The panniers I ordered and paid for by direct debit were from Motorcycle Adventure in Brisbane (see their website at http://www.motorcycleadventure.com.au/). From ordering by email to receiving by registered post was 5 days - very slick service.
After unpacking the two boxes and checking that all parts were there - I bought the Junior Enduro 40 litre LHS/30 litre RHS set so as to limit the width of the setup a little - I read through the German/English fitting manual to get a feel for what was required.
I found that I needed the following tools:
1 x Phillips head driver
1 x Flat blade screw driver
1 x vise grips
1 x 4mm Allen key - for the rear guard mounting screws
1 x 5mm Allen key - for some of the kit screws
1 x 6mm Allen key - for some of the kit screws
1 x 8mm Allen key - for the Lock-it screws
1 x 10mm socket - to remove the original carrier bolts
1 x 10mm ring and open end spanner - for tensi-lock nuts
1 x 13mm socket - for blinker mounting nuts
1 x 13mm ring and open-end spanner - for exhaust-side mounting nuts to pillion peg
Several cable ties - this was to re-attach my Ventura rack.
Some of the tools and setup are shown here:
Fitting took about 2 and a half hours all up (very leisurely). First thing to do is to take off the seat, rear carrier, Ventura rack (I had one fitted already that I use to carry a Gearsack bag around) and rear guard. All come off straight-forwardly except the rear guard - you have to undo the 2 hex head screws from each side and below the tail light and then pull the whole guard (carrying the blinkers and rear lights) off to the rear. It took me a while to figure this out, but a good pull fixes it - as always!
With the seat off it looks like this:
With the rear guard off, it looks like this:
With the guard off, the fiddly bit starts. The fitting manual is not all that clear but you get the idea OK. You unplug the blinkers and remove them from the guard. They are then reinserted to the given bracket and attached to the new mounting plate with the wires hanging for the moment.
Next I took off the number plate and re-drilled new holes in the guard to match the pannier mounting bracket - make sure the mounting bracket is centred on the guard as it will look ugly otherwise - and then fitted the plate onto the bracket and the bracket onto the guard like this:
After that, you need another pair of hands for a while because you use the given bolts to bolt the rear tail light back onto the guard while holding the whole guard up off the bike so you can access the bolts. Then sit the blinker mounting plate on top of the guard like this:
and lift the plastic above the rear tail light just enough to poke the blinker wires through inside and reconnect them to the wiring harness - brown is left and black is right. Don't be too concerned that the mounting plate seems to cover the rear tail light a bit because as it is tightened onto the guard with the carrier again later on, it lifts it up again off the light. The left hand photo below shows the completed fitting and the right hand photo shows it as you are fitting the guard before the rack is lifted off the light.
Finalise the rear guard by push fitting the guard back into place and bolt the rear carrier back on - this all fitted together quite easily on mine - the trick seems to be to do nothing up tight until all bolts are started in their threads - then tighten all a bit at a time.
Up til now took me about an hour and three-quarters. The rest of the fitting was very quick and easy following the manual - the Lock-it screws in particular are very easy and quick to fit. You need the 8mm Allen key for them and don't turn them more than a quarter turn.
The final setup looks like this:
The original J-brackets for the Ventura rack don't fit once the pannier racks are fitted, but I actually don't mind. I find that they are very poorly designed anyway since the bag rack pushes down into the J-brackets leaving the junction open to water penetration and quick rusting as a result. Mine were fitted by the bike shop from new and so are only about a month old and already I found them almost impossible to take off due to rust at the junction. Anyway, I just cable-tied the bag rack to the original Suzuki rack and it sits very solidly - you can even adjust it forward or back to suit so you don't kick it so much when you swing a leg over when you are riding solo!
Did the test ride thing - all the instructions say don't load them with more than 10kg each and don't go faster than 130km/h. I loaded them as per instructions and tried them up to 130km/h and the bike sits rock solid. They look like they were factory items, they fit so neatly.
I am looking forward to the first tour with Tania on the back and fully loaded panniers and Gearsack.
This blog is about Pat and Tania's trips and stuff in general. Maybe shows that what we do is who we are.
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Wednesday, 26 November 2008
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
Bicycles and Motorcycles
After having got hold of some new Trek 6500's to replace our Racelines which are now pounding the bitumen in Italy, I traded my Suzuki DR650K7 in at Procycles at Hornsby on a new V-Strom Suzuki DL650 at the end of October. It came with a Ventura rack onto which I sit my Gearsack bag - I find the Ventura ones oddly shaped and leaky.
I also got a centre stand and handguards fitted at pickup - pretty expensive OEM bits with about $450 for the stand and over $200 for the guards!
