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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Into the Alps: The Großglockner (26 – 27 Sept 2009)

“From 768m to 2504m and back down again. Sometimes all you can do is slip into your lowest granny gear, set some Queen playing on your iPod, and grind your way to the top.”

 

Setting off we plan to get as close as we can to the start of the Großglockner Pass road. However we get distracted after finding a market, and then an enormous bike store, and then in Bad Reichenhall there are cakes, and internet. By the time we’re finished in Bad Reichenhall it’s after midday and the clouds have finally lifted, revealing the mountains surrounding us. Mountains! Rocky limestone alpine peaks, it feels just like home (well Canadian home). The rivers are aqua with glacier-chalk as well.

 

Afternoon views outside of Bad Reichenhall, all of a sudden we’re in the mountains

 

We’re a bit worried on reaching the end of Saalach-Stausee. The main road on to Unken and Lofer looks very bike unfriendly, but thankfully there’s a bike path to follow – we’re following Jakobsweg, and the Mozart Radweg, and a bunch of other signposted trails. After a steep gravelly start the path turns out ok, and happily keeps us away from the traffic. The day has turned out clear and sunny, and we’re cycling past rocky mountains, cliffs and rivers. We watch rock climbers and kayakers and yearn to be doing things besides cycling – but at least we get to be here cycling, rather than being stuck at work dreaming of being outside. Lofer is nice, and has a man playing a piano accordion outside a pub. It seems the quintessential Austrian Alps town.

 

Alex as we head into the Alps (note the beard getting alarmingly large)

 

As we get to Saalfelden, alpenglow is highlighting the mountains around us, and we arrive to set up camp in Maishofen a few minutes after sunset. Fall asleep to cow bells again.

 

Misty morning on the Zeller See, Austria

 

 

Riding through the foggy morning

 

After leaving Maishofen at 7.30am we rode into the fog south of Zeller See and saw a fogbow (like a rainbow, but with fog), and then heard a choir of children (who sounded disconcertingly like angels) singing in the church at Bruck. There wasn’t much climbing until we fit Fusch, and it was when we hit the tollgates that the ascent began in earnest (and we were quite grateful that we didn’t have to pay the outrageous amounts that cars or motorbikes were tolled).

 

The Großglockner High Road – 33km of road where anything could happen and probably will

 

Gradually more and more bikes appeared on the road. We didn’t overtake many, but on the plus side, not many were going much faster than us; although if we could have done, we would have happily changed down to a lower gear at some points.

 

Gaining altitude

 

 

Alpine views

 

Each switchback gained around 30 metres of altitude, so we were gaining height quickly. And each corner was sign-posted with name and altitude, which made measuring progress gratifyingly easy. There were also plenty of picnic benches and roadside stops, and different views to admire, so it was a very gradual progress uphill.

 

Achtung! Marmots!

 

 

Up and up

 

 

Hairpins bring us higher and higher

 

We tossed up cycling to the Edelweiß-spitze, but for another 200 metres of altitude over 2km, we decided to save our legs for the next few days – it wasn’t like this was the only pass we’d be cycling over. So instead we just cycled the main road along, descending, heading up through the tunnels, and reaching the high point of the main road of 2504 metres.

 

Alex on the final leg to the high point, cruising along at 2400m

 

 

The Surly LHT photo: 2504m above sea level

 

 

Alps through the looking glass

 

For the descent I decided to invest in some glacier goggles. You never know when they might come in handy. Then we kitted up in our warm clothes and began the descent… until we hit a roundabout and were flabbergasted by the fact we’d have to cycle uphill again! Oh well, that out of the way, we continued the descent to Heiligenblut, then a further 10km or so to a nice little campground with a chatty old Austrian man to talk to.

 

Glacier goggles

 

 

Down again into the Heiligenblut valley

 

Distance cycled: 172km
Sleeping arrangements: Campgrounds
Days of rain: 0/2 (wooo! the sunny spell continues)
Public toilets: Available
Bike friendliness: Good, lots of signed bike trails, or roads that are fine to cycle on
Free wifi availability: There was some in Bad Reichenhall

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Cycling: Austria and Bavaria by river (19 – 25 Sept 2009)

Waking in Slovakia, we decided not to bother cycling into Bratislava, instead we plan to backtrack and cross into Austria up north. A snapped tent pole and a flat tyre later, and we’re over the border and into Austria. Finally, success! We meandered along through rolling hills and open farmland towards Vienna, running into more and more lycra-clad families out for a Saturday cycle.

