Tours by Others

 

 

 

BicycleGermany Home

A.  Table of Contents

B.  General Information

 1.  Bicycling in Germany

  a.  German Laws

  b.  German Culture

  c.  German Food & Drink

           1)  German Wine

 2.  Tips

 3.  Tours by Others

 4Hotels in Germany

 5.  Bring Your Bike or Rent

            1)  How to Pack Your Bike

 6.  Why Self Guided

 7.  Words and Phrases

 8.  What to bring

 9.  Trains

C.  Tours

 1.  Fairytale

 2.  Weser

 3.  Diemel

 4.  Fulda

 5.  Altmühl

 6.  German   Danube

 7.  Austrian Danube

 8.  Eder

 9.  Lahn

 10. Spree

 11. Neckar

 12. Five Rivers

 13. Lake Constance

 14. Rhine

 15. Werra

 16. Main

 17. Saar-Mosel

 18. Elbe

 19. Baltic Coast

 20. Insel Ruegen

 21. Roman Route

 22. Pader

 23. Leine

 24. Nahe

 25. Kocher Jagst Tauber

D.  Contact Us

E.  Links

 1.  Tour Companies

 2.  Bike Rentals

F.  About Us

  1. Who we are

G.  Legal Stuff

H.  Feedback

 

 

Summaries of the German bicycle tours that have been provided to us by our readers.  Of course, for these tours we can take no responsibility.  In fact, we are not even responsible for the spelling, grammar, choice of words, opinions, measurements, etc.  For the detailed travelogue, just click on the name of the tour or on the underlined and colored hyperlink.

 

Lake Constance (Bodensee), Southern Germany:

Click the underlined link to see to see detail.

Jim Brennan took a tour of Lake Constance in September 2000.  His description is very good and excellent material for anyone planning a self-guided tour around Lake Constance.

Rhine to Koblenz  this link will take you to www.bergstrassebikebooks.com and you will be able to read about this famous river valley.

Eisenach to Wittenberg  June 10-19, 2002, by Alan Severn.  A 10-day trip (8 riding days) of 509 km (316 miles) covers mostly-gentle terrain, but with some cobblestones and a bit of sand.  The last two-thirds follows the Salle River, then the Elbe.  Time permitting; it can be extended eastward to Bad Schandau near the Czech border.  There are plenty of opportunities for sightseeing and history: Eisenach, Erfurt, Weimar, Dessau and Wittenberg.

The Rhine to Mainz, June 2002 by Bob Smith.  This 710-mile ride took Bob and his nephew Gerry 17 days including stops to visit relatives.  It starts at the very top of the Rhine, Oberalppass just outside of Andermatt Switzerland.  It ends in Mainz, near Frankfurt.  Bob tells a good story, sprinkled with both humor and wisdom.

 

Want to be published too? 

As you can see, we only have two tours provided by others so far.  If you would like to add your tour to this list, write up a tour you have taken, and e-mail it to me at the e-mail address found on my Feedback page.  Of course, I reserve the right to edit any submittal -- but I'll be gentle.

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