Ewcyna
Banner
  • BLOG
  • Ewcyna
  • REGION
    • NORTH AMERICA
      • USA
    • Asia
      • Turkey
      • Kirgistan
      • Japan
      • Philippines
      • Myanmar (Burma)
      • China
      • South Korea
      • Thailand
      • Laos
      • Cambodia
      • Vietnam
      • Uzbekistan
    • Poland
    • Middle East
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Oman
      • Iran
    • EUROPE
      • Bulgaria
      • Greece
      • Italy
      • Romania
      • Ukraine
      • Ukraine – Krym
      • Hungary
      • France / Szwajcaria
      • Czarnogóra/ Kosovo/ Macedonia/ Bułgaria
  • IN PRACTICE
    • Countries
      • Japonia praktycznie
      • USA
      • Burma (Myanmar)
    • Asia by bike - practical info
    • A must-have or what is useful to me when traveling?
    • This is a men’s world... should a woman travelling solo be scared?
    • Winter bike clothing - what works for me the best?
    • Sandals for cycling - Teva, Keen, Source, Shimano.. which ones to choose?
    • Equipment and accessories when traveling by bike - what is useful for me?
    • Transporting a bicycle by plane - as I understand it? My experiences
    • Bike in the world - a guide for women
  • Journeys
  • COOPERATION
  • EVENTS
  • MEDIA
Tag:

Lands of Dante

    EuropeItalyItaly

    Italy by bicycle. Mugello and Dante's Lands, Tuscany that you didn't know about

    by Ewcyna 14 May 2020
    written by Ewcyna

    Italy is overwhelming with authenticity - centuries-old history of places and people peeks out of every alley, who made it, those very well known and completely unknown, buildings and works of art of extraordinary beauty and value, difficult to comprehend the mind to such an extent, that after some time almost ceases to pay attention to them and all this beauty around becomes something obvious.

    I liked Italy as a teenager, I lived there and I visit her quite regularly for years, from 2019 I live there for a few months a year, every time by bike. This time the journey took the color of bright green and yellow shades spinning up for good spring and moderate temperatures of April were favorable for pedaling. For me, this is the best time to visit Mediterranean countries, which are overwhelmingly hot in summer.

    These Tuscan postcard views!
    View of Monte Amiata, the highest mountain in Tuscany from the city of Pienza

    More fate than the previous plan dumped me for a few weeks to the "shoe" of the Apennine Peninsula in Tuscany, located in the north-central part. Due to the historical and artistic value and the beauty of nature - buildings and works of art, charming hills, stone houses and towns, Cypress-lined avenues –  Tuscany is a top-tourist destination and what can I say - for most of the year it is packed with millions of visitors. Most tourists go to the Chianti region, which is famous for its vineyards and medieval towns, or the famous resorts of the Tyrrhenian coast.

    Meanwhile, wandering sideways I missed Chianti, Siena, and even Florence and headed to the Apennines.

    Italy Mugello by bike
    San Giovanni d'Asso – “my” house periodically from 2019 year
    Apennines – Biforco. Kasia lives here

    Why there?

    Just a stone's throw north of Florence, Against the backdrop of the charming Apennine mountain passes is a historic land called Mugello. Part of the area is a vast valley located at the top of the Sieve River. On the north, between mountain peaks and trails, which descend on the other side of the mountain chain towards Bologna and the region of Emilia Romagna, at the top of the Santerno rivers, Senio and Lamone is located by Alto Mugello (Upper Mugello).

    These are the home pages of the famous Medici family, birthplace of artists Giotto and Beato Angelico. This is the place, where he lived and worked in the early fourteenth century, after being banished from his hometown of Florence, the medieval poet Dante Aligieri, creator of "Divine Comedy".

    Despite the beauty and history dating back to early medieval times, eminent names of people, who were born here or lived centuries ago, crowds visiting the nearby capital of the region do not reach here. I might not have come here too, if I didn't meet Kasia, who in love with this place settled there permanently in A stone house (which is also the name of her blog) in the town of Marradi.

    Edit 2023 – Kasia is the author of three guides to this corner of Tuscany and Romagna and Florence itself – there is no better guide than a person in love with a given region and living there permanently. If you want to know more than “only” – riding a bike is the best purchase!

