Planning the Ultimate Cyclist Vacation
Earlier this summer a friend of mine told me that he wouldn’t sell his memories of riding at the Tour for any amount of money. He said this right after I mentioned that I鈥檇 be following the final days of this year鈥檚 Tour, and his voice was wistful and envious.
I鈥檝e been to Tour stages over the years, and while they were interesting enough I never found the experience all that moving. So I didn鈥檛 grasp my buddy鈥檚 covetous tone. But at this year鈥檚 Tour, I realized that I鈥檝e just done it all wrong in the past. Dropping in on a stage for a few hours is like popping through Rome or Athens on a layover and expecting to feel like a local. To do the Tour justice, you have to spend a few days so you can grasp the mega scope and manic energy. And you have to bring a bike.
I went to France with Specialized, which was promoting their new Evade aero road helmet and, more generally, the . Our group was comprised mostly of journalists, though also along for the ride was Greg Wiedle, winner of the company鈥檚 #ItsMyTour video contest. The slogan sounds trite at first, but seeing Greg鈥檚 prize video, and then watching him and his wife experience Europe and the Tour, underscored just how transformative a trip like this can be.
They don鈥檛 have the combo of 5,000-foot climbs, Raclette cheese, or any of the pomp or history of the Tour back in the U.S., and the Wiedles drank up the experience. It made me realize that following the race isn鈥檛 necessarily about who鈥檚 in yellow or how a particular stage unfolds. It鈥檚 about channeling the passion of the event.
To wit, when, two hours into a sinuous evening alpine ride with at least another hour to go, we were faced with the choice of sticking to the plan or extending our ride to include the Col de la Croix Fry and missing our dinner reservation, the choice was easy. 鈥淚t鈥檚 my Tour,鈥 someone announced, and up we went. Another dessert or slab of cheese? Le fromage, bien s没r. Forgo a few more hours of sleep for another round at the bar. Not even a question.
In the final week of this year鈥檚 Tour, I came to understand the nostalgia and envy my buddy had expressed about his trip to France. If you do it right, there鈥檚 arguably no better vacation for a cyclist than spending a week chasing the world鈥檚 most important and overwrought cycling event. Here are a few tips. Vive le Tour!
Experience the Tour: Pick a Home Base

You could chase the race in a camper van, but if you鈥檇 rather spend more time in the saddle than behind the wheel it鈥檚 better to choose somewhere central and daytrip to the stages. We bedded down in Annecy, a quaint Rh么nes-Alpes village on a sparkling spring-fed lake with countless mountain roads radiating like spokes out over high and mythic passes.
Stage 18鈥檚 historic double ascent of Alpe d鈥橦uez was within easy striking distance, though getting off the mountain at the end of the day proved as epic as any ride we did. But everyone was in such good cheer鈥擟hristoph Riblon had just secured France鈥檚 first (and only) victory of this Tour, after all鈥攖hat there was no pushing or grousing or ugliness in spite of the three-hour gondola lines. At the base of the lift in Oz en Oisans, the restaurants were packed, but our guide, John Goldsmith, had a table reserved and vin rouge waiting. Lesson two: A knowledgeable local guide service like Goldsmith鈥檚 Annecy-based is indispensable.
Experience the Tour: Get Close
Just back from following Le Tour, our writer explains why every cyclist should book next year鈥檚 ticket to France now and offers up some tips for making the most of it
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Unlike many sports that keep their pros cordoned off from the public, cycling provides opportunities to get up close with your favorite riders. (No, not by chasing alongside in a ) Pre and post-stage, you can wander around among the team buses, watch the guys warm-up, and sometimes even catch a quick conversation and autograph. I managed a word with Contador and Richie Porte before the stage at Annecy.
Specialized upped the ante, though, by arranging for breakfast with Omega Pharma-Quickstep at their team hotel in Chamb茅ry. Mark Cavendish told us that even though he鈥檚 already won 25 Tour stages in his career he still has plenty to accomplish. Sylvain Chavanel said he loves his custom , though the orange paint job鈥攃olor-matched to his beloved Camaro鈥攚as making it tough for him to get into breaks because he鈥檚 so easily marked. And Niki Terpstra said that even though he鈥檚 mostly a classics rider, he doesn鈥檛 mind coming to the Tour. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the biggest race in the world,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檒l never win here. Most of us won鈥檛. But you still want to be here.鈥
Experience the Tour: Don’t Miss the Caravan

