Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
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- gairym
- Posts: 3139
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 11:05 am
- Location: Chamonix, France (but a Yorkshire lad).
Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Morning all,
I'm currently sat on a train, returning to Verona to then ride back to the car and begin the long drive home after four thoroughly pleasant days in northern Italy.
Disclaimer: even writing this I'm still not sure I'll post it as what I just did may or may not be considered bikepacking™ depending on your definition.
The idea was simple, pack light, ride all day, find a nice pub in the evening and eat lovely food along the way.
We carried full bikepacking gear BUT were under no illusions about the probability that we'd end up grabbing a cheap room somewhere if it was available.
So.....
At daft o'clock on Sunday morning I got up and drove six hours from Chamonix to Verona. I met my buddy Alan and after lunch we set off riding the 2017 Veneto Gravel event route (in reverse, starting from half way round).
That first afternoon was the hilliest section of the route and it was still very gentle going (750m alt gain in 70km).
We passed vinyards, castles and pretty villages a-plenty in the baking heat (was above 30°c every day!) before rolling into Vicenza in time to wash and pop out to a lively burger/craft beer pub that I visited last year - yum!!!
The youth hostel we stayed in was crap, not particularly cheap and seemed to have gone out its way to make all previous continental 'breakfasts' seem amazing by comparison - truly pushing the boundaries on what can be considered 'includes breakfast'.
Day two saw our intrepid explorers head back out into the scorching heat and we did a leisurely 110km up into grappa country.
Lovely riverside trails and long white gravel roads were passed with gentle ease and the evening saw us once again thinking about a place to lay our heads.
We decided that we'd rather bivi than spend another night in a crap-hole but luckily we stumbled upon the find of the century!
An amazing agritourismo place which was cheap (only a tenner more than the miserable hostel), beautiful, had a pool and who directed us to one of the nicest restaurants I've eaten in in a long time (also cheap - win!).
We were not in the slightest unhappy with how this beerpacking malarkey was panning out
Day three was supposed to be a short day followed by an afternoon wandering around Venice being proper tourists but Alan decided he'd rather eat his own head than wade through a sea of selfie-stick weilding idiots and so we pushed on and made it the 120km to Padova just as we were losing the light.
Another city meant either another damp hostel experience or paying a bit more so we got the cheapest twin we could find and set off into the night to find the White Pony micro-brewery and bar (there's a pattern emerging, no?).
That night Alan decided he was going to jump on the train home in the morning. Various reasons were cited, among them that he'd brought his single speed and the ratio was a bit too spinny to get anywhere fast on the flat.
So I had a decision to make.....
Have a big (160km) last day to get back to Verona or.....retrace my steps, have a short day and pop into Venice to soak up the sights.
45 short, fast kilometers later I found a cheap room, dumped my bike, showered and went into the craziness that is Venice!!!
I walked, I took photos, I ate amazing food at a big old brewery, I walked some more, ate some more, visited a lovely craft beer pub I'd found last year, walked some more and then went back and got an early night - smashing!
I covered about 350 of the nicest, easiest and least climby kilometres imaginable in 3.5 days and now that it's all over I'm feeling great.....I de-scrunched, ate well, drank well and slept well - what's not to like???
I'll let you be the judge on whether or not you consider this bikepacking, touring or just dicking around on a bike.
I named it 'beerpacking' and I bloody loved it
I'm currently sat on a train, returning to Verona to then ride back to the car and begin the long drive home after four thoroughly pleasant days in northern Italy.
Disclaimer: even writing this I'm still not sure I'll post it as what I just did may or may not be considered bikepacking™ depending on your definition.
The idea was simple, pack light, ride all day, find a nice pub in the evening and eat lovely food along the way.
We carried full bikepacking gear BUT were under no illusions about the probability that we'd end up grabbing a cheap room somewhere if it was available.
So.....
At daft o'clock on Sunday morning I got up and drove six hours from Chamonix to Verona. I met my buddy Alan and after lunch we set off riding the 2017 Veneto Gravel event route (in reverse, starting from half way round).
