Poitiers to
Copenhagen completed over the past five trips, we decided to point our bikes
north and follow the cold shores of the Baltic Sea from Denmark’s capital to
Sweden’s second city, Gothenburg.
DAY ONE
Out of Denmark
Arriving
early morning in Copenhagen, things did not look promising. The bikes had
gotten beaten up on the plane - Dave inevitably complained about a wheel buckle
- and the weather was simply horrible. A shiver went down my spine as I stepped
out the terminal into the grey, cold, raining Danish “summer”, with only a thin
rain jacket and Lycra to protect me from the elements.
On the bright
side, Uwe had made it from Germany on time and the reunion gave us the shot in
the arm we needed to contemplate the long, wet, cold day ahead. After the
obligatory picture and butt slaps, we pushed off towards the city centre
through curtains of rain.
What could
improve the commencement of our journey? A puncture. Barely had we made it into
Copenhagen and Uwe had the first blow out of our trip. Fortunately, this
occurred near a 7/11 where we picked up some local Dutch courage to warm us up,
which uncannily resembled Listerine.
We diverted through
Christiania, the odd hippy colony that we had paid a night visitation to on a
previous trip (Copenhagen 13). By daylight it had
lost its edge and found tourist groups. Hippies and pushers watched on as flag
waving East Asian tourists admired its novelty.
Assisted by
another puncture (we later learned that the local roads are notorious for
popping tyres due the usage of small sharp rocks in the tarmac), it took us an
age to come out the other end of the city, but once on the coast road heading
north the weather cleared and we hammered it at over 30kpmph. It was a great
stretch of ride, with the sea to our rights and one pretty, affluent settlement
after another on our left. Our destination was Helsingor or, more specifically,
as early a ferry as possible from its port. From a couple of miles out we could
see the boat at dock. We put pedal to metal (or whatever the equivalent is in
cycling terms) and squeaked onto the ferry just as its doors closed and it
departed for Sweden.
Skane, Sweden
On the boat,
we drank our last Danish beer and poured over the maps of Skane, Sweden’s most
southerly and heavily Danish influenced province (it was part of Denmark for a
very long time and it cut off from the Swedish heartland by a massive forest).
Oh, for a good route and place to spend the night. Before we knew it, we were
disembarking in a new country, our sixth of the route, at the city of
Helsingborg. After the obligatory flag picture and pit stop we took set off
through town.
Maybe we
missed the nice parts, but it did seem like an underwhelming place. The centre
was rather grey and, getting lost on small bike paths out, we encountered what
seemed like well-meant, but somehow stagnant, newly built estates housing recent
immigrant communities. It did not feel like a place of seamless integration.
What I will
say for Helsingborg is that somewhere near a roundabout in the centre of town
it had a simply awesome bakery with great treats, coffee and unnervingly
attractive, yet friendly staff. A Swedish stereotype straight off the boat.
After an
annoyingly long time trying to shake off the large roads and industrial estates
of the city, we eventually found countryside. Taking a diversion to the east to
avoid a whole lot of contours on the map, we passed gentle, tilled countryside
before eventually hitting the sea. It was getting late and we turned north,
skirting along the coast in search of lodgings.
It is fair to
say we found scant pickings as we followed dune flanked cycle paths and minor
roads. Amongst the sea, sand, and trees there were houses, but seemingly no
life. So few people and a strange emptiness, I presume emanating from the
Swedes not having much interest in their second homes this late in the season
(usually I would not think of end of August as late, but Swedish summer is
damned short).
The scenery
was pretty and all, but déjà vu was creeping in as the light failed and we
still had no idea where we were going to stay. Finally passing some locals, we
followed their directions through an ill judged short cut. Instead of following
the paved road, we found ourselves on an ever-diminishing dirt trail across
fields and then through a small forest that jutted out into the sea. Jumping
over roots and down dead drops in diminishing, grey gloomy light. I am not
quite sure how we stayed on our road bikes. Oh, OK, I did fall over, but only
right at the end skidding across a part of the path that resembled a sandpit.
Rocking up in
the seaside resort of Vejbystrand, we criss-crossed the roads with no luck
before finally striking gold. Against all the odds we not only found the only
place within miles that was open, but no less than a speciality cycling hostel.
If we needed any more indicators of just how dead this part of Sweden gets, we
had to brag a lift 7km to get to an ATM, before we could settle down to beers,
chill and a massive pizza to see out the day.
DAY 2
Waking up to
a great Swedish breakfast of cured meat and yoghurt, we veered back to the sea
and just like that discovered the Kattegatleden cycle path (http://kattegattleden.se/en/) which, if
the sign was to be believed, would take us all the way to Gothenburg over the
next 2 days along the shores of the Kattegat Sea. We had lost it within 5km.
Accidently
taking a bending road back in land, we discovered some countryside which put
the day before to shame. Steep, bumpy valleys of green. The adrenaline reached
pitch as we freewheeled at 60kmph down a twisty, precipitous road before having
to swerve past a BMW and around flower boxes that were unhelpfully left in the
road to “calm” traffic.
A big uphill
later, we were again gunning downhill to the town of Båstad and a small
promenade on the sea where we parked up our bikes and savoured one of the
surprisingly hydrating Swedish supermarket beers (in Sweden, supermarket beer
is capped by law at piss strength, leaving even slightly intoxicating stuff to
System Boleget – more on that later).
It was a great
moment, looking out over the sea and a beach strewn coast line arching to our
right and up. Not for the first time, the boys rejected my suggestion of a
little swim.
We powered
on, switching back and forth between bike path and road, past a seemingly
endless golden beach. We grabbed lunch and a beer in the sunshine by the river
in Halmstad, before doing some serious spinning all the way to Falkenberg,
burning up 50km in our impression of a peloton. This was the long leg of the
journey, and it felt it. Heavy cross winds did not help!
My poor
directions inadvertently by-passed the historic centre, taking us through an
ugly industrial centre. With the day already running away, we decided to miss
the town and push on up the coast, hoping to make it make the final 30km to
Varberg before night fall.
A combo of more
strong wind and my puncture did not help, though the latter gave us a good
excuse for a tin of beer on the beach as the sun lowered to the horizon, like a
countdown clock.
Twenty minutes more on the bike, willing the tired legs
through each revolution, and we rolled into Varberg. On a tip, we made it up
the castle seeking rooms. There were none free, but we were compensated with a clear sunset from the ramparts.
Heading back
into town, as per usual, we struggled to find anywhere to stay, but eventually
shacked up in a strange, funky Lenin themed place. In all truth, I was ready to
knock-out. Beer and chocolate had dragged us through 150km of up and down
cross-winds and there was not much left in the tank…
Just enough
for a quiet beer or, as it ended up, a night-out which went from the ridiculous
to the sublime. From a speedway obsessed
seemingly over 50’s bar to an immaculate 18-21 Swedish party club. Neither was
particularly sociable (we were quickly understanding that the Swedes are not
the most open of peoples), but a few hours in the latter was a rather surreal
experience. Three smelly, scruffy thirty somethings sitting back and watching
all these young, beautiful, overly-blonde and perfectly done-up Swedes float
about their party business.
This is what
I love about these trips. A bit of a challenge, taking in the countryside by
day, ending up in a small town you have never heard of and gaining an
unexpected glimpse into local life. Only problem was we had a long way to go… with
a mild hangover.
(Continue to Blog Part 2...)
(Continue to Blog Part 2...)
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