K
Ken Roberts
Guest
Sharon and I tried a November trip to Rome and southern Italy. I put some
photos up at
http://roberts-1.com/t/b05/itn/k
Trip Report: We found some pretty rides, and lots of fun non-riding stuff
like walking around ancient + modern cities, hiking to mountain villages,
and finding rather good food without looking for it. We toured in our usual
"incorrect" way, using a rental car to carry our tandem bicycle to the best
cycling roads on the best weather days -- and doing other things on wet or
windy days (which are to be expected in November). We often used ideas from
the book Cycling Italy, by Ethan Gelber et al (Lonely Planet, 2003), which
had earlier given us some good recommendations for northwestern Italy.
Bicycling highlights:
* Amalfi coast: prettiest bicycling road in the world?
* riding Rome city streets slightly downhill was exhilarating.
* riding around crater lakes north of Rome was pretty.
* Gargano has a good "sea + hills" ride.
* farm country of "the Murge" near Bari looks promising.
Details below.
Ken
__________________________________
details
- - Amalfi coast road - -
Such a great ride through such spectacular terrain calls for a separate post
of its own. The road cut into the steep hills and cliffs for such a
sustained distance, with the sea directly below. Dramatic rocks beside and
above. Pretty villages set into the hills, with narrow passages to explore
on foot. Big views across the bay to mountains beyond.
The Amalfi coast is the southwest of Naples (Napoli) and west of Salerno,
and faces south toward the water of the Gulf of Salerno. We rode from the
city of Sorrento east to the city of Salerno, going thru the villages of
Massa Lubrense, Termini, Positano, Praiano, Amalfi, Maiori, etc. Definitely
hilly, but mostly not steep. We rode it in a day, because that was the
window of good weather. Next time we'd hope to spend two or three days,
spend more time exploring the villages, do a hike up into the hills.
The problem with bicycling the Amalfi coast is that we have not yet heard of
a good way to make it part of a loop route. So we did it as a one-way ride
and used trains to shuttle between Salerno and Sorrento.
- - Rome city and two Appian Ways to the Colli Albani hills - -
We started at our hotel in the Aurelia section on the west side of Rome,
rode across the city of Rome and out east on the Via Appia Antica -- the
old "Appian Way" road from two thousand years ago -- and climbed up into
the Albani hills to Castel Gandolfo, the traditional summer residence of the
Pope. Then we rode back down to Rome on the Via Appia Nuovo -- the new
"Appian Way" road (SS 7) -- and across the city again to finish at our
hotel.
I remembered learning of the "Appian Way" from textbooks in high school. The
idea of riding it came from the Lonely Planet Cycling Italy guidebook.
There's still some of the big original pavement-stones in some sections, and
the guidebook rightly warned about the difficulty of riding on them. But
most of the other sections of the old Way were covered with the modern
cobblestones, which are smaller -- but which are not fast and not fun for
riding -- and we did not find any guidebook warning about them. So we were
glad when the old Via Appia ended and we got our wheels onto the
mostly-smooth asphalt surface of modern Italian roads outside cities.
The guidebook suggested taking the train back to Rome after climbing into
the Colli Albani hills and seeing the lake and villages. But we figured we
surely had _earned_ the fun of some downhill riding. So after lunch in
Castel Gandolfo, we aimed west back to Rome, and had lots of fun spinning
our pedals on the smooth surface of the SS7 highway (where we saw other
cyclists). Later we found that apart from a few moderate climbs, we were on
a gentle downhill all the way to the Tiber River (Fiume Tevere) which runs
thru the middle of Rome. So in that direction we could ride on the main city
streets almost as fast as the cars (though not as fast as the
motorscooters). We had lots of fun sprinting the start from a traffic light,
out and in around a double-parked car, on the lookout for assertive
pedestrians -- but always being predictable so that we didn't get mowed down
by a motorscooter trying to squeeze past the cars.
Sharon says it was exciting and fun in the afternoon, but on the back of the
tandem it was scary the first time thru the city in the morning. I think
next time maybe we'll just ride arounde the villages and lakes in the Colli
Albani area and minimize taking our tandem on the city streets (though I'd
be glad to try more of the Rome streets riding a single bike, or on skates:
www.pincio.com/mercoledi.htm).
- - Lago di Bracciano - -
Pretty and pleasant short (36 km) ride around the lake nearest to Rome
(about 35 km northwest from the city). Less hilly than Bolsena -- actually I
did it on skates, and saw several cyclists along the way.
