Discover
France's self-guided biking tours start from $230 per person double
occupancy, which covers two nights' accommodations in the Loire Valley,
breakfast and dinner daily, luggage transfer, route map and local
emergency assistance. That's for normal, touring-minded folks, but if you
want a bit more of a challenge, they can cater for you.
This
year, 60 or 70 adventurous cyclists will be sampling a plan which has
taken Discover France years to organise. This is how they described it:
Cycling
enthusiasts on this trip will experience the thrill of riding segments of
the Tour de France on the days that the race is in progress. The Discover
France cyclists will be on the course each morning, two to three hours
before the racers. Later in the day they will watch the end of the day's
racing, or stage -- and will have the opportunity to meet some of
the racers.
Discover France will take three separate groups, each consisting of 20 to
24 participants, along different parts of the course during the July 2002
Tour de France. The general plan of the trip is the same for all three
groups, though the actual experience will differ somewhat as the groups
will be cycling through different regions and over varying terrain.
Each
group will be led by a professional French guide and will be accompanied
by a bicycle mechanic and a van. As with all Discover France trips, the
support is excellent and comprehensive.
The Discover France package combines the excitement of the Tour de France
with the traditional pleasures of a biking vacation, seeing the
countryside at first hand, gaining a personal experience of the people and
the culture. This approach is consistent with Discover France's
philosophy, that France is best appreciated up close and personal, not
through a bus window.
The package is a nine-day/eight-night trip and participants will ride on
most days. On riding days, the morning will begin with a hearty breakfast,
after which the Discover France cyclists will head out on the official
Tour de France route.
The Discover France group will ride for about three
hours, stopping for lunch, which will be a catered picnic in the
countryside or at a restaurant chosen for its typical regional ambiance.
(The van will carry a change of clothing so riders can get out of their
cycling gear.) Much of the afternoon will be devoted to seeing the local
sights and cultural attractions before heading for the finish line to see
the stage's end. Dinner will be in carefully selected restaurants or
hotels serving regional food. Because the towns and villages on the Tour
de France route are crowded with spectators, the Discover France groups
will generally stay in nearby villages. The hotels vary from the two-star
to the four-star level, always with private bath.
The Champagne and Normandy group (July 5 to July 13) starts from
Luxembourg and bikes through such northern French cities as Metz in the
Lorraine region, the cathedral city of Reims, Rouen, and through the heart
of the beautiful Champagne region. The group will observe individual and
team time trials. The trip ends in the Norman town of Alençon.
The second group (July 13 to July 21) traverses the magnificently scenic
Bordeaux wine country, Gascony and the Mediterranean region of
Languedoc-Roussillon. There are stops at Pau, in the Pyrénées; at
Lanemazan; in the historic city of Béziers; and in the regional capital
of Montpellier, one of the most attractive cities in all France.
Languedoc-Roussillon, less well known to Americans than Provence, is a
southern region of dramatic topography with an eventful history.
The third group (July 21 to July 29) covers France's eastern regions,
including the French Alps, and is possibly the most difficult part of the
Tour de France. This group will cycle through Aime, Cluses and Bourg-en-Bresse
-- much of this is dramatic countryside -- before heading into Paris to
watch the race's exciting finale at the Arc de Triomphe.
Those interested in taking this trip should consider the terrain of each
segment before deciding which group to join. Parts of the Tour de France
are over rolling countryside but others are in difficult, mountainous
country. Everyone who joins this Discover France trip should be an
experienced cyclist and should bring their own bicycle. That having been
said, the professional leadership and excellent support will be a constant
presence.
The package does not include airfare but does include transfers to and
from the rendezvous points (Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris or the
nearest major train station, for example).
The price of this package is $2,695 per person, double occupancy for
Groups 2 and 3, and $2,545 for Group 1. There are limited single
supplements. Group size will vary from 20 to 24 participants.