    A more contemporary touch, quite exotic for me after months spent overcoming local, mainly Asian roads, is an interesting website "Mugello in bike". Suggestions for cycling trips around the area of ​​varying degrees of difficulty, including a lot for those who like ramps – gains are given, local attractions and events. That's enough, to stay here a few days, so… click!

    I came in a little unusual – from the side of Dicomano, a small town located at the western end of the valley. I took a local train here, nice low set with space for transporting bicycles (on local trains in Italy there is no problem with that, bicycle ticket applies for 3 EUR per day along the entire route, however, the bicycle cannot be transported on express trains) and there is nothing to complain about, but .. departure from the third platform which can only be accessed via the underground passage and the elevator is out of order. Three courses with panniers and a bicycle up and down, Murphe's law applies!

    bike path along the river Sieve

    As soon as the wheels begin to roll, the thought of previous nuisances disappears instantly. The road on the south side of the river is smaller than the main road on the north, there is little traffic here. Before your eyes you can see the valley and the Apennine peaks still covered with light snow. Sowing in the fields, lazy grazing animals, flowers are blooming, chirping birds - you can say a perfect example of a "disgusting" idyll. To make it even more "unbearable" after several kilometers in Ponte Vicchio begins the cycle path, which leads along the river bank. It stretches through the fields of fragrant now blooming rapeseed through the capital of the region – Borgo San Lorenzo almost to San Piero a Sieve.

    It's one of those little ones, stone Italian medieval towns with streets converging on the market.

    Here I get the smell of pizza. This is unreasonable, I know, but nowhere, but nowhere will you get such a pizza as in your country of origin. Only here it is, what I think it should be - the cake is thin, made on site and baked mostly in a clay oven, lightly smeared with tomato sauce and not flooded with ketchup, covered with mozarella cheese, not its weak counterpart.. and everyone chooses additions at their own discretion. Pizza with vegetables, with grilled vegetables, which I order is absolutely perfect and no wonder, I'm coming back the next day. Otherwise, Italy pulls money out of the wallet quite intensively, and pizza is still one of the cheapest dishes, which you can get from 5 Euro. And then it's time for ice cream. There is no better ice cream than Italian. So, and also buy cheese.

    – Please sweet pecorino I am talking to the seller. In Poland, we can't make such cheeses..

    – but you are making great popes! he replies with a laugh

    Italian pizza – of course, it is supposed to be thin and with LEAST ingredients
    Maybe for ice cream? What flavor do you like? I eat very little sweets, but Italians can make ice cream like no other in the world

    It was already about authenticity, but on the other hand I lack this authenticity. In supermarkets, fruit and taste flavored and tasteless European standardized, adjusted and packaged, loudspeakers screaming in supermarkets, to wear disposable plastic gloves to select fruit, which soon thrown into the sea will clog the stomachs of marine fauna, all this absurdity, which brought our planet to the brink of destruction.

    The area around San Piero a Sieve where camping Mugello Verde is located is a great place, to make a base and go around a little without panniers. The oldest properties of the Medici family are nearby - the fortress of San Martino and fortified Villa del Trebbio and Villa di Cafaggiolo. These elegant palaces situated on the tops of hills, surrounded by extensive gardens, which served as rural family residences, who lived permanently in Florence.

    The Medici family ruled Tuscany for three centuries from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries. They are then businessmen – they were bankers of European rulers, m.in. English kings, politicians and art patrons. The family issued three popes and two French queens (Katarzyna Medycejska and Maria Medycejska). Needless to say it's so popular, that their heritage - among others, the properties in Mugello are extremely beautiful and valuable. These are excellent examples of Renaissance and Baroque architecture and this was the main reason, thanks to which some of them in 2013 were added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.

    That was the tour plan for today.

    But how, closed?

    But how, private property?

    ok, and renovation?

    Well, I kissed the proverbial door handles. Both palaces are in private hands, and in addition Villa di Cafaggiolo is undergoing renovation and there is no possibility of sightseeing. Fine though, that it is perfectly visible from the road - this is the characteristic shape of the Tuscan Renaissance buildings - the quadrangle with the courtyard and the tower with the bay window are impressive. Villa Pecori Giraldi in Borgo San Lorenzo has a similar shape, which I visit later. This time it's not private property - it houses the Museum of Manufactory Chini, which collected works of art - paintings and Art Nouveau ceramics belonging to the Chini family.