It is a dream to ride - very smooth and solid handling. I am little concerned that the speedo is a bit optimistic eg. it reads fast and the odometer is inaccurate to the tune of about 2 kms in every hundred!
I took it back to Procycles for its first service ($291.00) for what was basically an oil and filter change - I could probably do it myself next time.
I have just today ordered some Hepco & Becker panniers today from www.motorcycleadventure.com.au - about $1079 delivered. I looked into the Caribou cases but they have no dealer in Australia unfortunately. They looked very good - check them at www.cariboucases.com - but at the current exchange rate they would have cost about $1600 and take a few weeks.
I will post some pictures once I get the panniers and start to fit them.
I also got a centre stand and handguards fitted at pickup - pretty expensive OEM bits with about $450 for the stand and over $200 for the guards!
It is a dream to ride - very smooth and solid handling. I am little concerned that the speedo is a bit optimistic eg. it reads fast and the odometer is inaccurate to the tune of about 2 kms in every hundred!
I took it back to Procycles for its first service ($291.00) for what was basically an oil and filter change - I could probably do it myself next time.
I have just today ordered some Hepco & Becker panniers today from www.motorcycleadventure.com.au - about $1079 delivered. I looked into the Caribou cases but they have no dealer in Australia unfortunately. They looked very good - check them at www.cariboucases.com - but at the current exchange rate they would have cost about $1600 and take a few weeks.
I will post some pictures once I get the panniers and start to fit them.
Tuesday, 16 September 2008
A couple of months on...
We got back after a great flight home with Air Canada on July 7th. We bought a new Trek WSD6500 for Tania from Clarence Street Cyclery 2 days later and a Trek 6500 for me from a Trek shop at Rouse Hill. Unfortunately I've been ill a bit since getting home and haven't been able to ride much but hopefully be OK soon.
Our next trip options include Lisbon (Portugal) to Toulouse (France) over the Pyrenees, Riga (Latvia) to Bucharest (Romania) and lots of others. Look forward to making it reality in maybe 2010.
Our next trip options include Lisbon (Portugal) to Toulouse (France) over the Pyrenees, Riga (Latvia) to Bucharest (Romania) and lots of others. Look forward to making it reality in maybe 2010.
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
Downhilling in Whistler, BC
We left Paris behind (in my case reluctantly - I could easily live there!) and flew with Lufthansa on a very uncomfortable plane for 10 hours to Vancouver. The seats were very hard on the plane and I was well glad to get off in British Columbia (BC). We were pretty jet lagged as BC is about 9 hours behind Paris so we taxied to the hotel in Vancouver and chilled for a couple of nights. Ben and I were still not all that well either.
Bussed up to Whistler (2-3 hours) through 120 km of roadworks getting the place ready for the 2010 winter Olympics and stayed in the village in an apartment in the MarketPlace for those who know Whistler. It was great being right in the middle of things - you can walk everywhere with a fantastic supermarket selling everything you want or need except grog - its at a different 'liquor store' just like home. We had gotten used to the European way of having everything all together in one shop (hypermarche) or everything in all different shops (boulanger, boucherie, patisier, Champion, etc).
Ben rode downhill bikes for the next 4 days - I lasted a day and couldn't go anymore than that. The Bike Park is brilliant with 3 lifts running and over 200km of downhill trails to ride at three different levels - green (easy), blue (medium) and black (hardest). We rode De Vinci bikes (made near Toronto), Norco bikes (made in Vancouver) and Specialized bikes (made I know not where). The place was very busy with both bike riders and boarders/skiers - there was still enough snow on Blackcomb mountain to have better cover than Mount Perisher has in a good season in winter!
Bussed back to Vancouver and caught the 15 hour direct flight home to Sydney - was a great trip home with Air Canada.
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
Bussed back to Vancouver and caught the 15 hour direct flight home to Sydney - was a great trip home with Air Canada.
The Left Bank
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
Staying on the left bank in an apartment allowed us a view of the city we hadn't had before - we have previously stayed near the Moulin Rouge a couple of times and so we saw Notre Dame (still lots of gypsy beggars here - watch your monies - a new scam was a lady would seem to pick up a gold ring just in front of you and ask you if it was yours while the kids crowded around you while you were distracted by this and make a lunge for the wallet or similar). Did you also know that Americans pronounce Notre Dame as Noter Dame?
The Pantheon, Jardin et la Palais du Luxembourg, Tour Eiffel, etc - what a great city!
Paris is also a leading example of providing bikes for people to use and encouraging their use with bike paths specifically marked on the roads. On many streets, there are say 25 bikes for hire using a parking meter type of gadget to hire it - first hour is free. You can return it to any of the similar bike stations throughout the city and it is locked into place and the computerised locking system tells the central system that you have 'returned' it and to compute a final price. The bikes have lights front and back, gearbox rear hub and very easy to ride. Roads here are narrow but again drivers are pretty forgiving and everyone 'fits' on the roads.
