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Cycling Along the Waterways of France (Bicycle Books)
 
 
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Cycling Along the Waterways of France (Bicycle Books) [Paperback]

Tony Roberts (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Bicycle Books February 1998
As early as the 16th century, there were graded gravel paths alongside France's rivers and canals. This text guides cycle tourists through this back country, now far more inhabited by swans and cows than by people. Cities such as Nantes, Toulouse, Dijon and Narbonne add cultural interest.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Motorbooks International (February 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0933201907
  • ISBN-13: 978-0933201903
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 4.7 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,124,686 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Best (The Only) Book On An Overlooked Bicycling Paradise, August 25, 2000
This review is from: Cycling Along the Waterways of France (Bicycle Books) (Paperback)
3 stars for the book; 6 (six) stars for the region described!

Though tourists now know-and-go "everywhere," the world is wide enough that individual travellers might miss (sadly overlook) mini-regions which would be fulfillingly perfect for them (even if not for other travellers). Roberts' book helped prevent such a misfortune for me. Do you like to bicycle? Perhaps in a foreign country? BUT hold back because hills make older knees ache....because road-traffic is dangerous and dour....because scenery can vary from the sublime to the prosaic, even trashy?

Well, imagine hundreds of miles of bike paths which is (for some not all) a pocket of paradise. No hills at all....no motorized traffic at all (and only one other cyclist every half-hour)....Usually, good riding-surface....Idyllic scenery--calm waterway on one hand, greenery on the other, and often an umbrella of shade trees overhead!....Moderate adventure: you have to navigate your way some, but could never get "lost".....Plus, villages for sleeping-and-eating every so often, which you enter by the waterside "back door," always at a pleasant "middle distance".....This astonishing arena is the network of tow-paths alongside the canals of France!

Formerly used for commercial traffic, France's hundreds of miles of canals now re-bloom with slow-moving luxury tourist-barges for costly vacations. But the still-unknown secret for the bicyclist who wants a trip, tour, promenade--but with few hassles plus the advantages noted above--is the tow-paths alongside many (not all) of the canals. They're a private Royal Road, for an hour, a day, a month.

Sure, most visitors to France probably want to see the sights, from museums to night-life. That's natural. But this seasoned traveller (me) found the canal-paths THE answer for recreational relaxing, as noted above.

And Tony Roberts' book is the ONLY one which gives mile-by-mile--oops, kilometer--guidance. His GOOD POINTS: generic preparation-advice, plus maps-and-text to navigate three canals. (1) BOURGOGNE, S.E. of Paris. (2) BRETAGNE, in Brittany to the west. And (3) MIDI, in the south (from Narbonne to Agen).

His BAD POINTS? The text is not easily-correlated to the maps. And the maps are inconsistent (sometimes incomplete in features) and also sometimes irritatingly transposed onto wrong pages out of sequence (baaaaaad editing!). Also, what about the other canals than these three, why these three only? Roberts never tells us.

PERSONAL DISCLOSURE. In September 1999, I bicycled four unforgettable days on the Canal du MIDI, the 110 miles from Narbonne to Toulouse. My bike was a torture-machine rental; bring your own! And in June 2000 I car-surveyed six canals in Burgundy.

I do RECOMMEND Roberts' book, indispensable as a starting-point. (If you go, however, do acquire the "Navicarte" chart-book used by barge captains; one for every canal.) I recommend the CANALS of the MIDI, Narbonne to Agen. Also in Burgundy, the backwater removed NIVERNAIS, and the straight-shot but tranquil ROANNE A DIGOIN. (Caution--the BOURGOGNE is good but variable; often too open and near the autoroute. The LATERAL LOIRE and the CENTRE are too near highways also and at times the tow-paths vanish into deep grass, making the derailleur eat a salad.....)

THE NEAR FUTURE. France is currently constructing "Voies Vertes" or "greenways" all over. Fine; but they're swaths of ashphalt populated with cyclists, rollers, strollers, BMX kids. Stick to the back-door canals. Let the opulent barge-tourists wait at the locks. Roll along on your private path. I did, and shall again. You too? Acquire Roberts' book and see if it primes your pump....

