Flashpacking the Lot:
Cycling from Mende to Bordeaux
My bike setup for "flashpacking" the Lot and Garonne River drainage |
The most highly anticipated part of our holiday in France involved quite a lot of planning, from designing the route using the online mapping service called Ride With GPS, to deciding what to take, to booking accommodation. "Flashpacking" is a termed used by cyclists to describe riding a bike with a minimal amount of gear and a credit card, so you don't have to carry camping or cooking equipment.
Before I proceed any further I'd like to insert special thanks to our friends in Toulouse, Michel and Brigitte. Without their wonderful help and hospitality it would not have been possible for us to have such a long and elaborate holiday here in France. Including our arrival, we have shuttled to and from Toulouse three times already and there is still another short visit to come before we leave for home in a week's time. (More about that later.)
Alors Michel et Brigitte, nos plus sincères remerciements à vous deux.
Going from Mende to Bordeaux would involve something between 500 and 550 kilometres of riding, depending on how many wrong turns we took and route alterations due to road works, etc. During the pandemic we had come up with the idea of riding along the River Lot to the Garonne and then on to Bordeaux, which seemed more like a dream than anything else at that stage.
The Lot valley is steeped in history and the geography changes a fair bit as you descend from 730 metres above sea level at the town of Mende down to where it joins the Garonne at a few dozen metres above sea level and then travel on the the Garonne estuary at Bordeaux.
The town of Mende itself dates back to ~ 200 BC, although there doesn't seem to be anything still standing from those early days. However, there is a graceful bridge dating back to the 13th century that apparently has never been destroyed by flooding. An impressive cathedral commissioned by Pope Urbain V in the 14th Century also testifies to the town's long and significant history.
Days 1 and 2: Toulouse to Mende & and a rest day
At Toulouse Matabiau Station, ready to start another adventure |
Michel and Dianne outside Gare Matabiau |
... and then found our seats on the train to Nimes and hung our bikes ...
The lighting on the train wasn't great for taking pictures! |
By the time our train pulled into the station in Mende it was almost 10 pm so we had a few kilometres to ride in the dark to our accommodation.
A pretty good way to start the day, especially the next morning when I added a croissant! |
We wandered around the town for a couple of hours ...
There is a convent here in Lot and I think it might be the building in the background |
Autumn colour promising nice views ahead |
The Pont Notre Dame built in the 13th century |
One of the more recent bridges spanning the River Lot at Mende |
Such steep roofs suggest a heavy snow load in winter |
This must be a wonderful place to hang out on a hot summer afternoon |
The Cathedral of Notre-Dame and Saint-Privat |
A statue of Pope Urbain V who commissioned the cathedral stands in front of it |
On a warm evening it would be lovely to eat out here in the courtyard but not today! |
Back on the Bikes: Day 1 ~ Mende to Saint Géniez
Definitely the BEST coffee since landing in France |
... but when I saw a proper espresso machine I asked the wonderful woman who was serving if she could make me a café creme grande with steamed milk and she said "bien sur!". It was the first time I'd had someone make me a coffee since we landed in France with care and attention to detail. It made the start of the trip westward seem very promising! There were some nice touches inside this brasserie and although I'm not generally one for knick knacks I really did like these little figurines ...
Breakfast over, we walked back to our apartment, changed into our cycling kit and set off. We'd already been impressed with the clearly delineated cycling lanes along the major route leading in and out of town but riding along them during early morning traffic made us appreciate them even more. We'd chosen to take a slightly more direct route towards St Geniez than the one which would have take us out of town on a less busy road but there was a good paved shoulder along the Route Nationale and we felt perfectly safe. It didn't feel like long at all before we were on much quieter road for the rest of the day, which provide for a most enjoyable day to start our trip. Here's a short video to show what those three sections were like ...
We mostly rode past rather than through small villages along the route but did see some nice houses and gardens along the way ...
... and I detoured onto the bridge that took the main road up to the village of Saint Laurent d'Olt to take this photo ...
... before backtracking to the narrow road that would prove to be one of the most charming sections of the whole trip, and which we'd follow on and off for the next four days of riding. At this point we were clearly on the Véloroute de la Vallée du Lot which was made abundantly clear for cyclists and motorists alike ...
Once up and over that hill we rolled down into some very fertile looking land for quite a few kilometres with some impressive farmhouses...
Soon we were down and riding alongside the river and passing randonneurs walking one of the many pilgrim routes which cross France ...
... and past some impressive castles, including this beauty ...
... past the town of Cajarc where this bike shop with its end of season sale was unable to tempt me to stop other than to take a photo ...
Day 3: Capdenac Gare to Cahors
Dianne liked the flowers and insisted I pose beside them with her bike |
This was another day that started out cool and overcast but improved as we rode westward. We were noticing that the autumn colours seemed to be intensifying day by day, but that might have been due to a change in the mix of trees along our route ...
In places, fallen leaves gathered along the roadside ...
Another day, more chateaux to look at, including this rather sombre-looking one ...
Beautiful bridges across the river continued to be a regularly occurring feature too ...
... and cliffs close by the river on both sides became more evident as we neared Saint Cirq-Lapopie ...
which we'd visited from Cahors on our bikes about three weeks before ...
We thought we'd ride up and through the village this time but ... we were wrong!
Look closely and you can see me pushin my bike up the steep, wet slippery cobbles! |
The village seemed to have the one main street you can see above and a network of very narrow and steep laneways like this one ...
It wasn't the best day or time to visit Saint Cirq-Lapopie, with the occasional shower making the cobbles slippery and the eateries still closed so we continued on up the road to the lookout and descended to where we thought would be the other end of the chemin halage and turned onto a steep where Di stopped halfway to catch her breath and take a photo looking back up ...
... and then another looking down ...
Note the little red flags on the left indicating a lot of loose gravel which had washed down and across the road |
Riding ahead of her, at the bottom I discovered we hadn't come out past the chemin halage but just before it started ...
Not happy, as I hate pushing my bike and knew if we went through the chemin halage we'd be pushing our bikes for at least 400 metres, I would soon become even less happy. As I turned around I heard Di calling out. Somewhere on the descent she'd got a puncture so I rode back and got to work taking her seatpost bag off, turning the bike upside down, removing the wheel and its tyre to find the problem. It turned out there was a tiny piece of rock with a very sharp tip embedded in the tyre. I removed that and made it clear to Di that I'd rather ride another 10 kilometres than push my bike through the towpath. I managed to persuade her with the argument that if we went through the halage we didn't know when we'd be able to get something to eat, whereas if we backtracked and crossed the bridge we'd been across on our previous visit ...
As it turned out the place where we'd eaten on our last visit was closed but only a couple of hundred metres down the road there was a very nice restaurant that restored our spirits immensely. An added bonus was that this time as we road along the north bank of the Lot towards Cahor the wind was assisting rather than hindering our progress.
We focussed on getting to Cahors to find our accommodation but Di did pause briefly to make this lovely photo looking across the river ...
We spent the next day wandering around Cahors enjoying the old village ...
And, like everyone else spent an inordinate amount of time trying to find the best angle to photograph the famous Valentré Bridge. In the end I gave up and just putting together this mash-up ...
So, that was the first half our journey from Mende to Bordeaux in the bag. An extra ten kilometres and a puncture to fix just add a bit more interest before our rest day in Cahors. The big bonus for me though was on the rest day I stuck my head in a bike shop that was moving a kilometre up the road and was having a sale so they could cart as little as possible from one place to the next. I picked up and excellent pair of Castelli bib shorts that was already cheaper than I could get them in Australia and they had a 30% reduction sticker on them. Very nice day off the bike indeed. 😁