All posts by admin

Aarburg to Biel/Bienne

It had rained all night – and the comfortingly familiar sound of rain on tent had given me the best night’s sleep for months. It was still raining as we packed up.

20140710-184500-67500788.jpg

And it never stopped all day. Officially wet.

But a good day’s ride nonetheless, always following the swollen River Aare upstream. When even the locals are watching the river level in alarm you know its wet. Breakfast took a while to find, but Helen eventually talked a ham sandwich and coffee out of a pizzeria in Aarburg, right under the castle.

20140710-193353-70433663.jpg

Most of the riding was very rural – on all small lanes and tracks. Lovely country. Except that the wind and rain were consistently in our faces.

We reached Buren in the afternoon – where the course of the Aare has been diverted through the Bielsee in a canal.

20140710-185222-67942747.jpg

In Biel/Bienne (so good they named it twice – once in German and once in French) we were grateful to be able to change to French. And to check into a warm, dry hotel. Not the poshest but welcome (polystyrene cups in the room and Haribot sweets for greeting. Actually, I thought the latter was great, because I have a Wiggle-induced Haribot addiction). Biel has a nice harbour on the Bielsee but it doesn’t look so good in the rain. The forecast is no better tomorrow.

20140710-190232-68552114.jpg

Helen’s track of the day: after lunch when the rain was getting a bit much I thought that on usual days off I would not venture out . I should be at home in my kitchen baking cakes and listening to my favourite music, I thought. So any track from Paulo Nutini’s latest album will do, and as it was in my head the most I choose
Let me down easy.
And when all this summer activity nonsense is over I look forward to a girls’ night out with Catherine to see Paolo Nutini in Newcastle Arena!

Zurich to Aarburg

So Day 1 got underway and we completed just over 50 miles in the day which felt like a steady warm up for what is to come. Here we are leaving the hotel. We hope for a similar photo on return in 9 weeks time.

20140709-183258-66778851.jpg
Andy had mapped a route following 3 rivers over the day so generally flat along river banks and off the main roads. It felt good to get going at last and see some Swiss pastoral countryside though a lot of suburban miles too.

20140709-183102-66662602.jpg
We can report that there is still plenty of money in Switzerland with building of housing and new factories everywhere along todays paths.

After picnic lunch in Brugge the weather went wet and we arrived a bit damp at the campsite. The beer is ok though. This is Aarburg with castle.

20140709-183743-67063186.jpg
Some reading this will know that i tend to pick up tunes in my head most days sometimes from my own listening choices and sometimes what I hear in a random way during the day. So track of the day is reintroduced for this trip:
The day travelling to Zurich was Its Alright by The Impressions when I was working hard to stay calm on a fraught journey. Day 2 was our day in Zurich which gets Silver and Gold by Fat Freddys Drop because i have never seen so many Bentley cars in one day and because of a lovely Dutch painting I saw in the gallery by Pieter Clausz (spelling check when i get home )of silver and gold jewellery in a still life picture, you could almost feel them the detail was so good.

Today and despite trying not to I have succumbed to Dolly Parton as her face has been on several posters for a forthcoming concert. Good memories of watching her on tv at glastonbury if unfortunate title Here you come again, the song has stuck in my head so hope it clears off soon.

Day off in Zurich

Let’s call it a low key start to the holiday. Gently does it, as we wandered round Zurich in the gentle rain – trying not to think of wet days in Keswick.

We were tired after an anxious train journey yesterday, delayed by a broken down shuttle train in the Channel tunnel. We were very lucky to get to Zurich only a few hours late thanks to friendly SNCF staff.

Today we enjoyed the Kunsthaus for Rembrants and Impressionists in particular.

20140708-183722-67042700.jpg

The clock and watch museum was also very good – though small. But above all its just good to be here, relaxing, and looking forward to the start of the ride tomorrow – albeit in the rain!

20140708-184018-67218585.jpg

20140708-184018-67218936.jpg

We’re off on a Grand Tour from July 7th to Sept 9th

We agreed it is time for a long cycle ride. But where to go?

Helen said “All that the cycling is all very well – but there have to be plenty of interesting stops along the way. How about visiting all those northern Italian towns that we’ve always wanted to see?”

Andy said “That bit of Italy is a bit flat. How about starting and finishing  in Zurich and crossing the Alps twice?”

And so a circular ride was born. Mountains and culture, bike and rider, Helen and Andy – all in perfect harmony. Follow our ‘latest posts’ and see how long the harmony lasts.

Helen and Andy

Cajarc to Cahors

Our final day of cycling, and the final hot day. A storm is forecast tomorrow.
It could not have worked out better.
This was stunning scenery beside the Lot, often under limestone cliffs.

20131228-171638.jpg

20131228-171707.jpg

A highlight was Saint Cirq Lapopie, a cliff top honeypot village. But stunningly beautiful and well worth a final steep climb. We wondered round taking photos with the crowds, and then had a final big cycling lunch.

20131228-172133.jpg

20131228-172204.jpg

20131228-172220.jpg

The last few miles took us to a final campsite on the edge of Cahors and the end of the cycling. Tomorrow we take the train to Toulouse for a day, and then Paris and home.

