Watching the 100th Tour of Flanders – with a baby

The 2016 Tour of Flanders was special for many reasons. It was the 100th edition of the great race. It saw the changing of the guard as three-time champion Fabian Cancellara in his last Ronde before retirement was finally beaten by young buck and reigning World Champion Peter Sagan, taking his first Monument win. Last but not least it was our fifth visit to the race but our first with our young son, 14 month old Arthur.

I won’t lie to you, it’s a lot easier if you leave the baby at home and you’ll probably see a lot more of the race if you do. But if you do have a little one, don’t be put off from making the trip. The Belgians see the Ronde as fun for all the family, and West Flanders is a great base for a family cycling holiday.

I have previously written detailed posts about how to watch the Tour of Flanders and enjoying a cycling break in Bruges, so rather than repeat myself this post is intended to provide some supplementary info for those travelling with babies, and also to share a few pictures from the 100th Ronde.

Its never too soon to introduce your kids to the Ronde!

It’s never too soon to introduce your kids to the Ronde!

The sign-in

As in previous years, we stayed in Bruges which meant we were able to see the riders sign in before the race set off at 10.15am.  The crowd seemed particularly large this year, perhaps because it was the 100th race or perhaps because the weather was particularly good.

The 100th Tour of Flanders was blessed with fine weather

The 100th Tour of Flanders was blessed with fine weather

There were big crowds in Bruges

There were big crowds in Bruges’ Grote Markt for the start of the 2016 race

With a baby in a buggy we stayed away from the very centre of the crowd but still got a great view of proceedings from the edge.

Fabian Cancellara is interviewed before his last ever Ronde

Fabian Cancellara is interviewed before his last ever Ronde

World champion and eventual winner Peter Sagan charms the crowd

World champion and eventual winner Peter Sagan charms the crowd

I was expecting some extra bells and whistles for the 100th edition, but it was business as usual with the same oompah band and the same compere who hadn’t even bought a new fleece for the occasion (I’ve checked my old photographs and can confirm he has owned this one for at least five years).

Ive checked and the compere has been wearing the same fleece for at least five years

Why change a winning formula?

Watching the race in Oudenaarde

I’m already having a dilemma about what we do next year. I love staying in Bruges and the sign-in is one of the highlights of Ronde day, but the hour-long train journey to Oudenaarde to see more of the race seems to take up way too much of the day when you have a young baby to entertain, especially if you end up waiting half an hour for a connection at Kortrijk. Maybe Ghent would be a better base (nearer to Oudenaarde), but that would mean missing the sign-in of course.

A concession we made this year was not to hop on the shuttlebus to the Oude Kwaremont at Oudenaarde station.  The bus can get crowded and bawdy, particularly on the way back. The public zone at the Oude Kwaremont is also very busy, although space can be found if you wander out of Kwaremont village along the length of the barriers.

Instead we walked into the centre of town. Following the terrorist attacks in Brussels less than two weeks previously, bags were searched when entering the market square and backpacks were not permitted at all, which fortunately we’d heard about before travelling. Aside from that, Oudenaarde was in party mood and we bagged a café table in the sun to soak up the atmosphere and have a spot of lunch washed down with a non-negotiable tripel blond beer.

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The warm-up act in Oudenaarde

Oudenaarde has its own public zone with beer, friets and merchandise stalls positioned close to the finish line and heading here to watch the race on the big screen was our plan for the day. It’s easy to find; walk alongside or around the square (which will be full of team buses) towards the church then follow the road round to the right, with the Tour of Flanders museum on your left (more about this marvellous institution in a later post). Keep going until you get to the recreation park that hosts the public zone, about a 20 minute walk; you’ll see plenty of other people going in the same direction. As we approached, the TV helicopters were circling as Lizzie Armistead’s victory in the women’s Tour of Flanders was announced over loudspeakers.

This public zone was just as crowded and boisterous as the one at the Oude Kwaremont but it was bigger and we found space at a picnic table with a good view of the big screen and a crowd-participation contraption where plucky volunteers pedaled a static bike that was hoisted into the air to a height proportionate to their efforts.

However, we had just got settled in with a beer when a tell-tale whiff drifted under our noses…our little boy can really pick his moments. Unsurprisingly there weren’t any baby-change tables nestled in amongst the portaloos so we had to come out of the public zone into a field and change his nappy next to some wet and rather sorry-looking bouncy castles there to tick the “family friendly” box. We didn’t have the energy to go back in and fight for another picnic table, so we wandered back to town and watched the end of the race on a pavement cafe’s TV.

Oudenaarde town hall was suitably decorated for the occasion

Oudenaarde town hall was suitably decorated for the occasion

We would probably have been better off staying here the whole time; we had access to beer, loos and TV and still got to see the pros as they rode right by us after the race on their way to their team buses. We still experienced the jovial Ronde day atmosphere and were right by the Tour of Flanders museum to enjoy an obligatory poke round the gift shop.

