Going back
#1
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Going back
How many posters here have enjoyed a region or route on a cycling tour so much that they have returned for a second experience?
Or maybe there was unfinished business?
Or is there somewhere you have toured by another means and you now want to do it by bicycle?
Or maybe there was unfinished business?
Or is there somewhere you have toured by another means and you now want to do it by bicycle?
#2
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i passed through Wales last year by train heading to Worcester, and it looked from where i was sitting great cycling country so i would like to give it a go maybe this year.
i played golf in Kerry many moons ago and it always stuck in my head as a really beautiful part of Ireland,so that's on the list as well.
i played golf in Kerry many moons ago and it always stuck in my head as a really beautiful part of Ireland,so that's on the list as well.
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In my case, I spent many years traveling by motorcycle. Now I'm in the process of going back to many of the places I passed through, too quickly, and seeing them by bicycle.
But there's also a lot of places I haven't been to that I need to go see.
But there's also a lot of places I haven't been to that I need to go see.
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Ireland three times (gradually working my way up the west coast)
Slovenia twice (West then the East)
Pyrenees twice (middle bit then east)
Its a bit strange touring the same place twice, things change usually with more development and not always for the better for us cyclists. Sometimes there is a bit of overlap in my tours but I try to see new parts of the country.
Slovenia twice (West then the East)
Pyrenees twice (middle bit then east)
Its a bit strange touring the same place twice, things change usually with more development and not always for the better for us cyclists. Sometimes there is a bit of overlap in my tours but I try to see new parts of the country.
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I rode the Great Southern Randonnee, a 1200K randonnee, in 2004 (Rowan rode it too, but not with me), and along the way I noticed a few places where I thought I'd like to spend a bit more time.
So, now that I've moved to Australia, Rowan and I have spent a long weekend in the Grampians doing a hub-and-spoke tour, and a long-long weekend at Port Fairy doing a hub-and-spoke tour, and we've been in the Anglesea area doing a 150 km ride in the daylight along the Great Ocean Road ... all places along the route of the Great Southern Randonnee. It was really nice to see those areas again, in daylight, at a more relaxed pace.
When I toured Australia in 2004, before and after the Great Southern, it was rather a high-speed tour ... not much time for lingering anywhere. But there were areas I wanted to see again.
So when I came back to Australia in 2008 to visit Rowan, we did an 8-day tour down to Wilson's Prom and back ... that was one of the places I wanted to see again. We've been down in that general area several times now for hub-and-spoke tours, Audax Australia events, etc. And I've been eyeing that vicinity for a weekend trip sometime before the end of summer. It's a beautiful area.
3 weeks of the 2004 tour were spent in Tasmania ... and not long after I got here in 2009, Rowan and I returned to Tasmania for 3 weeks and travelled to many of the places I'd cycled (and a lot more). The 2009 tour, however, was all done by van ... I was recovering from a serious case of DVT which had landed me in hospital for 2 weeks, and walking slowly for short distances was about all I could manage. But it was interesting driving somewhere rather than cycling ... we covered a lot more distance ... and some of the hills didn't seem quite as challenging as they seemed when I cycled it! I think it can be good to see an area via different methods of transportation.
Those are all Australian examples ... I could go on about Canadian examples too.
So, now that I've moved to Australia, Rowan and I have spent a long weekend in the Grampians doing a hub-and-spoke tour, and a long-long weekend at Port Fairy doing a hub-and-spoke tour, and we've been in the Anglesea area doing a 150 km ride in the daylight along the Great Ocean Road ... all places along the route of the Great Southern Randonnee. It was really nice to see those areas again, in daylight, at a more relaxed pace.
When I toured Australia in 2004, before and after the Great Southern, it was rather a high-speed tour ... not much time for lingering anywhere. But there were areas I wanted to see again.
So when I came back to Australia in 2008 to visit Rowan, we did an 8-day tour down to Wilson's Prom and back ... that was one of the places I wanted to see again. We've been down in that general area several times now for hub-and-spoke tours, Audax Australia events, etc. And I've been eyeing that vicinity for a weekend trip sometime before the end of summer. It's a beautiful area.