The Romanian Leg
Sorry for the delays for updates but things happen.
We caught up with Tania's Romanian cousins in Cassano d'Adda, Trezzo sur d'Adda and Crema - all near Bergamo. Found out that Pelligrino mineral water is bottled here as well! I knew I liked it.
We donated our bikes to the cousins and mine was already in use by the time we left for Romania. Bike riding is much more of a way of life here than in Australia and rain, hail, shine as well. The roads are probably not as good in Italy as the general roads in Australia either but the drivers are very forgiving and just wait if they have to in order to pass bike riders on the narrower roads. We were very impressed.
The other thing to note about Italians is how hard they work compared to home. A typical day is 7am to 7pm with a half hour break. Often its 6 days per week and they get 2 weeks annual leave. We have it pretty good at home really.
We (eventually!) flew on to Romania with WizzAir - can't really recommend them if anyone is thinking of travelling cheaply around Europe. We had two flights booked with them - one was delayed for three hours and the other was cancelled due to a pilot strike! Anyway, we flew to Cluj Napoca and hired a car and drove the 339km (which took nearly 9 hours such are the state of the roads BTW) to Tania's Aunts/Uncles in Bogota in Eastern Romania.
This was an emotional time for me as I hadn't been there since 1987 ie. before Ceaucescu was toppled. It was great to see the freedom and general sense of well-being now though there is a vast lack of 18-40 year olds in Romania as they have mostly left to other EU countries for the higher wages. Cluj Napoca though was a university city and was very vibrant and alive though many still said that they would be seeking work in other EU countries when they were finished study.
We rebooked flights out of Cluj Napoca with Tarom Air since our WizzAir flight was cancelled and had a dream flight back to Milan and onto Paris via Zurich. Unfortunately Ben and I had picked up food poisoning - our own fault really I suppose - we were drinking and enjoying lapte (milk) straight from the milked cow until it caught up with us and we are still recovering even now some weeks later.
We caught up with Tania's Romanian cousins in Cassano d'Adda, Trezzo sur d'Adda and Crema - all near Bergamo. Found out that Pelligrino mineral water is bottled here as well! I knew I liked it.
We donated our bikes to the cousins and mine was already in use by the time we left for Romania. Bike riding is much more of a way of life here than in Australia and rain, hail, shine as well. The roads are probably not as good in Italy as the general roads in Australia either but the drivers are very forgiving and just wait if they have to in order to pass bike riders on the narrower roads. We were very impressed.
The other thing to note about Italians is how hard they work compared to home. A typical day is 7am to 7pm with a half hour break. Often its 6 days per week and they get 2 weeks annual leave. We have it pretty good at home really.
We (eventually!) flew on to Romania with WizzAir - can't really recommend them if anyone is thinking of travelling cheaply around Europe. We had two flights booked with them - one was delayed for three hours and the other was cancelled due to a pilot strike! Anyway, we flew to Cluj Napoca and hired a car and drove the 339km (which took nearly 9 hours such are the state of the roads BTW) to Tania's Aunts/Uncles in Bogota in Eastern Romania.
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
Saturday, 14 June 2008
St Moritz to Cassano d'Adda
The last couple of legs were easy in comparison to the rest of the ride. Little did we know that we had already done the climbing up to St Moritz and the Maloja Pass was in fact not a climb but a 30 km descent through sweeping curves and switchbacks - just climb the roads you see on the Tour de France in the Alps. What an amazing ride - still stunning scenery, good coffee and great riding. The weather was very kind to us and we were very lucky - spoke with other riders who had been camped in the Alps for a week so far and had been rained on for the whole week!
Down to Lake Como and found a hotel at Bellano with our own balcony over the lake - a beautiful place.
Last stage of the ride through to the relatives near Bergamo near Milan was very busy traffic and narrow roads but the drivers were very courteous to bike riders - saw lots of other riders here and all being avoided by drivers and just accepted as part of the everyday traffic on the road. Went through some interesting tunnels along the lake towards Lecco but this too was OK in Italy.
Into Bergamo we got stormed on in the later afternoon before a very kind lady, working in an office next to where we were sheltering from the storm, gave us some coffee and directions to Cassano d'Adda where our relatives lived. Got helped again by a lady on bike when the bike path we were following according to Google Maps turned out to be blocked by a cross European Railway - she was able to show us and in fact rode with us to find the actual street we were looking for.
We had made it - 4 countries, 1200km, lots of tailwinds, no flat tyres and everywhere we went were helped by some very friendly people - touring is really a team effort, even if you don't yet know you are on the team!
