
Today was the first of three days we sketched out using bicitalia.com to get us to a beach south of Genoa for a longer rest. It was going to be 105km (65 miles) of flat, and potentially boring, and definitely hot riding to traverse the flat section of Italy between Turin-ish where the Alps empty out and where the mountains pick up again before the coast.
The morning’s breakfast – our first in Italy – exceeded expectations with respect to ambiance and view, and the food was as exceptional, and non-German/Asian/American, as we were warned in the welcome e-mail:
Our breakfast consists of homemade cake or “brioches” (of which our daily selection depends from our suplier), homemade bread, cheese, eggs freshly cooked (upon request), homemade jam, butter, biscuits, cereal, muesli and Nutella. We don’t cook bacon, sausages, fish, potatoes, noodles etc etc. because they are not part of our traditional breakfast.
Welcome to Italian food rules.
Our plan was to stick as closely to the suggested bicitalia route as possible, to learn whether we liked their suggestions and could continue blindly using them for routing as we’d done in France (geovelo) and the UK (sustrans).
The first 30 km (19 miles) were a mix of excessive avoidance of state highways and one long-ish stretch of dedicated cycle path. I’m always curious what the sensitivities of these routing algorithms are, and what type of rider they are optimizing for. In our case we’d sometimes prefer the state highways in lieu of a 10-15% increase in total distance which favors back roads, but concede that not everyone is out here for five hours at a stretch and for some that may in fact be working as intended.

At some point someone had put a lot of effort into cycling infrastructure in the area, but it had gotten neglected, with overgrown brush and faded paint. Some intersections even had dedicated crossing lights for bikes, but after a few too many zig-zags through busy neighborhoods and watching one driver blow through a green cycle light I was pretty ready to abandon the proposed route in favor of the direct one.
Had good results from our first trial of the Italian lunch plan – a quick 5€ each pasta stop in lieu of the French baguette and cheese and veg picnic – and we were off on an updated, more direct route that’d save us 15 km (9 miles).

Made good time over the next 40 km and rewarded ourselves with a gelato, the aftertaste of which was nearly enough to get me through the bonus 1 km (0.6 miles) of climbing to get to our agroturismo. Nearly.
Arrived to tales of how yesterday’s storm was actually hail up here, and we could see extensive damage to the grounds and canapes over the terrace. Luckily the owner’s farm is further down the valley, and production of their eggs, fruits, vegetables, and wheat was unaffected. Someone explained once that agroturismos in Italy are largely a tax-evasion scheme, with frequent violations of the requirement that owners make a larger portion of their income off agriculture than off guests, but this one seems to have an earnest focus on the farming.
Enjoying a glass of the owner’s uncle’s white wine next to the fig and pomegranate trees while we do some more critical reviews of bicitalia’s plans for us for the next few days, and getting hungry for dinner.
Total distance/elevation to date: 3207km/23’879m
Rest days: 10
Route and Stats
Relive Video
















