3 weeks of the 2004 tour were spent in Tasmania ... and not long after I got here in 2009, Rowan and I returned to Tasmania for 3 weeks and travelled to many of the places I'd cycled (and a lot more). The 2009 tour, however, was all done by van ... I was recovering from a serious case of DVT which had landed me in hospital for 2 weeks, and walking slowly for short distances was about all I could manage. But it was interesting driving somewhere rather than cycling ... we covered a lot more distance ... and some of the hills didn't seem quite as challenging as they seemed when I cycled it! I think it can be good to see an area via different methods of transportation.
Those are all Australian examples ... I could go on about Canadian examples too.
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#6
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I liked the Colorado GDMBR section of my last tour so much, and disliked Northern Utah so much, that I'm going to ride the Kokopelli trail from Colorado to Southern Utah this spring.
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I went back for a second helping of Icefields Parkway.
I liked CO so much when I toured here that I moved here, and have done a few more tours here since.
I'll go back to New Zealand someday.
I liked CO so much when I toured here that I moved here, and have done a few more tours here since.
I'll go back to New Zealand someday.
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Did ACA's Northern Tier route in '99. Returned the following year to do the Seattle to Glacier N.P. portion as part of a tour ending in Cortez, CO. The original plan was to continue across the country, but I let my heart talk my head into going to see a young vixen who would be working at Mesa Verde N.P. I should have taken that left turn at Fairplay, CO and stuck to my original plan. Definitely have some unfinished business there.
I did some train travel in Andalucia and thought it looked like a great place to explore by bike. I was correct.
I did some train travel in Andalucia and thought it looked like a great place to explore by bike. I was correct.
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I went to Tuscany in 2006, Sicily in 2008. Not sure if that really constitutes "going back", those are two rather different parts of the same country. I'm going back to Italy in 2012, or at least that's the plan. I'll be doing a second, somewhat longer stay in Florence, and exploring more of northern Tuscany this time.
#10
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I've had two attempts at the TransAM Trail....the third attempt (2012) is a start over from Yorktown. And a Thousand miles I have already seen. I have a couple of ride partners in 2012, it wouldn't be fair to them to not start at Yorktown...besides, I'm sure there is a ton I missed in the miles already ridden! Namely, I'm positive I wasn't chased by all the dogs in Kentucky!!
OH! I forgot RAGBRAI. This year I'm registering (as always) but I'm going to bag it. I'm taking my Surly LHT instead of my Aegis, and riding with full panniers, tent, cooking gear etc. The route will be announced in a few days, so I'll be able to see how much "hurt" I'm in for.
OH! I forgot RAGBRAI. This year I'm registering (as always) but I'm going to bag it. I'm taking my Surly LHT instead of my Aegis, and riding with full panniers, tent, cooking gear etc. The route will be announced in a few days, so I'll be able to see how much "hurt" I'm in for.
Last edited by Gus Riley; 01-25-11 at 05:31 PM.
#11
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I have returned to the Icefields Parkway, and surrounding area too many times to count. I cycled there as a child and I returned to cycle there as an adult. I've done a several randonneuring events there, day tours, and longer tours.
There are two places I really miss in Canada ... the Rockies and the lakes in Manitoba.
There are two places I really miss in Canada ... the Rockies and the lakes in Manitoba.
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#12
Hooked on Touring
Didn't Thomas Wolfe say that you could never go back again?
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
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Didn't Thomas Wolfe say that you could never go back again?
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
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#14
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Didn't Thomas Wolfe say that you could never go back again?
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
#15
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When I cycle through an area, I see the road I've chosen to cycle and whatever is on either side of that road, and a little bit of the towns I go through. When I return to an area, and especially if I'm doing a hub-and-spoke tour there, I may cycle the same road I cycled before, but I will also cycle roads in all different directions around ... really exploring the area. I will return to the same towns, but I'll explore them rather than just cycling through. And I'll discover all sorts of things I didn't see when I cycled through the first time.