Set aside at least one day to stand by the roadside and watch the hours-long procession before the racers arrive. The high-speed parade doles out melodrama (as in the Chippendales model wearing nothing but French-flag undies who was tethered, day-in, day-out, to the top of a float) and plenty of freebies (mostly useless trinkets and 13-cent branded cycling caps), all to a blaring soundtrack of Eurotrash techno. That might sound obnoxious, and in some ways it is: One afternoon I watched a 220-pound dude poured into blue zebra-stripe riding shorts and a commemorative maillot jaune literally scrabbling around with a group of 10-year-olds to snatch up trinkets being tossed to the crowd. But it鈥檚 also priceless to experience firsthand.
Experience the Tour: Climb a Few Cols

From Annecy, you can easily ride the Col de la Colombi猫re, Col de la Croix Fry, Col de Mont-Revard, Mont茅e Semnoz, Col des Saisies, Col de la Forclaz鈥攁nd the list goes on, depending on how long you care to ride. Riding these monsters yields an appreciation for what the racers are doing that you can鈥檛 otherwise get.
Case in point, the winner of a citizen race that takes in a single stage of the Tour each year (Stage 20 in 2013), was well slower than even the sprinters on this mountainous stage. Meanwhile, the majority of riders were hours off the time, and the slowest racers finished some seven hours behind the winning time of 3:39:04.
On our last day in Annecy, a trio from our group did a ride called the Tournette, which took in the Col de l鈥櫭塸ine and Col de la Croix Fry, the last two (of five) climbs covered by the race on Stage 19. These were big, muscular ascents that went on and on into Sound of Music high pastures, and I was grateful for the Tarmac SL4 that Specialized had lent me. (Aside: Leave the heavy touring bike at home and bring something light and high-performance.)
Atop the Croix Fry, one guy from our group rolled up looking broken and dejected, flopped down on the ground on his back, and announced, 鈥淚f I had to ride shi* like this every day for three weeks, I鈥檇 definitely want some dope.鈥 We amateurs cannot grasp the difficulty of what the pros take on in a race like the Tour, but following in their wheels gives some small idea.
Experience the Tour: Tune in on TV

You don鈥檛 have to go sit by the roadside every day to appreciate the race. French TV airs every stage in almost its entirety, and nearly every restaurant and bar in the country will have it playing. Some of my favorite days involved a handful of hours in the saddle followed by a recovery meal and drink (erm, drinks) while screaming at the TV side-by-side with locals at the brasserie. The network鈥檚 fixation with the French riders can be a bit much鈥攁t the finish at Le Grand Bornand, there were lengthy interviews with Pierre Roland, Christophe Riblon, and Thomas Voeckler but only a few seconds with stage winner Rui Costa. Then again, at least you don鈥檛 have to put up with the vapid yammering of Paul Sherwen and Phil Liggett.
Experience the Tour: Eat Some Fromage

It鈥檚 inconceivable how the French stay thin. Every meal felt like an orgy of whole-cream dairy, succulent grilled meats (with plenty of duck), and bread, bread, and more bread. It鈥檚 safe to say the Paleo Diet will never make it in this country. It became something of a joke鈥攁nd point of pride鈥攈ow much cheese we could consume in a day.
Stage 19 at Le Grand Bornand was the high-water mark. At lunch, when the waitress brought a skillet with a five-inch round of Reblochon, we passed it around to share. 鈥淣on, non, non, non, non,鈥 she corrected in that inimitable stuffed-up-nose French way. Soon she reappeared with skillets for every person at the table and demonstrated how to use the tabletop grills to soften them: melt cheese, pour on bread and potatoes, stuff down throat. Fist-size servings of sorbet buried in heavy cream followed for dessert. And at dinner, there was not only ch猫vre on the salad and creamy custard for sweets, but in between came a cultured cheese called fromage blanc shaped into a form and served with a raspberry coulis. It鈥檚 not just about the cheese, of course, but about food that鈥檚 as memorable as the entire race鈥攁nd riding each day that justifies loading up.
Experience the Tour: Go to Paris

Hotels are hard to get. The streets are slam-packed with humanity. Stores are closed because it鈥檚 Sunday. But it is worth every inconvenience and hassle to make it to Paris and watch the final sprint live down the Champs 脡lys茅es. For one, it鈥檚 virtually the only time the Tour takes in a circuit, meaning you get to see the racers screeching down the cobbled streets and leafy avenues time after time. Find your way close to the finish line, as we did, and the jockeying and rough roads and blazing high speeds will literally make you smack your head in disbelief. It鈥檚 a hell of a show鈥攁 far cry from what you witness on TV鈥攁nd, if you鈥檙e lucky, at the requisite post-race bar crawl, a few tired riders might even wander in. Buy them a round if you can. They鈥檝e just punctuated your best holiday ever.