Andalousie à vélo en une semaine
by Chadoc
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Bonjour !
J'évalue la possibilité de partir en Mai une bonne semaine en Andalousie (8-9j de vélo max, à VTT). Début et fin du périple à vélo à Malaga (arrivée ou départ éventuel de Séville, mais c'est moins sûr). Je n'ai pas une méga grosse condition physique mais après quelques coups de pédale, ça va... J'ai regardé le site de la transandalouse (http://www.transandalus.org) mais j'ai du mal à évaluer les difficultés et les "incontournables". Pourriez-vous mes donner quelques avis pour orienter mon projet ?
Merci beaucoup !
Cha
Salut tu peux jeter un coup d'oeilsur ce post:
http://voyageforum.com/v.f?post=4616515
Je me répete mais Granada->Orgiva->Alpujarras(A348)->Almeria->Cabo de Gata(caping sauvage à El Monsul près de San josé), ca grimpe mais c'est vraiment des paysages extras. Bonne route.
Je me répete mais Granada->Orgiva->Alpujarras(A348)->Almeria->Cabo de Gata(caping sauvage à El Monsul près de San josé), ca grimpe mais c'est vraiment des paysages extras. Bonne route.
“For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” – Robert Louis Stevenson
https://marenostrumbicycle.wordpress.com/
Bonjour,
Il y a dans voyage forum deux vidéos de cycliste amateur superbe sur des coins paumés du sud de ce pays. C'est dans le post vos motivations pour partir a vélo, et là sa motive, c'est aèrien vraiment à voir. Je sais pas si cela pourra vous aider au niveau technic mais par contre sa fait rêver très fort.🙂
Il y a dans voyage forum deux vidéos de cycliste amateur superbe sur des coins paumés du sud de ce pays. C'est dans le post vos motivations pour partir a vélo, et là sa motive, c'est aèrien vraiment à voir. Je sais pas si cela pourra vous aider au niveau technic mais par contre sa fait rêver très fort.🙂
(credo quia absurdum)
Merci pour vos réponses! J'avais deja vu l'autre post mais le trajet évoqué est trop long pour une semaine, et probablement un peu trop "raide" pour nos gambettes pas assez entraînées. Quant aux vidéos, merci pour le lien elles sont supers ! Pas du tout le même coin mais rien n'est encore fixé alors je vais regarder ça de plus près (j'habite toulouse alors l'aragon, ce n'est pas bien loin !!)
J'ai effectué un tour d'Andalousie en avril 2011. J'y suis resté quasiment tout avril mais je n'ai fait que 19j de vélo (départ de Malaga, arrivée à Almunecar puis moi et vélo dans un bus jusqu'à malaga pour reprendre l'avion).
Les parties que j'ai préféré : La route entre Malaga et Ronda, le nord de l'Andalousie en général (Aracena-Sierra de Morena-Cordoue-Ubeda-Parc de Sierra de Segura. Attention c'est peu peuplé, sauf Cordoue évidemment, et j'ai eu quelques surprises avec des campings fermés définitivement alors que sur différents sites internet ils étaient toujours notés. Par contre j'ai pu passé en grande majorité sur des petites routes très peu passantes. Attention même en Avril j'ai eu chaud d'Aracena à Ubeda (Température supérieure à 30 et avec 2,5l d'eau je n'avais pas assez pour faire un peu plus de 100kms entre 2 étapes)
Le parc de Segura de Sierra y Cazorla est vraiment super à vélo (nombreux campings). J'ai bien aimé aussi la descente entre Cazorla et Tabernas (nord d'Alméria). Attention très peu de camping (camping sauvage du côté de Seron, au sud de Baza, à l'Est de Guadix).
Le trajet entre Tabernas et la Mer (via Gador/Alhama del Rio).
