunnel to Myrdal, otherwise we’d be stuck for the night! Panic, panic!

After some muttering and wailing, we backtrack – which is thankfully all downhill anyway. Back to Voss again, and we leave town headed in the right direction (although the turn-off just out of Voss isn’t sign-posted, it isn’t too hard to spot as long as you’re paying attention – and given that you have the railway to follow, that shouldn’t be too hard). Despite all the warnings we’d heard about the fact we’re doing the route the wrong way, the hills aren’t that bad at all. Perhaps Norwegians have a thing about going up hills, Route 8 in Wales is much worse than any of this. It’s warm and windy, and the weather looks unsettled.

 

More curious sheep

 

 

Rivers running clear – nearly at the end of the road and start of the Rallarvegen (Navie’s road)

 

Arriving at the train station in Upsete we are overjoyed. We made it! Overcame adversity, triumphed in the face of something. The station is even warm, and provides shelter from the rain which is beginning to fall. We comment that it wouldn’t be a bad place to have to camp for the night, ha ha. I have a look at the timetable, confirming that we have the right time written down. The timetable here is more up to date than the one we’d looked at earlier, and much easier to read. Oh. The 7.23pm train only comes on Fridays you say? The last train we could have got to Myrdal was at 3.18pm you say? Oh.

We settle down to cook dinner, and eat in the warm of the Upsete train station. No-one comes to kick us out or lock up for the night, so we set up in our sleeping bags, listening to the storm roaring outside.

 

Waiting for the train

 

Come morning we awake in our warm little house and get things packed and ready in preparation for The Train. It comes as planned at 9.14am, and takes us through the tunnel in 7 minutes or so for NOK100 (CAD$19). If only there weren’t freight trains going at all hours we could have walked through the tunnel ourselves.

It’s raining slightly as we potter down onto the start of the Rallarvegen, which is disturbingly steep and rocky. Alex’s front tyre is a bit soft, and gets a pinch flat within the first few hundred metres – we fix it up, make sure there’s a more reasonable amount of air in our tyres, and continue. After the initial rocky start, the track quality improves, and is mostly quite ok – unfortunately the sections that tend to be eroded and rocky are also the steep sections where you’d really prefer not to be cycling over rocks. I’m surprised how populated it is too – there are houses all the way along; it’s not out in the wilderness at all (I suppose the trainline with all the train stations should have given that away).

 

Rallarvegen

 

 

Rallarvegen

 

Gradually working our way higher, we weave past lakes and waterfalls and streams, playing overtaking tag with a fisherman (who rather pragmatically hops off his bike and walks whenever the going gets steep – with our fully loaded bikes it’s easier to be cycling though). The weather alternates between sun and rain, and the scenery is spectacular. Patches of snow start appearing, and the water flowing past us is clear and blue.

It’s just before midday that we start meeting people coming the other way. I start counting them – they come in dribs and drabs at first, then huge enormous groups, and hire bikes. We’re working our way uphill, and they’re all going the commonly recommended way, which involves a lot of hurtling downhill. By the time we reach Finse we’ve passed 188 people going the opposite way (and only ever saw the one person going the same way as us).

 

Rallarvegen

 

 

Highest point on the Rallarvegen

 

From Finse onwards the hills are on our side though, and we cycle along the mostly downhill section of the Rallarvegen to Haugestol, past still more groups of cyclists (I’ve stopped counting them now though). Off the Rallarvegen we’re back on the road and cycle to Geilo for a quick supermarket dinner and then to jump on the terrible train, which whisks us away to Oslo.

 

Friendly cow believes my bike is a salt lick

 

Distance: 532km
Flaginess levels: Low
Public toilets: Available
Wifi availability: Good
Groceries: Expensive
Days of rain: 5/6
Mooses: Still none

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Cycling: Norway Part I (6 – 15 August 2009)

To Oslo and along the South Coast
*Uploaded 3 Dec 2009*

The best thing about travelling across Europe by bicycle is seeing all of the gradual changes in the landscape – the flatness by the North Sea, with all the dykes and windmills, transforming into the gentle rolling hills past Hamburg, and gradually steepening as you get further into Sweden, with lakes springing up everywhere, and changing again to a more obviously glacial landscape as you draw near the border with Norway, with the fjordal type lakes hemmed in by steep forested hills.

 

Picture postcard first day in Norway Alex cycling

 

We arrived in Norway shortly after midday, then headed north along the lakes through Fossby and then to Ørje, where we admired the lock system and the pretty lake, and then the cost of Norwegian groceries. Cycling onwards the scenery became more interesting, and the day warmer. We ended it all by finding some moose prints to camp near, in the hope of being trampled by a moose in the night.

 

Route planning and the grocery bill

 

We were not trampled by a moose in the night.

