Bikes and Practice Rides
Su has used her Stanforth Kibo on previous tours but I had replaced by Dawes Super Galaxy with a Stanforth Kibo (Gates Carbon/Rolhoff Speedhub) at Christmas, so I needed to get some miles on this new bike. See here for my review of my Stanforth kibo.
We have been out for a number of rides with groups of friends on our kibos, and in addition we took a two week tour of the Netherlands (See Rotterdam or Anywhere AKA Pedal to Parkrun). This was in early March, so was a B&B rather than a camping tour, but we got 520kms and a bit of tourism in. We had to be back in Dover by Marc 15th in order to make sure that this trip did not get included in our 90 days in a rolling 180 in Schengen, (We leave for France on June 16th - by early September our March trip starts dropping out of our "Rolling 180" days.
It was a cold and wet spring/early summer, so it was late May before we managed to do a camping night out in the New Forest as a rehearsal. Luckily all the equipment seemed to be present and correct and functioning.
Drying out kit on bikes after a wet night |
Technology and Route Planning
It would be appropriate at this moment to point out that I have zero sense of direction. Give me a chart or map and a compass and I am a first class navigator (really!) but I do like to have the map in front of me. I navigate using an iPhone attached by Quadlock and nearly always turned on. I power the iPhone from the USB output driven by my dynamo, which produces approximately 2.5 W which is just about enough to run an iPhone as long as there are not many other apps running,
For maps, for many years I have used either Outdoors Gps (Ordinance Survey Maps) or Open Cycle Map, or French IGN Maps for navigation, In particular I have used a brilliant French Application called iPhGénie which allows overlay of Open Cycle Map on the French IGN Maps - and now I discover it also overlays the German BKG Maps. It runs on MacOS and IoS. The issue with using these apps is that they do not have a Route Planning mode - you either need to import a preprepared GPX route or create one yourself - eg by tracing the route with your finger. This can be fiddly and time-consuming.
Twelve years ago I had experimented with apps that did route planning but had never been satisfied with them - they were very inclined to crash and rarely produced an optimal route. However, I am happy to find that things have moved on in twelve years. I have tried a number of current Apps, and the one that suits me best is Komoot (which has improved enormously since I first used it!). It is really easy to use on a small screen, selects good routes, and does not crash. But what makes it the best in my mind is the ease with which you can alter the route if you want to optimise the route it has chosen. In addition it has an excellent ability to highlight your chosen points of interest (POIs) - Campsites, cafés, train stations, shops, ATMs etc...
However, much as I appreciate Komoot for planning routes I do not use it, or any other turn-by-turn navigating app when actually travelling. I prefer to see the larger context in a map with North at the top and me at the centre. This makes it much easier to make minor tweaks to the route once you actually understand the terrain, But, more importantly, turn-by-turn navigation seems to use up the battery - certainly Komoot eats the juice much faster than the Dynamo can top it up.
Other applications we have include:
- Cyclemeter (Keeps a record of the route you have taken, time spent moving and height ascended and descended: we have used this for all our trips and it still has all the records)
- BikeDoctor (Good app on how to mend and maintain bikes)
- Archies (List/map of many campsites. The only information is Geolocation and contact details)
- Pocket Earth and Maps.Me (I have never used these apps in anger, but friends have convinced me that they are useful extra sources of information about the places you are visiting)
- Booking.com. When it pours with rain, or you discover that the only campsite for miles has been converted into a Motorhome Aire, or you decide want to stay in the centre of a city, then Booking.com is your fiend.
We have a number of other camping apps, but it's not clear they add any extra value to Komoot, Archies or Open Camping Map.
Important websites include:
- https://en.eurovelo.com/ev6 (official EuroVelo description of EV6)
- https://www.seat61.com/bike-by-train.htm#other%20destinations (The Man in Seat 61 advice on travelling by train with a bike in Europe)
- https://opencampingmap.org/en (More camping)
We also have a number of tourist web site descriptions of parts of the route especially in Austria and Bulgaria.
Getting Home by Train
After years of long haul flying for work, we are keen not to add any more than essential airmiles. Also we are not keen to have to collapse and pack our bikes. We have chosen to attempt to get home using local trains that we can roll our fully laden bikes onto. This might mean taking a train to one side of an international border then cycling across the border to the first station in the next country. It may well be that it will take us around 10 days to get home. We have bought Eurorail passes which allow us seven days travel within a month of first use, and we may need to pay bike supplements on top,
Insurance?
We have a bank provided travel insurance which covers us adequately for short holidays. We have never previously insured our bikes.
Getting travel insurance was non-trivial! The majority of insurances seem to be limited to 90 days, and we expect to be away a bit longer than that. We are just a few months short of 70 years old, which seems to be an age at which premiums increase exponentially. In addition, I have had some minor medical issues in the past, all of which are now dealt with, but they seemed to unreasonably excite insurance companies when I asked for quotes. The majority of things that travel insurance covers are of no interest to us. We would be very happy to take a very large excess (~£1000?) on any medical or theft claims. All we really want is cover against seriously expensive medical treatment, e.g. following an accident, But no-one would quote us for such a large excess.
In the end the best offer was from SportsCoverDirect.com, who provided a basic travel insurance with good medical cover, and, unusually, they did not want to hear about previous medical conditions unless they were ongoing; I was able to honestly sign on. The cost was about £450 for two people for 4 months cycle touring.
Covering the bikes with most insurance companies seemed to require a premium of about 20% of teh value of the bikes. We had decided not to insure them and to make them as "unstealable" as possible - so they have our twitter handles on them, they have hidden trackers, and they have a range of non-standard decals. We decided to also register them on BikeRegister.com and to use their kit to "burn" the registration into the paintwork. When we went to add our bikes to the database we got offered cycle insurance by Bikmo.com. This insurance requires you to keep your bike inside locked premises, or locked to an immovable object using a Sold Secure Gold lock. We were quite happy with these conditions, and found the cost of the insurance much more reasonable than other offers. We are now insuring all the bikes in our house for 365 days a year, worldwide for £37 per month.
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