    If from visiting the thread it is time for bicycle relaxation or a round around Lake Bilancino. This reservoir is an artificial creation – was created after the construction of the dam on the Sieve River in order to solve the problems of the hydrotechnical system in Florence - flood or drought. The fact is, that it blends in perfectly with the landscape and is also a great place to relax, practicing water sports – not only on the territory of Mugello, but also the whole of the Tuscany region. And catch fish. I meet several cyclists at racing cars, but despite the beautiful sunny weather for bathing it is too early.

    nad jeziorem Slingbar

    The road in the loop marked for today begins quite intensively climbing the Apennine slopes. The old Bosco ai Frati convent hid here, one of the oldest in Tuscany, was founded in the tenth century, later passed along with most of the forest of St.. Francis of Assisi. Among the valuable wooden crucifixes is one attributed to the master Donatello.

    Bosco ai Frati

    Along the road leading to it, the plates are densely arranged - "entry to the forest is forbidden, only for those authorized to collect mushrooms ". I have a feeling, that everything is fenced and banned in Italy.. at the head of the possibility of sleeping in the wild. I also encounter such prohibition signs quite often.

    wild camping? not really

    Behind Galliano lies the village of Santa Agata, the oldest town in the area. Despite the noon hours in the tavern opened in the center of the dialect - in addition to the local several backpackers trekking gathered here - here at the foot of the Apennines cross hiking trails.

    And for Saint Agata, the descent begins and in my opinion, the most beautiful piece of the Mugello region. Something, making it, that it is unique and different, for example, from the views of the Tuscan regions of Chianti or Val d'Orcia – is a view of the Apennines peaks reaching up 1300 meters. Forests,  Olive trees groves and few patches of vineyards against the background of harmoniously interpenetrating higher and lower hills. In the distance, Bilancino Lake.

    view of the Apennines

    But Scarperia - which can be translated as a "city of shoes" - belongs to the cities officially recognized as the most beautiful in Italy. They don't do shoes there, but still a few craftsmen make knives - because it was from making iron tools for cutting and cutting that the village became famous and in the central amphibian Palazzo dei Vicchari there is their museum. Building, another example of the Medical Renaissance was from the 15th century the seat of a Vicar sent from the Republic of Florence to manage the vast area of ​​the Mugello poviat. The pediment is decorated with coats of arms of local powerful families, the walls of the courtyard are decorated with Renaissance paintings.

    I am drawn to the very higher parts of Mugello, however, it is difficult to plan an optimal loop. For fear, will I be able to overcome the distance and gain the idea of ​​using the so-called. Dante's train. He has so much in common with the poet, that lies on the city trail, in which he stayed - his hometown of Florence with the city of Faenza on the other side of the Apennines. Now it is a modern warehouse with space for bicycles, scenic railway line, which overcomes many overpasses and tunnels at heights above 500 meters above sea level. What are the rules for transporting a bicycle in Italy on the train? – have a look at entry.

    “Dante's train” – ordinary, modern, but low-floor!

    Train in 20 minutes takes me to the other side of the pass to Crespino and from here the road winds towards Marradi. The water in the Lamone river is transparent and the mountain river is even unreal greenish-turquoise color. In the summer you can bathe in it, and it's good to visit this area in October, when Chestnut Festival takes place in Marradi, most famous in Italy.  

    Lamone River

    The driveway from Marradi again. To reach the Palazzuolo sul Senio lying among the mountains you have to overcome the pass. Maybe it's not the heaviest of ramps, some 300 meters vertically to a height above 700 meters, but still. And then down as much as a reward ! For those wanting there are much higher passes, it's just a matter of planning – I left too late.. Italian cyclists liked this region.

    drug Marradi – Palazzuolo sul Senio
    Palazzuolo sul Senio

    In the afternoon hours Palazzuolo sul Senio is stuck with lethargy. Two streets cross, including one along the river, in which current two fishermen are standing. In this silence, walking in the streets seems to be a noise, so I unknowingly climb my toes and walk on the pavement, not to disturb this atmosphere. You can still smell the bread from the now closed bakery, the dog flings shyly, a cat is warming up on the windowsill. Well, and stores closed, because it's holy siesta time. I want to laugh, that nothing has changed in years - the rest time must be! I appeal to travelers here, who will target Italy - remember that, that in hours 13.00-16.00 in small towns everything will be closed with four triggers (because in the big ones one can sometimes "shoot" an open shop). It's best to close the ranks and do nothing, because in summer it's usually too hot to pedal these hours.