The lakes being in our favour, we picked a quiet route on dirt roads that took us directly towards Oslo. On the way we passed a few swampy lakes that looked vaguely promising for mooses, but resulted in nothing.

 

Oslo-bound!

 

 

Plastic-wrapped silage

 

 

Passing through farmland

 

As we reached Fetsund, the level of traffic started to increase, and it’s around then that Alex’s cleat failed – the plate in his shoe with the clipping mechanism in it pulled out entirely, thanks to old and cracking shoes. The second bike cleat failed within the next hour – too much pressure on it after the demise of the first no doubt. As we were only a few hours from Oslo, Alex kept cycling with the dead shoes; they seemed to work ok. They did, however, have the disadvantage that the holes created by the missing cleat section could catch on the pedals, and make the shoe not want to come off again. This was discovered when Alex tried to stop suddenly and ended up in a pile on the ground with the bike on top of him. At a bus station. Outside a mall. Surrounded by people.

On the outskirts of Oslo, the ratio of lycra-clad cyclists was as high as we’ve seen it since France. Everyone is out on the bike paths, and there weren’t many town bikes to be seen. We think first that it’s like a flatter Vancouver, and secondly that we need to find a bike store. This is easily achieved, as people in Oslo are mad keen cyclists (and everything else involving being outdoors for that matter) and there are bicycle stores on every corner. We go through the city centre, with its colourful inhabitants, and Alex walks out of the first bike store we look at with a new pair of shoes. We both use MTB style bike shoes that we’ve had for… well, mine are about 6 years old now, and his were a similar vintage. They’re comfortable for cycling all day, and they’re ok for walking around in too – the only disadvantage being that irritating crunching sound they make when walking on concrete. But Alex’s new shoes don’t even have that, as the cleat is further recessed into the sole.

We find the apartment of our old Australian friend who is currently living in Oslo, get our bikes stashed, get clean, eat tasty food, and generally spend all evening catching up and admiring the view from his balcony. The next day is spent touristing around town – our first day not on a bike since we left Ireland over a month ago.

 

It’s the Fram! (As used by Roald Amundsen on his expedition to the South Pole and such things)

 

The city is flooded with outdoor gear stores, and it would be a dangerous place to be if it weren’t for the strength of the Norwegian Kroner making a simple pair of shoes cost as much as a house in Australia. All the rumors are true, and we cringe as we pay for a small load of groceries that would have cost a quarter the price at an Aldi store in Germany. Going out for a couple of beers on Saturday night, I have a CAD$18 margarita, followed up with a CAD$10 beer. I can see why people don’t come to Norway to go partying.

 

I could have happily spent a lot longer in Oslo – the sculpture garden was just one of the reasons why

 

* * *

As we set off from the warm comforts of Oslo, I rue my words the night before:
“Oh no, we’ve had really good weather in Norway, it’s been sunny every day so far.”

It starts to rain a little bit, and then torrentially. After satisfying itself, the rain departs, leaving us to pedal soaking wet through the sunshine. This theme is repeated again the following day, as we’re immediately soaked soon after setting out, only to have it clear up again.

 

This singing sphere is by the banks of the Dramenselva River, in Drammen, with a partner on the far side. They both resonate according to the vibrations of pedestrians passing across the bridge in the background (which has accelerometer sensors imbedded in it). Created by Louise Bertelsen and Po Shu Wang, as a tribute of sorts to the legendary Norwegian water spirit Nøkken, who lives in the river and lures people to their deaths with his beautiful music.

 

Aside from the rain, Norway is also demonstrating her lovely steep roads, and our leg muscles protest a little at this unaccustomed work – all of the flat terrain through the Netherlands and Germany has made them lazy.

 

The district of Telemark (we didn’t see anyone skiing)

 

 

Down towards Skiien on a gorgeous sunny morning

 

While grabbing groceries in Skien, Telemark, a guy on a single-speed swings by to chat to us, warning us of a No Bicycles section on the E18 ahead. We were hoping to dive off onto the North Sea Cycle Route around that point, so hopefully we can find a way through. As we were pushing our bikes away another old guy comes up for a chat, and then half an hour later as we were having some cheese and crackers with our bikes leaned on a deer, another man comes up to chat as well. Since we’ve hit Norway a lot more people seem interested in coming up and talking to us about our trip. (On a side-note, Castello Blue cheese and Spelt Knekkebrot make an excellent and protein-filled cycling snack).

Luckily the No Bikes road could be avoided by jumping onto the bike path alongside it, and then connecting through to the North Sea Cycle Route (sign-posted as the 1 in Norway, in that sign-style so familiar from cycling through Wales and England). The fjord towns with little islands are beautiful, and I’m beginning to understand why boat ownership in Norway is reputedly so high. Since we’ve hit the coast, the fjordal terrain has been making for long days with lots of climbing (and descending), but the views have made it all worthwhile.