Najac to Cajarc

Villefranche, upstream on the Aveyron, was our lunchtime destination. But the Aveyron is in a deep gorge with no road. Helen persuaded me to retrace our steps from yesterday for a bit, since we were more than half way up one side, rather than my intended route on the other side of the river. And it proved much easier that way. We returned for coffee to the cafe that saved our lives yesterday, much to the surprise of the locals!

20131208-211231.jpg
All in all this was an attractive morning’s ride, with a lovely descent to Villefranche, another Bastide town. Though actually the riverside was better than the centre – which was being repaved. We had yet another duck and chips in a delightful courtyard restaurant.

20131228-165843.jpg

It was red hot as we left town for one final climb up and over to rejoin the river Lot, about 20 miles down from where we had left it. From the top we could see Puy de Dome in the Auvergne away to the north. I wanted to cycle back that way to Paris.
20131228-170551.jpg

We finished at a tiny campsite beside the Lot next to a beautiful old suspension bridge. We picnicked and did very little as the sun set.

Sauveterre de Rouergue to Najac

This turned out to be just about the hardest day of the trip. The first target was Rieupeyroux, another Bastide town . It wasn’t quite on route and involved climbing back up to the top of the massif, but St Sauveterre had been so good that we wanted to see it. First there were two huge wooded ravines to cross – each about 300ft down before starting the climb back up. And then more climbing across open fields. So we were annoyed and disappointed to find that Rieupeyroux had nothing much to offer and, worse, that we had cycled past the only coffee stop just before flying down the very steep hill into town! So back up we had to go.

And the climbing just kept coming as we crossed valley after valley. The last one was steepest of all. I saw 17% on my GPS for a long time. But perhaps that was because I was cycling so slowly. Relief came at a restaurant at Savensa where we joined a bigger road for the final run, mainly down to Najac.

This is a famous village and castle on a narrow neck of land in a huge bend in the deep Aveyron gorge. It is a long way above the river, and the campsite. We were tired and didn’t fancy having to climb back up after pitching, so we booked into the village hotel. This turned out to be an inspired move, because although 2 star and quite cheap it had a fantastic restaurant that the locals travelled miles for. We had a gourmet meal on the terrace. Another change of gear after last nights bread and cheese beside the road with the hippies of freecamp.

20131109-142359.jpg

The village was in a spectacular spot, with the castle on the end of the ridge commanding the loop of the river. I climbed to the top of the keep for the view back.

20131109-142751.jpg

20131109-142807.jpg

Rodez to Sauveterre de Rouergue.

Back to cycling today. First a descent from this hilltop town to cross the infant Aveyron. (We had passed the source a couple of days earlier). Then steeply back up the other side, heading SW into rolling countryside with long views back to Rodez.

20131109-133713.jpg

This was hard work, constantly up and down across the grain of the land. And so we decided to slow down, lose the final rest day in Cahors and turn 3 days riding into 4. By coffee time we had reached our highest point for the day and relaxed in a pavement cafe in Baraqueville. Then it was mostly one long swoop down to the day’s new terminus at Sauveterre de Rouergue.

20131109-134703.jpg

This is a Bastide town, built as new in the 12th century on a grid design around a central square. It has not really changed since. We had a meal under one of the arches and then did nothing all afternoon!

20131109-135542.jpg

The ‘campsite’ was a tiny triangle of land in a junction between lanes. It was free and had attracted a motley collection of semi permanent residents – who welcomed us by lending the communal peg hammer. So from a nice hotel in Rodez to squatting beside the road for free – all in 24 hours. Our trips Sauveterre de Rouergue. certainly varied!

Rodez

20131108-224527.jpg

We took a break from cycling today. There can’t be many people who need to take a holiday from their holiday – but we do! We have a really nice hotel beside the Cathedral for two nights.

20131102-125456.jpg

20131102-125542.jpg

Rodez is a great place for a day off. The highlight is undoubtedly the Menhir Museum. This has a whole load of ancient standing stones, carved into the likeness of real people , male and female, wearing contemporary clothes. Fantastic.

20131102-125616.jpg

Entraygues sur Truyere to Rodez

After breakfast in town we crossed the Truyere (the wrong way on a narrow old stone bridge) and carried on down the Lot gorge. This became steadily more remote until we reached the tiny hamlet of Decoursavy. Here we turned left, back south, and began to ascend a side valley. First stop after coffee was Conques. This is a top tourist spot, famous for its mediaeval golden icons.

20131027-194714.jpg

20131027-194747.jpg

The golden artefacts were indeed beautiful, and the church had some interesting carvings, particularly over the door. But it was a busy place and we decided to find somewhere quieter to eat. So we were delighted to find a roman bridge and sat down on the roadway. Only to find that it was still open to cars (just fitted with wing mirrors folded in) so we had to move mid picnic!

20131027-195412.jpg

From Conques it was a serious climb back up to Rodez on the plateau. Half way up we stopped at Salles la Source to see a waterfall, not unlike those closer to home.

20131027-195844.jpg

These big climbs are becoming routine now. But entering large towns is not. This is our first since Girona. I had plotted a cunning route on back roads. But it turned out that the main road in to town had a good bike track, so we followed it – only to find that it ended in a rubbish dump. We ended up having to ride the main roads, and climbing steeply to the old, hilltop centre. Here we booked into a nice hotel near the cathedral and we’ll have our first day off the bikes tomorrow.