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Episode 079: The Cycle Touring Festival / Albania Most episodes of The Cycling Europe Podcast know where they are going from the outset. This episode is slightly different. We start in the English Lake District to take in the sounds of the recent Cycle Touring Festival in its new home of Coniston. We then head to India to hear from long-distance cyclist James Thomas. He lives in a coastal town in Goa on the shore of the Arabian Sea but often ventures into the mountains on foot and on his bike. He reflects upon his current experiences in India as well as past experiences cycling through Europe, especially Albania. We stay in Albania for an extract from Along The Med on a Bike Called Reggie, Andrew P. Sykes' travelogue about cycling the EuroVelo 8 from Greece to Portugal in 2013. To explain if things have changed in the past decade, the podcast speaks to Dritan Kolgjini, a tour guide for Explore Travel's Albanian cycling trips. Does the country really live up to its reputation of being the 'new Croatia'?
https://cyclingeurope.org/2024..../06/01/episode-079-t


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The Cycling Europe Podcast: Episode 079 – The Cycle Touring Festival / Albania Most episodes of The Cycling Europe Podcast know where they are going from the outset. This episode is slightly different. We start in the English Lake District to take in the sounds of the recent Cycle Touring Festival in its new home of Coniston. We then head to India to hear from long-distance cyclist James Thomas. He lives in a coastal town in Goa on the shore of the Arabian Sea but often ventures into the mountains on foot and on his bike. He reflects upon his current experiences in India as well as past experiences cycling through Europe, especially Albania. We stay in Albania for an extract from Along The Med on a Bike Called Reggie, Andrew P. Sykes’ travelogue about cycling the EuroVelo 8 from Greece to Portugal in 2013. To explain if things have changed in the past decade, the podcast speaks to Dritan Kolgjini, a tour guide for Explore Travel’s Albanian cycling trips. Does the country really live up to its reputation of being the ‘new Croatia’?
https://cyclingeurope.org/2024..../06/01/the-cycling-e


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Exploring Emilia-Romagna By Bike: Top Cycling Routes In publishing Le Grand Tour at the start of the month, I was required to get to grips with producing a properly formatted ePUB document. Nothing to do with drinking in your local; everything to do with eBooks. It's the format that is required by the online distributors. Earlier today I spent a bit of time going back over my first book - Crossing Europe on a Bike Called Reggie - and reformatting it as an ePUB document. It means that it is easier to navigate. I took the opportunity of re-reading the prologue to that book. It was interesting reading what I wrote at the time, especially my comments regarding the development of the Italian section of the EuroVelo 5 back in 2008 (when I was beginning to plan the trip).
https://cyclingeurope.org/2024..../05/29/exploring-emi


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Le Grand Tour: The Audio Book Saga | Behind The Scenes You might think that once you've written a book and it's been published that you'd be able to sit back and relax. It never seems to be like that, for good reason. Lot's of people have been getting in touch directly with kind comments about Le Grand Tour - I always take time to respond - and the marketing is an ongoing process. However, there is one thing that I started doing yesterday that I haven't done before. I spent a serious amount of time thinking about and researching the options available to make an audio book of Le Grand Tour. I even had a go at recording.
https://cyclingeurope.org/2024..../05/28/le-grand-tour


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Move Over Tim Moore*: “An entertaining travelogue… The words of Richard Peploe in his review of Le Grand Tour... which has just been published on the Seven Day Cyclist website. But it gets better. A couple of years ago you may remember that I headed off down to London to meet up with one of the greats of cycle-touring literature, Mr Tim Moore. His publisher is a master of coming up with a catchy title for a book: French Revolutions, Gironimo, Vuelta Skelter to name but three. I wonder if a title such as 'Le Grand Tour on a Bike Called Wanda' would have ever got further than the trash can; I was once told by an important person in the publishing world that the title 'Crossing Europe on a Bike Called Reggie' was one of the worst titles he had every seen! Anyway, I digress...
https://cyclingeurope.org/2024..../05/25/move-over-tim


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