Le trajet Adra-Orgiva (Alpujarra)-Grenade
Ce que je n'ai pas beaucoup aimé : J'avais prévu de faire Ronda-Alcala de Los Gazules-Tarifa. Malheureusement je ne suis jamais arrivé à Tarifa. Pas à cause de Relief (Ronda étant plutôt en hauteur) mais à cause du vent. Gros vent de travers par rafales qui rendaient le contrôle du vélo quasi impossible (après 2 chutes sur le bas côté, j'ai essayé de continuer à pied en attendant mais j'avais aussi du mal) d'où la solution de suivre une route qui allait dans le sens du vent (vers Vejer de La Frontera). S'il y a de grands champs d'Eoliennes ce n'est pas un hasard (jamais vu des éoliennes tourner aussi vites). Les bords de mer entre Vicar (El Ejido) et Adra (Serres gachent le paysage, routes pas intéressantes même si j'ai évité les grosses) L'entrée et la sortie de Cordoue (mais la ville en elle même est à faire si vous avez le temps). Au bout d'un moment j'avais un peu marre des champs d'oliviers à perte de vue (Vallée de Cordoue-Ubeda-Entrée du parc de Segura de la Sierra + au Sud du Parc jusqu'à Seron quasiment).
Conclusion : Super intéressant mais l'Andalousie ça monte et ça descend (sauf partie entre Chiclana de la Frontiera/Cadix et Séville. Les routes sont dans l'ensemble en très bon état mais un vélo permettant de rouler sur des chemins peut être quand même pas mal. En effet j'ai pris des portions de chemins pour éviter des portions de grosses routes et certaines petites routes que étaient en mauvaises état voir finissaient par ne plus être bitumées.
Ce que je n'ai pas beaucoup aimé : J'avais prévu de faire Ronda-Alcala de Los Gazules-Tarifa. Malheureusement je ne suis jamais arrivé à Tarifa. Pas à cause de Relief (Ronda étant plutôt en hauteur) mais à cause du vent. Gros vent de travers par rafales qui rendaient le contrôle du vélo quasi impossible (après 2 chutes sur le bas côté, j'ai essayé de continuer à pied en attendant mais j'avais aussi du mal) d'où la solution de suivre une route qui allait dans le sens du vent (vers Vejer de La Frontera). S'il y a de grands champs d'Eoliennes ce n'est pas un hasard (jamais vu des éoliennes tourner aussi vites). Les bords de mer entre Vicar (El Ejido) et Adra (Serres gachent le paysage, routes pas intéressantes même si j'ai évité les grosses) L'entrée et la sortie de Cordoue (mais la ville en elle même est à faire si vous avez le temps). Au bout d'un moment j'avais un peu marre des champs d'oliviers à perte de vue (Vallée de Cordoue-Ubeda-Entrée du parc de Segura de la Sierra + au Sud du Parc jusqu'à Seron quasiment).
Conclusion : Super intéressant mais l'Andalousie ça monte et ça descend (sauf partie entre Chiclana de la Frontiera/Cadix et Séville. Les routes sont dans l'ensemble en très bon état mais un vélo permettant de rouler sur des chemins peut être quand même pas mal. En effet j'ai pris des portions de chemins pour éviter des portions de grosses routes et certaines petites routes que étaient en mauvaises état voir finissaient par ne plus être bitumées.
Bonjour,
Je m'immisce dans ce post car je pars justement en Andalousie fin février. Une dizaine de jours pour pédaler au départ de Malaga. Je me joins donc à chadoc pour remercier tout le monde pour toutes ces précisions. L'itinéraire proposé par NicolasR54 m'intéresse mais passer par la Sierra Nevada fin février... quelqu'un est-il déjà passé par là vers février / mars ?
Merci d'avance pour vos retours.
Je m'immisce dans ce post car je pars justement en Andalousie fin février. Une dizaine de jours pour pédaler au départ de Malaga. Je me joins donc à chadoc pour remercier tout le monde pour toutes ces précisions. L'itinéraire proposé par NicolasR54 m'intéresse mais passer par la Sierra Nevada fin février... quelqu'un est-il déjà passé par là vers février / mars ?
Merci d'avance pour vos retours.
petits tours entre amis:
http://nosvoyagesavelo.wordpress.com (nouveau)
http://nosvoyagesavelo.free.fr (jusqu'en 2013)
Je l'avais fait mi-Janvier. Je n'ai pas eu de souci.(j'ai même chopé mes premiers coups de soleil). Il fait environ 10°C à Grenade en cemoment.
