Planning your bike trip well requires asking the right questions
The first thing to do when planning your bike trip is to make a list of questions. Your answers will determine the rest. A bike trip is not entirely risk free. It is therefore wise to prepare as best as possible to prevent minor incidents from turning into a nightmare situation.
Deciding your route
What is your target destination? Even though the destination matters less than the journey itself, this is one of the first questions to ask. You may of course enjoy planning nothing and heading where fancy takes you. Why not? It is preferable, though, to have an objective to aim for. It makes the experience more mentally stimulating, especially if it is your first time travelling by bike.
Based on this end destination, you will be able to calculate the distance to be covered, and the number of days it will take you to get there. For some, 100 kilometres will be an easy one-day stage, for others a week-long expedition. But the important thing isn’t how long it takes.
If you are cycle touring for the first time, beware of not taking on too much. Aim for a suitable distance which you are capable of completing. What is a suitable distance? It’s hard to say. You could, for instance, start out easy and work up to longer distances, with a first stage of 30 km, then a second of 45 km, and so on. The last stage should also be reasonable in terms of kilometres, as your legs will have already worked hard. By choosing short stages, of between 30 and 50 kilometres a day (or perhaps a little less or more depending on your level), with the energy you have left on arrival, you will be able to explore your destination (in Angers, the bike concierge service allows you to store your bike and belongings).