For example, I cycled through Toora in 2004 on the way to Wilson's Prom, and that is a pretty area. But there is absolutely no indication from the road that there is a fairly large beautiful waterfall over the hills just behind Toora. We spent a weekend in Toora last year to explore the area, and discovered that there is more to the place than I would have guessed!
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#16
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Interesting. The one place that I wanted to go back to was Flanders... in fact, the World War One theatre across Northern France and Belgium. It had such an impact on me in 2003 that it seemed natural that in 2007 (the years coinciding with Paris Brest Paris) that I take Machka through so she could experience it, too.
For me, returning is more an enhancement of the previous experience. We've talked recently about going back to the south coast of the state where we live, and there are parts of Tasmania that I would have no trouble revisiting. Likewise Canada, and I would like to go back to the New England area of the US.
For me, returning is more an enhancement of the previous experience. We've talked recently about going back to the south coast of the state where we live, and there are parts of Tasmania that I would have no trouble revisiting. Likewise Canada, and I would like to go back to the New England area of the US.
#17
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I have lost track of the number of times that I have returned to Prince Edward County, Ontario. I first "discovered" the region in the late 1980s or early 1990s. In 2009, I visited three times! It is my idea of a cycling paradise. The magic has never diminished for me.
The area has changed plenty over the years, but mostly for the better: more bicycle lanes on the (so-called) main roads; more accommodation and restaurant options; and more (and better) wineries, farmer's markets, cheese factories, and art galleries.
The area has changed plenty over the years, but mostly for the better: more bicycle lanes on the (so-called) main roads; more accommodation and restaurant options; and more (and better) wineries, farmer's markets, cheese factories, and art galleries.
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Right now, my thoughts are about returning in April 2015, The Centennial of the Second Battle of Ypres. I could do the whole Western Front by bicycle in a couple of weeks... Ypres, the Somme, Vimy Ridge, Verdun. I'd need to take some decent clothes because touring battlefields and cemetaries in lycra just isn't on.
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In 2009 I had planned on biking up the north shore of lake superior, then up into the superior national forest and making a big loop back to Minneapolis. Big nasty cold front made me abort plans and head home early.
In 2010 I biked across Wisconsin, Michigan, and on the way home decided to retrace the route I never finished, but family problems happened I had to skip it.
One of these years.
In 2010 I biked across Wisconsin, Michigan, and on the way home decided to retrace the route I never finished, but family problems happened I had to skip it.
One of these years.
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I don't have time for a long tour, but the Victoria-California trip I did last year starts right outside my door, so I'm doing it again. It may not be as interesting as most of the others here, but its a damned nice ride that takes not a lot of time.
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Originally posted by: jamawani
Didn't Thomas Wolfe say that you could never go back again?
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
Didn't Thomas Wolfe say that you could never go back again?
And Hericlitus said you could never step into the same river twice??
If you return for the same experience, you are likely to be disappointed.
But if you return simply to enjoy anew, you can be pleasantly surprised.
We do find ourselves revisting the Puget Sound areas, San Juan Islands, Vancouver Island, Gulf Islands and the Sunshine Coast of BC.
gulfislander, It is ironic that you come our way on your tours, and one of our favorite spots is in your neighborhood. It just shows that we are all really blessed to be living in the Pacific Northwest-- even including parts of California
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When I tour, I do entertain the question, "Could I live here" as I'm cycling through an area. There have been several areas where the answer is "Yes".
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#25
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I rode the Oregon coast 24 years ago and returned last year. I covered a little more ground on the recent trip and enjoyed it as much but probably wouldn't go back due to too many other areas to explore. Definitely more traffic the last time. Another favorite area that I have explored a couple times and would go back to is Door County Wisconsin. There are still many things to see and nice quiet roads to criss cross in different ways.
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Nothing compares to the simple pleasure of a bike ride - JFK