Family cycling in Bruges

Bruges is a great place for a family holiday and we revisited several tourist attractions that we hadn’t been to for years, including the canal boat trip which our little boy loved (babies go free). As ever though we were keen to get out and about exploring further afield by bike.

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It’s easy to cycle with babies in Bruges

As we travel by train and our baby still needs his buggy, we have yet to take our own bikes on holiday since he was born, but fortunately there are a few places to hire bikes in Bruges. We rented two bikes and a baby seat from De Ketting on Gentpoortstraat for just EUR 15 for the day (EUR 6 each plus EUR 3 for the seat). We would have preferred a trailer for the babe but they didn’t have any (and neither did another provider we asked – I’ve heard before that trailers aren’t terribly robust and rental companies tend to have to replace them every season, so this may be why).

bike hire

Recommended bike hire

The bikes were great and the baby seat must have been comfortable enough because Arthur fell asleep in it as soon as we got out into the countryside, thus missing out on the views of fields, canals, windmills and farm animals that had been one of the primary reasons for hiring bikes in the first place!

If only they fell asleep this easily at bedtime

If only they fell asleep this easily at bedtime

After an abortive attempt to ride out to the anecdotally lovely village of Lissewege that took us through some of the more industrial parts of outer Bruges (my bad!), we were getting hungry and decided instead to take the tried and trusted route along the canal to Damme where we knew there were plenty of places for a spot of lunch. None of them seemed to have a high chair though, so we ended up choosing a table outside Tijl & Nele on Jacob Von Maerlantstraat where I could sit more comfortably with the baby on my knee.

Just around the corner from the townhall and viciously cobbled market square, this little café cum gift shop proved to be a great choice, as its house beer turned out to be one of the tastiest we sampled on the whole trip, which is no mean feat in Belgium! Called Pater Van Damme, it is brewed especially for the shop and available nowhere else, so definitely worth seeking out. They also do bike rental here.

Canals and farmlands make for easy cycling after a beery lunch

Canals and farmlands make for easy cycling after a beery lunch

One of the great joys of cycling in this area is that there are so many routes to choose from that you never need to take the same one twice. It’s handy to have a map so you don’t wander too far off piste, as after a while all the canals and fields start to look the same (Fietsroute Netwerk maps are available from Stanfords, many bike rental outfits will also provide maps). Our circuitous route back to Bruges this time was via Moerkerke, passing a dairy on a road called Legewege that sold ice cream and had a lovely children’s playground that would definitely have been worth a stop if sleeping beauty hadn’t still been snoring away in the back.

Until next time

The dairy will have to wait until next time

Back in Bruges, the abundance of friet and waffle pedlars means that it’s never hard to find a child-pleasing snack to keep the whole family going (I also developed a serious hot chocolate addiction this time around). For the grown-ups, some of the bars I’ve previously recommended where you can sample beers from a list of hundreds can be, while not off limits to children, cramped and difficult to negotiate with a buggy (this is a quaint medieval town with buildings to match after all). I’m pleased to report that Cambrinus, however, has high chairs and baby change facilities as well as a selection of hearty Flemish dishes to eat and so is still very much on the menu. Cheers!

Let's not forget why we're really here.

Let’s not forget why we’re really here.

 

 

From Bruges to Ghent – capital of cycling

With the Spring Classics kicking off last weekend, it’s time to revisit my spin around Belgium a couple of years ago to witness some of these fantastic races first hand. Having cycled from Britain to Bruges, spent a couple of days there and taken in the Tour of Flanders, the next leg of the journey was to cycle on to Ghent, the third biggest city in Belgium and one of the most bicycle-friendly cities in the world.

Why visit

In a previous post I have waxed lyrical about the glories of Bruges and in many ways much of what is true for Bruges is true for Ghent. In medieval times it too grew rich off the cloth trade (until its citizens fell out with Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (or Charles Quint) over taxes and trade began to move to Antwerp). As a result it has an imposing and beautifully preserved historic centre comprising three interconnected squares and grand churches featuring priceless works of art, including Van Eyck’s The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb. As in Bruges, I have failed to visit said priceless art because I’ve been too busy enjoying the bar culture to be found in its similarly appealing gabled canalside hostelries.

Ghent does canals just as well as Bruges

Ghent does canals just as well as Bruges

And churches

And churches

Ghent is beautiful, however it feels more lived in and has more soul than Bruges, which is so preposterously perfect that you sometimes forget people actually live there and it’s not just laid on for the tourists. Ghent is bigger and busier and comes with the lively but laid-back feel you would expect from Belgium’s biggest university town, yet there are surprisingly few tourists which makes for an altogether more relaxed experience.

