
Our two-months cycling tour with our kids already lies a few months behind us now. Plenty of strong impressions and beautiful memories, as you can see from this blog. Here are some of our thoughts after having done such a long tour for the first time.

What has it taught us?
We can live with less. Even the kids managed to get by almost without any toys, using whatever they found along the way to play with. We lived for two months in a tent as a family without too many problems. The tent made us all appreciate the few times we slept in hotel beds even more.
We had thought that this would be a time of reflection and sometimes idleness. Strangely, we had little time to just read or do nothing. Actually, on most days there was hardly any time left between cycling, home schooling, eating, setting up the tent, planning the next day’s tour, etc.
What did the kids learn?

“Most of the territory is not inhabitated. There is actually lots of nature, just every now and then, there is a village in between.” (Lena, 7)
“I learned about playgrounds.” (Theo, 4)
We undertook some some formal learning with the kids (“home schooling” with a tablet PC). But they learned much more through the tour itself: about geography, nature, history, …
Was the tour difficult?
“It was super-cool. I recommend to small kids to go in a trailer and to play with Playmobil while travelling.” (Theo)
A tour of this length with two kids (4 and 7) is perfectly feasible. The four-year old slept and played a lot in his trailer, and with the seven-year old we had a lot of discussions on the ever-changing surroundings.
For us adults, it was not that difficult physically. Even without prior training, such a tour should be feasible for most people, especially if you are not too ambitious in the beginning. In the four years before going on this tour, we had lived in Kinshasa (DR Congo), a mega-city with hardly any opportunities for cycling. In other words: We were not trained at all, apart from the few small bike trips we made after our return to Europe.
The tour was also not that adventurous – it may have been a bit less comfortable and closer to nature, had we not slept on offical camping sites but camped just somewhere.
Can we recommend the routes we took?
Yes. If you follow the route described here, you’ll get to see a lot: from beautiful small German villages and large woods to historic cities along the Rhine, from the Burgundy vineyards to the Camargue, from the beaches to the Pyrenees.
We followed mostly the transeuropean Eurovelo cycle paths. Some are in perfect state, while others are very much work in progress. The really difficult parts were just a few (notably: the dusty paths along the Saone, the stretch south of Lyon and the part behind the border in Spain). We followed rivers most of the time, which had big advantages (no hills…). The disadvantage of river bank cycling is that it can get monotonous and leads hardly ever through the more remote areas – civilization is always near. We were happy to sometimes leave the river banks and, for instance, cross large areas of woods in Hessen, Germany.
Overall, a good route also to ride with a trailer, apart from the above-mentioned bits were sometimes two adults were needed to push the bike & trailer, plus also some dusty tracks along the Rhine in the south of Germany (which you can avoid by cycling on the French side). The dust is not an issue for a cyclist, but the kid in the trailer receives a lot of it if you do not go very slowly.
What equipment is really important?
Good bikes, of course: The Hase Pino tandem is a great and reliable bike for long distance travel with children. The combination E-Bike and trailer also worked well.
Some woolen clothes can be like a gift from heaven when it gets cold – or when you, like we did, bought light summer sleeping bags, and temperatures drop to 10 degrees Celsius at night.
Bicycle tools and a repair kit!
Overall, we were very happy with our equipment, including the bikes and the tent – see the page on equipment for more details.

Was it the right season?
Mid-August to mid-October was ok most of the time, weather-wise. The downside is that you meet VERY few other families at that time of the year. From September, many camping sites started to close. The days also shortened obviously and we had less time to set up the camp, and cook before the night.
Would we do it again?
Yes! If you want to take a break and find back to a more balanced life, you should do a long bike tour. We loved being in the nature, seeing the change of landscapes, and exploring at a slow rythm with our kids. We would definitely recommend long bicycle tours with kids. If two months is too long for you, you can have a similar experience in two weeks!
The kids during the tour suggested that we do another tour soon – “but in a camping car, not on bikes.” In retrospective, seven months after the trip, they say they would go by bike again and recommend it to others.





















































































