 

5000km, and some laundry hanging to dry on my handlebar

 

 

We… weren’t sure how to Maks Gangfart, but we tried

 

We cycle through Kragerø (another pretty coastal town), following the NSCR, and wait for the ferry over to Stabbestad. The ferry takes us past islands and towns, and we see all sorts of amazing houses in ridiculous places perched on rocky little islands as we travel over, including one with climbing holds attached to the cliff the house rested next to.

We keep following the NSCR for the next few days, and realise that the only bad point about following the coast in Norway is that it’s all fjordal and crinkly. So you’re cycling north and south all day to get around fjords, or you’re relying on ferries. At one point we find we’ve missed the only morning ferries, and realise that there will be no other ferry for about 4 hours. We kick the ferry that’s sitting there innocently, and contemplate driving it across the narrow gap ourselves. Instead the days plans are rerouted and we go inland, picking our way along roads at random – a treacherous task in Norway where a lot of roads are busy with tunnels that won’t allow cyclists to pass. Well, a treacherous task when you’re relying on a 400K scale map of the country which doesn’t exactly provide a lot of detail.

 

Icecream stop!

 

 

Typical south coast views

 

We regain the NSCR, passing through Grimstad, and then on a magical mystery tour through wetlands on steep dirt tracks – so steep that we’re pushing our bikes occasionally. We arrive in Lillesand, then Birkeland and down to Kristiansand. It’s easy to tell when you’re nearing a large city in Norway, as suddenly there are cyclists all over the trails and roads, out having some fun away from the city. Kristiansand is a nice little city, with statues, fountains, bike lanes, threatening clouds, ice-cream and a church.

 

Sunset from camp

 

 

Boats everwhere in Norway. Well, boats everywhere along the coast in Norway. And thanks to the fjords, there’s a LOT of coast.

 

* * *

After a bit of a sleep-in, we were making good time til at 11am or so we hit a Belgian headed towards Kristiansand. We tell him we’re cycling to Bergen then catching the train back to Oslo, “You’re missing the best bit!” he exclaims, and proceeds to tell us of the Rallerwegen near Bergen, and after chatting for a while, we end up buying his plastic map set of Norwegian Route 4, incorporating the Rallerwegen on the route from Bergen to Drammen or thereabouts. Our route ahead is modified as we dream of the Rallerwegen – but how to find the time? We’re riding on a schedule now as we have to be in Lithuania on September 1st.

 

Eep, warming up now – go little solar panel, go

 

 

Fjords and cyclist in the sun (And yes we wear helmets, even when it’s hot. I grew up wearing one, as it’s the law in Australia, so I don’t even notice it anymore. It’s saved my bacon a few times too – I must have a knack for landing on my head)

 

We passed through Vigeland, which has lots of memorable statues (the most obvious one being the 3 naked ladies standing on each others shoulders in the middle of a roundabout). Following the NSCR out of town it was slow going, and got slower as the road got steeper. Oh god, the hills, the hills! Before Lyngdal we were on steep switchbacks to grind our way up, and then fly our way down again. Drivers in passing cars look at us with sympathy.

 

Hairpin! We had some in Japan, but this is the first for Europe.

 

It was that night that the rain started, and the next morning we reluctantly packed up the tent as it continued. The roads were the steepest yet, and sometimes gravel – hard going in the wet. Back on the main road again we could move faster as it was flatter, but there was also little to no shoulder, and still a lot of rain.

As drowned rats we limped into Farsund and sought shelter on a stage in a small square next to the Spar supermarket. Groups of people were huddled in marquees either side of us in the rain. Alex disappeared to get an initial pre-grocery-shopping snack, and came back with half a cake. As we started devouring the cake we contemplated where a coffee could be found – and just then a woman from the blue marquee came up and offered us both coffees. We accepted gratefully.

It was my turn to run the grocery gauntlet, and I discovered with disgust (soaking wet and cold to begin with) that they keep all their cold items in a cold-room. I dived in to grab some cheese, and then once more for eggs, cursing them and their clever ideas. I was appalled and frozen. Returning to the horrible weather outside, I found that Alex had been information gathering – apparently there’s an election on, and the Labour side have countered the Liberal coffees we drank with some chewy toffee lollies.

Biding our time under the shelter, hiding from the rain, eating more food, imagining the weather might improve, we chatted to a few different people, and were given roses by a man who wandered round handing them to everyone. Then came the offer for a warm and dry place to stay for the night – we accepted without too much deliberation.

 

A rose in the rain

 

It was just a short cycle through beautiful terrain to our warm and dry destination (once you’re thoroughly soaked you can’t really get much wetter, so can appreciate the misty scenery). We took a short-cut and missed a section of the NSCR, but can thoroughly recommend the route we took: a dashed section on our map, it’s an old car route that’s closed to traffic, which hugs the side of the fjord (Framvaren), winding higher and higher with waterfalls running along the inside, and mossy rocks scattered along the outside – hardly enough to stop you from taking the precipitous plunge down to the water below.

