Running a French Holiday Gite in Rural Brittany

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Tour de France passes by

Well after years of the Tour de France going round France, with the Tour sometimes coming nearish to our Gite, and sometimes not, I finally last week got to see the live action in person.

However I wasn't in a sleepy French village or up in the Pyrenees mountains, I stood in the cycle lane of Trumpington High Street in Cambridgeshire, about 10 miles from my home as the early stages of the tour came to the UK.

First came all the advertising and sponsorship cars and to be honest this was a bit of a disappointment as they sped through, must have been doing 30 mph or more, so it wasn't even easy to see the decorated vehicles.
The only one that we did see well was the official fan van that stopped in front of me to sell a goodie bag with T shirt, cap, stickers for £20. They did well but I wondered if the price would be €20 on the other side of the Dover straits?




Then for the next couple of hours the people standing alongside me on the pavement grew as the occasional car, police motorcycle, official vehicle and even the gendarmes went through.

Finally the waiting was over and without much fuss or noise the peloton shot past in a blur of cyclists. Impossible to even see the previous stage winner in the yellow jersey let alone recognise anyone.



Then as soon as they had gone by it was a flurry of French ambulances and then car after car of the different sponsor teams, each one stacked high with replacement bicycles.


I've filled all my photos and videos of the Tour de France event on a public Google photo gallery so hopefully you will be able to see them ok.

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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Tour de France 2011 visits Brittany

Pounding up the hill in a Brittany cycle race

The Tour de France has just announced the route for 2011 which covers a distance of 3,471 kilometres over 21 stages including 6 on the mountains.

Next year the TDF once again returns to Brittany and if you're quick you can go and see it in person as we our Gite is currently vacant for the Tour de France 2011 Brittany dates in July next year.

On July 4th the tour enters Brittany with the 3rd stage completing in Redon, then on the 4th the riders setout from the naval port of Lorient and ride up to Mûr-de-Bretagne in the centre of Brittany. The next day the coastal region of Finistere is visited for a 158km run and finally on July 7th the stage starts in the medieval town of Dinan and completes 226km later on in Normandy.

Most of these towns are about an hour from our Gite and we're pretty much in the middle of Brittany so easy to see the race on all of these dates.

Drop us a line if you are interested in booking a holiday, either to see the Tour de France or on any other dates next year.

PS: Christmas and New Year 2010 is still available as well.

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Wednesday, April 07, 2010

The Bikes are back in town!

Adults and children's bikes all in a line in the barn, ready for holiday use

I'm delighted to be finally able to take the photo above, showing all the bicycles we have ready for use in our French holiday cottage - it's been a long time coming.

Over the years as I've seen reasonably priced bikes at car boot sales or our own children have outgrown them, I've been accumulating bicycles and taking them over to France for use by our holiday guests. A few years ago we had so many that I had to buy a bike rack for them all (another ebay purchase), and things were looking pretty good at that stage. We have 3 adult bikes, 3 children's bikes of different sizes, 3 smaller children's bikes with stabilisers, two scooters, a child's seat for one of the adult bikes and a Wike bicycle trailer that two children can sit in and be towed behind one of the adult bikes.

Then about 3 years ago when we were over at the Gite I found that one of the adult bikes (the orange one) wasn't riding right. In fact it felt terrible and when I tried to change gear the whole dérailleur mechanism jammed up solid, requiring some emergency roadside repairs.

When I got back to the Gite and inspected the bicycle properly I realised that the dérailleur had been damaged somehow and it was bent out of alignment and several teeth on the cogs were missing. No time to fix it there and then so I put the broken bike in the second house and made a note to buy a new dérailleur when we returned to the UK.

And this then started the long saga of trying to get the bike back on the road again which went something like this ...