Down to Lake Como and found a hotel at Bellano with our own balcony over the lake - a beautiful place.
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
We had made it - 4 countries, 1200km, lots of tailwinds, no flat tyres and everywhere we went were helped by some very friendly people - touring is really a team effort, even if you don't yet know you are on the team!
Wednesday, 11 June 2008
Scuol to St Moritz
Weather was clear and bright today as we headed toward St Moritz. It was up! but with views unfolding with each turn of a corner, it was fairly straight forward riding. It was only about 60km and we got into St Moritz before a storm hit at about 2pm. We were safely in a cafe sipping Kaffee creme at that point!
Staying in Youth Hostels the last two nights has been good value with 3 course dinners and breakfasts to salve some aching hungers. Tomorrow moving onto Lake Como somewhere we hope and out of the Alps - the forecast is for the weather to close in by the end of tomorrow so our timing might be OK. Bikes are all good now - mine had a stiff rear cable for the gears but was able to fix that last night. Our legs are holding up OK too - we climb the Maloja Pass at 1850 metres tomorrow and then we hit some serious downhill to Lake Como I hope.
Have I mentioned how stunning the mountains are? The mountains are stunning! We are at just below the tree line and snow line at about 1400m in St Moritz so the pass climb is ``only`` about 400m, but we`ll see tomorrow. Having a pre-dinner drink at the Youth Hostel (Pinot Grigio no less) and reading a SF6.20 English newspaper - first reading news we`ve had since we left home.
From Berlin to Milan |
Have I mentioned how stunning the mountains are? The mountains are stunning! We are at just below the tree line and snow line at about 1400m in St Moritz so the pass climb is ``only`` about 400m, but we`ll see tomorrow. Having a pre-dinner drink at the Youth Hostel (Pinot Grigio no less) and reading a SF6.20 English newspaper - first reading news we`ve had since we left home.
Tuesday, 10 June 2008
Fussen (Deutschland) to Scuol (Switzerland) via Ostereich
Weather turned out to be great for our attack into the Alps. Over the border to Reutte in Austria and promptly got lost again heading up the wrong valley - but hey, I was used to it by now.
The climb up to FernPass (1205 metres) was not bad a climb but the traffic was unbelievably heavy both ways - a bit like Great Western Highway on soccer Saturday morning. No bike paths up to the pass so we had no option but to deal with the traffic but it turned out OK. It started to rain toward to top as well - just a passing mountain shower though. Found a mountain bike track down out of the pass - a bit like Bees Nest Hill times 6 in terms of steepness and slipperiness and length but at least we didn`t have to deal with the traffic in the rain going down. I crashed and burned on some tree roots but it was all good fun, just being my usual self.
Stayed at Imst overnight in a fantastic hotel with balcony views and sensurround views and sounds of mountains. Italian for dinner and hearing a lot more different languages around town now.
Monday dawned fine and sunny and we found the Inntal Randweg bike path of the Via Claudia Augusta - the old Roman road leading from Donauworth in Germany through to Verona in Italy. This is a very popular bike path and we saw lots of other bikers today which was brilliant. At time there were remnants of old roman road with carved wheel tracks still evident. Signage for the path was excellent and we didn`t really touch roads at all for most of the way to the Swiss border at Pfunds where the Via Claudia goes over the Reschen Pass into Italy and we turned south west and went into Switzerland towards St Moritz.
Crossing the border was interesting with customs checks still evident and of course the Swiss still have their own currency (Swiss franc) and slightly different electricity plugs - seems like sheer bloody-mindedness to me but what do I know?
With the Via Claudia leaving us to go to Italy, we searched in vain for Swiss bike paths, though the roads were pretty deserted and very high quality. The riding to Scuol was uppish but generally following the River Inn which begins somewhere near St Moritz and of course, flows through Innsbruck in Austria. The next real test will be the Maloja Pass after St Moritz at 1850 metres. Staying tonight at the Youth Hostel and before you question that - we are not the oldest here thanks very much!
The climb up to FernPass (1205 metres) was not bad a climb but the traffic was unbelievably heavy both ways - a bit like Great Western Highway on soccer Saturday morning. No bike paths up to the pass so we had no option but to deal with the traffic but it turned out OK. It started to rain toward to top as well - just a passing mountain shower though. Found a mountain bike track down out of the pass - a bit like Bees Nest Hill times 6 in terms of steepness and slipperiness and length but at least we didn`t have to deal with the traffic in the rain going down. I crashed and burned on some tree roots but it was all good fun, just being my usual self.
Stayed at Imst overnight in a fantastic hotel with balcony views and sensurround views and sounds of mountains. Italian for dinner and hearing a lot more different languages around town now.