    Dante's lands

    …"Something you did Italy, Alighiery,

    That these two graves would be dishonest people,

    Exile first ... "

    writes Cyprian Kamil Norwid in You did something to Athens, Sokratesie ...

    Two graves? Although Florence demanded the poet's ashes, he was buried in the opposite side of the Apennines massif Ravenna, where he lived at the end of his life and died. I get there after leaving the Mugello region.

    Colorful houses in Brisighella. This town is a hidden gem

    But let's get back to Dante. The poet died in 1321 r. He did not see his native Florence through 20 years and he did not return to her. He spent these years wandering, refusing subsequent conditional offers to return to Florence on terms, which he considered unfair. Divine Comedy is a work written in exile, and what's more – this exile was the source of its creation. The author's personal fate, bitterness over the situation in the homeland, everything that moved him found a direct reflection in the work. The poet's presence, it is actually felt everywhere.

    on the way through the Apennines to Ravenna

    There are different languages ​​on the streets of Ravenna, but the city seems to live its own way, not stifled by tourists. It is famous for Byzantine architecture and mosaics, which decorated the interiors of important buildings, mainly sacred. These are the best preserved mosaics outside of Constantinople, next objects on the Unesco list. In the past, the city was located right on the sea, on the coastal lagoon, which made them the perfect port, over the centuries, due to its silting, it moved away from him for good 10 km.  The mosaics in the local basilica of Saint Vitalis are the most beautiful, come from the fifth and sixth centuries. Above the colonnade in the main nave of the Basilica there are Old Testament frescoes: Abraham's story, sacrifice of Isaac, the life of Moses, and also a story about the biblical: Cain and Ablu. In addition, the interior is decorated 15 medallion-mosaics, depicting Jesus and the apostles ... nothing more than to look up and admire.

    Ravenna mosaics. UNESCO heritage
    Ravenna and its mosaics
    Ravenna

    I find incredible pleasure in discovering the connections between people and places, learning their stories, joy of it, I'm going the same way, who was famous for ages ago, I look at the same stone house, where he lived and I touch the same door. Live history is received differently, than the history of books and textbooks. Osmosis so administered through the skin. In school years, I scrubbed the felt floors of museum floors with felt slippers, now I can almost touch, ba - ride a bike.

    14 May 2020 1 comment
    0 Facebook<span class="share-count">11</span>Email
Ewa Świderska Ewcyna
Photo. Mateusz Skwarczek / Agencja Gazeta

Welcome to my blog! This is a website about solo cycling the world as a female and life on the road. I get to know and describe the world, others and myself too.. A little more about me you can find here. If you want me to follow my journey - - you are more then welcome!

Support my trip

Do you like my entries, you think, that they are useful and you want to support my trip? With every penny I can do more. Buy me a coffee or click the donation button (lower comission :) "donate". Thank you!
Buy me a coffee at buycoffee.to

More often, I am pedalling on Facebook – take a look!

https://www.facebook.com/Ewcyna-217095148465193/

Where am I?