Bought new dérailleur off ebay, took it over to France, fitted it, then realised that three of the bike wheel spokes were broken. Measured them, and when next in the UK bought some new spokes. Took the spokes over to France, fitted one of them, then realised that I needed to remove the freewheel unit in order to fit the other two spokes. Returned to the UK and bought a freewheel extractor which I then took over to France.
Had trouble getting the freewheel off, meant I had to clamp the axle in a vice before I could remove it, so in the process damaged the thread on the axle so when I removed the freewheel unit and fitted the new spokes, I couldn't tighten up the axle nuts to put the bike wheel back on the frame.
Took the wheel back to the UK, bought a new axle (and some axle grease), fitted it all back together, checked the wheel was OK, and took it back over to France.
Fitted the wheel to the bike, everything looked OK, so took it out for a test run and on the first hill the dérailleur dive-bombed into the wheel and came apart all over the road. Retrieved all the bits, including newly broken bits of dérailleur, and took the bike back to the Gite to work out what was wrong with it this time.
Realised that the axle was missing half of its ball bearings so hunted around for a French bicycle shop (for a nation obsessed with the Tour de France they appear to be few and far between in my bit of Brittany), eventually found one, and bought some ball bearings. Returned to the Gite and realised that the wheel hub was actually broken and it wasn't repairable.
Back in the UK bought another wheel off an ebay seller that was local to me, arranged for Liz to meet him at a nearby Tesco, but he never showed up and despite several emails via ebay we never managed to complete the transaction. Some weeks later found another ebay seller that had both a front and back wheel for sale so ended up buying both so I had a spare ready for the next bike 'challenge' !
Took the new wheel(s) over to France, fitted the rear one, it worked OK, took the bike for a test run and success at long last, everything worked perfectly.

For the next week I rode the bike most days, usually when we took the dog for a run, and the wheel behaved itself but by the end of the holiday I'd noticed that the pedals and crankshaft had developed a definite 'clunk' at one point as they went round. Fearing the worst I bought a cotter-less crank removal tool from the hypermarket in Loudeac, then when I removed the dust cover off the crank shaft I found that it was simply the crank nut that had come loose and it was easy to tighten it back up with my socket set. The bike is now working perfectly - hurrah!

All of this kind of underlines the difficulties in maintaining a Gite (and in this particular case the bicycles at the Gite) when you're not physically living onsite and have to keep on shuffling back to the UK for replacement parts. All in all whilst it probably was only a few hours of repairwork to the bike I think it took an elapsed duration of couple of years to get the bike back up and running. Of course if I'd realised earlier on that the wheel was damaged and needed to be replaced, then I'd have taken the easy route out and replaced it straight away ... but 'hindsight is a wonderful thing' as the saying goes.

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Thursday, March 18, 2010

Tour de Bretagne - April 2010

Next month (from April 25th through to April 30th) the Tour de Bretagne is running, and like it's "big brother" the Tour de France it's a hard fought multi-stage race through the villages and towns of rural France.

One thing will be different though, there'll be no "King of the Mountains" (on account of Brittany being somewhat flatter than the Alps!), but this year the race is moving offshore for the first time ever with Jersey hosting the first two days of the Tour.

There's expected to be some 22 teams and 400 cyclists taking part in the race, so if you're over in Jersey (or nudge, nudge, our Brittany holiday Gite - which just happens to be free for that week!) then it looks like a fantastic event to go and see.

When we've been over in Brittany ourselves we often see cyclists taking part in local races or practising along the main roads, and like most rural French events there's a real carnival atmosphere with music, the obligatory bar, and of course the hot crepe's and pancake stall as well - yummy!

One time we were driving in Brittany we managed to take a wrong turn and found ourselves driving down the cycle race course. All the side streets had been closed off with barriers and we had to divert an awful long way before we could get "out" of the race! Fortunately we were a few hours before the race started so the streets were still empty but I'm sure we got a few looks from the locals who wondered why the crazy English were driving round their cycle race.

More details on the Tour de Bretagne on their website, and details of the Tour de Bretagne coming to Jersey on the BBC news website.

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Monday, July 09, 2007

Tour de France comes to London

It can't have escaped notice that the Tour de France came to London this weekend with the time trial prologue on Saturday and then the main race starting on Sunday.

We didn't go down to London ourselves, preferring instead to watch the action as the riders threaded through London and Kent on the TV.

Lots of photos and a good explanation of the Tour de France are all on the BBC's website and on the dedicated Tour de France London website.


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