Après c'est la météo...
prise entre Alméria et Orgiva!😛
prise entre Alméria et Orgiva!😛“For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” – Robert Louis Stevenson
https://marenostrumbicycle.wordpress.com/
Bonjour,
Désolée de ne pas avoir réagi plus tôt mais merci pour la photo qui m'a rassurée sur le potentiel de la météo andalouse avant de partir 🙂 En dehors de 2 nuits très très fraiches, pas eu de souci. On a pu éviter les coups de soleil tout en bronzant sans s'en rendre compte (un beau soleil mais un vent frais fin février, début mars 2012).
Et merci beauuuucoup pour cette idée d'itinéraire NicolasR54. Nous sommes finalement partie de Grenade pour rejoindre la route A-348 qui relie Lanjaron à Almeria en passant par Orgiva et c'est vraiment superbe. Malheureusement, pressés par le temps nous avons choisi de suivre la côte pour rejoindre Malaga au départ de Almeria... Plein de serres, de grands complexes hôteliers, le tout en suivant assez souvent une grosse nationale. Si c'était à refaire, je partirai comme toi faire un tour du côté de Cabo de Gata, quitte à monter dans un bus pour terminer le périple (ceux que nous avons vus acceptaient les vélos).
Merci pour les conseils en tout cas. Bonne route ! Laëtitia
Désolée de ne pas avoir réagi plus tôt mais merci pour la photo qui m'a rassurée sur le potentiel de la météo andalouse avant de partir 🙂 En dehors de 2 nuits très très fraiches, pas eu de souci. On a pu éviter les coups de soleil tout en bronzant sans s'en rendre compte (un beau soleil mais un vent frais fin février, début mars 2012).
Et merci beauuuucoup pour cette idée d'itinéraire NicolasR54. Nous sommes finalement partie de Grenade pour rejoindre la route A-348 qui relie Lanjaron à Almeria en passant par Orgiva et c'est vraiment superbe. Malheureusement, pressés par le temps nous avons choisi de suivre la côte pour rejoindre Malaga au départ de Almeria... Plein de serres, de grands complexes hôteliers, le tout en suivant assez souvent une grosse nationale. Si c'était à refaire, je partirai comme toi faire un tour du côté de Cabo de Gata, quitte à monter dans un bus pour terminer le périple (ceux que nous avons vus acceptaient les vélos).
Merci pour les conseils en tout cas. Bonne route ! Laëtitia
petits tours entre amis:
http://nosvoyagesavelo.wordpress.com (nouveau)
http://nosvoyagesavelo.free.fr (jusqu'en 2013)
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A shout-out to a cycling colleague from Savoie
Claudio specializes in the route of the Savoie lakes Here are his travels Between Bornes, Chartreuse, the Savoie foothills, and Dauphiné Five lakes: Léman, Annecy, Paladru, Aiguebelette, Bourget, not to mention a few ponds along the way Plenty of accommodation options: camping, hotels, and more...
A lovely route not far from his place Rural and quite peaceful A road cycling route created by Serge B...
N+1 reconnaissance trips on a loop of about 400 km This way, he avoids the SNCF and its troubles http://cbandiera.free.fr/vv/lacs-savoie/recos.php

The latest reconnaissance trip from April to May 2026 http://cbandiera.free.fr/recits/2026-grenoble-H/index.php

Claudio specializes in the route of the Savoie lakes Here are his travels Between Bornes, Chartreuse, the Savoie foothills, and Dauphiné Five lakes: Léman, Annecy, Paladru, Aiguebelette, Bourget, not to mention a few ponds along the way Plenty of accommodation options: camping, hotels, and more...
A lovely route not far from his place Rural and quite peaceful A road cycling route created by Serge B...
N+1 reconnaissance trips on a loop of about 400 km This way, he avoids the SNCF and its troubles http://cbandiera.free.fr/vv/lacs-savoie/recos.php


The latest reconnaissance trip from April to May 2026 http://cbandiera.free.fr/recits/2026-grenoble-H/index.php

First of all... happy New Year! Wishing you great roads in 2017!
