Touring Tasmania, Touring Setup James Rickard Touring Tasmania, Touring Setup James Rickard

A Long List of Requirements Just to Get About

Contemplating our bike setup for our family bike ride has been time consuming and has taken us down many roads. It's not as easy as just buying bikes and putting panniers on them, we are a large family and we have specific requirements. Deciding __what__ and __how__ we should ride has been difficult, at times it has almost pushed us to drive a car instead of riding.

Dear Adventurous Reader,

Contemplating our bike setup for our family bike ride has been time consuming and has taken us down many roads. It's not as easy as just buying bikes and putting panniers on them, we are a large family - two adults and six children with three children below 7 years of age. Riding around with all of us, aiming to cycle anywhere from 20km to 40kms in a day, would be expecting too much of our little ones.

We are hoping this to be a fun trip, so keeping the weight down and enjoying our days riding is important. We are not planning on loading up the older boys with too much (they will carry what is needed of them, but not be pack-mules just because they are there), so that excludes attaching trailers to distribute our weight.

So What are we Looking For?

What are our goals for creating a happy caravan of riders?

One: A baby seat is required

In our short rides that we have done our Baby Girl tolerates being a trailer for a short amount of time. It starts exciting and falls into a terrible idea about 40 minutes into the ride; Toys, books and shoes are thrown from the trailer with abandon, dropping onto the road or path as we all ride onwards.

To create happy travels for our youngest she needs to be more involved into the ride and that means a bike seat.

Two: The Boys Need to Ride

Boy Four and Five are capable riders at their young age of 6 and 5. They are both determined, and headstrong, and for the life of them they will not be seen lazing about in a bike trailer when they could be riding with everybody else.

A few weeks ago we rode a bike 16kms down to Queenscliff. Boy Four rode down on his own bike, while Boy Five followed on a Trail-Gator. On the way back, our 5 year old rode all the way back with his older brothers and I didn’t see him until we got home about 20 minutes after them - Boy Four rode on the trail-gator. It was an impressive performance from both of them.

Getting them to go for a ride when they are sitting in a bike trailer is beneath them. It is a discussing thought that they will not entertain, choosing to stay home in protest.

While they have to ride, they cannot do 20kms a day, so to create happy travels for our younger boys they need to ride and not be stuck in a trailer.

Three: The Older Boys Shouldn’t be Overloaded

Nothing would be worse than to expect our older boys to carry a large portion of our weight. Carrying their own weight is fine, helping with food is fine, but carrying one of the boys because we cannot fit it onto our bikes is not acceptable.

To create happy travels our older boys should feel like they are involved in the hard work but not be used like pack-mules.

Four: We Need to Carry Our Stuff

We are not close to fine-grain details on everything we need to take just yet. We do know there will be a lot to carry. But we need to be able to carry it all, ideally without backpacks.

Talking at Bike Shops

Our setup discussions raise many eyebrows in bike shops. Thin, wiry bike clerks who ride fast in group rides and challenge Strava KOM’s have not, in my experience, tried to setup a caravan of bikes for a family with children ages 2 - 11. Two children, maybe, but not three under 7.

I had been in and out of many cycling stores to find a way to get us all around, and most of them ended with the clerks smiling, or chuckling, suggesting some thoughts that seemed like the wrong fit for us, and then wishing me good luck on my quest.

Tandems. Bike trailers. But not tethering a trailer to a trailer bike, that cannot be done (according to the clerks I spoke to). Side cars. Panniers and a baby seat? “Sure” Panniers, a baby seat and a trailer bike? “No way.”

They have helped me to think out of the box a little, but nothing “sung”. There were no ideas that grabbed me and screamed “That!”, they all seemed like boring solutions that didn’t think outside “the box”.

Looking for Help

We have done a lot of trawling the internet for ideas and solutions to our traveling setup. It is not a simple problem to solve, and finding the right search terms often leads to internet battles between bike trails and baby seats being more safe.

Here are some of the sites that we came across to give us more information and helped us dream a little bigger.

Other Families

Bicycle touring with young ones is not new. We are not too much into uncharted territory here, I wouldn’t expect. This all feels remote because there are not many places that can help me answer questions. But that is why the internet is an amazing place.

A few accidental searches lead us to The Family Ride who toured with children around the age of our younger kids. Reading blogs gave us ideas and made us feel more comfortable with doing something different. They made us feel comfortable with making choices to build something for our family, rather than buying pieces suggested by bike clerks.

What are we building, you may be asking… Well, there are many pieces to the puzzle, some a sorted out and others are being sorted out. Stay with us and find out more, in our next adventure.

Read More

Scenic Railway to Kuranda

Before the steam engine could make the journey, men went before to forge the path. Pick axes and dynamite used to blast and hack their way through the difficult terrain.

kuranda.jpg

Dear Adventurous Reader,

An old railway runs from Cairns up into the mountains beyond. A railway constructed by the labor of many men, facing hardship and death everyday. Today we took the easy path and paid money for the train ride to the small town of Kuranda.

We love trains and railways. All of us like old railways with a story to tell, especially one of hard work, of toil and men of the past shaping a peaceful path through a treacherous mountain. Before the steam engine could make the journey, men went before to forge the path. Pick axes and dynamite used to blast and hack their way through the difficult terrain.

Today engineering is a different feat, we have made it easier for ourselves. In the days of old paths were created on the sweat and shoulders of people who would dare to prove what seemed impassable was not.

There are 15 tunnels hewn from the mountain side, the longest 490 meters. There are many bridges spanning gaps small to large. One bridge is built on one of the two switch backs where you can see the engines pulling up front and the last carriage following behind.

The train slows down on one switchback as it passes a large waterfall. People move from one side of the train to the other, making sure to take a photo or to store an image in their mind. The rain from a few nights ago not going to waste with the magnificent scenery.

The Kuranda Scenic Railway has a video that displays photos at opportune story moments, telling us the tale of the railway's creation. It is neither loud or annoying, often times the children's excited voices drown out the words it speaks to us. It tells tales of wonder and explains magnificent views.

Tourist Town in the Mountains

We pull into Kuranda. The station is surrounded by wonderful green trees and large flowers. There are some steps leading toward the town which we follow.

Kuranda reminds us if Sorento, across the bay from where we live. The prices at the shops also remind is of Sorento. The town seems to run on the tourist dollars that arrive, there are many indigenous, new-age and specialty stores along the street, all catering to the whim of someone looking for a bargain or for a memory.

We walked into the rock candy store, just standing inside that place made your teeth start to decay. There were so many colours and flavours of rock candy to choose from, with a video to demonstrate how it was made. We put that on the list of places to visit on the journey back towards the train.

We ate a cheap lunch of Nutella on bread. We took a brief stroll though the rainforest before rushing back towards the train for the ride home. We spent more time sitting on the train than wandering the streets of Kuranda, although if we had more time we would have walked the rainforest instead of finding shops to take our money.

Down Again

Back down the mountain, making the slow trip with the train again. The same video played but reversed the explanation points. The boys hopped between seats trying to find the best view as the train slowed at important sections, once again. Adeline had the afternoon sleep she had been fighting since lunch.

Kuranda Scenic Railway was a slow ride through some beautiful scenery. We loved the idea of seeing that part of the world by train, in old style carriages, going slowly up the mountain to see the views of Cairns and the forests below.

Read More