Skip to main content

One Month on the Road!

It's me again ... Mike... I've taken over the blog action for today, as I wanted to update you on how we're going.. we've been on the bikes for a month (and 1 day). Yep.. a month!   Here's a map of the action so far... the red dots was 2 years ago, and the blue dots are our action this time.  Today we reached the ferry to Denmark... wow! 



As you can see we left Lubeck 3 days ago, and it's been an amazing 3 days!  We rode out on Monday following the river (continuing the path we rode in on), just a great way to leave, and feeling amazingly refreshed after our double rest day.  It was a fabulous day on the bike, sunny but not too hot, great paths, with a few sharp climbs but some lovely descents to make it all worth while. 

Then we hit the Baltic coastline...  it's nuts! It's the French Riviera meets Nelson Bay. We had to stop to take the obligatory celebration selfie - total tourist mode!


Then lunch ... an amazing Focaccia and some Chilli-con-carne.. both yummm. The rest of the day was spent riding along the coast on roads where cyclists have priority, past some super swanky holiday places, just totally chilled till we found our cute little camp site, right across from the beach. We were the only tent amongst a whole bunch of permanent cabins... everyone welcomed the newbies!

Crazy beach chairs are everywhere - about $20 for the day

Sally comfy amongst the Cabins

Tuesday we hit the road early, and again had some early hills (this seems to be a theme), before descending back to the beach, and following a dirt track along the beach till our lunch stop. We then headed 6k inland to our granny flat... super cute and super relaxing. 

View from our Lunch table in Dahme

Cute house down the road from our Granny Flat

Then today, we completed the ride up to Puttgarden, we're camped about 500m from the ferry to Denmark. Again today we had hills early. Then we stopped at a supermarket for supplies and light lunch when I saw an Aussie flag on someone's pannier. It turned out it was a couple of intrepid cyclists on their way back to Hamburg from Denmark, they've done 2 trips to Australia, including cycling across the Nullarbor... count me impressed. Oh yeah, and the 2 women were experienced, the oldest is 75! Inspiring!!

After lunch today was a bit of a slog, some difficult terrain and a bridge we had to walk the bike over (it's 1k long!), and some busy'ish roads (Google is a little confused sometimes). But we found ourselves a bike path and had a smooth and comfortable ride to our campsite.

Leaving our Granny Flat 

Amazing Poppies - most I've seen altogether

So, here we are, 1 month and 1 day in, 997k's on the clock. It's strange but I planned on us doing about 1,000k a month. It's easy to say, but it's almost overwhelming to think back on. Every day is a BIG DAY. So much happens, so many small details, so much good food, and amazing scenery. 

Along the way we've learned a few things...

- The tent (Sally) is a real asset. It gives us many more options each day. We haven't had any camp sites turn us away, and it gives us amazing flexibility to change our plan during the day, and to adjust our distances to the weather and our tiredness. 

- Balancing the riding and resting is so important. Both of us are nowhere near as tired as we were at the end of the ride 2 years ago, and adding extra rest days seems to be the key.

- We're loving the routes we take and the surprises we get along the way. It's really working for us that we don't do much research each day and just head off and see what we find. Google maps seems to be doing a great job of mixing up "things to see" with "let's get there!".

- On the same theme, keeping things flexible each day. Somedays we stop and re-evaluate the route. Maybe a road is too busy, or we feel fresh enough to add in a detour through the forest.

- And, above all, having so much time is amazing. It means we always have time, for the extra stop, for a rest day (or 2), for whatever. 

I'm excited and a little nervous to be leaving Germany. Denmark is a whole new adventure, and then, Sweden... wow!!









Comments

  1. Great.Be careful of the schnapps in Copenhagen.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yay Mickey D! The map is excellent for us following along, and you look very fetching and European in your stripes on the beach.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Love the energy and happiness! Gosh you've covered some ground.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

5000km - TICK, Mont Saint Michel - TICK, Crazy rainy mud riding - TICK, Normandy - AMAZING!

 WOOHOOO - 5000KM!  We did it. MASSIVE LEGENDS!! But let's get down to the journey of the last week.  So much action, so many amazing things to see, so many intense emotions - buckle up for a long post with a billion pics, and even a video.  There are really four parts of the last week, so let's keep things organised and go in order... 1. Leaving Saint Malo and heading to Mont Saint Michel - around 55km We leapt out of bed (not really) early to get on the bike cause we knew we had a long ride ahead with unstable weather.  To our delight after climbing our way out of Saint Malo, waving to the local hunter who passed us with his sausage dog and shotgun, we were in gorgeous farming country, the sun started to come out, and when we crested the final hill of the morning could see the famous Mont Saint Michel out there in the sea waiting for us.  We couldn't believe it - we were only 20km in and with the clear weather we could see all the way to this gorgeous 100...

Beziers or Bust x 2

(Mike again and Serena will do the pics) - We left you last time in Avignon relaxing and basking in the glory of a great week! But all great teams need to adapt and pivot.  And adapt we did. Adaptation 1 - Cody Breakaway It happened - Cody graduated from his cycle touring apprenticeship! This manifested in the form of Cody deciding to push on and see what he could achieve solo.  For us this led to a very tough morning where we had to get our own breakfast - after 10 days of the best croissants and chausson-au-pommes delivered every morning by Cody, Serena and I struggled for about an hour looking for one that looked as good  - eventually we found one that fell way short! Saying goodbye to our wonderful team meat, Cody.  Mike giving last minute tips as I had a few tears (and took a few pics), then hugs all round and off he went - if you love them, set them free! Adaptation 2 - Tyre Wars! So, while Cody was burning rubber on the route towards the coast, we took an extr...

Bye bye Doubs ... Hello hills! And hello French cottage life!

 Mike again... I'm trying to go back and remember all that's happened since the last post... it's been an amazing and unique week. Sooo great! We left you last time in the fairytale land of the Doubs river, in the magical kingdom of Besançon. The following day we headed out early and immediately found ourselves back on the Doubs river path amidst breathtaking scenery. After 15k we came to a tunnel for the canal (mostly the river and some locks around the occasional weir). The tunnel also had an ancient cycle/walking path next to it. Not keen to ride through (it was crazy and we would have had to carry or bikes and panniers separately over the slippery muddy stairs), we went over the hill. It's amazing the engineering they used to build these waterways. Later after finding a boulangerie and grabbing some bread for lunch we booked ourselves a cute little house about 20k down the path, and headed via a "petit casino" (mini supermarket) to our stop... and wow, it ...