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Traveling on a Bicycle...

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Traveling on a Bicycle...

Postby Madhu » March 4th, 2006

So anybody here traveled distances on a bike. If so were you always a avid biker and just took the skill to the road or did you travel for the first time on your bike.

Curious about how one starts to Bike long distances. How did you get started.
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Postby scubamama » March 4th, 2006

This is the longest bike ride I have been on.

It involved a lot of training of different types. This ride is basically a party on wheels across the state. I have been an avid biker off and on in my life.
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Postby halfnine » March 4th, 2006

Madhu,

Are you talking about eventually traveling a country and using a bike as the soure of transportation. Or are you just talking about doing a long ride over a few days. Say riding from SF down to SD to come down and see me. I do need someone to kill those spiders for me after all Wink

Anyhow, there are a couple of ways to go about it depending on how serious you want to be and what your ultimate goal is. Let me know whay you were thinking of doing and I'll give you what help I can.
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Postby Madhu » March 4th, 2006

So what am trying to look into is should I walk across Spain or bike.

So right now in a evaluation stage.I'm not a biker but on the other hand i know its better on the knees and my back than walking.

So..am still in the thinking stages. I have time so want to make sure either option am prepared.

and nine...stop being such a wuss. Wink
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Postby gonorth » March 5th, 2006

I reckon horsebacking it would be a great compromise between walking and cycling - you could even walk a bit when the bum was sore and leading the horse carrying your gear would be easier than wheeling the bike.
Even Madrid has this huge open area right alongside the city so tethering the horse for some grazing may not be too much of a problem.
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Postby Madhu » March 5th, 2006

Horse is not an option.

The problem is am not good with animals..i don;t know what to do with them and they know that too. I first time a pet a dog..really pet one was about 2 years ago. I'm not squimish but I don;t seem to connect with them. A horse def would know this. I rode one last year and let me tell you that took a lot of courage on my part. She knew my discomfort.

I'm reading a book right about this guy who took a Donkey as his means of transport...reading this book is not encouraging.

Thanks though...

Cheers
M
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Postby colinm » March 24th, 2006

Step 1) Buy a bike
Step 2) Ride!
Step 3) After an hour or so wonder what the hell you were thinking off
Step 4) Collapse into a guesthouse and drink lots of liquid.
Step 5) Repeat for however long you want.

I decided on a whim that I would try cycling tour, so I bought a bike in Singapore and five months and 3000km later ended up in Bangkok.

My previous experience was that I had bought a bike about a year before, my first bike with gears and would sometime ride a total of 20 miles at the weekend.

As long as there is plenty of shops/guesthouses on the route and not too many hills nothing to worry about Smile

If it wasn't for cycling I would never see dawn
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Postby boatcrew » May 26th, 2006

I biked around Greece for a few months. I'm still planning a bicycle tour across Europe. Just waiting for the right moment...

A few photos from the trip here: gallery.linuxfortravelers.com
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Postby colinm » May 27th, 2006

I'm back on a bike again! Cycling North of Thailand just now. Biking along flat roads is very different from chugging up and down hills though.
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Postby tmags » June 12th, 2006

I'm in Thailand as well, and spent all of last week in Hua Hin. I just missed meeting a couple of RTW cyclists at my guesthouse by a couple of days. They've been at it since 2002, here is their site: www.downtheroad.org
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Postby Andreawhohasacat » June 21st, 2006

Hi Madhu

I don't know where you got the idea that walking is bad for your back and knees. It's quite wrong. Often the contrary.

The choice could be made by the time available. You obviously have plenty. Consider how long it would take to walk your chosen route and then how long it would take to ride it. See which you prefer.

Cycling such distances is probably easier than walking.

How to do it, you just make a choice, the rest should follow.
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Postby Canyonlands » October 1st, 2006

Hey Madhu,

My wife and I go out for a month long bike tour every year and in June of 08 we'll be leaving for a 6+ month tour with no real plan (at this point).

To focus on what I sense is a concern:
Every year we meet people that haven't ridden bikes since they were kids before deciding to head off on 3,000+ mile self contained tours. All have seemed to be having a great time.

We backpack as well but bicycle touring is what we prefer.

I happen to be the creator of a unique photo gallery of expedition bicycles. Check it out: www.fullyloadedtouring.com

I get images from around the world and to limit my workload I set the gallery requirement for front and rear panniers. You can carry enough in a trailer alone or depending how you go, with just two panniers. You can also find a bike that will work for this purpose for very little $ depending on where you look. Some of the bikes in the gallery are little more than old mountain bikes.

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Postby elAdi » March 22nd, 2007

Not sure this is still an issue...but I reckon I keep the thread alive for others who are interested.

I've done cycling trips in California (SF to Santa Barbara) and here in Western Australia (Perth - Bunbury, 210 km on the road and Munda Biddi Trail, 320 km off-road).

I'm currently planning a bike trip in Tasmania with a few friends. There's either 1000 km on the road....or a mix between off- and on-road routes.

Recently, I've been reading quite a few travelogs by cyclists in Asia....and the idea is forming to ride through Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

As much as I love cycling, I never thought I'd consider such a trip. But I'm starting to get convinced that the 'slow way' is probably the most intimate one to travel a country.

As for training...obviously every ride that you do helps. But...you tend to build up fast and best while doing it. Day 3 and 4 tend to hurt anyhow - whether you trained or not. So, just get used to the saddle a bit, and then jump in.

Would love to hear from / talk to some people here who did long tours in Asia - especially Indonesia, as this seems the least cycled country around there...

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Postby MarkCO » March 29th, 2007

I have found the pleasures of bike touring in other countries to outweigh the travails by quite a bit. Most of my best travel experiences have been on a bike.

I did a fun but difficult 2000km tour along the dirt roads of Patagonia for three months in 2002:
Biking Patagonia

And about a month of cycling around N. Thailand last summer:

SEA Blog

And here is a great BnA-esque bike touring website:

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Postby elAdi » May 17th, 2007

Just been reading through your Thailand bike adventures Mark. Good trip, good writing. Kudos.

The bike gets more and more appealing to me. Obviously, we will wait till we accomplished our 1000 km Tasmania trip before we'll make any decisions on an extended Asia bike tour. But...for some reason I believe that Tasmania will only support the current tendency.

Again, if there are any other bicyles tourers around here in BnA: please share your touring experiences.

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