Click to open a larger map

Instagram

ewcyna_com

The winds will blow as they want my mother used to The winds will blow as they want my mother used to say - and in Sardinia the winds usually blow counter-clockwise.  When I reached Olbia on the east coast of Sardinia, I should have started cycling west. However, I was too keen to see the feast of Saint Efisio in Cagliari in the south of the island, so I decided to go there by train and disturbed this windy order. I got off the station before the city to find a quiet corner behind a bush for the night.  From there I went to Cagliari.
I saw the amazing fiesta and crawled out of town slowly.  Islands are islands, you can always count on wind blowing there.  And it blew right in my face.  I did 20km that afternoon and didn't enjoy it at all.
 I had an ambitious plan to conquer the interior and the east of the island, which is famous for its beauty, and it was.  Huge spaces, greenery, grazing cattle... we like it that way.  Extremely steep climbs and my bike loaded after the winter did their job - two days of struggling with them reduced my urges to push east, which is considered the most beautiful part of the island.  Willingly or not, after seeing the UNESCO site which are the ruins of the Bronze Age village in Barumini, the people of Sardinia called the Nuraghias, I climbed even higher and then went back to the sea to Oristano and packed the train back to Olbia.  Just to go with the wind along the coast. I wanted to see some of this emerald sea.  So I did, cycling the Costa Smeralda. The sun was shining beautifully, I didn't feel like taking a bath or staying in the sun. It's still too cold.  But the views alone are enough for me.
Nature are Number One in Sardinia.  The architecture was unobtrusive, not to say ugly.  Surprise. After seeing the gems of Tuscany and Puglia, this was a bit of a disappointment.  But, there are beautiful murals everywhere!
.
.
.
.
#italiainbici #italybybike #cicloviaggiatori #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #Sardynia #inbici #sardegna #sardegnainbici #travelbike #outdoorlife #podrozerowerem #sant'efisio #outsideisfree #solowomancycling #solopodróż #solotraveller #biketouring #rowerem #rowerowapodróż #onmybike #roweremprzezświat #polskieblogipodróżnicze
On my last, or penultimate, weekend in Tuscany thi On my last, or penultimate, weekend in Tuscany this spring, I was to wind my way through the roads of the Chianti hills. Yes, that's where the ones famous of wine-making (in the store ask for "kianti", not "cianti") and the place of the beginning of the l'Eroica bike race. I was there 10 years ago, and all in all, the hills around me are plentiful, but just to refresh my memory, stretch my calves and catch the first sun? I don't live too close, the cats had company over the weekend so I thought - well, how about a two-day trip? 
I didn't want to pack all the lodging equipment for one night, but two accommodation search engines had bad news, however - in an area of 150 km x 100 km for the night from Saturday to Sunday there was not a single vacant accommodation! Mount Amiata. On the second one the cheapest offers for more than 200 EUR.  The long Italian weekend has begun (April 25, Italy celebrates "Festa della Librazione" - Liberation Day). On top of that, the region is mega-touristy, and there is no camping apart from Siena. Let’s pack uwellell. 
Set off slowly like a tortoise ... past Asciano I entered, in the sense of pushed, on the famous white gravel roads, along which the route of the Eroica race leads and then even more slowlier!  I was occasionally passed by cyclists travelling light and on E-bikes, because that's the only way they cycle here. Envious. Eroica roads are for eagles or I need to revise my physical capabilities. I don't know what killed me more, the steepness of the roads or the number of motorcyclists on their roaring machines, but by the evening I decided that I've had and seen enough, I'm going back. And those dozen kilometers of return home in the dark - because nearly no vehicles anymore, listening to the sounds of the night, were perhaps as beautiful as the Tuscan and Sienese landscapes in spring.
And in a few days, a new cycling stage.
.
.
.
.
#italiainbici #italybybike #cyclingitaly #travelbike #eroica #asciano #outsideisfree #cicloviaggiatori #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #inbici #cretesenesi #toscanainbici #solowomancycling #solopodróż #solotraveller #roweremcross
"Christmas with yours, Easter with whoever you want", "Christm "Christmas with yours, Easter with whoever you want", "Christmas with the family, Easter with whoever you want" - according to this saying, Easter in Italy is often spent away from home, with family or friends.  The beginning of the picnic season, one might say, the welcome of spring.  Children are given chocolate eggs.  Accommodation places are booked long before Christmas.  Although you can't generalize - in many homes everything from A to Z is cooked.
The Easter traditions hold strong in the south of the country, in Sicily and even in Puglia, but although I was hoping to participate, unfortunately I was not able to be there at that time again.  The processions that take place on Good Friday, are very solemn and gather hundreds of participants.  I really like to peek at local customs, but in Tuscany there is not much to see 🙃, unless watching hundreds of visitors would count as such.  It's interesting that when I searched (in three languages) for "Easter in Tuscany", I mainly see offers of accommodation and trips.  When I searched for "Easter in Puglia", the search engine shows mainly religious rites and local traditions.

This year spring is late, the trees are blooming, but the leaves are still on hold. Three days ago we had frost at night, it's supposed to rain during Easter. In fact, it's just about to start.  Yes, I've seen what's going on with the weather in Poland, I'm not complaining! 

