Sunday, June 15, 2025

Tour 2025 Day 34 - Arriving in Brussels

The final kilometers of our official Tour 2025 today.  

Our last night in the tent, for a while.

Our last breakfast of oatmeal cooked on the Pocket Rocket, and would you believe we ran out of fuel today, just after boiling enough for coffee & tea & oatmeal. Woot woot. Now that's good timing. 

And also good timing, I am just finishing my cinnamon, it lasted so long and helped so immensely with my enjoyment of breakfast. 


We had fun meeting fellow bike packers Izzy and Alex, they are doing Amsterdam to Vienna. Cycling about 100 k a day, they have a route and are just enjoying the freedom of finding the next campground as they ride. They impressed us last night as they cooked chicken and pasta. And again this morning out came the pots and frying pan for eggs and bacon. Wow. Traveling in (heavy) style. They are a wee bit younger so we figure they can carry more. They just graduated from highschool and are having a summer of biking before starting "Uni" in October. 

The Sunday Market was happening in Grimbergen so we went back to the impressive Church and town square for a look. 

It was a very small market with flowers and a few other vendors. 



When I spotted the waffle vendor, I knew what my second breakfast was going to be today. 
Waffle-on-a-stick. 


We are staying closer to the airport and as such we are cycling the outskirts of the city of Brussels. Sometimes that can be challenging, but in true Belgian style, even the outskirts have great bike paths. Along the train tracks. 


And up and over a very major highway (the Ring Road) we even had our own cycling bridge. 



We also had to cross a canal and the bridge had to be very high for the boats, so there were many stairs. But


both sides of the bridge had large glass elevators for bikes.


We both fit, with our bikes, easily. 


And voila, across we rode and took the elevator back down. Sophisticated cycling. 


Our final stop in Zaventem. One last wait outside the grocery store. Me watching the (loaded) bikes, Marc managing the unknown grocery aisles. 


We have a cute little air bnb for 4 nights as we now have the (somewhat ominous) task of preparing for traveling home with our bikes. We have three days to figure it all out. 

The end.


Some final Strava stats 
Stage 1 - Spain = 151 km
Stage 2 - Narbonne (+ Paris) = 140 km
Stage 3 - Normandy = 603 km
Stage 4 - Hauts-de-France = 122 km
Stage 5 - Belgium = 352 km 

2025 Tour = 1,368 km



Life Is A Highway. 

As I close tonight's post, I am sharing a little Tom Cochrane that has been singing in my head ...

Love's like a road that you travel on
When there's one day here and the next day gone
Sometimes you brake, sometimes you climb
Sometimes you turn your back to the wind
There's a world outside every darkened tent
Where blues won't haunt you anymore
Where the brave are free and lovers soar
Come ride with me to the distant shore

We won't hesitate
Break down the garden gate
There's not much time left today

Life is a highway
I wanna ride it all night long
If you're going my way
I wanna ride it all night long

Through all these cities and all these towns
It's in my blood and it's all around
I loved you now like I loved you then
This is the road and these are the hills
From Barcelona to Brussels paths
The Normandy coast and battlefields lost,

Knock me down, back up again
You're in my blood; I'm not a lonely gal

There's no load I can't hold
Road so rough; this I know
I'll be there when the light comes in
Just tell 'em we're survivors


Saturday, June 14, 2025

Tour 2025 Day 33 - Grimbergen

A few updates on camping from last night. 

We ended up not alone. A family rolled in, in a very cool VW van, and so yes, Marc played the song "Are you having any fun?" to celebrate their arrival. 

Are you havin' any fun?
What y'gettin' out o' livin'?
What good is what you've got
If you're not havin' any fun?

Are you havin' any laughs?
Are you gettin' any lovin'?
If other people do,
So can you, have a little fun

We tried to sleep in the heat and the stillness of the night, but it wasn't easy. Until 1 am and then WIND!! Wind, like you wouldn't believe. It sounded like a freight train. So much wind and thunder and lightning and rain.  As we scrambled to close the tent doors, we wondered if we would be safe under the very tall trees.

Suddenly something hit the tent, with quite an impact. We weren't sure if it was a pinecone at high velocity, or a branch (shout to to my sister who was hit by a high tree acorn once - ouch!) The storm passed through rather quickly, it was very dark, and the tent was still standing, so we both fell back asleep.  Only to wake up a few hours later to this! Yes a nice hole just above me. 


The view from the outside of the tent showed a few depressions and the one hole. 



This branch must have been the culprit. It lay there on our cords "innocently" this morning. There were several other branches down around us, some quite a bit bigger. 

So, yikes. Another tent repair to be done today. 

Our neighbours' youngest son was up early too. We didn't speak each other's language but he did manage to ask me where the dog was (I think he thought she was ours), when a really cute bunny appeared and we made friends and enjoyed "chase the bunny". 

