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  1. RogerPelly
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    On a bike you can take in the scenery and easily stop whenever you want. Also you can hear and smell the countryside that you miss if you are sealed in a car.

    Burning all that energy in the day gives you a hearty appetite for the local food on offer in the evenings.

    We're heading to Avignon to cycle around Provence by taking the Eurostar to Lille, with a TGV connection.

    However, Eurostar seem to make it nearly impossible for passengers to take their own bikes (unless they are folding bikes they have to go as “freight” and arrive a day later), so we will be hiring bikes in France.

    I think that Eurostar are missing a marketing opportunity here. How about introducing some special “bike” trains that take bicycles (like the bicycle compartments on Virgin’s trains)?

    Such a service wouldn’t only appeal to British cyclists travelling to Europe but also to European cyclists wanting to take advantage of the excellent Sustrans network.

    There are several companies that sell this type of holiday but they are quite pricey. It's quite easy, and a lot of fun, to plan it all yourself.

    To start with you need a good map. Mark out a route that takes in scenic areas (green routes on the Michelin maps) and interesting towns and villages. Mark the towns that look likely overnight stops (we normally aim to cover 30-60km a day). Then get on the internet and search for hotels at your intended overnight stops. Its quite likely that you may need to modify your route once you find out where the good hotels are. You can book some hotels online but others you will need to phone. This is when it starts to get interesting if your French or Spanish is limited. Don’t panic, its really only the first night of the trip that you really need to be completely certain about. If you have any doubts about your booking for any of the other nights you can always ask the receptionist at one of the earlier hotels to phone and check the booking at a later hotel.

    We had a great cycling holiday in Brittany, taking our bikes on the train to Plymouth, ferry to Roscoff then 10 days cycling around the Brittany coast, mainly on small lanes.

    Even better, we tried the Plymouth-Santander ferry and cycled around Cantabria, Asturias and the Picos de Europa. Here we stayed in some beautiful Paradors, followed parts of the pilgrim route to Santiago (Camino St Jacques) and cycled along a “Via Verde”.

    www.brittany-ferries.com
    www.logis-de-france.fr
    www.parador.es/english/index.jsp
    www.viasverdes.com
    www.feve.es/00/index.html

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