So I jumped on my bike before this rain for a pre-Easter bike ride to Trequanda. I haven't been there yet this year.  This is another insanely picturesque road with a view of Monte Amiata and Crete Senesi.
 I enclose a handful of photos to whet your appetite for Tuscany and wish you a good Easter time.  Rest and live it as you like.
.
.
.
.
#italiainbici #italybybike #cyclingitaly #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #inbici #valdichiana #trequanda #tuscany #cretesenesi#toscanainbici #travelbike #outdoor #outdoorwoman #outsideisfree #solowomancycling #solopodróż #solotraveller #biketouring #by bike #monteamiata #rowerowapodróż #onmybike #bike trip #by bike through the world # polishtravel blogs #lifeontheroad #bikewander #solotravel #worldbycycling
Happy Novrooz my Iranian friends! Happy new year. Happy Novrooz my Iranian friends! Happy new year. Hope it'll bring you health and happiness. 
It's been 5 years! Still on my mind 
.
.
.
.
.

#hobolife #worldbycycling #cyclingwomen #cyclingiran #adventurecycling #silkroad #novruzbayramı #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #travelbike #freedom #outdoor #outdoorwoman #outsideisfree #travelbybike #solowomancycling #solopodróż #persia #esfahan #roweremprzeświat #wolność #polskieblogipodróżcze #solotraveller #biketouring # #shetravels
To do some shopping, I need to talk seriously and To do some shopping, I need to talk seriously and reach an agreement with myself - to go or not to go, where to?  From my Tuscan solitude, 30 km both ways may not impress, but 800 meters of climbing yes. On Saturdays one can choose between Buonconvento or Asciano, because both have vegetable markets and although they are no match for the Polish or Apulian ones, they are also twice as expensive as the latter as well, but at least they exist.  And since I eat vegetables like a rabbit and say no to plastic wrapping in supermarkets I had to go.  This time I didn't even need that much but since the weather was great, I decided that maybe I'll go to Asciano to see if the medieval walls haven't collapsed yet.  I report that they are standing still, the town on the ancient route of Via Laurentina is doing well and there were even quite a few tourists who exposed their faces to the sun over a cup of espresso or other prosecco.  The cycling season has also started, although mainly e-bikes and road bikes rule, there are plenty of cyclists, and in April and May it will be the apogee.  I mumbled in the bakery about the lack of good bread though, I've already told you that in Tuscany it is baked from white flour without salt and it's so bland.. One tiny reason to complain about this heaven. You can forget about Apulian brown loaves with a thick crust, so I bought two kilos of flour and I will bake by myself. 
 I could return taking the same or an alternative, more demanding route, a moment of hesitation, but I chose the latter.  It is even more beautiful in terms of views, it cuts through the heart of the Sienese clays and the traffic there is negligible.  Crowds come here for photography shooting and me just went shopping... 
Where did you go on your bike today? 
.
.
.
.
.
#italiainbici #italybybike #cyclingitaly #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #travelbike #outdoorwoman #outsideisfree #solowomancycling #cretesenesi #solotraveller #biketouring #by bike #rowerowapodróż #onmybike #wyprawarowerowa #roweremprzeświat #polskipodróżcze #lifeontheroad #bikewander #solotravel #worldbycycling #bicycletouring #cycling # bybike #lifeofadventure #toscanagram #toscana
Have you ever taken your bicycle on Flixbus buses? Have you ever taken your bicycle on Flixbus buses? Yes, that? Uncertain about it? I have, numerous times in Europe, luckily mostly it went smoothly. And one big failure..that finished well.

Dreaming of a bicycle trip around France or sunny Italy, experiencing the great cycling infrastructure in Germany, a trip to the Hungarian Lake Balaton or Poland? How to get there with a bike? If you don't like flying, trains fail or are too expensive, Flixbus could be an option, to reach the place with a bicycle. Sometimes it's simple, but beware – it's is not always the case.

It's time to plan our summer trips so here I come with my blog post on Flixbus and bicycles. Step by step guide with lots of photos, screenshots and links. 

Questions answered:
Can I transport a bike on Flixbus?  What does it look like?  How to search for connections?  Do I have to dismantle and pack my bike?  What problems may arise and how to avoid them. And what if we can't ..?

