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I just wrapped up a 1,250km trip. Left on June 21st and arrived at my destination on June 29th. It was an amazing experience, but man, I made so many mistakes. Here is my review.
First time using a big saddle bag instead of a rear rack and panniers. The bike felt so much more responsive in corners. With panniers, I always felt like after a certain lean angle, the bike just became unmanageable and wanted to tip over. On the front fork, I was running the Old Man Mountain bags. They are convenient but a bit too small. this specific model has exposed bolt heads inside which made packing rigid stuff a nightmare.
For the other bags, the Restrap top tube bag was flawless, super well-made! The Topeak lower frame bag, though… absolute pain. The velcro straps kept slipping the whole trip and completely ruined my favorite bib shorts. Definitely changing that. On the bright side, putting a bottle cage under the bottom bracket for chain oil and tools was a great move, saved tons of room. I also electrical-taped two butyl inner tubes to the outside of the frame and put the pump next to the bottles out of the way and zero issues. Also, the food pouch on the stem Is great. I wish I had one more kept completely empty just to throw in a cold Coke bought on the go.
What I overpacked: way too much food. I brought a mountain of instant risotto pouches and ended up finishing the trip with enough food for 4 more dinners. Next time, 3 meals max and I'll buy groceries on the way. Also leaving behind next time: headlamp (the light mounted on my bike was enough), headphones (never used), fork and knife (a spoon is enough), and the Swiss plug adapter. And i use solid soap: I bought one from Decathlon and it was a disaster. It never dried, stayed wet, turned into a creamy mush, and got everywhere. Next time, just a hard piece of Marseille soap.
What actually saved me: wet wipes were a total lifesaver for wiping the dried sweat and salt off my face. Also, arm sleeves were essential to avoid sunburns. I really wanted more snacks to eat while riding, but I tried nuts and dried fruit and after a while, in that suffocating heat, they just made me super nauseous. I also really wished I had electrolyte tablets to put in my water bottles, but I completely forgot them at home.
Two major issues I didn't expect: Coming from Italy, I'm used to finding drinking fountains in every small town square or playground park. From Switzerland up, they are basically ghosts, and the ones I found were marked non-potable. My 1.5L water capacity was definitely not enough. Also, my lock was so annoying to use that I'd spend 10 minutes just locking and unlocking it at every supermarket. In Boxtel (NL), outside an Aldi, I walked out just in time to see a guy with his hands literally on my bags trying to open my top tube bag. If I had a quicker lock, I wouldn't have wasted time and probably avoided the mini-heart attack.
Also, Switzerland is beautiful, probably the prettiest part of the trip, but the locals I met were something else. First campsite only took cash (€40 for a tiny tent spot). The reception had the AC blasting at 18°C. I had just arrived after 7 hours of pedaling in 40°C heat, and within two minutes my vision went pitch black. I almost fainted on their floor and had to run outside to sit down. Then in Lucerne, I'm minding my own business brushing my teeth in the bathroom. The guy at the next sink reaches over and aggressively shuts off my tap without saying a word. I look at him like "What?!", and in a heavy German accent, he lectures me: "Here in Switzerland we don't waste water, in your country you can do whatever you want." … paying €40 for a tent spot just to get a passive-aggressive life lesson…
Anyway, I need some advice from you guys for the next trip:
1 neck sun protection: My neck got completely fried, literally opened a small wound. My Buff is too hot. Any good products?
2 Snacks: Since nuts and dried fruit made me nauseous in the 40°C heat, what do you eat when it's that hot to keep your energy up?
3 The Soggy Tent: It rained one morning and a couple of nights. Packing a soaking wet tent and wet clothes felt terrible. How do you guys manage drying gear on consecutive rainy days?
Thanks!
by Willing_Swim_5515
15 Comments
1. I’m in Japan, so the product that I use won’t help you. But: try to get a shirt with higher collar or use a thin scarf with high UPF.
2. I sometimes just switch over to electrolytes with sugar. That sugar is enough.
3. I have a backpack on my backrack that I use to bring my valuables etc. when I go to a cafe or whatever. This packpack has big mesh pockets. That’s where I store wet stuff so it can dry. Also, I bring a tarp and use the tarp to setup the tent in the rain or also I use it to protect the tent from the rain when I expect rain during packing up. That helps quite a bit but it comes with additional weight of course. If it rains a lot for more than 48h then I go to a hotel for a night.
Good old Swiss….ahem
Sounds exciting. As a swiss, I can understand what you mean. Especially in rural areas and the middle-aged to elderly are quite conservative and even racist.
I always ride with a sunshirt that has a hood and put on the hood underneath my helmet. This way I only have to put sunscreen on my face and legs. Keeps everything clean and fast!
As for the tent: if it rains constantly for multiple days, you just have to live with a wet tent. If not, I always unpack my tent during lunch or I’ll try find a sleeping-spot sooner to dry my tent in the sun.
i admit i lol’d at the swiss comment
in the heat you probably need to switch more to carbohydrates and limit fat and protein during the day.
I mean this was a crazy heatwave. I’ve used a buff to cover my neck in mid 30s temperatures. But I pull it all the way up over my ears too
Sounds like a good trip! Good job man !
I just finished a one-month trip in Norway with constant rain and cold weather every day. What I did with the tent was keep the inner tent inside a waterproof pannier. That way, only the outer tent gets wet, so I pack and pitch the wet flysheet first, then I just add the dry inner tent. It works pretty well, but you need a bit of extra space for that.
Can you tell m something about the simond tent?
How did you like road shoes for such a long trip? Did you have some other shoes for walking?
Bonjour, merci de partager votre expérience !
J’ai trouvé cette option pour une protection solaire, cela pourrait vous intéresser
Durant les longs voyages, je bois de l’ISO + (électrolytes et glucides chez Decathlon) et je m’arrête aux boulangeries et je fais des provisions de nourriture dans les supermarchés
Pour la tente, il faut la faire sécher quand tu fais une pause dans la journée
https://preview.redd.it/46z9c1ytbfbh1.png?width=864&format=png&auto=webp&s=549627b8d304c4dc97f8689e419e344e9f7ad8bd
For the bar soap, I use this and it’s really useful.
https://www.matadorequipment.com/products/flatpak-travel-soap-bar-case-v2-black
I just put my soap in it and it dries during the night without putting water everywhere. Also I’m in scandanivia right now and it was almost impossible to find solid soap, I’m shocked it’s not more widely available…
Beautiful trip. As a Swiss, I apologise for quite a decent amount of weirdos we sadly have here.
You were riding a Canyon Grizl AL, right? How happy are you with it? Does the riding position feel comfortable with this frame geometry on such a long trip? Is it enough sturdy to hold for maybe 10 – 20 years?
I am still deciding between a Rose Backroad AL and a Grizl AL.
I was really enjoying this post until the weird swiss stuff. Congratulations on a great trip. Would love to hear more about the route. Are you sure he was being ‘passive aggressive ‘ when he reached over and turned off the water ?! 😆
A light weight sun hoody is the best for sun protection and the hood catches wind and funnels it to your core so you don’t overheat. No need to spend a lot of money either I find ones on sale for 15-25$
Nice trip!
* Sun protection: I wear a sun hoodie (like for fishing), not optimal but does the job well,
* Wet tent: one of my cargo cages is dedicated to wet stuff, I shove my rain fly in the bag and on my lunch break I dry it (if I can).