It is also a fantastic and stress-free place to cycle; over 300km of cycle lanes criss-cross the city, often segregated from the traffic (although drivers are considerate when they’re not) and motor traffic is banned from the city centre.

Oh, and it has a castle.

Enjoying a post-ride beer by Ghent castle

Enjoying a post-ride beer by Ghent castle

For the pro-cycling fan, Bruges may have the honour of hosting the start of the Tour of Flanders, but Ghent has a longer standing relationship with both this race and Flemish cycling in general, no doubt due in part to its location at the very heart of West Flanders. Bruges has only hosted the start since 1998, whereas Ghent hosted every start between 1913 and 1976 and usually the finish too until 1973.

The Tour of Flanders may have moved on but a trip to Ghent can still be combined very easily with some pro- race action. A good bet would be to visit at the end of February for the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, which starts and finishes in Ghent and uses many of the same stretches of cobbles and climbs as the Tour of Flanders  The next day you could either take part in the sportive or hop on a train to Waregem, Harelbeke or Oudenaarde to catch Kuurne – Brussels – Kuurne as it whizzes by. A trip to Oudenaarde would also give you the opportunity to visit the wonderful Tour of Flanders museum – more on which in a later post.

There’s also Gent – Wevelgem at the end of March, although this race no longer starts in Ghent but in Deinze, a 15 minute train ride away. In fact, Gent Sint Pieters station in the south of the city is well connected to many other cities in the region as well as Brussels, making Ghent a good base from which to get out to see lots of races during the spring classics season.

Cycling from Bruges to Ghent

The 45km ride from Bruges to Ghent is a straightforward and easy one once you find the right route out of town, taking at least an hour for which has become a traditional start to most of our cycle-touring adventures. To avoid doing the same, head to the south of town and the appropriately named Gentpoort, one of Bruge’s four remaining medieval gates  (which is part of the Museum of Bruges if you want to drop in and look around). Take the bridge over the canal here and turn right on to the cycle path on the far side that runs alongside the ringroad.  Keep going as the ringroad crosses over another canal and passes a coach park on the left hand side. You are looking for a left-hand turn shortly after this called Vaartdijkstraat which runs along the right hand side of a canal that leads southeast all the way to Ghent.

Passing through a four-horse town

Passing through a four-horse town

Once on the right track you are very quickly out of civilisation and into farming territory, passing though just a handful of tiny sleepy towns along the way. The quiet road gives way to a beautifully paved cycle path and it’s very difficult to get lost; the route hugs the canal almost the entire way and the few deviations are well sign-posted.

The route is unremarkable but peaceful and pleasant and ideal for a Tour of Flanders hangover.

The most eventful thing to happen on the canal all day

The most eventful thing to happen on the canal all day

About two-thirds of the way along is a peculiar little cycle museum that appears to have been set up in someone’s shed. Like all museums in Belgium on a Monday, it was shut when we passed by, much like many of the shops so stock up on waffles and Mattentaart before you set off.

One of Belgium's many tributes to the bicycle

One of Belgium’s many tributes to the bicycle

As you approach the outskirts of Ghent the canal-side path becomes wider and busier with semi-professional looking lycra-clad men zooming up and down. The commitment to cycling is evidenced by the large fishing-nets alongside the track into which you’re intended to fling your litter as you pass, sparing you the pedestrian humiliation of having to stop to put it in a bin. It’s not long before one of those rather pleasing town-in-silhouette road signs that you see all over Belgium show that you have made it to Ghent.

Welcome to Ghent

Welcome to Ghent

Velodromes old and new and other things to see

Ghent is packed with historic buildings, quaint cobbled streets and a multitude of fascinating sites and galleries that someone other than me is probably better placed to talk you through.  The focus of this blog is cycling and you could do a lot worse than to take advantage of the largest car-free city centre in Europe by spending a day just tootling around on two wheels drinking it all in.

Not a car in sight

Not a car in sight

Beware of the cobbles though – despite having completed the Tour of Flanders sportive on two occasions with no mishaps, the devilish combination of cobbles and tram tracks by the castle was enough to send me flying across the road with my legs in the air so that all of Ghent are now aware of the very tiny space-saving pants I wear when cycle-touring!

To explore beyond the city centre, why not start by adding to the tally of cyclists that are counted daily as they pass along the cycle path on the left hand bank of the Coupere canal (if you have previously followed the route along this canal from Bruges into the heart of Ghent then you may have already seen this digital display).