We set off after breakfast & bunny chasing and cycled some fields and climbing - yep, another day in Flanders. Some lovely fields and rolling hills, and we even ran into some traffic. 😂 Saturday morning in Belgium. Yes there are a lot of cyclists!!

We found a bakery and a sandwich shop. Not in the same place. We are getting used to Belgium, it is quite different than France in this way, but I did like this sign...



We had to climb out of this little town. And what a climb it was. The sign said 10% grade and it was not cobblestone, so we managed, but boy oh boy it was a long hard climb. 


To be honest, the descent was also hard. Tough on the hands and the mental focus. Brake, brake, brake. Love the signs to warn you. 


Once we made it up and down the hill, we had a few kms on a canal. Flat and easy, safe and shaded.
 

And after the "pain" of the hill, we celebrated with another kind of "pain ... au chocolat" 


The canal was very busy too. 

It was a good safe fast part of our day. 


The little towns in Belgium that we have been cycling through all have the same school symbol. They use this purple octopus, and all the school zones and crossing areas are painted this purple and yellow. My octopus teacher?


They all also have town signs on the way in and the way out - the way out has a line through it, like the town is now cancelled, been there, done that.  

This was my favourite today. It seemed somewhat fitting for this final stage of our journey.


We arrived at our campground to find this greeting. 


It is a well organized campground with an open field for tents, lots of room, sun and shade. 

Our first priority was to rehydrate. And why not, when you can get the World's Best Zero Alcohol Beer!  Cheers. 


Also, I should mention, my new shoes have been great this trip - very useful - they have also been good for cycling 😉


My mechanic had to check on my brakes as apparently I have been using them a lot. 


Another good day in the books. We are very close to our Air Bnb so tomorrow will be a short day. We might go to the Sunday Market.

Another patch in the tent and we should be dry for one last night of camping. 


Strava stats


Good night from Grimbergen.



Friday, June 13, 2025

2025 Tour Day 32 - From Farm to School

Our past two nights we have been camping at a farm, and enjoying the warm welcome and thoughtful considerations of Phoebe. She is managing this whole place on her own, the cows and crops and camping. The farm has been in her family for 4 generations and neither of her brothers wanted to stay here. So she, (and her two dogs and a cat), is giving it a go! 

Camping op den berg


We had the use of a lovely new kitchen, frig and stove and cutlery (a vegetable peeler!! huge excitement for us). 


And we sat at the lovely farm table out of the wind, out of the sun, out of the weather... Sometimes it is just nice to have walls.  


We said goodbye to our friends who had pitched a serious teepee the day we arrived and had also spent two nights. They live only 30 minutes drive away but had come to do a test camp for an upcoming family reunion. 


The hardest planning for these final days of cycling is to find camping. It is much harder in Belgium, especially near Brussels.  So today we only cycled for 30km, sort of hopping from one available campground to the next. Tomorrow will have to ride at least twice as far. 

It was a hot hilly day. Some of the potato fields are in full bloom and others are just starting.


We were back on the Blue route again for some climbs, and even found ourselves on some of the Yellow route. Basically in Flanders you are riding some hills. Celebrating Belgian cyclists along the way. 


 
The town of Ronse was our bakery and lunch pick up. Clearly it is a university town, everyone looked 20-something. 



As we went back into the hills and fields, we saw one farmer "making hay while the sun shines".


But turning the next corner we could see very dark clouds ahead. 

We stopped for lunch and some shelter as the rolling thunder got closer and closer. 


It was a pretty view but the thunder was ominous. 

Would you believe it went by us? We didn't get a drop! 

And the little picnic area in the woods had these great climbers made of logs. 



Escaping the rain was great, and we had an early arrival at our next camp site. On the property of an old school. La Divine Providence. 

This school was built in 1900, and survived both wars. It was run by French Nuns who apparently came here to teach young women as the Nuns were not allowed to teach in France. For more than 50 years it was run as a girls school, teaching "home economics" but in the late 50's, when feminism became popular, the school became less popular. The Nuns then returned to France, and the school closed. 

The current owners bought it in 2000 and have turned it into a vacation rental, a bed & breakfast and a brasserie. As well as a campground. 

We are pitched behind the school house, under a cherry tree. We are the only ones here tonight. 


(You can just see the school house behind.)


We actually get to go in and use the washrooms and showers. Wow. Original. 


And this room - looks like "sick bay" to me! 


They have a lovely old dog who wanted to play fetch even if it is 30+ degrees - but he really only wanted to fetch twice. 😍
This is the back of the school building, where the camping is. 


Several hours of sitting in the shade have done us good today. Our phones are recharged, our lights are recharged and so are we. 

The route for tomorrow has been planned. 

Today's washed clothes have already dried in this heat. 

Today's hills and Strava stats below. 



Thanks for reading along on our adventures. We love when we get comments too!