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March 22, 2011

Talking Pro Series Bike Tours with Andy, Justin and Tom

As many of our readers know, we have just launched a new concept within our European bicycle tours, which we call our Pro Series Bicycle Tours.  These challenging tours or should we say “extremely challenging” tours provide a little less focus on the wines of a region, and a lot more focus on the biking, while maintaining the 5 star accommodation and fine dining standards, for which DuVine is known.

In this video founder Andy Levine and DuVine guides Justin Wuycheck and Tom Coppock sit down for a little coffee talk to fill you in on these legendary climbs in France, Spain, Italy.

As they tell it these bike tours are designed for those who want to ride what the pros ride, the legendary mountain passes from major races (Tour de France, Criterion de Dauphine etc.) and key areas where the pros train, like Costa Brava.  The idea started with rides the guides wanted to do…. big huge rides – still DuVine, great food and great stays but with that extra punch and feeling of accomplishment, hanging out where other riders are, where spandex is cool!

So, check out this video and these great new tours:

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March 17, 2011

Introducing the DuVine Adventures Pro Series Bike Tours!

How I got to Boston so I could get up the Alps.

pro series bike tours

Which way to Mt. Ventoux?

By bike, mostly.   Started in Pittsburgh on Monday, got to New York on Friday. (Rode the train to Boston on Sunday)  Averaged 82 miles a day over the Appalachians and the Poconos, hiked 3-5 miles on snow-covered roads over a mountain ridge.  Biked when it was 15 degrees, biked when it rained, got some frostbite, got some windburn.  Was rewarded with 65 degrees in NY on Friday, came over the George Washington Bridge in my spandex and a DuVine jersey.

Why would anyone do long-distance rides in the winter?  To prepare for the summer!  Here at DuVine we’ve been thinking about your bicycle tour and vacation probably longer than you have.  The hotels are set, reservations made, routes have been scrutinized, adjusted and readjusted.

pro series bike tours

Pro series bike tours

This year’s training is even more intense as we’re launching a new set of tours called the DuVine Pro Series Bike Tours.  A little less focus on the wines, a lot more focus on the biking.  DuVine routes are going up the Alp d’Huez and the Tourmalet, the Madeleine and the Port de Balès; descending into the cycling hub of Girona, Spain and attacking Mt. Mortirolo in Italy.  We want to cheer you on as you set a personal record, refill your bottles en route, and make sure that the rides you take with us are some of the best you ever will have.

And while we might not stop for a wine tasting on the way or indulge in a multi-course picnic while climbing up the Col d’ Aubisque, we will make sure dinners are to DuVine standards, with incredible wines to match.  When I finished my ride in New York, I celebrated with a beautiful meal at Blue Hill, a procession of wines supplied by the incredibly capable and diligent Director of Wines, Claire Paparazzo.  The celebration continued with a beautiful 2001 Barbaresco at Emporio in Little Italy.  Likewise, on your bicycle tour the table will become a place to recount the glories of the day, and share the dreams of the days to come.

And after the meals, a great room, a great bed.  The hotels will gaze out upon the routes we climbed and give us the chance to rest luxuriously before we climb again.
It’s done.  Call us.

pro series bike tours

Climbing in the Pyrenees

The Alps Pro, the Pyrenees, the Dolomites, the Costa Brava.  We’ve got hundreds of miles in our legs already this year, thousands to come.  We’re ready for you.

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December 26, 2010

Giro d’Italia 2011: you won’t want to miss this!

Cycling fans who haven’t been asleep (or French) for the past few years know that the Giro d’Italia has consistently provided the most drama of any Grand Tour over this period.  Since Angelo Zomegnan became the director of the Giro in 2006, the race that has traditionally lived in the shadow of the more famous Tour de France, has really stepped into the cycling spotlight.  Zomegnan has transformed the Giro into the sport’s most dramatic stage by creating brutal routes, giving fans what they want: the sadistic pleasure of watching racers suffer.  Of course, this bravado on the part of the Giro Director has led to some tensions with the riders who, led by Lance Armstrong, famously refused to push themselves through a treacherous circuit of Milan in 2009.

Along the 2010 course...