 

Into Austria

 

That afternoon we reached Vienna, where we had a mediocre Wiener Schnitzel and some Apfel Strudel, and failed to find any open bike stores. There were however lots of large and impressive buildings. A city to be explored another day though, we cycled out of town along the Danube to find camping.

 

Unexpected Viennese architecture

 

The next morning we realised that as we didn’t find any inner tube patches yesterday, and we had no good spare tubes, so if either of us flatted before we could find a bike shop we’d have to test the theory that inner tubes can be used to patch other inner tubes. Of course I got a flat within 5 minutes of cycling away from camp. Luckily the inner tube patch idea works pretty well (just cut out a circle from a no-good tube, glue it on as per a normal patch, works a treat), and we didn’t have to beg patches from passing cyclists.

 

Along the Danube River near Vienna – wide open and peaceful

 

The next few days were spent cycling along the Danube – flowing wide and fast, it’s more of a green than blue. The cycle path is good though, and it’s obviously a popular tour, there are hoards of cyclists following the river, and the average age seemed to be about three decades older than us. All along there were cafes, and lovely scenery – especially after Krems and Melk, where the land beside the river started to rise up and become hilly and picturesque. We cycled past wineries clinging to terraced hillsides, orchards of stone fruit, huge cliffs, castles, churches and jungle-like forest. It was the best scenery cycling we’d been through since Norway. Although unlike our last week in the Czech Republic, there was a bit of a shortage of wildlife. High-water marks on buildings acted as reminders of the tendency of the river to flood, and we’d often be cycling along the bike path, realising that the river was much higher than the land on the other side of us.

 

The Danube as the scenery steepens

 

 

The light of the setting sun over the Danube in Schönbühel

 

We spent our evenings camped by the river and watching the sun set over the Danube (while listening to the sweet music of trees trying to drop pears or acorns on us). There were no spectacular river sunrises though, as it was foggy every single morning, often until noon. The mornings were beginning to get a lot colder at this point too – damp and clammy, they didn’t do much for early morning enthusiasm.

 

The last wisps of fog clearing along the Danube

 

After a couple of days cycling we reached Linz, another nice little Austrian city, with some super tasty icecream (there were probably some relevant architectural and historical points as well, but for some reason the food is always more memorable). It’s there that we finally managed to find a new front tyre for Alex, and get the first bike shop opinion of Alex’s chain/cluster/chain rings – they’re thoroughly worn out.

 

Accessing the internet in random locations – in the middle of Linz just outside the tourist info centre, currently done up to look like a room in one of the hotels in Linz.

 

 

Morning fogginess by camp

 

The following morning we found another bike shop where the mechanic confirms this verdict: “Kaput!” So we headed on to Passau where we hoped the bike stores would have the necessary replacement parts. A few hours later I snapped my gear cable, and so we hobbled into Passau and found a fantastic little bike shop just across the river by the roundabout (Fahrrad Klinik). Thankfully they had the parts we needed (gear cable, front tyre, chain, chain rings, cluster, bottom bracket), and were very helpful, lending us the tools we didn’t have. So we set up on the roundabout in the middle of Passau and spent an hour or two getting ourselves covered in dirt and grease, and our bikes in full working order again.

 

The view from our roundabout in Passau

 

 

Post bike-fixing

 

After our pleasant afternoon in Passau, we parted ways with the Danube and left town along the River Inn, which we were planning to follow at least part of the way towards Munich. The Inn forms the border between Germany and Austria at this point, so we did a lot of crossing back and forth from country to country as we cycled west – although the best cycling infrastructure was definitely found in Austria.

 

Alex cycling through the steep and narrow streets of Passau

 

 

Passau

 

At one point we ended up doing an inadvertent Papal pilgrimage as we followed the Benediktweg through Marktl (where I resisted buying Vatikan Brot or Benedikt Torte) and various other sites of importance to the life of the young Pope Benedikt. In general though, this section of the Inn proved to be far less scenic than the Danube, and the bike path spent much of its time traveling only vaguely near the river, and on gravel and mud, and over un-scenic hills.

