cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/14835612
(Title picture is from yesterday in the Parque Natural Sierra de Castril, narrow single track only went for a couple 100m but a good occasion to take a photo and make me look like a badass)
A week in and it’s been really great so far. I started in Malaga, stayed a day longer than i wanted to because it was harder to find a fitting gas canistrr than i yhought. The third Decathlon (at the airport) finally had one. I also picked up a windbreaker there because i felt that the wind was really cold but the sun really strong, too warm for my rain jacket. Was a good idea, used it a lot already. From there went into the mountains then down to Granada where i made an early rest day, had a pension for 25€ a night in the heart of the city and wanted to have a look around. Early rest day was also good because i was not in shape at all (last cycled in ocyober really, other than running errands at home), and the first days were pretty tough with lots of climbing and steep grades.
I feel like the grades here may generally a bit steeper than what i know from elsewhere, maybe i am imagining it though due to my form.
- Cycling out of Granada. If you enhance the jpg enough, you can see a crystal clear Alhambra
Went back into the mountains on what i believe is a part of the badlands race route, very lonely and beautiful. Went on through the Gorafe desert. It was drizzling
- Gorafe desert
In the desert there were quite some people, motorbikers, vans. Not too bad though. In the weird sandy riverbed (?) at the bottom of it seemed to be a small cycling race going on. After a river crossing i was all alone again for a good while in amazing landscapes.
Yesterday i went into the parque from the title picture all day along this hiking track. Only at the bottom of it i saw some hikers, the rest of the day i was aline. Slept in one of the refugios up there on the high plateau, it was so good because it is getting really cold in the mountains. It was drizzling, really windy and i was freezing. So happy that i have mu stove with me to eat something hot, also earlier just make a coffee break and wait out the rain. So good when there’s no infrastructure around.
- My bike in the refugio. Somehow looks like great weather outside in this photo :)
Refugio also had a water pump. This morning it was real cold again, the nights in the mountains were like 3-5° which i did not really expect tbh. It was raining and i descended. Fucking ice cold hands, cold everything. After about 15km downhill i finally made it to a village, where i hung around in a cafe, eating tostadas con tomate and drinking tea and coffee. Rain kept raining and i didn’t want to go back up on the hiking tracks, so i made up a new route to the next village on my original route where i could take a room. Cycled through the rain on mostly asphalt, which was nice for a change, the road was also super calm, met like three cars on 40 km of riding. Beautiful views too.
- Through the trees you can see the village where i’m at now. Every lemmy user here in Siles is invited to as much beer as you can drink, pm me for details :)
So i got a room here now. Somehow the sun is coming out, weather report said it’d rain all day, heavy in the evening. Next two days it’s gonna rain too.
I am waiting for a restaurant to open, which is only ever after 8. So i have time to kill writing this post, haha.
The whole ‘no dinner before 8’ really is not great for my touring time table. Also the siesta fucked me over a few times. I hope i will get used to it.
Good call for the early rest day, and kudos for fessing up to the badass photo (although in truth the whole journey and all the photos are actually badass). Nice report. Please write more while you wait for food - it feels like one of my trips and the story is almost as good as being there. Except the beers.
Early rest day was good yeah, i’m sure i would have needed it otherwise a couple days later in bumfuck nowhere. I’ll add some more pics that i had posted to masrodon, but i have now deleted my account there, it is just not for me.
- from Malaga into the mountains. Super quiet, super nice, but felt really steep.
- on the way to granada, bit more forgiving second day since it’s been more down than up. Snow covered Sierra Nevada in the background
- an amazing section of what i believe to be the badlands track. The all around view was abaolutely incredible
- kind of at the start into the sierra castril park
- A couple kilometers on the high plateau before i ‘checked in’ to the refugio
- picture from yesterday, riding on 'boring asphalt, haha. Was great. I totally love riding asphalt too.
Now i got to get my ass on the bike. The late food makes me stay up late and get up late. Also all the beers with all the lemmy users from Siles ;)
Wow these pictures are so awesome. I especially like the landscape just before the refugio!
The landscapes were totally crazy all the time. From granada up to that plateau, crazy colors. Really unique and cool.
I will keep posting some updates along the route in the biketouring community, onlz make a new topic when the theme changes. Like ‘cycling in the pyrenees’ or ‘i took a ferry to greece because it was too cold in spain’.
And i may post stuff here that fits, i almost wanted to post about this funny cycle cafe in malaga, where i got 10% discount on my breakfast because i got there by bike:
I thought it was funny because it wasn’t like anybody got there by car, the other guests were all pedestrians. They just really like people riding a bike i guess.
Cool cafe Also you are doing all this without suspension. I started a tour in Italy last year on my hardtail, but it was a bit punishing as the trails looked like yours. I’m going back in June. It taking my fully in touring-bike mode (tent on the front, drybag strapped below the saddle bag. I think it’ll be ok)( I just have to carry less)
Just what i’m used to ride, well it’s my bike :) I don’t have problems like hurting wrists that many seem to have. I assume with a fully you can go faster and safer, more comfortable on dirt, so yeah sounds good to me.
Less stuff has some cool time saving that goes with it i think, less to fiddle with less to unpack and pack… And italy is a great place to not cook for yourself, haha.
Are you planning to ride some established route? Wish you a lot of fun, hope you share some of ot with us!
Awesome photos and travel notes, I wish I could meet up with friend for those beers!
And also, the Spanish schedules always threw me, I never did figure it out. I ended up grabbing meals from mercados or supermercados half the time, because restaurantrestaurant schedules never made any sense.