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
With the Via Claudia leaving us to go to Italy, we searched in vain for Swiss bike paths, though the roads were pretty deserted and very high quality. The riding to Scuol was uppish but generally following the River Inn which begins somewhere near St Moritz and of course, flows through Innsbruck in Austria. The next real test will be the Maloja Pass after St Moritz at 1850 metres. Staying tonight at the Youth Hostel and before you question that - we are not the oldest here thanks very much!
Saturday, 7 June 2008
Augsburg to Fussen
Well the rain eased and we made our way out of Augsburg without getting lost - yay! Generally found the Romantische Strasse which is the Via Claudia Augusta or old Roman road all the way to Schongau - about 90 km for the day. Some excellent riding in the, at times, middle of nowhere - cool and overcast with fairly flat and pleasant riding.
Into Schongau to stay at a hotel in the Stadtmitte - had liver dumpling soup which is the local grub - an acquired taste I believe!
Woke on Saturday to rain but we thought we would push on toward Fussen which is the start of the real climbing. Rained all the 50km of the ride but the paths we rode varied from cowbell pastures, the River Lech every so often with a milky sort of colour, green fields, tall forests and the first glimpses of the Alps in front of us. It was very cold riding though and my shorts were just not cutting it really! We barely hit a road at all for the 50 km and it was wonderful - on a summer´s day it would be fantastic riding.
In an internet cafe in Fussen now after visiting the local kirches and schlosses and of course feeding ourselves at pastry shops. Have checked our options for what we do if the weather doesn`t improve - should be able to bus or train through but we´hope for finer weather first.
From Berlin to Milan |
Woke on Saturday to rain but we thought we would push on toward Fussen which is the start of the real climbing. Rained all the 50km of the ride but the paths we rode varied from cowbell pastures, the River Lech every so often with a milky sort of colour, green fields, tall forests and the first glimpses of the Alps in front of us. It was very cold riding though and my shorts were just not cutting it really! We barely hit a road at all for the 50 km and it was wonderful - on a summer´s day it would be fantastic riding.
In an internet cafe in Fussen now after visiting the local kirches and schlosses and of course feeding ourselves at pastry shops. Have checked our options for what we do if the weather doesn`t improve - should be able to bus or train through but we´hope for finer weather first.
Friday, 6 June 2008
Pegnitz to Augsberg
We're sitting in the Youth Hostel in Augsberg and it has rained for much of today. Yesterday was a big day from Pegnitz to Weisenberg (south of Nürnberg)- about 120km for the day and so pretty boring highway riding. It started out OK with the B2 continuing to look after us as far as Nürnberg - beautiful rolling hills and little traffic to deal with ~ that all changed when we hit the big smoke of Nürnberg - lots of traffic and a beautiful walled zentrum - with moat, though now functioning as a car park. It was only 60km to here so we decided to keep going as the weather was holding OK.
The next 60km to Weisenberg involved highway riding and very busy and even a few km of autobahn for which we were told to get off by the very friendly roadworkers. Made it into Weisenberg by about 5pm and stayed inside the of walled town in a 13th century hotel. It started to rain about an hour later and hasn't really stopped since unfortunately. Beautiful dinner of meat and various veges at the hotel with breakfast following Deutsch fashion of meats and cheeses (Jarlsberg no less!) and vrious breads - all good wholesome stuff.
Today was still raining so we packed up and went to the local hauptbahnoff (train station) and bought tickets for our bikes and us to Augsberg, which was essentially our planned destination for the day anyway. The train was great with a separate area to store bikes (and plenty as well) and place for us to sit nearby to monitor.
Checked into the Youth Hostel now and we're not the oldest ones staying - yay! Augsberg is another walled city with moat and tower gates - have I mentioned that I coud become accustomed to living in a castle with a moat? Might be a bit grand do you think?
Saving grace today that I didn't get lost once - we were only travelling by shanks pony though!
Hopefully weather get's better tomorrow (Friday) and we ride onto Fussen at the start of the Alps. Bikes are well and so are we and really quite fit and ready to climb.
Thanks for the comments everyone - hope you are enjoying the rantings.
The next 60km to Weisenberg involved highway riding and very busy and even a few km of autobahn for which we were told to get off by the very friendly roadworkers. Made it into Weisenberg by about 5pm and stayed inside the of walled town in a 13th century hotel. It started to rain about an hour later and hasn't really stopped since unfortunately. Beautiful dinner of meat and various veges at the hotel with breakfast following Deutsch fashion of meats and cheeses (Jarlsberg no less!) and vrious breads - all good wholesome stuff.