- - Lago di Bolsena - -
Lots of big views around a "crater" lake (with three islands) between
Viterbo and Orvieto (pretty far north from Rome). Includes a +300m (+1000
vertical ft) climb up to the town of Montefiascone, and to avoid a few km of
rough pavement we took a hillier variation around the west side, which
required another two substantial climbs, rewarded by views on both sides of
the ridge. Saw at least two other cyclists on a cloudy-rainy midweek day,
which strikes me as a favorable indication of the quality of the ride. (Lago
di Vico did not strike me as good for riding as Bolsena or Bracciano)
- - Gargano peninsula - -
Gargano is on the east coast of Italy in northern Puglia. I rode east and
north along the Adriatic seacoast, the west and south through the interior
hills. Good variety of great sea views with white limestone, olive trees,
then interior woods and cow pastures. Rather hilly, though nothing was
really steep, there's some long long moderate climbs, and not much flat --
took
longer than I thought.
I went from Monte Sant'Angelo to Mattatani to only a ways past Vieste to
around Spiaggia Scialmarino, didn't make it to Peschici, then returned
inland thru Villagio Foresta Umbra to MtStA -- so about 126 km total loop.
* lots of pretty sea views.
* long descent east from Monte Sant'Angelo to Mattatani was pretty and
mostly not very steep. I wouldn't have done this descent if I'd started in
Manfredonia, so perhaps for best views next time I'd want to start in Monte
Sant'Angelo -- or better yet near Mattantani, to do that pretty descent with
the sun behind me in the afternoon.
* side trip to Pugnochiuso was worth it -- more nice sea views, and actually
does not add that much climbing work.
* long climb from Spiaggia Scialmarino up to Villagio Foresta Umbra was not
interesting enough for its length. It started nice in the farms and
vineyards, continues nice into the woods -- just too much of it. It seemed
to follow a creek intead of a ridge, so no views out to the side. Next time
I'd hope to find some more interesting climb into the interior.
* Next time I'd want to continue along the sea further north to try the
climb up from west of Peschici -- Lonely Planet guidebook says that climb
stays more on the ridge.
* I got three flat tires (all punctures, not snake-bites) along the coast
road. Perhaps it was from little shards on limestone. Consider brushing off
tires frequently.
- - the Murge, near Bari - -
On a rainy day I drove my car to explore this farming region with gentle
hills south of Bari in southern Puglia (toward the "heel" of the "boot" of
Italy). Looked promising for visiting sometime with our tandem bicycle.
Around the town of Alberobello are many old-style conical stone houses
called "trulli" -- which are kinda nice -- but actually the region looked
nice enough for riding even without them. The Lonely Planet cycling
guidebook has a multi-day route thru this area.
_____________________________________________
photos up at
http://roberts-1.com/t/b05/itn/k
Trip Report: We found some pretty rides, and lots of fun non-riding stuff
like walking around ancient + modern cities, hiking to mountain villages,
and finding rather good food without looking for it. We toured in our usual
"incorrect" way, using a rental car to carry our tandem bicycle to the best
cycling roads on the best weather days -- and doing other things on wet or
windy days (which are to be expected in November). We often used ideas from
the book Cycling Italy, by Ethan Gelber et al (Lonely Planet, 2003), which
had earlier given us some good recommendations for northwestern Italy.
Bicycling highlights:
* Amalfi coast: prettiest bicycling road in the world?
* riding Rome city streets slightly downhill was exhilarating.
* riding around crater lakes north of Rome was pretty.
* Gargano has a good "sea + hills" ride.
* farm country of "the Murge" near Bari looks promising.
Details below.
Ken
__________________________________
details
- - Amalfi coast road - -
Such a great ride through such spectacular terrain calls for a separate post
of its own. The road cut into the steep hills and cliffs for such a
sustained distance, with the sea directly below. Dramatic rocks beside and
above. Pretty villages set into the hills, with narrow passages to explore
on foot. Big views across the bay to mountains beyond.
The Amalfi coast is the southwest of Naples (Napoli) and west of Salerno,
and faces south toward the water of the Gulf of Salerno. We rode from the
city of Sorrento east to the city of Salerno, going thru the villages of
Massa Lubrense, Termini, Positano, Praiano, Amalfi, Maiori, etc. Definitely
hilly, but mostly not steep. We rode it in a day, because that was the
window of good weather. Next time we'd hope to spend two or three days,
spend more time exploring the villages, do a hike up into the hills.
The problem with bicycling the Amalfi coast is that we have not yet heard of
a good way to make it part of a loop route. So we did it as a one-way ride
and used trains to shuttle between Salerno and Sorrento.
- - Rome city and two Appian Ways to the Colli Albani hills - -
We started at our hotel in the Aurelia section on the west side of Rome,
rode across the city of Rome and out east on the Via Appia Antica -- the
old "Appian Way" road from two thousand years ago -- and climbed up into
the Albani hills to Castel Gandolfo, the traditional summer residence of the
Pope. Then we rode back down to Rome on the Via Appia Nuovo -- the new
"Appian Way" road (SS 7) -- and across the city again to finish at our
hotel.
