Finally getting around to uploading videos of the 2025 Tour Aotearoa!
2025 Tour Aotearoa, Part 1. Days 1-14
2025 Tour Aotearoa, Part 2. Days 15-30
Bonus - 2025 Tour Aotearoa post ride. Stewart Island and riding around Queenstown
Finally getting around to uploading videos of the 2025 Tour Aotearoa!
2025 Tour Aotearoa, Part 1. Days 1-14
2025 Tour Aotearoa, Part 2. Days 15-30
Bonus - 2025 Tour Aotearoa post ride. Stewart Island and riding around Queenstown
Total Days: 25
Ride Days (some short): 15
Miles Ridden: 676.2
Longest Ride Day: 67 miles
Shortest Ride Day: 19.7 miles
Total Climbing: 27994’
Most Climbing in a Day: 4449’ from Cesky Krumlov to Nove Hrady
Ferry Rides: 1
Escalator Rides: 2
Miles walked / ridden on cobblestones: So many!
Walking Tours: 6 (Prague, Cesky Krumlov, Telc, Vienna, Bratislava, and Budapest)
Highlights:
Our ride from Prague to Budapest was intended to be made up of easier cycling days with more time out of the saddle for sightseeing, and our trip hit the mark for us. Leaving home the camping equipment, the water filter, and only carrying 2 liters of water and light snacks at any time meant that our bikes were light, and riding was easy. We travelled in September when most students are back in school, and there aren’t as many tourists out (though there were plenty). We were lucky with the weather. Most of the days where rain was predicted, it only sprinkled and the downpours were at night.
In the Czech Republic, we were on bike paths or rural roads with very low traffic. Once we reached the Danube near Vienna, we were on separated bike paths or marked bike lanes for almost all of our ride, and the ride was so flat that our main elevation gains seemed to be on bridges.
Our route combined the Czech Greenways routes with Eurovelo 6. We spliced together the main Prague-Vienna backbone with the Roseberg Heritage Greenway and the Crafts and Beliefs Greenway. We had to figure out our own side route to Telc on the “Crafts and Beliefs Greenway” since we couldn’t find a downloadable gpx route. The EV6 runs on both sides of the Danube, and we put together a route that used a little of each. Our resulting route worked great most of the time. The gpx points were far apart in places (point reduction), cutting corners across fields and through city blocks. This made our bike computers think we had wandered off route, necessitating the use of our map app to figure out which way to go. For the most part this was straightforward.
We booked hotels a couple of days in advance using google maps and booking dot com. We had to choose a nearby town on two different nights, and we learned to book farther ahead for the weekends, but overall everything went ridiculously smoothly, other than the airlines gobbling up our boxes which required a lot of tape to repair. It was a great trip.