That first afternoon was the hilliest section of the route and it was still very gentle going (750m alt gain in 70km).
We passed vinyards, castles and pretty villages a-plenty in the baking heat (was above 30°c every day!) before rolling into Vicenza in time to wash and pop out to a lively burger/craft beer pub that I visited last year - yum!!!
The youth hostel we stayed in was crap, not particularly cheap and seemed to have gone out its way to make all previous continental 'breakfasts' seem amazing by comparison - truly pushing the boundaries on what can be considered 'includes breakfast'.
Day two saw our intrepid explorers head back out into the scorching heat and we did a leisurely 110km up into grappa country.
Lovely riverside trails and long white gravel roads were passed with gentle ease and the evening saw us once again thinking about a place to lay our heads.
We decided that we'd rather bivi than spend another night in a crap-hole but luckily we stumbled upon the find of the century!
An amazing agritourismo place which was cheap (only a tenner more than the miserable hostel), beautiful, had a pool and who directed us to one of the nicest restaurants I've eaten in in a long time (also cheap - win!).
We were not in the slightest unhappy with how this beerpacking malarkey was panning out
Day three was supposed to be a short day followed by an afternoon wandering around Venice being proper tourists but Alan decided he'd rather eat his own head than wade through a sea of selfie-stick weilding idiots and so we pushed on and made it the 120km to Padova just as we were losing the light.
Another city meant either another damp hostel experience or paying a bit more so we got the cheapest twin we could find and set off into the night to find the White Pony micro-brewery and bar (there's a pattern emerging, no?).
That night Alan decided he was going to jump on the train home in the morning. Various reasons were cited, among them that he'd brought his single speed and the ratio was a bit too spinny to get anywhere fast on the flat.
So I had a decision to make.....
Have a big (160km) last day to get back to Verona or.....retrace my steps, have a short day and pop into Venice to soak up the sights.
45 short, fast kilometers later I found a cheap room, dumped my bike, showered and went into the craziness that is Venice!!!
I walked, I took photos, I ate amazing food at a big old brewery, I walked some more, ate some more, visited a lovely craft beer pub I'd found last year, walked some more and then went back and got an early night - smashing!
I covered about 350 of the nicest, easiest and least climby kilometres imaginable in 3.5 days and now that it's all over I'm feeling great.....I de-scrunched, ate well, drank well and slept well - what's not to like???
I'll let you be the judge on whether or not you consider this bikepacking, touring or just dicking around on a bike.
I named it 'beerpacking' and I bloody loved it
Last edited by gairym on Thu Sep 13, 2018 11:50 am, edited 4 times in total.
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
that looks bloody fantastic, like my kind of trip.
can i ask 'what are those silver brake levers?'.
found the levers. TRP. ordered
can i ask 'what are those silver brake levers?'.
found the levers. TRP. ordered
Last edited by ton on Thu Sep 13, 2018 9:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Bearlegged
- Posts: 2312
- Joined: Fri Jun 30, 2017 5:00 pm
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Beerpacking... I like! Looks like a great trip.
Also, what are you using for gear shifting?
Also, what are you using for gear shifting?
- gairym
- Posts: 3139
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 11:05 am
- Location: Chamonix, France (but a Yorkshire lad).
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Yes, them. They're really nice and work well with the Spyre calipers.ton wrote:that looks bloody fantastic, like my kind of trip.
can i ask 'what are those silver brake levers?'.
found the levers. TRP. ordered
I've got an Eagle GX groupset and so I just engineered the shifter mount to work on a drop bar (fancy way of saying that I forced the clamp open and then drilled it so that a long nut/bolt could be inserted).Landslide wrote:Beerpacking... I like! Looks like a great trip.
Also, what are you using for gear shifting?
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
No hardship, no rain, no hike a bike - definitely not bikepacking
Looks absolutely brilliant, not much a drinker myself but the idea of that is ace!
Looks absolutely brilliant, not much a drinker myself but the idea of that is ace!