From Berlin to Milan |
Checked into the Youth Hostel now and we're not the oldest ones staying - yay! Augsberg is another walled city with moat and tower gates - have I mentioned that I coud become accustomed to living in a castle with a moat? Might be a bit grand do you think?
Saving grace today that I didn't get lost once - we were only travelling by shanks pony though!
From Berlin to Milan |
Thanks for the comments everyone - hope you are enjoying the rantings.
Wednesday, 4 June 2008
Leipzig to Pegnitz
Left Leipzig earlyish with my poor old bike making bad noises from the hub. I say earlyish because we had to fight the German hordes at the Youth Hostel free breakfast - some even came armed with their lunchboxes and stocked up for later!
We headed toward Gera on the B2 which we will follow pretty much all the way to Augsburg. The riding to Gera was rolling hills and pretty hot - about 32 degrees and 85km. Thought we have had to sleep on park bench as hotels were pretty hard to come by but found a beautiful one off the main drag and settled in the luxury to which we would like to become accustomed. Sundays are not a day to be looking for anything to be open very much in Germany.
Monday dawned hot again and I wasn't going anywhere until my poor old rear hub had some due care and attention. Turned out that the internals of the cluster carrier had pretty much shredded themselves - I was lucky to make it this far I think. Bike shop guy was great though and fixed it all on the spot and so on our way to get lost (again!) getting out of Gera - lost an hour here - I was not a happy traveller.
Very hot and unimpressive riding to Hof - about 90km and our first taste of some bigger hills and close traffic. I worked out that I am getting about 20km per litre of water. Cheaper than petrol - water is about 50 cents a litre while petrol is over 2 dollars a litre so I'm in front! Found the Youth Hostel in Hof (at the top of another hill of course!) but the room was cheap and fantastic after a hard day - even though we had to pay an extra 8 euro because we were (just) over 26 years old. Bike is like new as well.
Tuesday we headed off from Hof under cloudy and cooler skies but still steamy. The riding was the best so far with uncrowded roads, no steep hills, lots of rolling Bavarian countryside and quite a few bike paths - highly recommend this area for riding. Got lost (again!) in Bayreuth but found Pegnitz after 90km where we are staying in a Gasthaus with CNN on TV for company. Had a hotdog mit senf under the walls of a castle for lunch - cobbled streets, no traffic. Even when we hit the main roads which we had to at times, the drivers including trucks, tractors, cars were all very forgiving and gave us a wide berth.
Tomorrow (Wednesday) we head off toward Nurnberg and beyond toward the Alps hopefully by Friday depending on the weather. It has been very stormy here at night so thankfully we have not had to ride through any real rain so far. We saw in the paper though that south-west Germany (where we are headed to) has had big floods from storms but we haven't had to deal with any of that thank goodness.
We headed toward Gera on the B2 which we will follow pretty much all the way to Augsburg. The riding to Gera was rolling hills and pretty hot - about 32 degrees and 85km. Thought we have had to sleep on park bench as hotels were pretty hard to come by but found a beautiful one off the main drag and settled in the luxury to which we would like to become accustomed. Sundays are not a day to be looking for anything to be open very much in Germany.
From Berlin to Milan |
Very hot and unimpressive riding to Hof - about 90km and our first taste of some bigger hills and close traffic. I worked out that I am getting about 20km per litre of water. Cheaper than petrol - water is about 50 cents a litre while petrol is over 2 dollars a litre so I'm in front! Found the Youth Hostel in Hof (at the top of another hill of course!) but the room was cheap and fantastic after a hard day - even though we had to pay an extra 8 euro because we were (just) over 26 years old. Bike is like new as well.
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
Sunday, 1 June 2008
Away we go - Berlin to Leipzig
Left Berlin on Friday on bike paths all the way out of the city and most of the way to Lutherstadt Wittenburg - beautiful forests, forgiving drivers (cyclists really are a way of life here and they are in the psyche of all citizens). Very hot riding - over 30 degrees but excellent conditions. Stayed at the Youth Hostel in the Wittenburg castle - neat rooms and very helpful English-speaking staff. 108km today and going fine on the B2.
Saturday had the morning in Wittenburg - Tarn bought scarf and bandanna and saw two weddings. Left for Leipzig about 1:30pm for late lunch in Bad Dubens which had a good old-fashioned market fiesta going with ferris wheel etc. Hot and at times stormy ride for the last 38km to Leipzig to the Youth Hostel at Schoneberg Ost. 68km today and Pat´s bike is making a few noises around the chain that weren't there before - tomorrow will tell if its anything major.