 

The moon rises over the Inn River

 

 

Obernberg town square, Germany. Typical town square – brightly coloured buildings surround the square, lots of overflowing planters, cobbles, and problematical traffic flow

 

At our closest point to Munich, we suddenly realised that we should probably make use of the good weather while we had it – the Alps were beckoning. So we turned from our course and dropped down south, trying to follow the Salzach River, but ending by the Waginger See (441m a.s.l.) where we fell asleep listening to the clanging of cow bells.

 

Alex finds that mud makes a great bike stand – our attempt to find a bike path along the Salzach River

 

 

Reaching the foothills of the Alps in Bavaria

 

 

 

 

The view from our campsite by the Waginger See

 

Distance cycled: 604km
Average cycled per day: 93km
Rest days: None
Flagginess: Low
Sleeping arrangements: Campgrounds
Days of rain: 0/7 (wooo! the sunny spell begins)
Public toilets: Available
Bike friendliness: Riverside bike trails were great
Free wifi availability: Bad

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

Cycling: Czech Republic and Slovakia (13 – 18 Sept 2009)

After a last minute decision to jump on a train to Prague, we sat down and made a rough route plan. It looks like our path from Prague to Paris is going to trace out a line on a map of Europe that will look remarkably similar to the tracks of a drunk staggering home from an overlong day at the races. First the steps backwards into Slovakia, then a quick trip forwards into Munich, via the dog-leg of river valley. Then another stagger off route, down across the Alps and into Italy. And finally a loop up through Switzerland and into the Black Forest, around into Germany, and back through Luxembourg to Paris.

It was 7.30am as we sat on the station platform in Prague and hooked our panniers back onto the bikes. A little odd at first to be cycling again, we spent the morning wandering around Prague, a lovely little city filled with old and beautiful and characterful buildings and churches and synagogues and clocks and giant metronomes and rivers and bridges and such. And a golem. Maybe. And definitely cobbled streets. My posterior has vivid memories of the cobbled streets.

 

The doors next to the astronomical clock, Prague

 

 

The steps up to the attic of the synagogue where the golem of Prague is reputedly kept

 

 

Prague

 

It was afternoon by the time we started cycling out of town, having acquired some food, a map, and some Kroner, as well as looking at an awful lot of things (including popping by to see Franz Kafka’s grave). The suburbs seemed endless, as they often do, and there wasn’t much in the way of bike lanes, although the footpath generally seemed fairly hospitable for bikes.

 

Leaving Prague and heading out into the countryside

 

The countryside we were entering was rolling and picturesque, and much more interesting than the plains of Poland (sorry Poland, I’m sure you have your good points, I just didn’t happen to run into any of them). The last of the summer crops were being harvested, silage was being heaped and covered, land was being ploughed, shiny new tractors were rampaging around – the farming technology has certainly leaped forward as we’ve come further south, just a few hundred kilometres north of here we saw a man ploughing a field with a horse just a few days ago. The trees were turning, and there was a chill in the air as night fell – much earlier than it did a few weeks ago. Autumn was on the way.

 

Czech countryside

 

The rolling terrain seemed to become steeper as the days passed, and the hills became a lot more like hard work. At the end of the day we’d have notched up around 1000m of climbing, without having got any higher. There were a few wildlife sightings: a group of pigs wandering around in the undergrowth by the side of the road, and a deer trying to hide behind a leaf. The terrain was lovely, forrested and rolling, and we travelled through a succession of nice little towns, on good roads, with scenic mist hovering in the distance, but no precipitation landing on us directly. Life was good. There were even lots of open wireless networks! And we hit 7000km.

 

7000km

 

 

In the town square of Pelhrimov, Czech Republic

 

Cycling through Jihlava, we found our first non-charming Czech town. It was just a bit too noisy – although it does have fort walls. Brtnice was nice and conveniently unpronounceable, and had statues of men with moustaches. We arrived in TÅ™ebíč later that day and experienced our first Czech campground; after a few nights wild camping in patches of forest. The manager seemed to have about the same grasp on German as I did, so we got along fine. The following morning we had the pleasure of cycling up a nice steep hill to get into town, and then some more cycling up and down steep cobbled streets all morning as we wandered around the Jewish Quarter and Old Town.