Any experience in this regard?  #flixbus
👉Link in my bio 

 Ps.  I created this post with other people in mind and it took me a long time.
 Did you find it useful?  Cool!  Pass it on. Buy me a coffee!
 https://buycoffee.to/ewcyna
.
.
.
.
#europebybike #bikeonabus #rower #flixbusrower #womenonbikes #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #travelbike #freedom #outdoor #outdoorwoman #outsideisfree #solowomancycling #solopodróż #solotraveller #biketouring #rowerem #onmybike  #polskieblogipodróżnicze #lifeontheroad #bikewander #outsideisfree  #solotravel #natgeotravel #worldbycycling #bicycletouring #cycling #bybike #lifeofadventure
Sometimes you keep on trying.. and you fail. you Sometimes you keep on trying.. and you fail.  you know it, right?  No idea how it happened, but until now, despite numerous stays in Italy I have not seen the ancient city of Pompeii.
 But that's the past!  Last Sunday, making a stop on my way from the south of Italy to the north, I finally visited this extraordinary place.  Me and thousands of others 😁. There were crowds.  Maybe even bigger than usual.
 Sunday was a weather window between days of rain because it still rains a lot.  But not only.  It was also the first Sunday of the month, and on the first Sunday of the month in Italy it was declared "Sunday at the Museum", when admission to most museum monuments in the country is free, Pompeii too.  I was planning a stop on the road for this Sunday, so it was great! Already in the morning the queue was sky -high but made it smoothly in.
 I walked the stone streets of Pompeii with my jaw dropped.  I had no idea how huge this area is!  A regular port city, it used to lie on the seashore.  Beautiful villas, an amphitheater, a theater, speeches, temples, baths, even a brothel.  The love of art can be seen everywhere, frescoes, sculptures. The tragic volcano Vesuvius still reigns over the city.
 In terms of trials and intentions, however, there still be the Amalfi Coast - a mountainous promontory jutting into the waters of the Tyrrhenian Sea south of Naples, which is famous for its insane views.  Positano and Sorrento are the names of real cities on the Amalfi coast, not just pizzerias 😉. Well, I missed a few days and the weather. 
Next time
.
.
.
.
.
#pompei #italiainbici #italybybike #hobolife #cyclingitaly #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #travelbike #outdoorwoman #outsideisfree #solowomancycling #solopodróż #solotraveller #biketouring #biketouring #rowerowapodróż #onmybike #wyprawarowerowa #roweremprzeświat #polskieblogipodróżnicze #lifeontheroad #bikewander #solotravel #worldbycycling # bicycletouring #cycling #bybike #lifeofadventure #domenicaalmuseo
It's cold and windy outside - how about immersing It's cold and windy outside - how about immersing yourself in the landscape of Italian postcards?  Dolce vita viewed from your bicycle? 

In my new blog post let me take you to Tuscany for cycling in the Orcia river valley.  I've spent many months there and go back frequently in different seasons (yes, just in a week!). I got to know this region really well and fell in love with it just like everyone else.

Val D'Orcia makes the most of what Italian landscape is - medieval stone towns on the hills, picturesque roads lined with cypress trees, winding gorges, vineyards and olive groves and all this creates fantastic, almost fabulous landscapes. A UNESCO heritage and an AMAZING bike spot in one.

Hold on, because the views knock you off the couch 🙂 It is here, through the winding roads of Tuscany, that the routes of iconic bicycle routes lead - the vintage race L'Eroica, the high-performance Tuscany Trail and the ancient pilgrimage route from England to Rome - Via Francingena. You will cross the famous "strade bianche" - roads made of almost white gravel. One thing is for sure - you won't be the only one riding a bike. And not the only one to sweat - yes, it's all about the hills!

Follow a link in my bio 
.
.
.
.
.
#eroica #valdorcia #italybybike #hobolife #cyclingitaly #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #travelblog #travelbike #outdoor #outdoorwoman #outsideisfree #solowomancycling #solopodróż #solotraveller #biketouring #rowerem #rowerowapodróż #onmybike #wyprawarowerowa #roweremprzeświat #polskieblogipodróżnicze #lifeontheroad #bikewander #solotravel # worldbycycling #bicycletouring #cycling #bybike #lifeofadventure
Today, as the sun finally set its foot over the It Today, as the sun finally set its foot over the Italian heel again and spring in the air- I cycled to some of the oldest groves in Puglia. The olive trees - some over a thousand years old, have their trunks wrapping around the gnarled base before splitting and walking away from their other parts. The olive oil has become substantial part of my diet and here it tastes great. 40% of Italian olive oil comes from Puglia!
.
.
.
.
#italybybike #puglia #olivetree #apulia #kobietanarowerze #outdoorwomen #cyclinglife #outdoorwoman #bike #onmybike #polskieblogpodrozcze #freedom #bikewander #outsideisfree #solotravel #worldbycycling #bybike #lifeofadventure #outsideisfree
Load More... Follow on Instagram

Soon I'm going to?