From Berlin to Milan |
From Berlin to Milan |
Friday, 30 May 2008
Potsdam
Took a day to check bikes and legs were working and so rode out to Potsdam and back – about 60´odd km along main roads, horse trails, cobbled streets and every other type of road in between. Berliners are so cycle friendly – separate lights for cyclists, paths, pedestrians do not walk on the bike paths either. There are literally thousands of bike riders at all times of the day – old, young, well dressed, and not, skirts flying – what a society that embraces cycling as a way of life!
Weather is holding – got over 30 degrees again today but not so windy. Forests were very peaceful to ride through though we are neverendingly reminded of the old
East and West – the horse trail we were riding crossed the E51 autobahn at one point. At this point was one of the main trunk routes between East and West in the bad old days. The checkpoint towers are still there as silent guards watching still!
Bikes are well, we are well – prepared the bikes for tomorrow´s leg to Lutherstadt (about 100km) – we say goodbye to a great stay in Berlin. Its a pity that it is a big non-stop building site at the moment – very loud, dry and dusty. But the food, the sites and the people were brilliant! The cycling is so flat and have I mentioned how good the pastries are?
Weather is holding – got over 30 degrees again today but not so windy. Forests were very peaceful to ride through though we are neverendingly reminded of the old
East and West – the horse trail we were riding crossed the E51 autobahn at one point. At this point was one of the main trunk routes between East and West in the bad old days. The checkpoint towers are still there as silent guards watching still!
Bikes are well, we are well – prepared the bikes for tomorrow´s leg to Lutherstadt (about 100km) – we say goodbye to a great stay in Berlin. Its a pity that it is a big non-stop building site at the moment – very loud, dry and dusty. But the food, the sites and the people were brilliant! The cycling is so flat and have I mentioned how good the pastries are?
Wednesday, 28 May 2008
Made it to the starting line
Well here we are in Berlin. We keep pinching ourselves that weŕe actually here. Bikes are still packed and we have been hitting the streets on foot. It is amazing to see how many bikeriders there are. I would be just one of the crowd here. All all manner of bikes, all ages, few wearing helmets. Berlin seems to ooze youth, opportunity and hope for the future. The whole city is a building site with demolition, rebuilding and renovation happening everywhere, and notonly in the old east section. But thankfully they are not tearingdown all of their history so there was still plenty to see to impress us. The Brandenburg Gate, the last remaining gate when Berlin was a walled city, Humboldt University, countless museumsand churches and the rathaus which is the city council chambers. And while tacky souvenir stalls and tourist buses swarmed over the site of Checkpoint Charlie and the last bit of the Wall, it was still a poignant, sobering spot, and to think people were still being arrested less than 20 years ago for attempting to escape to the west. The weather is fine and mild whichaugurs well for when we take off on Friday.
Pat here – just unpacking the bikes and theyseem to be OK. The boxes held up pretty well. We had to pay 40 euro each bike as excess baggage from Frankfurt to Berlin but we were just happy to get them back in one piece.
Visited Little John´s bike shop near AlexanderPlatz for a cable lock, spare tubes and a multi-tool – not many places take credit cards here and most like to have cash thanks very much!
Pat here – just unpacking the bikes and theyseem to be OK. The boxes held up pretty well. We had to pay 40 euro each bike as excess baggage from Frankfurt to Berlin but we were just happy to get them back in one piece.
Visited Little John´s bike shop near AlexanderPlatz for a cable lock, spare tubes and a multi-tool – not many places take credit cards here and most like to have cash thanks very much!
Sunday, 18 May 2008
Details
I'm not sure if anyone's interested but I'll try to record some basic organisational details here about flights, bikes, pre-bookings, luggage, etc.
Flights:
We booked round-the-world (RTW) flights with "Flight Centre" in Springwood - Naomi was a great help BTW - in January 2008 and were lucky to get a reasonably good deal with "Star Alliance" partners of Singapore Airlines, Lufthansa and Air Canada. We joined the KrisFlyer frequent flyer program of Singapore Airlines so we could earn some flyer miles as we go. Unfortunately, the RTW ticket wouldn't fly us to Berlin from Frankfurt am Main, nor from Milan to Cluj Napoca (Romania) return so these were extra flights which we booked separately with Lufthansa (Frankfurt to Berlin ow) and Wizz Air (Milan-CLuj Napoca-Milan).
So the basic plan is to travel as follows:
SYD-SIN-FRA-TGL then cycle for 3 weeks to Milan
BGY-CLJ then drive to Tania's family village in northern Romania and return to Milan BGY.
Milan Malpensa-Zurich-Paris (CDG) stay in Paris for 7 nights
CDG-FRA-Vancouver - stay in Vancouver 2 nights (visit Norco factory)
Bus transfer to Whistler for 5 days of downhill riding
Bus transfer to Vancouver
Air Canada flight direct to Sydney.
All up we're away about 7 weeks.
