#16
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Take a bike on an airplane is the easy part. The hard part is whether you have room or travel option once you land.
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#17
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#18
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Biggest advantages: (a) not having to fiddle with disc brakes (b) no paint to chip (c) 34/34 gearing (d) mech shifting. No worrying about batteries. |
#19
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My bike flies for free so it’s always the cheaper option.
That said; I’d prefer to rent if I could. It’s no secret that I’m a retro grouch and renting high end bikes is an excuse for to experience something really nice; high end and modern without having to commit to owning it. International travel; especially solo is stressful enough trying to manage all your own luggage with only two hands; so it’s certainly easier to not have to lug a bike case. With that out of the way; for various reasons I’ll be taking my own bike to Europe later this month.
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#20
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Conversely, my wife is the proverbial Princess & The Pea; she is extremely sensetive to even the slightest variations in bike fit, and so it is* well worth the effort to bring her custom-built coupled bike and know that everything will be in the correct place, rather than futz around with a rented or borrowed bike and constantly having to stop mid-ride to whip out a hex wrench and do some +/- 1mm tweak. *or rather, was: Her S&S coupled bike was destroyed in a crash several years ago, and so the last two cycling vacations we took she rented or borrowed a bike. Lots of stopping & tweaking ensued. |
#21
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I've flown to Europe with my bike twice. The rentals are nice, but you sacrifice generic contact points for your particulars, and I haven't been willing to sacrifice. Build-up/take-down from my travel case is easy.
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©2004 The Elefantino Corp. All rights reserved. |
#22
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Bring your bike
I go to Europe each summer for a few weeks - as a result, the Ritchey Breakaway cross has accumulated some decent frequent flier miles, and is great to have over there. No disc brakes as others have mentioned makes things easy. Going eTap would be ever easier, but this works for my needs. Not a race bike by any means, but it does the job and is so fun to ride. The only reason I go with my Breakaway is that the travel to/from CDG to my family’s house can be a bit of a logistical hassle, so having the smaller case makes a difference.
Traveling domestically I rely on my DaKine bike case. Again, I stash a rim brake/steel bike in there. So far it’s held up great on multiple trips. As others have noted, shipping ahead does save a lot of hassle. Quite often, I’ll “ship there/check it back” as the risk on not having it at the location (when the whole point of the trip is to have to a bike on location!) is greater outbound than inbound. MB |
#23
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It's really not even a question, if it's a vacation, a bike is coming with me. Both domestically and internationally. I will not rent a bike because I usually don't plan my destination around cycling, but always find places to get plenty of miles in via local groups and ride with GPS. I do have a dedicated "travel" bike. Aluminum, rim brake, room for 32s, full mechanical. Goes into an Orucase airport ninja. I have become pretty efficient when it comes to packing. For 2 weeks I can get away with just my bike bag and a carry on. We don't have issues with taxi cabs, train luggage racks, and rental cars.
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#24
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#25
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#26
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If you have the ability to move with the bike once landing (public transit or airport transfer service/rental car), it's a win getting things dialed and organized on a bike you know, versus a rental, which may require some time to get used to.
I have flown a bike quite a few times for vacation and for long work trips. No issues (fingers crossed) with luggage handling, and most carriers now treat bikes as standard luggage, so that's a win as well. We did rent gravel bikes last year while staying in the Dolomites, we'd brought our road bikes, but figured we'd at least explore the gravel in the area to get an idea of how it was (TOUGH). Rentals from the hotel were great, I had time to work with the mechanic and install the pedals/saddles on our two rental bikes, as well as talk shop with the hotel mechanic. |
#27
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Looks like you are going to be in Provence/ Alps Maritimes… terrific riding areas throughout. Last I knew, there were some high end rental places scattered around that area, so some searching may turn something up . But I would want it to be close by. As others have said, the fixed location makes bringing or leaving a bike with your pal real options. Not sure where you might be flying from, but for a flight to Nice, look for a direct flight, to minimize the travel time as well as the potential for bike transfer issues.
We go to a different part of France, fly direct (from YUL, which we’re close enough to in the US) and leave some bikes here (we’re in SW France at the moment). It makes life so much easier. When will you go? There’s great spring riding, but it can be cold enough higher in the Alps Maritimes. |
#28
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This will be a controversial option - but, the last 5 or 6 vacations I’ve been on, I’ve actually just stalked the internet and bought a bike wherever I’m going, rode it, then brought it back with me. I’ve learned getting somewhere with a bike is harder than bringing one back. Flying with a bike is maybe $35 normally (it’s free on Delta for me). Boxes are easy to source. I try and get a good deal, enjoy riding it, then maybe resell it and offset costs of the vacation or ride it for a while.
When we went to Hawaii, I bought a giant that a military guy was selling because he was going home. PayPal’d the money before we got there. Rode it all over the big island and resold it and paid for all of our fancy dinners. |
#29
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#30
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Bring your own bike. It's the focus of your trip. Sounds like great memories on tap, memories that you'll cherish. Seems weird to do it on a rental whip. Back in 2017 I debated taking a telescope to the Solar Eclipse. You don't need to bring a telescope to experience an eclips, just show up and put on the glasses. Then I realized, welp no, I'm an astronomer, this is a big deal, I'm going to experience this my way. I brought my scope. |
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