Love him or hate him, you can’t argue with the results.  The difficult nature of Zomegnan’s routes make it impossible for the big teams to set the pace, catch the breakaways and control the race as often happens in the Tour de France.  Instead, each stage is an exciting free-for-all, as favorites get dropped and complete unknowns emerge with the maglia rosa (pink leader’s jersey). In 2010, 20 different riders won individual stages in the 21 stage race and 8 wore the pink jersey.  In a breakaway on the 11th stage, 50 riders got away from the peloton gaining a 13 minute advantage and throwing the general classification into total confusion.  For a few days the cycling world was turned upside-down as virtual unknowns, David Arroyo and Richie Porte, held on to the pink jersey with the big names struggling to catch up.  In the end, Ivan Basso managed to storm back to the top place he held on the podium in 2006, but only after a hard-fought series of stages over some of Italy’s toughest mountain climbs.

2010 Giro d'Italia

Here at DuVine we had put this stage on our calendar almost a year before when the rumor emerged that this stretch of dirt road would be included in the 2010 Giro.  We had always wanted to create a tour revolving around the Giro and given the fact that our popular Tuscany bicycle tour already visited Montalcino, all the pieces were now in place.  You couldn’t have asked for a better inaugural Giro d’Italia bicycle tour.  After a few days of riding the race route from Volterra, our group arrived in Montalcino early on race day to secure prime spots at the finish line.  It had been raining on the racers non-stop since their departure from Carrara turning the final stretch of dirt road into a ribbon of mud.  From our vantage point in front of the maxi-screens, we watched with growing anticipation as Cadel Evans and Alexander Vinokourov battled for the lead.  Multiple crashes and the horrid conditions had already eliminated any semblance of an organized peloton and riders struggled up the 15% grades of the muddy approach to Montalcino in groups of ones and twos.  Then a buzz of excitement swept down the town’s narrow cobblestone main street as Vinokourov and Evans emerged from the mist, covered in mud.  As they bumped past I swear I could see mud even on Vino’s tongue as he gasped for the strength to overcome Evans.  But, his gasps were in vain as Evans pulled away on the final climb to the finish for a two-second victory.  Then, like watching a defeated army returning home, we stood in awe as small groups of riders continued to straggle in, their colorful jerseys and space-age bikes dulled by the ever-present Tuscan mud.  Angelo Zomegnan certainly hadn’t let us down.

Cadel just before his stage win...

After driving back to the luxurious warmth of our Tuscan villa we rushed to regroup for dinner, everyone wanting to talk about the cycling spectacle we had just witnessed.  We all agreed that it was the best sporting event we had ever seen, “better than Game Seven and the Superbowl combined” someone said. Italian TV commentators couldn’t come up with enough superlatives.  As the dust (or mud in this case) settled, the cycling world quickly agreed that Stage 7 of 2010’s Giro would go down in history and was easily one of the most exciting days of riding in the last 15 years.  I feel extremely fortunate to have witnessed it. Thanks Angelo.

This year, Mr. Zomegnan is angling for another historic mudfest. Like 2010’s Stage 7, this year’s 5th stage starts on the Tuscan coast, crossing nearly 200 km of classic countryside before turning to dirt roads as it approaches the finish in the towering hilltown of Orvieto.  Again, DuVine Adventures’ Giro d’Italia bicycle trip will feature scenic cycling in the Tuscan hills, riding much of this route on the days before the epic 5th stage.

Scenic cycling in the Tuscan hills

Then, as the riders leave from Piombino, we will cycle the final stretch of dirt road followed by the final climbs into Orvieto.  This year we have further upgraded the finish-line experience, procuring VIP passes for our guests to ensure the best views along with access to the riders after the race.  In the evening we will meet the Liquigas team in town for autographs and pictures and the next day we will again be able to enjoy VIP access to the pre-race excitement as the Giro departs from Orvieto.  As part of a special offer, we are also able to secure up to 5 spots in the Mavic official support cars where guests will be able to follow this stage up close and see the Giro as only insiders do.  For more information, please visit:   http://duvine.com/giro-bike-tour.html or contact Tom Coppock at tom@duvine.com or 888-396-5383

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November 23, 2010

A San Francisco Treat: French Affairs 2010

Before the Oscars, Golden Globes, Grammys or even the CMAs there is….
ATOUT FRANCE’s French Affairs awards ceremony!