I’ve been traveling for a few years now with a high-quality mountain bike, but it’s equipped with hydraulic disc brakes. I live (pedal) with the constant worry of a breakdown (leak, air bubble, heat causing the fluid to...). My bike mechanic tells me it’s impossible to switch them out for V-brakes.
What do you all think? Am I taking a big risk continuing (alone) with these brakes? Thanks in advance for your great tips!
Hi everyone,
First post here to share a quick recap of our west-to-east bike trip along Algeria’s coast in January 2025. It was just the two of us—my partner and I—with French passports and not a word of Arabic. No friends or welcoming hosts in the country.
Under those conditions, we’d strongly advise against going.
Our original plan was to follow the coast from Algiers to Tunis. We ended up cycling from Algiers to Béjaia, then took the train from Béjaia to Annaba (with a stop in Constantine), and finally biked to the border. We were tailed by police the whole way—whether on our bikes, on the train, or even on foot while exploring towns. On top of that, we couldn’t wild camp and were limited to the few state-approved hotels that accept foreigners. Under those circumstances, connecting with locals was especially tough.
With such an omnipresent and intrusive police presence, we’d definitely recommend against this destination for bike touring. A really sad situation that completely cuts you off from the local population...
We’d been warned, we went to check it out, and we weren’t disappointed!
You’ve been warned.
First post here to share a quick recap of our west-to-east bike trip along Algeria’s coast in January 2025. It was just the two of us—my partner and I—with French passports and not a word of Arabic. No friends or welcoming hosts in the country.
Under those conditions, we’d strongly advise against going.
Our original plan was to follow the coast from Algiers to Tunis. We ended up cycling from Algiers to Béjaia, then took the train from Béjaia to Annaba (with a stop in Constantine), and finally biked to the border. We were tailed by police the whole way—whether on our bikes, on the train, or even on foot while exploring towns. On top of that, we couldn’t wild camp and were limited to the few state-approved hotels that accept foreigners. Under those circumstances, connecting with locals was especially tough.
With such an omnipresent and intrusive police presence, we’d definitely recommend against this destination for bike touring. A really sad situation that completely cuts you off from the local population...
We’d been warned, we went to check it out, and we weren’t disappointed!
You’ve been warned.
Hi there,
I’m planning the route to cycle from Lille to Nordkapp with my partner.
Duration: 3 months, from May 1st to July 31st, 2026.
In the attached details below, I need to add some "non-riding" days (rest days, basically).
So I’m looking to "shorten" the trip by taking ferries or trains for some stretches. Which areas could I skip?
Thanks in advance for your great tips.
Have a good evening.
https://www.komoot.com/fr-fr/collection/4023980/-lille-cap-nord-1er-mai-au-31-juillet-2026?ref=collection
Hi there,
I’m planning to bike back from Poland this summer. Does anyone know a way to ship it there without having to take it apart? Otherwise, it’s a real hassle to fine-tune all the settings before departure! Thanks in advance.
I’m planning to bike back from Poland this summer. Does anyone know a way to ship it there without having to take it apart? Otherwise, it’s a real hassle to fine-tune all the settings before departure! Thanks in advance.
Hi, has anyone recently bought Primus or Butagaz gas, possibly puncture-style, in Dubrovnik or the surrounding area? Same question for Albania... thanks. aichatou
Hi there,
Coming from Laos (*), I’m planning to enter Thailand by bike via the Fourth Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge.
Before this bridge was built, I’d already cycled the road from Louang Namtha to Houei Sai and crossed the river by boat to reach Thailand.
At the time, the condition of that road was impeccable, and most importantly, traffic was light.
So I’m wondering if anyone who’s taken it recently can tell me whether traffic has increased since the bridge opened.
Thanks in advance!
(*) I’m currently cycling in China (Yunnan)
Coming from Laos (*), I’m planning to enter Thailand by bike via the Fourth Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge.
Before this bridge was built, I’d already cycled the road from Louang Namtha to Houei Sai and crossed the river by boat to reach Thailand.
At the time, the condition of that road was impeccable, and most importantly, traffic was light.
So I’m wondering if anyone who’s taken it recently can tell me whether traffic has increased since the bridge opened.
Thanks in advance!
(*) I’m currently cycling in China (Yunnan)
Hi there,
Just a few words about the loop I did by bike in Yunnan.