Italy

Popular posts

  • Sandals for cycling – Teva, Keen, Source, Shimano.. which ones to choose?
  • Ewcyna
  • Transporting a bicycle by plane – how do i handle it? My experiences
  • A must-have or what is useful to me when traveling?
  • Solo woman cycling in Iran - woman's perspective (.. – is it a no-no?)
  • The Vistula Bicycle Route in Małopolska. Eastern part: Krakow – Szczucin (and around)
  • By bike through Western Pomerania – The Old Railway Trail (Kołobrzeg - Złocieniec)
  • Journeys
  • Solo cycling the world – a subjective guide for women
  • The Vistula Bicycle Route in Małopolska. Western part: Brzeszcze – Krakow (and around)

Categories and Topics

Albania Armenia Azerbaijan Asia Uncategorized Middle East Bosnia Bulgaria bike Bulgaria China Croatia Montenegro Czarnogóra/ Kosovo/ Macedonia/ Bułgaria Europe Philippines France / Szwajcaria Greece Georgia Iran Japan Silk Road Cambodia Caucasus Kirgistan South Korea Laos Myanmar (Burma) Oman Poland Poland - Eastern Poland practically PRZEMYŚLENIA Romania Serbia Thailand Turkey Ukraine Ukraine - Krym USA Uzbekistan Vietnam Hungary Italy Italy United Arab Emirates

Ikony facebook, RSS, Mail

Archive

I look into

  • Bicycle.pl
  • WorldBiking.info
  • Cycling Duch Girl
  • Podróżerowerowe.info

Tags

Asia by bike Bałkany rowerem Burma Birma rowerem Burma by bike China China bicycle cycling Burma cycling China cycling Japan cycling Korea cycling Laos cycling Myanmar cycling Philippines cycling USA ewcyna Philippines bicycle Greece bicycle Hokkaido Iran woman riding a bicycle Japan by bike Japan Japonia rowerem Silk Road bike Cambodia by bicycle Cambodia by bicycle. cycling in Asia Korea by bike Korea rowerem Laos by bike Laos cycling Myanmar by bike not for speed Philippines by bike podróże rowerem Polish bike cycling in Asia lonely journey by bicycle Thailand Thailand by bicycle Urumcz the USA rowerem Viet Nam by bike Italy by bicycle Xinjiang Yunnan

  • Facebook<span class="share-count">11</span>
  • Instagram
  • Email
  • Rss

@2019 - All Right Reserved. Created by WP Doctor


Back To Top
Ewcyna
  • BLOG
  • Ewcyna
  • REGION
    • NORTH AMERICA
      • USA
    • Asia
      • Turkey
      • Kirgistan
      • Japan
      • Philippines
      • Myanmar (Burma)
      • China
      • South Korea
      • Thailand
      • Laos
      • Cambodia
      • Vietnam
      • Uzbekistan
    • Poland
    • Middle East
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Oman
      • Iran
    • EUROPE
      • Bulgaria
      • Greece
      • Italy
      • Romania
      • Ukraine
      • Ukraine – Krym
      • Hungary
      • France / Szwajcaria
      • Czarnogóra/ Kosovo/ Macedonia/ Bułgaria
  • IN PRACTICE
    • Countries
      • Japonia praktycznie
      • USA
      • Burma (Myanmar)
    • Asia by bike - practical info
    • A must-have or what is useful to me when traveling?
    • This is a men’s world... should a woman travelling solo be scared?
    • Winter bike clothing - what works for me the best?
    • Sandals for cycling - Teva, Keen, Source, Shimano.. which ones to choose?
    • Equipment and accessories when traveling by bike - what is useful for me?
    • Transporting a bicycle by plane - as I understand it? My experiences
    • Bike in the world - a guide for women
  • Journeys
  • COOPERATION
  • EVENTS
  • MEDIA
 

Loading Comments...