17 Stunning Images Show the Most Incredible Bike Paths in the World
By Chris Riotta, Mic, 13 August 2015.
By Chris Riotta, Mic, 13 August 2015.
Ernest Hemingway once wrote, "It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them."
Whether it's a relaxing ride along the coasts of Chile or an adrenaline-pumping tour through South Africa, cycling in any capacity provides a unique combination of exercise, transportation and incredible sightseeing.
Here are several places you may want consider swapping out your normal bike path for this summer:
1. The Shimanami Kaido Bikeway (40 miles, Japan)
Source: FullyFunctnPhil/Flickr
The Shimanami Kaido is an expressway that connects Japan's main island, Honshu, to Shikoku and six other smaller islands, but the scenic bike path can be travelled in one day.
Source: Redlegsfan21/Flickr
The Seto Inland Sea National Park provides both breathtaking and peaceful views as cyclists cover the 40-mile route, which features various stops along the way, including 14 different bike rental terminals, lodges, campsites and even bus stops for the tired traveller. In the above image, the Shimanami Kaido Bikeway veers off the Kurushima-Kaikyo Ohashi Bridge revealing a stunning view of Japan's coastline.
2. Carretera Austral (770 miles, Chile)
Source: Daniel Peppes Gauer/Flickr
The Carretera Austral might just be one of the most challenging yet scenic bike paths in the world. It spans 770 miles from the northern region of rural Chilean Patagonia to the village of Villa O'Higgins in the south.
Source: Vera & Jean-Christophe/Flickr
This route has it all for the wide-eyed bicyclist: free campsites, hot springs, glaciers, forests, lakes, and vast dirt roads as far as the eye can see. Laguna Verde, or "Green Lagoon," (first image above) is one of the many lakes along the way of the Carretera Austral bike trail.
3. South Downs Way (100 miles, England)
Source: Gareth Williams/Flickr
Don't let the views of calm pastures and lush green hillsides (shown above and below) fool you: The South Downs Way is a tough trail that takes even experienced off-road cyclists two or three days to complete.
Source: Diminic Alves/Flickr
However, the reward is worth it. Views of the Hampshire countryside and cliffs along the Beachy Head will leave you just as breathless as the trail itself.
4. La Route Verte (3,107 miles, Canada)
Source: Steve Olmstead/Flickr
La Route Verte, or "the Green Road," combines dedicated bike paths and more intensive cycling trails while covering most of Quebec's French-speaking region. Parts of the trail cover steep hills, while others are nestled in quiet lakes and greenery.
Source: Matias Garabedian/Flickr
La Route Verte happens to be the longest cycling trail in North America, connecting many of Quebec's most historic locations, and is a great cycling-centred vacation idea for any cycling aficionado.
5. The Friendship Highway (684 miles, China)
Source: Gilda/Flickr
The Friendship Highway will form a bond between any bicyclist and the quiet Lhasa and Nepalese border in rural China, one of the most remote regions in the entire world. It provides an incredible experience for visitors to travel through one of the lesser known parts of China.
Source: J P Davidson/Flickr
One of the most interesting parts of the Friendship Highway biking experience is the opportunity to interact with monks and pilgrims traveling along the descending path. In addition, by veering slightly off road, bikers cycling through the highway can find some pretty spectacular views.
6. Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City (746 miles, Vietnam)
Source: Staffan Scherz/Flickr
Traveling between Vietnam's two largest cities, cyclists on this 746-mile path will enjoy some of the most incredible opportunities to see Vietnam's coasts and regions less-travelled by tourists. This bike path connects Vietnam's two largest cities and provides various scenery, from narrow paved roads to sandy coastlines. However, although the lengthy cycling trail shows off its breathtaking oceans and coastlines, the route is also quite the challenge thanks to its varying terrain and nature's obstacles, including the Hai Van Pass, the historical division point between North and South Vietnam.
Source: Felix Thonke/Flickr
Travellers note that exploring the country by experiencing the Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City bike path is not only exhilarating, but rather cheap, too: One couple who travelled the path together in 2013 said on their travel blog that hotel accommodations cost, on average, US$12 a night.
7. Cape Argus Pick 'n Pay Cycle Tour (68 miles, South Africa)
Source: Anna Zieminski/Getty Images
Although this event only comes once a year to South Africa, the Cape Argus Pick 'n Pay Cycle Tour's outlined path is remarkable, covering both the Table Mountain National Park and the country's various coastal sections.
Source: Obed Zilwa/AP
Nearly 35,000 bicyclists from around the world travel to South Africa each year for the bike tour. The course also wraps around through Cape Peninsula, a cumbersome trek with many ups and downs, providing the challenging portion of the route. The tour kicks off Saturday, Feb. 27, giving interested cyclists plenty of time to gear up and learn the lay of the land.
8. The North Sea Cycle Route (3,852 miles, North Sea, Europe)
Source: Jiri Buller/AP
There may not be any better way to travel through northern Scotland, down the eastern coast of Britain, then over to the Hook of Holland, along Denmark, through the coasts of Sweden and around the Norwegian coastline to Bergen, before heading back toward Britain via the Orkneys and Shetlands - simply because no other bike route provides such accessibility (see the exact route below).
Source: Mic/North Sea Cycle
Cyclists can expect a wide array of obstacles, challenges and scenery when biking this path, as well as several ferry rides that will provide some much-needed rest and relaxation.
9. The Van Gogh-Roosegaarde cycle path (600 meters, the Netherlands)
Source: Peter Dejong/AP
In honour of the Van Gogh 2015 international theme year in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, the Van Gogh-Roosegaarde cycle path opened on Nov. 12 and connects two watermills along a picturesque, glow-in-the-dark path. Cyclists experience the combination of contemporary and traditional art, as well as a classic piece that has shaped art and culture. The bicycle path was created by world-renowned artist Daan Roosegaarde, using influences from Van Gogh's Starry Night.
Source: Heijmans
Roosegaarde said in a statement regarding the creation of his new bike path, "I wanted to create a place that people will experience in a special way, the technical combined with experience, that's what techno-poetry means to me." The path illuminates at night similarly to the design and concept of Van Gogh's original Starry Night.
Hello, I am from Nepal. I just recommend to each and every bike riders to visit once in a lifetime in Upper Mustang Nepal
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