The 187th cyclist to pass that day

The 187th cyclist to pass that day

Many professional bike racers call Ghent home and you may well spot a few tearing up the canal tow paths or the banks of the Sheldt river towards Oudenaarde. Two days after the Tour of Flanders we saw the Garmin team out and about not far from the Vlaams Wielercentrum (Cycling Centre) Eddy Merckx, a modern indoor velodrome named after Belgium’s (and the world’s) greatest ever cyclist.

A fitting tribute to a great man

A fitting tribute to a great man

This is in Blaarmeersen in the west of town and tends to be just off many tourist maps.  Follow the Leie river along the north bank and look out for a right hand fork and signs to the Recreatiepark, the large green zone in which the velodrome sits alongside other leisure sites such as a huge swimming lake which is supposed to be very popular in summer (although not so much in April, brrrr!).

Anyone can wander in for a quick look at the track and a few posters and sculptures that will be of interest to pro-cycling fans.

Inside the Eddy Merckx cycling centre

Inside the Eddy Merckx cycling centre

 

Not convinced by Quick-Step's latest signing

Not convinced by Quick-Step’s latest signing

Follow the Leie back towards town and turn right on to Ijzerlaan in the direction of the Citadelpark. On the corner with Kortrijksesteenweg you will find the De Karper café, owned by Ronie Keisse, father of Iljo Keisse who rides professionally for Etixx – Quick-Step and excels at track cycling.

Iljo Keisse's jerseys adorn the walls of De Karper

Iljo Keisse’s jerseys adorn the walls of De Karper

By all accounts De Karper is a thriving sports bar that is packed to the gunnels when there’s racing on the TV. On a Tuesday lunchtime however there was just us and a man with a thousand yard stare slowing sinking Kwaremonts at the bar. All of us were served by Iljo’s very nice sister, who gave us a Tour of Flanders poster and other memorabilia to take home.

Further down the road is the Citadelpark, a lovely green space that contains Ghent’s Botanical Gardens, a couple of museums and galleries and most importantly for cycling fans, the Kuipke velodrome. This is Ghent’s older velodrome that is only used these days to host the Six Days of Ghent in the 3rd week of November each year.  Part track-meet part stag-do, this is high on my to-do list, but on an April visit I had to make do with looking at the building from the outside.

't Kuipe

‘t Kuipke

Eating and drinking

I have seen ‘t Velotjee described in one guide book as “a bike workshop-cum-bar”, which is possibly the most wonderfully generous and optimistic description of it ever written. Lonely Planet more accurately describes it as “an escaping jumble sale”. Over the course of 25 years, the owner Lieven has filled his property of unknown dimensions with an assortment of bric-a-brac that would make a house clearance professional hastily revise his rates. Yes, there are plenty of rusting antique bike frames hanging from the ceiling and bits of componentry scattered here and there, but there are also countless dusty candelabras and other ecclesiastical curios plus random piles of clothes, toys and other junk.

Enjoying a beer at 't Velootje

Enjoying a beer at ‘t Velootje

 

Did anyone see where I left my coat...?

Did anyone see where I left my coat…?

It’s certainly unique and worth a visit if you happen to find it open (as you can imagine, its owner is somewhat eccentric and the opening hours likewise). Find it on Kalversteeg in the lovely twisting cobbled lanes of the Patershol area just to the north of the historic centre. Not for the asthmatic.

't Velootje from the outside

‘t Velootje from the outside

Patershol is a good place to head for eating and drinking generally; if you want cheap and cheerful then Amadeus on Plotersgracht serves all-you-can-eat ribs in historic and convivial surroundings. Not far away in Vrijdagmarkt the atmospheric and cosy Herberg de Dulle Griet serves the hundreds of different beers that you would expect from any self-respecting Belgian pub. If you want a glass of Kwak in one of the special extra-long glasses, be prepared to leave your shoes as a deposit, which will be hoisted to the ceiling in a cage (and left there should you fail to give the glass back).

Belgium 2014 111

Say goodbye to your shoes after one Kwak too many

The excellent Frituur Jozef operating out of a trailer across the square will supply you with chips and a choice of over 20 different flavours of mayonnaise to fuel your walk home.

How to visit

It’s not compulsory to cycle from Bruges to Ghent, even though I heartily recommend it! For a more direct route from the UK, Eurostar runs from London St Pancras International to Brussels Midi, and your ticket will cover you for a transfer from here to Gent Sint Pieters in the south of the city, a short bike or tram ride from the centre. If you want to take your bike on Eurostar, you can either collapse it all into a bike bag and take it on as luggage, or what we normally do is register them as luggage in advance for £30 each way so we can simply ride off at the other end.  You can also turn up and register your bike on the day but there’s no guarantee your bike will travel on the same train as you – more details about bikes on Eurostar here.

However you get here and whatever you choose to do, make sure you spend some time on two wheels – you will never find another city so beautifully set up for it.

Ghent is cycling heaven

Ghent is cycling heaven