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
What a fantastic way to hide a drinking problem.
- 99percentchimp
- Posts: 1057
- Joined: Sat Jun 25, 2011 7:46 pm
- Location: North Wales!
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
That looks brilliant
More dicking around on a bike beerpacking needed
More dicking around on a bike beerpacking needed
Conquistador of the pointless
https://www.flickr.com/photos/99percentchimp/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/99percentchimp/
- gairym
- Posts: 3139
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 11:05 am
- Location: Chamonix, France (but a Yorkshire lad).
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Totally works without the beer drinking, just replace with coffee and your choice of amazing foodbenp1 wrote:No hardship, no rain, no hike a bike - definitely not bikepacking
Looks absolutely brilliant, not much a drinker myself but the idea of that is ace!
Shhh!!!!!Rasta wrote:What a fantastic way to hide a drinking problem.
Consider it done! Or did you mean by others too?99percentchimp wrote:That looks brilliant
More dicking around on a bike beerpacking needed
- Charliecres
- Posts: 1454
- Joined: Tue Oct 01, 2013 1:28 pm
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Amazing. I think that’s how I’d like to spend the rest of my life.
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
I'm so happy I didn't go in the end.
- gairym
- Posts: 3139
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 11:05 am
- Location: Chamonix, France (but a Yorkshire lad).
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
I wholeheartedly agree!Charliecres wrote:Amazing. I think that’s how I’d like to spend the rest of my life.
You'd have hated it. Suffering and pain the whole time.rufus748 wrote:I'm so happy I didn't go in the end.
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
That looks a great trip.
I would have had some grappa though.
I would have had some grappa though.
Blog - thecyclerider.com
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Beer packing, that's something I can get onboard with! Perhaps one should bring a packraft for easy navigation of Venice's canals though?
- fatbikephil
- Posts: 6567
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Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
You plan it, we'll ride (and drink) itBlair512 wrote:Beer packing, that's something I can get onboard with! Perhaps one should bring a packraft for easy navigation of Venice's canals though?
- In Reverse
- Posts: 1821
- Joined: Mon Oct 12, 2015 9:08 pm
- Location: Manchester
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
Ah Gairy that looks great.
Sounds like a very familiar interpretation of the bikepacking ethos.gairym wrote: pack light, ride all day, find a nice pub in the evening and eat lovely food along the way.
We carried full bikepacking gear BUT were under no illusions about the probability that we'd end up grabbing a cheap room somewhere if it was available.
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
That looks like what I wanted Tuscany Trail to be. Less hills, more beer and mooching around towns whilst stuffing my face. Could beerpacking be the new black? Its a yes from me
- gairym
- Posts: 3139
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 11:05 am
- Location: Chamonix, France (but a Yorkshire lad).
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
It was! I'm already planning my next similar tripIn Reverse wrote:Ah Gairy that looks great.
It's a concept that been refined through years of failing to properly bikepack and now has morphed into a whole different beast.Sounds like a very familiar interpretation of the bikepacking ethos.
That's pretty much how I ride Tuscany too!Growler wrote:That looks like what I wanted Tuscany Trail to be. Less hills, more beer and mooching around towns whilst stuffing my face. Could beerpacking be the new black? Its a yes from me
But yeah, all the pleasant-ness and none of the pain.
Beerpacking is the future!
- gairym
- Posts: 3139
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 11:05 am
- Location: Chamonix, France (but a Yorkshire lad).
Re: Beerpacking the Veneto Gravel route
I've started a massively serious facebook group for anyone who wants to share their future beerpacking trips:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/277509606308829/
I'd feel bad about self-promoting on here but it's not like it's an actual thing or being run for profit etc... just a place to share silly stories or photos of beerpacking hilarity.
Enjoy.....
https://www.facebook.com/groups/277509606308829/
I'd feel bad about self-promoting on here but it's not like it's an actual thing or being run for profit etc... just a place to share silly stories or photos of beerpacking hilarity.
Enjoy.....