 

Looking out over the roofs of Trebic, Czech Republic

 

Leaving town in the afternoon, the roads were getting even steeper. Thanks to a headwind (or perhaps it was a sidewind), we only managed to cover 35km before giving in for the day. Thanks to the steep roads we’d still gained over 900 metres altitude (while losing the same amount in downhill coasting that didn’t even coast fast thanks to the wind).

 

Fields of drying sunflowers – we cycled past quite a few

 

Rain the following morning prompted a sleep-in, but eventually we rose and discovered the land was beginning to flatten out again, making cycling a much saner proposition. As we drew near the border with Austria and Slovakia the terrain became even more interesting, lots of lakes, rivers, castles, grapes and holidaying Czechs. The area is apparently included in the UNESCO list for world cultural and natural heritage.

Later that day we ended up passing by a roadside stall with large containers of suspiciously red liquids. The sign on his stall proclaimed that the liquid was burcak. We ended up camped opposite the stall, and after seeing some other people in the campground wander past with some, we found out that burcak is a type of young wine brew, legal to be sold on the roadside due to tradition. We purchased a bottle (it comes in plastic softdrink bottles) for the sake of experimentation, and found it to be quite tasty, like a mix between wine and ginger beer.

 

A tasty cylinder of goodness, purchased at the last town before the Slovakian border. It unravelled from the bag for eating, and was delicious and we never found them for sale anywhere else… UPDATED – It was Trdelník

 

The next morning as we were cycling towards Slovakia Alex got a front flat (to be followed up by another one later in the day, and then one from me as well). Once in Slovakia we stumbled across the Iron Curtain Greenway, and decided it was a much more pleasant option for cycling than the horribly busy narrow road we’ve been on.

 

Slovakia, yay?

 

The Iron Curtain Greenway proved to be lovely and quiet, and filled with interesting bunkers. Come afternoon we attempted to cross over into Dürnkrut in Austria. According to our map there should have been a bridge. According to reality there was no bridge. According to the drunken Slovakians Alex went to talk to, it’s a long-weekend this weekend, he should drink beer with them, and there is no bridge (and the map-makers were drunk).

 

Along the Iron Curtain Greenway (the demilitarised zone), Slovakia

 

Unimpressed with the lack of a bridge, we decided we were happy to call it a day. A brief hunt along the Greenway turned up a spot to camp and relax for the evening, undecided about whether to return north or head on south to Bratislava.

 

Greenway camp, Slovakia

 

Distance cycled: 428km
Average cycled per day: 65km
Rest days: None, but the cycling was following two weeks of enforced rest
Food highlights: Trdelník!
Flagginess: Low?
Sleeping arrangements: Wild camping and a couple of campgrounds
Days of rain: 3/7 (nothing very heavy though)
Public toilets: Available
Bike friendliness: Quiet country roads were nice
Free wifi availability: Pretty good

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

An epic attempt to escape Vilnius

Well, the Poland plan started well. On arriving in Vilnius we got the rental car returned and walked to the bus station, queued for 40 minutes, then bought a ticket with Ecolines to Krakow for the following evening.

We spent the next day traipsing about the city tracking down extra things we needed (such as the bike boxes the ticket lady assured us we would have to pack our bikes in) and cleaning our bikes. Come 8pm we set off to the train station with the assistance of a couple of others from the hostel to help carry the bike boxes (they were catching an earlier bus, and it made life easier to go with them so we could help carry each others gear).

8.20pm and we were at the bus station, busily packing our bikes away. 9pm and everything was neatly packed and taped up. We sat and waited. The bus was supposed to come at 10.30pm. It didn’t.

On the plus side a group of salsa dancing friends turned up with a boombox to farewell one of their number, so we had a salsa dancing circle going on in full force in front of us. The security guard was baffled, but let them be.

Some time after 11pm the bus turned up. They took one look at the bike boxes, and said “No”. Pointing at our other luggage, they said “This yes. The other, no. Bus full, no room.” It was an enormous double decker thing, packed with people and with very little luggage room. We were told there might be some hope if the bikes weren’t in boxes, but even then probably not, and that they would write on our tickets that we’d cancelled our trip so we might be able to get 50% back at the office the next day.