Bikes:
We both have Raceline mountainbikes - these are about 7-8 years old and the ride from Berlin to Milan will be their swansong. We will box them up to take with us but we will not bring them home - we will give them both to the Romanian cousins in Milan. We have fitted rear carriers with Summit Gear and Tioga panniers as well as a Tioga front bag on my bike for navigation maps. Both have a speedo but apart from that they are fairly standard. We will run Schwalbe Marathon tyres and a Shimano LX group set throughout. these are the same bikes we have ridden previously from Sydney to the Gold Coast and from Adelaide to Melbourne and found them to be solid, strong, comfortable and reliable.
Pre-bookings:
We haven't pre-booked any accommodation for the cycling leg but we have joined the Youth Hostel Association as well as the "Warm Showers" hospitality group. We have hosted some cyclists at home in the Blue Mountains and would like to meet and stay with some cyclists in Germany.
We have pre-booked and pre-paid for pretty much everything else after the cycling though - flights, accommodation in Paris, Vancouver and Whistler.
Flights:
We booked round-the-world (RTW) flights with "Flight Centre" in Springwood - Naomi was a great help BTW - in January 2008 and were lucky to get a reasonably good deal with "Star Alliance" partners of Singapore Airlines, Lufthansa and Air Canada. We joined the KrisFlyer frequent flyer program of Singapore Airlines so we could earn some flyer miles as we go. Unfortunately, the RTW ticket wouldn't fly us to Berlin from Frankfurt am Main, nor from Milan to Cluj Napoca (Romania) return so these were extra flights which we booked separately with Lufthansa (Frankfurt to Berlin ow) and Wizz Air (Milan-CLuj Napoca-Milan).
So the basic plan is to travel as follows:
SYD-SIN-FRA-TGL then cycle for 3 weeks to Milan
BGY-CLJ then drive to Tania's family village in northern Romania and return to Milan BGY.
Milan Malpensa-Zurich-Paris (CDG) stay in Paris for 7 nights
CDG-FRA-Vancouver - stay in Vancouver 2 nights (visit Norco factory)
Bus transfer to Whistler for 5 days of downhill riding
Bus transfer to Vancouver
Air Canada flight direct to Sydney.
All up we're away about 7 weeks.
Bikes:
We both have Raceline mountainbikes - these are about 7-8 years old and the ride from Berlin to Milan will be their swansong. We will box them up to take with us but we will not bring them home - we will give them both to the Romanian cousins in Milan. We have fitted rear carriers with Summit Gear and Tioga panniers as well as a Tioga front bag on my bike for navigation maps. Both have a speedo but apart from that they are fairly standard. We will run Schwalbe Marathon tyres and a Shimano LX group set throughout. these are the same bikes we have ridden previously from Sydney to the Gold Coast and from Adelaide to Melbourne and found them to be solid, strong, comfortable and reliable.
Pre-bookings:
We haven't pre-booked any accommodation for the cycling leg but we have joined the Youth Hostel Association as well as the "Warm Showers" hospitality group. We have hosted some cyclists at home in the Blue Mountains and would like to meet and stay with some cyclists in Germany.
We have pre-booked and pre-paid for pretty much everything else after the cycling though - flights, accommodation in Paris, Vancouver and Whistler.
Getting set up
We live in the Blue Mountains near Sydney Australia and both keen cyclists. We have done some long rides before (Sydney to the Gold Coast 1000km and Adelaide to Melbourne 1100km) and we were keen to go further afield. So with some long service leave and leave without pay we committed ourselves to a trip in May-July 2008 by booking airfares in January 2008.
At that stage we were thinking of taking our Raceline mountainbikes with us to Berlin (because we hadn't been there before) and riding to Milan over the Alps taking about 3 weeks. Tania has a Romanian heritage (mine's Latvian) with relatives in Milan who we would meet up with. Our son Ben and his grandma would meet us in Milan as well and fly with us to Romania to meet up with further relatives. We are going to leave our bikes with cousins in Milan.
After Romania, we fly on to Paris for 5 nights and then onto Vancouver and Whistler for a week of some serious downhilling which Ben in particular is really looking forward to.
At that stage we were thinking of taking our Raceline mountainbikes with us to Berlin (because we hadn't been there before) and riding to Milan over the Alps taking about 3 weeks. Tania has a Romanian heritage (mine's Latvian) with relatives in Milan who we would meet up with. Our son Ben and his grandma would meet us in Milan as well and fly with us to Romania to meet up with further relatives. We are going to leave our bikes with cousins in Milan.
After Romania, we fly on to Paris for 5 nights and then onto Vancouver and Whistler for a week of some serious downhilling which Ben in particular is really looking forward to.
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