Entry and exit
I entered China through the Sino-Vietnamese border crossing at Lào Cai / Hekou under the 30-day visa exemption currently available to French nationals and others.
The process was simple and quick. A Chinese police officer even helped me complete my electronic pre-registration at a computer kiosk. I wasn’t aware this formality was required—it’s similar to Thailand’s TM6.
No issues with the bike.
I left the country via the Sino-Laotian border crossing at Mohan / Boten.
The atmosphere was a bit chaotic there, but again, no problems with the bike.
The timing
I visited Yunnan in February 2026.
Weather-wise, at higher altitudes (between 1,500 and 2,000 meters), it was around ten degrees at night and in the mornings, and around twenty degrees at the hottest part of the day.
I had two days of rain, so I took the bus to keep moving. Otherwise, clear blue skies.
Culturally, Chinese New Year fell on February 17th (and the 15 days following), right in the middle of my trip. Because of this, my take on the traffic might be off.
Accommodation and food I always found a hotel to stay in for prices ranging from 8 to 15 €. Except in Kunming (the capital), where many hotels were fully booked (Chinese New Year). I ended up at a 100 € hotel with great value for money.
A bowl of noodles costs about 1.5 € on average.
Onboard electronics Since my smartphone doesn’t support eSIMs, I subscribed to a China plan with my carrier. Otherwise, for much cheaper, Alipay offers eSIMs for foreigners that allow access to services usually blocked for Chinese users (WhatsApp, Facebook, etc.).
An internet connection is essential for paying with Alipay or WeChat, as this payment method is widespread.
I only managed to use Alipay.
Either way, always carry cash because sometimes there’s no signal, or the merchant only accepts WeChat.
Also, it’s best to bring a power adapter when you arrive rather than struggling to find one.
Traffic and roads The Chinese aren’t reckless drivers. They follow traffic rules and watch out for cyclists. This is slightly less true in Xishuangbanna (the region bordering Myanmar and Laos).
In urban areas, there are almost always wide bike lanes, separated from other roads, where bikes, electric mini-scooters, and scooters share the space pretty harmoniously.
The roads are in great condition, and traffic is generally manageable—even light—except for one stretch (Eshan -> Yangwu).
Most traffic is absorbed by expressways, China’s equivalent of highways: toll roads that are off-limits to slow vehicles.
You’re never far from these expressways; sometimes you even ride alongside them, which can be noisy at times.
The climbs are usually reasonable, around 5% to 6%. From what I remember, the steepest section was between Menglun and Mengla, with gradients of 8% to 10%, sometimes more.
Riding at these altitudes—though modest—took a bit of getting used to.
The route I didn’t plan anything in advance. My only goal was to reach Kunming. I don’t know why, but just hearing the name of that city, like Yunnan, always felt dreamy to me.
Here’s the breakdown: Hekou -> Man Hao (94 km); Man Hao -> Yuanyang (64 km); Yuanyang -> Jianshui (bus); Jianshui -> Tong Hai (78 km); Tong Hai -> Chenjiang (85 km); Chenjiang -> Kunming (60 km); Kunming -> Kunyang (60 km); Kunyang -> Eshan (67 km); Eshan -> Yangwu (58 km); Yangwu -> Yuanjiang (59 km); Yuanjiang -> Pu'er (bus); Pu'er -> Dadugang (75 km); Dadugang -> Jinghong (80 km); Jinghong -> Menglun (67 km); Menglun -> Mengyuancun (51 km); Mengyuancun -> Mengla (43 km); Mengla -> Boten (67 km).
Otherwise, I’m currently in Thailand and just hoping my return flight with Qatar won’t get canceled.
Oh well... 😉
Just a few words about the loop I did by bike in Yunnan.
Entry and exit
I entered China through the Sino-Vietnamese border crossing at Lào Cai / Hekou under the 30-day visa exemption currently available to French nationals and others.
The process was simple and quick. A Chinese police officer even helped me complete my electronic pre-registration at a computer kiosk. I wasn’t aware this formality was required—it’s similar to Thailand’s TM6.
No issues with the bike.
I left the country via the Sino-Laotian border crossing at Mohan / Boten.