Celebrating at the French Awards 2010

 

You are probably saying to yourself – Quoi? – and I am happy to explain. ATOUT FRANCE, formally known as Maison de la France, is France’s national tourism association. Every October for the past seven years, they hold an event that culminates with an awards ceremony to honor travel operators for their success in the country. So while the event is certainly not high profile, it is a very exciting date on DuVine Adventure’s calendar.

The 2010 French Affairs was held in San Francisco’s Hotel Nikko in Union Square.  At the awards ceremony  there were 8 unique recognitions up for grabs and of the 8, DuVine was nominated for 3! Not bad if I do say so myself. Here is the list of our nominations:

• Best website
• Best special interest product
• Most creative use of social media

We were particularly delighted to be nominated in these categories because they honored not only our mission to develop unique and personalized travel but also to create a community where our guests can interact and share knowledge and experiences.

As DuVine’s representative at the event, Michelle Duffy, I eagerly awaited the awards ceremony to see if we would once again be taking home one of the coveted quasi-parallelogram shaped, glass awards. My fellow table mates, and eventual new friends, were quick to become DuVine enthusiasts as each nomination was announced. They were also equally supportive as each category passed without seeing me take a trip to the podium. Despite their jokes of sabotage and robbed glory, I assured them that the nomination was enough of an honor and it was great to see some of DuVine’s friends, like Discover France, be recognized for their accomplishments. Plus, there is always next year…

The Winner's Circle...

 

While the awards ceremony is certainly a highlight of ATOUT FRANCE’s French Affairs, there is much more to the event. After all, you cannot have vendors and operators flying across oceans and continents just for a gala dinner – we have work to do! The 2 day event is a unique chance for operators and vendors to connect face to face and includes presentations, panels, lectures, activities, a trade shows and plenty of exquisite French cuisine.

Before the awards ceremony all 200+ attendees attended an opening session. This session included a review of 2010 and a discussion of 2011 developments. In general the tone was quite positive, demonstrating that economic recovery has truly been felt in France’s tourism industry, which is always a good sign for DuVine! Following this session, the there were various panel discussions about everything from e-marketing to familiarization trips (shortened to fam trips for us industry people). I was asked to participate on the publications panel since DuVine includes a copy of ATOUT FRANCE’s FranceGuide Magazine in every gift packet sent to our guests going to France (anyone remember getting their copy?). Myself and my fellow panelists explained how this publication is a great tool to excite travelers for their upcoming journey as well as open their eyes to some more unique regions and experiences available  in this diverse country.

Participating in the panel discussion...

 

After a morning alarm sounded by the Powell-Mason cable car outside my window, I began day 2 with a work session about the New French Hotel Classification system. This new system will build on the 1-4 star system by adding a 5 star category and Palace designation. A Palace will be a property that meets all 5 start criteria but is also located at a historically or aesthetically significant property. The first French hotel received its new rating in Feb 2010, 120 hotels have been rated so far and the old classification of hotels (in place since 1986) will be completely fazed-out in July of 2012.  The most highly anticipated benefit of this new system is that hotels will have to raise their standards to keep their stars, which will improve the overall experience for guests. For example, a hotel must have WiFi to receive a 3 star rating and all 4 star properties must have air-conditioning, which will be two greatly appreciated improvements as anyone who has traveled into the French countryside can tell you.

A delicious lunch presented by Antibes Juan-les-Pins was our chance to relax after the morning work sessions and before the big afternoon trade show. The show included some great opportunity to catch up with current vendors, explore new options and discover new developments throughout the country. In other words, a great day to get the creative business and travel juices flowing, after all we are known for having the best bicycle tours in France and we can’t be resting on our laurels.

As I sat in San Francisco Airport to catch my red-eye flight back to Boston, I felt invigorated by the trip. Despite the unseasonably wet weather, as many local San Franciscans apologized for, I enjoyed not only an engaging conference but also my very first trip out west. Yes, while I have certainly have traveled a fair amount, including 3 trips to France this year, I had never been west of the Mississippi! It really is quite funny that we find ourselves amazed by the diverse regions of countries like France, Italy and Spain, but do not even stop to realize all that our own country has to offer. I have no doubt I’ll find myself out west again soon, perhaps a Napa & Sonoma bike tour next?