Although a warm and dry house-shaped accommodation was welcome that night, in general the wild camping has so far been producing some fantastic spots. Favourites on this section would be the spot in a forest next to a small creek/waterfall, where we could play around building dams and making swimming pools and dish-washing pools, and the lake just outside of Stabbestad, which put on a pink sunset just for us – and had no mosquitoes or ticks. The ticks have become a bit of a persistent fact of life while wild camping – we’ve become adept at spotting them crawling on us and crushing them before they can take hold.

Distance: 754km
Flaginess levels: Low
Public toilets: Available
Wifi availability: Good
Groceries: Expensive
Days of rain: 4/10
Bike friendliness: Not bad, not a lot of cycle lanes or wide shoulders in the countryside though, but plenty of quiet roads to choose from. Thanks to fjordal landscape there would often be only one road though, and if that was large and busy it could get awkward. Some good national cycle routes though. The Scandinavian countries are far from the bicycle friendliness of the Netherlands and Belgium though.
Advantages of cycle touring: Can stay anywhere in the country
Disadvantages of bike touring: No maid service.

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bikes european bike epic general

Cycling: Sweden (30 July – 6 August 2009)

After a half hour train ride across the Øresund bridge (the longest combined road and rail bridge in Europe – no bicycles allowed though) we arrived in Malmö and had a wander round to see the sights (including an enormous and somewhat terrifying supermarket, and yet another fort). Then came the afternoon thunderstorm that seems to be typical of summer in Scandinavia. More meandering took us to Lund, and then onwards north through gentle rolling hills and crops.

 

Twisting Torso

 

 

Malmo fountain

 

That night we had our first experience with the rule that stands in the Nordic countries, of Everyman’s Right, or the Right to Roam. Roughly speaking, it’s legal to camp anywhere that’s not cropland or fenced in. If you want to stay for more than a couple of nights, you must get the landowners permission, and you must be at least 150 metres from the nearest dwelling. This made traveling through expensive Sweden and Norway a lot more affordable – as most of our budget went on food every day.

 

Heading out into the Swedish countryside on a lovely sunny afternoon – well it was sunny for this 20 minutes anyway, there’d been crazy rain squalls earlier.

 

 

Bikes lurking in a mossy forest – we set up camp here on our second night in Sweden – the thick dry beds of moss covered everything and made for a ridiculously comfortable nights sleep

 

The next day we cycled further north, and as the crops were replaced by forest, the hills became steadily steeper and we were shifting into granny gear for the first time since England. We then discovered the second perk to cycling in Sweden: the Bad Plats. A nice setup that could often be found on the many lakes, with a boardwalk looping out onto the lake – creating a convenient spot for having a swim and washing yourself and your clothes (with eco-friendly soap of course) when you were camping wild every night.

 

The Vaetteryd Grave-field

 

There are lots of barn-like houses, and barns, painted in that reddish-brown and white combination that I always thought of as American, but must be really a Scandinavia import to America. Bales of silage are covered in white plastic, looking starting against the bright green of the fields. As well as the farmland, lakes and forest, we visit quite a few old standing stones and grave fields – and notice that a lot of the towns have an interesting variety of statues, beyond the simple ‘model of relevant famous person’. The Swedish colours are everywhere too, blue and yellow flags not just on all the houses, but also on road signs, through town, on boats…

 

Moose! (For the next 0.2 – 1.0km… lots of very specific warning signs in Scandinavia)

 

 

Bad Plats – here we met Swedish bogans, and cooked dinner, and camped nearby

 

 

The statues aren’t getting any less strange

 

Cycling through Göteborg, I realise my perceptions of a place are greatly influenced by the weather. It’s hard to fall in love with a city when you only see it in the rain, and most cities seem at their best when it’s sunny. As a result I’m unimpressed with Göteborg, but Trollhätten on the following day seemed like a lovely place (it even had a girl with a ferret on a leash). I’m still not sure if the perception would hold if the weather had been reversed.

 

Out in the countryside

 

We spend our last night in Sweden at the oddly named Ed, camping in a real live pay-actual-money campground, having actual warm showers and getting all of our electronics charged up again. Tomorrow, we should be in Norway by lunchtime.

 

Leaving Ed

 

 

Roadsign – decisions

 

 

Emus in Sweden! What are you guys doing here in the rain?
They didn’t even speak Australian.

 

 

Standing stone

 

 

More beautiful lakes

 

Distance cycled: 668km
Flaginess levels: Extremely high!
Public toilets: Available
Wifi availability: Good
Groceries: Not cheap, not cheap at all
Mooses: Our time in Sweden was entirely moose-free, despite the signs advising of their presence.