Shoulder Season Bikepacking in Europe
Spring and autumn should not be ignored for cycle travel. There's a real joy and satisfaction that you can find with “out-of-season” travel that you'll never get if you think of summer as your only option for cycling and adventure. However, the moods of the weather and route choice need thought, so I compiled a few ideas and tips to maximize the enjoyment of shoulder season cycle travel.
I'm Andy Cox, creator of the European Divide Trail bikepacking route, and I've been bikepacking mostly around Europe for the last five years. Before I started out on this Grand Adventure I'd done quite a few shorter trips around the UK and into Europe, but I was always focused on the summer as my main travel season. While I don't often travel in the depths of winter now (I try to find somewhere sunny and dry to spend December to March), I have really enjoyed out-of-season travel at the start and end of my travelling year.
Here are a few tips and ideas I've learned over that time that I hope will help you extend your travel into less predictable seasons.
The Right Route Makes All the Difference
Sunshine and warm daytime temperatures are key ingredients for enjoyable spring and autumn travel, and there are plenty of places in southern Europe that are relatively easy to access and have a lot of the requirements of a good cycle touring destination. Out-of-season coastal areas are a great place to start with, offering cheap accommodation, easy transport links and plenty of riding options. Think the Spanish Costas or Mediterranean/mid-Atlantic islands. The interiors of sunny countries areas are often surprisingly cold from late spring to late autumn, so choose your destination carefully. The mountains can be magical places in the autumn, before the bad and/or cold weather really starts to hit them. Empty of summer and winter tourists, it's a time of trees changing colour and valleys filled with mist. A dusting of snow on the high peaks really adds some atmosphere to a scene without making it unduly cold on the lower slopes.Layering Up is the Answer
Have many thin layers of clothing: a fleece or down layer over base layers and a waterproof/windproof jacket. A woolly hat for evenings and perhaps even down booties or knee-length winter socks, just as a backup. Planning for the worst but hoping for the best is a good strategy—you don't have to take full-on winter equipment—but a certain amount of extra clothing and bulkier equipment can make the difference between a good trip and stopping an adventure early due to bad weather.
Photo by Ben Matthews