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June 30, 2010

A Brief History of Bicycle Racing in Europe

At DuVine Adventures we spend much of our Summers with our guests on bike tours in Europe, several of those bike tours correspond with famous European bicycle races such as, the Tour de France and Giro d’Italia – where we run our specialty tours; The Pyrenees Bike Tour – Tour de France and The Giro d’Italia Bike Tour -  So, since the Tour de France will be kicking off this weekend we thought we would share a brief history of bike racing in Europe.

da Vinci bicycle

Leonardo da Vinci first recorded the idea of the ‘bicycle’ with vivid and precise sketches in his Atlantic Code. These sketches contemplated features which are representative of the modern bike such as wheels of the same diameter and pedals.

The bicycle went through several metamorphoses, from the wooden and rigid ‘celerifere’ (1790) to the ‘velocifero’, until finally in 1888, Dunlop invented the pneumatic tires. This major breakthrough also marked the beginning of modern competitive racing. Cycling became very popular in the western European countries of France, Spain, Belgium, and Italy. Some of the earliest bicycle races remain among the sport’s biggest events.

In the ensuing years, road races were held everywhere in Europe: on November 7, 1869 the first long-distance road race between two cities took place. It stretched from L’Arc de Triomphe in Paris to the Cathedral in Rouen and was attended by 304 racers. The first Paris-Rouen race was won by British bicycle racer James Moore, soon to become one of the first cycling stars.

James Moore

Following the Paris-Rouen race, the pace of change in cycling intensified. The same year, the London – Brighton race was born. In 1870, the first Italian road race was held between Florence and Pistoia: 33 km covered in about 2 hours. However, the first ‘classic’ Italian race was the Turin-Milan in 1876: the race was won by Maghetti, who covered 150 km between the two cities. In 1890, another exhausting race was created: the Paris-Brest-Paris: 1260 km non-stop loop, day and night. Finally in 1896, the first real ‘classic’ French race was born: the Paris-Roubaix. While originally it started in Paris and ended in Roubaix, since 1968 the starting city has been Compiègne about 60 km north-east from Paris. Famous for rough terrain and cobblestones, it is one of the “monuments” of the European calendar.

The first international body for racing was the International Cycling Association (ICA), established by Henry Sturmey (the founder of Sturmey-Archer). It opened in 1893 and held its first world championship in Chicago the same year. The ICA was replaced by the Union Cycliste International (UCI) which was set up on 14 April 1900 during the Olympic Games in Paris. The UCI was founded by the national cycling organizations of Belgium, the United States, France, Italy, and Switzerland. It replaced the ICA by setting up in opposition during a row over whether Great Britain should have been allowed just one team at world championships or separate teams representing Scotland, Wales and Ireland. Britain found itself outflanked and it was not able to join the UCI – under the conditions the UCI had imposed – until 1903, just in time to participate in what would become the most prestigious race of the ‘Grand Tours’: Le Tour de France.

vintage Tour de France

Denoted as ‘the most physiologically demanding of athletic events’, the roots of the Tour de France can be traced to the controversial Affair Dreyfus, which divided public opinion in France at the beginning of the 19th century over the innocence of Alfred Dreyfus, a soldier convicted – though later exonerated – of selling military secrets to the Germans. The editor of The Velo, the first and the largest daily sports newspaper in France, believed in Dreyfus’s innocence, while many anti-Dreyfusards opened a rival daily sports paper, L’Auto. Stagnant sales led the editors of L’Auto to come up with an idea of a multi-day bicycle race to surpass its rival. L’Auto announced the race on January 19, 1903, starting in Paris and stopping in Lyon, Marseille, Bordeaux and Nantes before returning to Paris. The first Tour De France was won by Maurice Garin, an Italian chimney sweep, and naturalized French citizen.

Six years after the first Tour the France, thanks to the editor of the main Italian sports newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport, the second of the Grand Tours, the “Giro D’Italia,” was started. The “Giro” was preceded by the Milan – San Remo, “the Spring Classic” or ‘the sprinter classic’. This annual cycling race between Milan and San Remo was the longest professional one-day race at 298 km. The first was in 1907, when Lucien Petit-Breton won.

2010 Giro d'Italia

Finally, in 1921, the first International World Cycling Championship was organized in Copenhagen, but only in 1927 were professional racers allowed to enter the competition. The first professional World Cycling Championship took place at the Nurburgring, Germany and was won by Alfredo Binda, followed by Girardengo, Piemontesi and Belloni, all racers from Italy.