The atmosphere was a bit chaotic there, but again, no problems with the bike.
The timing
I visited Yunnan in February 2026.
Weather-wise, at higher altitudes (between 1,500 and 2,000 meters), it was around ten degrees at night and in the mornings, and around twenty degrees at the hottest part of the day.
I had two days of rain, so I took the bus to keep moving. Otherwise, clear blue skies.
Culturally, Chinese New Year fell on February 17th (and the 15 days following), right in the middle of my trip. Because of this, my take on the traffic might be off.
Accommodation and food I always found a hotel to stay in for prices ranging from 8 to 15 €. Except in Kunming (the capital), where many hotels were fully booked (Chinese New Year). I ended up at a 100 € hotel with great value for money.
A bowl of noodles costs about 1.5 € on average.
Onboard electronics Since my smartphone doesn’t support eSIMs, I subscribed to a China plan with my carrier. Otherwise, for much cheaper, Alipay offers eSIMs for foreigners that allow access to services usually blocked for Chinese users (WhatsApp, Facebook, etc.).
An internet connection is essential for paying with Alipay or WeChat, as this payment method is widespread.
I only managed to use Alipay.
Either way, always carry cash because sometimes there’s no signal, or the merchant only accepts WeChat.
Also, it’s best to bring a power adapter when you arrive rather than struggling to find one.
Traffic and roads The Chinese aren’t reckless drivers. They follow traffic rules and watch out for cyclists. This is slightly less true in Xishuangbanna (the region bordering Myanmar and Laos).
In urban areas, there are almost always wide bike lanes, separated from other roads, where bikes, electric mini-scooters, and scooters share the space pretty harmoniously.
The roads are in great condition, and traffic is generally manageable—even light—except for one stretch (Eshan -> Yangwu).
Most traffic is absorbed by expressways, China’s equivalent of highways: toll roads that are off-limits to slow vehicles.
You’re never far from these expressways; sometimes you even ride alongside them, which can be noisy at times.
The climbs are usually reasonable, around 5% to 6%. From what I remember, the steepest section was between Menglun and Mengla, with gradients of 8% to 10%, sometimes more.
Riding at these altitudes—though modest—took a bit of getting used to.
The route I didn’t plan anything in advance. My only goal was to reach Kunming. I don’t know why, but just hearing the name of that city, like Yunnan, always felt dreamy to me.
Here’s the breakdown: Hekou -> Man Hao (94 km); Man Hao -> Yuanyang (64 km); Yuanyang -> Jianshui (bus); Jianshui -> Tong Hai (78 km); Tong Hai -> Chenjiang (85 km); Chenjiang -> Kunming (60 km); Kunming -> Kunyang (60 km); Kunyang -> Eshan (67 km); Eshan -> Yangwu (58 km); Yangwu -> Yuanjiang (59 km); Yuanjiang -> Pu'er (bus); Pu'er -> Dadugang (75 km); Dadugang -> Jinghong (80 km); Jinghong -> Menglun (67 km); Menglun -> Mengyuancun (51 km); Mengyuancun -> Mengla (43 km); Mengla -> Boten (67 km).
Otherwise, I’m currently in Thailand and just hoping my return flight with Qatar won’t get canceled.
Oh well... 😉
Hi! I’m planning to visit the Stockholm Archipelago by bike in early April.
Do you know if the boats will be running between the different islands at that time of year? For those who’ve already been, all your tips and recommendations are welcome—accommodation, etc. Also, do you know where I can rent a bike in Stockholm? Thanks so much in advance for your help!
Hello there, pedal-powered Young Boys!
Claudio (still from Faverges)
dreaming about a cycling getaway in Italy from Faverges (train all the way to Turin)
from Turin down to Venice along the Po River and back via the Padana (Alta Italia da attraversare – Northern Italy to cross)
The tricky part is getting from Chioggia to Venice.
I read it’s possible by hopping on a boat from island to island,
but it sounds a bit stressful.
Has anyone already tackled this route?
Thanks, and cheers to all! http://cbandiera.free.fr/parcours/Padania/
Claudio
Thanks, and cheers to all! http://cbandiera.free.fr/parcours/Padania/
Claudio