I remembered learning of the "Appian Way" from textbooks in high school. The
idea of riding it came from the Lonely Planet Cycling Italy guidebook.
There's still some of the big original pavement-stones in some sections, and
the guidebook rightly warned about the difficulty of riding on them. But
most of the other sections of the old Way were covered with the modern
cobblestones, which are smaller -- but which are not fast and not fun for
riding -- and we did not find any guidebook warning about them. So we were
glad when the old Via Appia ended and we got our wheels onto the
mostly-smooth asphalt surface of modern Italian roads outside cities.
The guidebook suggested taking the train back to Rome after climbing into
the Colli Albani hills and seeing the lake and villages. But we figured we
surely had _earned_ the fun of some downhill riding. So after lunch in
Castel Gandolfo, we aimed west back to Rome, and had lots of fun spinning
our pedals on the smooth surface of the SS7 highway (where we saw other
cyclists). Later we found that apart from a few moderate climbs, we were on
a gentle downhill all the way to the Tiber River (Fiume Tevere) which runs
thru the middle of Rome. So in that direction we could ride on the main city
streets almost as fast as the cars (though not as fast as the
motorscooters). We had lots of fun sprinting the start from a traffic light,
out and in around a double-parked car, on the lookout for assertive
pedestrians -- but always being predictable so that we didn't get mowed down
by a motorscooter trying to squeeze past the cars.
Sharon says it was exciting and fun in the afternoon, but on the back of the
tandem it was scary the first time thru the city in the morning. I think
next time maybe we'll just ride arounde the villages and lakes in the Colli
Albani area and minimize taking our tandem on the city streets (though I'd
be glad to try more of the Rome streets riding a single bike, or on skates:
www.pincio.com/mercoledi.htm).
- - Lago di Bracciano - -
Pretty and pleasant short (36 km) ride around the lake nearest to Rome
(about 35 km northwest from the city). Less hilly than Bolsena -- actually I
did it on skates, and saw several cyclists along the way.
- - Lago di Bolsena - -
Lots of big views around a "crater" lake (with three islands) between
Viterbo and Orvieto (pretty far north from Rome). Includes a +300m (+1000
vertical ft) climb up to the town of Montefiascone, and to avoid a few km of
rough pavement we took a hillier variation around the west side, which
required another two substantial climbs, rewarded by views on both sides of
the ridge. Saw at least two other cyclists on a cloudy-rainy midweek day,
which strikes me as a favorable indication of the quality of the ride. (Lago
di Vico did not strike me as good for riding as Bolsena or Bracciano)
- - Gargano peninsula - -
Gargano is on the east coast of Italy in northern Puglia. I rode east and
north along the Adriatic seacoast, the west and south through the interior
hills. Good variety of great sea views with white limestone, olive trees,
then interior woods and cow pastures. Rather hilly, though nothing was
really steep, there's some long long moderate climbs, and not much flat --
took
longer than I thought.
I went from Monte Sant'Angelo to Mattatani to only a ways past Vieste to
around Spiaggia Scialmarino, didn't make it to Peschici, then returned
inland thru Villagio Foresta Umbra to MtStA -- so about 126 km total loop.
* lots of pretty sea views.
* long descent east from Monte Sant'Angelo to Mattatani was pretty and
mostly not very steep. I wouldn't have done this descent if I'd started in
Manfredonia, so perhaps for best views next time I'd want to start in Monte
Sant'Angelo -- or better yet near Mattantani, to do that pretty descent with
the sun behind me in the afternoon.
* side trip to Pugnochiuso was worth it -- more nice sea views, and actually
does not add that much climbing work.
* long climb from Spiaggia Scialmarino up to Villagio Foresta Umbra was not
interesting enough for its length. It started nice in the farms and
vineyards, continues nice into the woods -- just too much of it. It seemed
to follow a creek intead of a ridge, so no views out to the side. Next time
I'd hope to find some more interesting climb into the interior.
* Next time I'd want to continue along the sea further north to try the
climb up from west of Peschici -- Lonely Planet guidebook says that climb
stays more on the ridge.
* I got three flat tires (all punctures, not snake-bites) along the coast
road. Perhaps it was from little shards on limestone. Consider brushing off
tires frequently.
- - the Murge, near Bari - -
On a rainy day I drove my car to explore this farming region with gentle
hills south of Bari in southern Puglia (toward the "heel" of the "boot" of
Italy). Looked promising for visiting sometime with our tandem bicycle.
Around the town of Alberobello are many old-style conical stone houses
called "trulli" -- which are kinda nice -- but actually the region looked
nice enough for riding even without them. The Lonely Planet cycling
guidebook has a multi-day route thru this area.
_____________________________________________