Inspired by the success of the Tours in France and Italy, and the boost they brought to the circulations of their sponsoring newspapers, the editors of the daily Spanish Informaciones adopted the concept to Spain. La Vuela (the tour of Spain) was first held in 1935 and annually since 1955.

Everything that follows this glorious prelude is written in the history of Racing.

Lance at the 2009 TDF

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March 23, 2010

The Big Race – Giro d’Italia – Guide Post

Giro d'Italia bike tourGuide Post – by Tom Coppock

It was early October when I got an email from Justin, my fellow DuVine guide and cycling fanatic, about one of the stages of the 2010 Giro d’Italia following the gravel roads of Siena.  The big cycling races love to keep their planned routes secret until the official unveiling ceremony (in the Giro’s case, this ceremony generally requires hundreds of supermodels).  The result of all this supposed secrecy is a pretty reliable series of leaks about the route that seem manufactured to generate fan interest.  Whether it’s which famous climbs will be featured in the Alps or a tour starting in a different country (Britain, the Netherlands, etc) fans and racers are rarely in the dark going into these unveiling ceremonies.   In fact, this year, in typical Italian style, the sports newspaper Tuttosport printed basically the entire itinerary for the 2010 Giro weeks before the race organizer, RCS sport, with its rival paper Gazetto dello Sport planned to announce it publicly.

For DuVine, this early announcement about the Giro near Siena was great news.  For years, people had been contacting us asking about a Giro trip, but we had never quite gotten around to putting one together.  Now, the Giro was planning to come right through our backyard in the hills around Siena where we run our popular Tuscany tour and where the guides live during the season.

Justin guides our trips in France, but his involvement in this whole story began a few years ago when he came down to visit me in Tuscany during Giro season.  As an avid cyclist he of course wanted to get out on these famous white (gravel) roads that make up the course of the region’s classic cycling route known as L’Eroica (the Heroic).  So we set out on our road bikes to the closest section of the route.  We were having a great time bumping along the acceptably smoothed gravel through the olive groves and wheat fields sprinkled with poppies until I decided to take us on a short cut I’d seen on the map.  Needless to say we found ourselves a half hour later at the end a muddy track consisting of two ruts, the rain pouring down, and a condemned farmhouse offering the only shelter.  Despite returning home soaked with our normally pampered bikes coated with mud, we were both elated from the experience, as basically, there isn’t any place as beautiful to cycle through as Tuscany in the spring.

So, thanks to Justin’s addiction to cycling news, he let me know immediately about the rumors surrounding the Giro’s plan to route one stage through this area.  Once this was confirmed by the supermodels at the official presentation, I began thinking about how to structure a tour around this event.  Because the riders ride so far every day, the Giro only has two stages in the Tuscany-Umbria area before heading farther south.  Instead of dragging guests all over Italy to try to watch each stage, we decided to focus on watching only these two stages (7 and 8) while spending the rest of the tour cycling through this gorgeous area.

The highly anticipated seventh stage of the Giro on the gravel roads of the Eroica corresponds with the fourth day of our trip.  We’ll have previewed a lot of the approach on the first days around Volterra and Siena and that morning we’ll ride to Montalcino to see this rocky climb for ourselves and await what should be one of the more memorable finishes of any tour.  Imagine Paris-Roubaix on steroids (not hard to do, I know), as racers will face a 1000 ft. plus climb on steep gravel after 200 km of hilly riding.  Then, the next day, we’ll head south and east, riding through Umbria on our way to Monte Terminillo, the first mountain finish of a Giro that is being hailed as a climber’s tour.  Whoever finishes strong here has a strong chance of finishing on the podium in Verona.  Inspired by seeing the pros up close, we’ll spend the last days of our trip, doing some of my favorite rides in Umbria, including an epic 3-pass loop from Cortona.

Daily mileages range from 50-70 miles, with full van support and the full range of DuVine perks, including beautiful rooms at luxury hotels, gourmet feasts, top-of-the-line Wilier racing bikes and two bilingual guides including myself and Giovanni, a semi-pro racer himself.  The DuVine Adventures Giro d’Italia bike trip will only happen this one time, May 12-19, so be sure to sign up soon.

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