raleighnut
Legendary Member
I find it really difficult to cycle past an open pub (unless I know that there is a really good one a couple of miles away.Absolutely. 35-50 miles a day average (fewer if in Belgium and visiting the breweries)...

I find it really difficult to cycle past an open pub (unless I know that there is a really good one a couple of miles away.Absolutely. 35-50 miles a day average (fewer if in Belgium and visiting the breweries)...
Best tour of all.Brewery to brewery by any chance?
I was thinking more Eurostar to Brussels and then Ghent and get the train from Bruges to Brussels and pick up the Eurostar on the return. Cycling from Brussels to Calais is not too bad. Went to Dunkirk last year and there were parts between De Panne and Dunkirk that were a real pig.Doing it be train could be a bit of a pain. To get from Calais or Dunkirk to Ghent you end up having to go via Little and Kortrijk.
Probably easiest to cycle from Calais Port up to De Panne (about 64k) and then get the train from De Panne to Ghent (which takes about an hour and a quarter, and is £10).
My last tour was on a Brompton, and I did about 50 - 60 k a day. I could have gone further, and did some days, but I'd booked the hotels beforehand. And it was supposed to be a holiday, not a route march.
The Ventoux day was fun!
Indeed. I was going round the Luberon in Provence, so you don't necessarily have hotels just where you want them. Plus, it was November and I'd hate to find the only hotel in town was shut until Easter!I think that is a good idea, booking your accomodation. It stops you ploughing on all day.
Hmm, depends. I was glad not to have booked on home to Alps, as one day I was gnackered, and just fancied stopping early. Conversely on the last day I had a tailwind, and though at the start of the day I thought I was going to take two days to reach the destination, 141 miles and 12,000ft of climbing later I was there. I enjoyed the flexibility (though planned the route to go through medium-sized towns, to improve my chances of having a choice of accommodation). Though, if not solo, I'd want to book ahead, for sure.Indeed. I was going round the Luberon in Provence, so you don't necessarily have hotels just where you want them. Plus, it was November and I'd hate to find the only hotel in town was shut until Easter!