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Best (The Only) Book On An Overlooked Bicycling Paradise, August 25, 2000
This review is from: Cycling Along the Waterways of France (Bicycle Books) (Paperback)
3 stars for the book; 6 (six) stars for the region described!

Though tourists now know-and-go "everywhere," the world is wide enough that individual travellers might miss (sadly overlook) mini-regions which would be fulfillingly perfect for them (even if not for other travellers). Roberts' book helped prevent such a misfortune for me. Do you like to bicycle? Perhaps in a foreign country? BUT hold back because hills make older knees ache....because road-traffic is dangerous and dour....because scenery can vary from the sublime to the prosaic, even trashy?

Well, imagine hundreds of miles of bike paths which is (for some not all) a pocket of paradise. No hills at all....no motorized traffic at all (and only one other cyclist every half-hour)....Usually, good riding-surface....Idyllic scenery--calm waterway on one hand, greenery on the other, and often an umbrella of shade trees overhead!....Moderate adventure: you have to navigate your way some, but could never get "lost".....Plus, villages for sleeping-and-eating every so often, which you enter by the waterside "back door," always at a pleasant "middle distance".....This astonishing arena is the network of tow-paths alongside the canals of France!

Formerly used for commercial traffic, France's hundreds of miles of canals now re-bloom with slow-moving luxury tourist-barges for costly vacations. But the still-unknown secret for the bicyclist who wants a trip, tour, promenade--but with few hassles plus the advantages noted above--is the tow-paths alongside many (not all) of the canals. They're a private Royal Road, for an hour, a day, a month.

Sure, most visitors to France probably want to see the sights, from museums to night-life. That's natural. But this seasoned traveller (me) found the canal-paths THE answer for recreational relaxing, as noted above.

And Tony Roberts' book is the ONLY one which gives mile-by-mile--oops, kilometer--guidance. His GOOD POINTS: generic preparation-advice, plus maps-and-text to navigate three canals. (1) BOURGOGNE, S.E. of Paris. (2) BRETAGNE, in Brittany to the west. And (3) MIDI, in the south (from Narbonne to Agen).

His BAD POINTS? The text is not easily-correlated to the maps. And the maps are inconsistent (sometimes incomplete in features) and also sometimes irritatingly transposed onto wrong pages out of sequence (baaaaaad editing!). Also, what about the other canals than these three, why these three only? Roberts never tells us.

PERSONAL DISCLOSURE. In September 1999, I bicycled four unforgettable days on the Canal du MIDI, the 110 miles from Narbonne to Toulouse. My bike was a torture-machine rental; bring your own! And in June 2000 I car-surveyed six canals in Burgundy.

I do RECOMMEND Roberts' book, indispensable as a starting-point. (If you go, however, do acquire the "Navicarte" chart-book used by barge captains; one for every canal.) I recommend the CANALS of the MIDI, Narbonne to Agen. Also in Burgundy, the backwater removed NIVERNAIS, and the straight-shot but tranquil ROANNE A DIGOIN. (Caution--the BOURGOGNE is good but variable; often too open and near the autoroute. The LATERAL LOIRE and the CENTRE are too near highways also and at times the tow-paths vanish into deep grass, making the derailleur eat a salad.....)

THE NEAR FUTURE. France is currently constructing "Voies Vertes" or "greenways" all over. Fine; but they're swaths of ashphalt populated with cyclists, rollers, strollers, BMX kids. Stick to the back-door canals. Let the opulent barge-tourists wait at the locks. Roll along on your private path. I did, and shall again. You too? Acquire Roberts' book and see if it primes your pump....

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
One morning while I was piloting my sailing vessel from the North Sea to the Mediterranean via the extensive French system of interconnected canals and rivers, I found myself on a peaceful backcountry canal in Burgundy. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
canal summit, canal path, canal port, tourist office
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Canal du Midi, Canal de Bourgogne, Canal Lateral, Canal Nantes, United States, Camping Municipal, River Garonne, Saint Bernard, American Express, Other Useful Information Note, Phone Numbers, River Tarn
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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