We muttered quite a lot, confirmed that none of the other buses leaving that night were going anywhere we had visas for (mostly Russia) or wanted to go (northern Lithuania) reassembled the bikes, and went back to sleep in the hostel courtyard, where we proceeded to get rained on and not sleep much.

Come 6am we set off back to the bus station to check out our options. We had no desire to buy another ticket for a bus that might not take our bikes – despite the fact most of the buses seemed to have heaps of luggage space. There was one at 11am for Warsaw, so we went to check out the train station in the meantime. We’d avoided it initially as it seemed like there was a lot of train changing involved, and trains tend to be more expensive. But there was a 12pm train to Warsaw that was cheaper than the bus, and the cost was conveniently covered by our bus ticket refund, with enough money leftover to buy us some food (handy, as we’d spent all of our Lithuanian money the day before in anticipation of leaving the country).

The train was a breeze – the first one had bike hooks opposite our seats, the second (a gauge change from broad to narrow before leaving Lithuania) had an entire carriage full of bike hooks, and Harry Potter type cabins (a novelty for us). And we didn’t need the damn bike boxes.

 

On the Hogwarts Express from Lithuania to Poland

 

We arrived in Warsaw at 8.30pm, determined to jump on the first train we could find. Which ended up being the 9pm to Prague. Fine, we said, Prague would do, please give us tickets for ourselves and our bikes for the Prague train.

When the train turned up, we were thrown onto the non-sleeper Prague section of the train, and told there was nowhere to put our bikes. Well, actually, the conductor just waved us towards a cabin with seats and went back to the sleeper carriage. After sitting with bikes and luggage piled up outside the bathroom at the far end of the carriage, we eventually managed to get a free cabin to ourselves, wheeled the bikes in, and had a row of seats each to sleep on. Brilliant! Many thanks to the one lady occupying the cabin who happily moved when she saw the bikes. I’m not sure how we would have spent the night otherwise.

 

I spent about half an hour staring at this sign, trapped under a pile of bikes and luggage.

 

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bikes european bike epic general trip reports

A week off driving around Lithuania, Poland and Germany (2 – 11 Sept 2009)

We ended up changing our cycling plans for the next section of the trip, as Alex’s father had 10 days to waste and wanted to spend them with us. So we ended up in a hire car again, our bikes were locked to the hostel balcony, and we spent time wandering around, first in Vilnius…

 

Hot-air balloons over Vilnius

 

 

Math-based graffiti

 

 

Vilnius cathedral

 

 

Polar bear – there’s a lot of street art in Vilnius, and a lot of hippy arts students floating around

 

 

Traditional Lithuanian food: Cold borscht (beet soup), eaten with sour cream and dill. As tasty as it is brightly coloured.

 

Then in Lithuania, travelling up to Rokiskis to visit ancestors (not my ancestors, but definitely someone’s ancestors).

Then across Poland, through small country towns, on huge highways, bumpy roads, past billboards and flashing lights and McDonalds and Coca Cola and skyscrapers. I’m terribly glad we didn’t try to ride across Poland – we weren’t planning to cycle the whole way, but until we reached Vilnius we hadn’t worked out exactly where we would cycle.

We ended up in Berlin, where we spent a couple of days trying to see as much as we could – even a couple of weeks wouldn’t be anywhere near enough.

 

Old segment of the Berlin wall

 

 

Deutsche Demokratische Republik

 

 

The Brandenburg Gate

 

 

Hippos in the sun at Berlin Zoo

 

Then down to Dresden…

 

Kreuzkirche, Dresden

 

 

The Elbe, Dresden

 

And back across the border into Poland, and through Lodz and Warsaw, where old buildings fought for sky space with high-rises, and advertising covered everything. Both seemed fairly charmless cities, but maybe that’s the car travel talking. It was lovely and sunny, so it can’t be the rain colouring my opinions this time.

Then finally back to Vilnius (via Stalin World) to pick up the bikes and hop on a bus back to Poland (yes, a ridiculous way of doing things).

 

At Grutas Park (a.k.a. Stalin World) – a sculpture garden of Soviet-era statues and relics collected from around Lithuania