Hotel or camping during a cycling tour?

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
I mix and match to suit: hostels, pensiones, hotels, motels, tourist farms, mountain huts, camping barns, campsites, campsite huts, wild camping, tarp camping.

I bought my first solo tent when I failed to find any free hotel rooms in Santander (some conference) and I found the freedom really good.
It is nice to sample local cuisine in smaller pensiones, you get a home-cooking style.
 

crazyjoe101

New Member
Location
London
Hotels for me. Power. Wifi. Towel rails for drying clothing after washing it.

No need to plan any further ahead than that day: I logon to hotels.com, laterooms.com and bedandbreakfast.com each morning to find and book a hotel for that night.
Have you ever had trouble not being able to find somewhere to put the bike?
 
My last (And so far only.) cycle tour I did a bit of wild camping and a fair bit of guest houses/pubs/hostels plus staying with family/friends along the way; I enjoyed doing camping as much as proper accommodation. I'm looking forward to doing nothing but camping on my next tour.
 
it has to be a tent -
  1. I love being and sleeping outdoor
  2. Indoor accommodation requires a level of pre-planning that to me kills much of the spontaneity of my style of touring
  3. I hate Hotels
  4. I am too mean to pay hotel prices
  5. My stove sets off the smoke detectors in hotel rooms :smile:

this is me every time.
My husband does not share the same philosophy though and if he has been wet through for a week or so, I have to allow him the option of a B&B....
 

CopperBrompton

Bicycle: a means of transport between cake-stops
Location
London
Have you ever had trouble not being able to find somewhere to put the bike?
Nope, and I mostly tour on the trike! I always say that I need a garage for the trike, and usually that's what is provided. A few times they've made alternative arrangements.

nsr-day11-46.jpg


londontoamsterdam-098.jpg


nsr-day10-48.jpg


Very occasionally, they've only been able to offer an outdoor area, but I don't mind that given these are places well off the beaten track. For example, our accommodation here was in the summerhouse of a large garden. The bikes were directly outside and well hidden from the (very quiet, rural) road.

ronde-06-52.jpg


With Travelodges and the like, I just wheel it into the room – do it with sufficient confidence and no-one challenges you.
 
Nope, and I mostly tour on the trike! I always say that I need a garage for the trike, and usually that's what is provided. A few times they've made alternative arrangements.

nsr-day11-46.jpg


londontoamsterdam-098.jpg


nsr-day10-48.jpg


Very occasionally, they've only been able to offer an outdoor area, but I don't mind that given these are places well off the beaten track. For example, our accommodation here was in the summerhouse of a large garden. The bikes were directly outside and well hidden from the (very quiet, rural) road.

ronde-06-52.jpg


With Travelodges and the like, I just wheel it into the room – do it with sufficient confidence and no-one challenges you.

good to know given my recent purchase!
 

MarkF

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
I like and enjoy camping, but I like drinking in bars more, and at the end of day's cycling touring I like nothing better than to hit a few bars, meeting people, watching people and boozing. A campsite bar doesn't really do it for me, nor does a hike or ride "into town", comfort doesn't really come into it, rooms (not hotel rooms) are near bars so I stay mainly in rooms. :smile:

Don't know why pre-planning is required, I've never booked a room in my life.
 
Location
Wirral
We use hotels or B&B's, we are slow enough anyway and all the extra stuff for camping would only make it worse, oh and on the ground in a 'cell' - nope from both of us!
For me the lack of darkness in a tent drove me to distraction when I was a boy scout in proper thick canopied tent - can't imagine a modern one!
For the boss however the lack of a hair dryer and a bath is beyond the pale.
 

Alex H

Legendary Member
Location
Alnwick
Nope, and I mostly tour on the trike! I always say that I need a garage for the trike, and usually that's what is provided. A few times they've made alternative arrangements.

Very occasionally, they've only been able to offer an outdoor area, but I don't mind that given these are places well off the beaten track. For example, our accommodation here was in the summerhouse of a large garden. The bikes were directly outside and well hidden from the (very quiet, rural) road.

With Travelodges and the like, I just wheel it into the room – do it with sufficient confidence and no-one challenges you.

This is the same for us and our tandem. :smile: Now that we live in France, we have not done so much touring, but it would be hotels only - camping is for boy/girl scouts:laugh:

I always ask for safe storage for the bike and have wheeled it through restaurant dining rooms, kept it overnight in a hotel kitchen, in the reception of a very posh hotel in Bayeux and on one occasion it had it's own room in a chateau ^_^
 

MarkF

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
You get much better rates booking ahead, but on cycle tours I only ever book in the morning for that night's stay.

But I doubt even 10% of the rooms I stay in are possible to book ahead. I just go in a bar and ask, usually it's above that, or another bar, they are not places with websites or often any any visible advertising. Tbh even it was possible, I like wondering where I'll I'll end up, I don't enjoy planning.
 
Top Bottom