If you would like to see details about our journey, check out our itinerary and our bike route.
Around 6:00, the garbage and recycling and street-cleaning crews made their rounds. We ate breakfast and drank coffee and checked the weather. Partly cloudy, no rain in sight.
Ken was feeling much better and wanted to ride. (We did have the option of taking a train.) At 8:00, we packed up and cleaned the apartment.
At 9:00, we left the tourist tax on the table (this tax is supposed to be paid directly to the host in cash at each accommodation), tucked the keys under the umbrella stand outside the apartment door (every property has a different security system), leapfrogged our bikes and bags down the four flights of stairs, tapped the button to open the entrance door, moved our gear out into the archway, and pulled the door shut behind us.
The streets were crowded with locals walking their dogs and shopping, the markets just starting to open, delivery trucks parking and unloading, city workers taking down temporary infrastructure from the weekend celebration.
These are the routines on the days we travel. They are familiar and easy, and we miss them a little when we get home.
It took just a few minutes to coast down through the old upper city, and over half an hour to get through the new lower city and suburbs. Once we were out in the country, we had incredible views of the Prealps and Dolomiti in the distance. We skirted the southern edge of the hills up to Lecco, where we caught our first glimpse of Lake Como.
The wind was blowing hard in our faces, and the air was a little chilly, but the rain was holding off. Ken actually felt better as the day went on--a good sign, we thought. Trying to eat healthfully, we avoided restaurants and stopped at a grocery store and put together a picnic lunch with half a small roasted chicken, peach juice, and carrots. We stopped at a bench along the river on the edge of Lecco to eat it.
All was going smoothly...until it wasn't.
The first hiccup was as we left Lecco and had to make a longish detour around a flooded section of the bike path. Oh, yeah: Lake Como was overflowing with torrential rains. The city of Como had evacuated some neighborhoods yesterday, and all along the lake, we saw boats overturned, trees swimming, and parks underwater.
We found our way back onto the bike path and continued on for a while. The sun came out and chased some of the clouds away. We were feeling strong and happy, with just an hour or so of riding left.
Then the trail ended. It just stopped at a permanent barrier.
We studied our maps, the roads around us. Our RWGPS route clearly showed a bike path continuing along the lake, but our eyes clearly said it was not there. This kind of thing sometimes happens. Technology is far from perfect.
The only option was to go up onto a strada provinciale (SP; provincial highway) that we could see was roaring with traffic in both directions. From what we could tell, the SP joined up with a strada statale (SS; state highway) for a mile or so, which was even worse. Bikes can legally ride on SPs and SSs, but those roads are often dangerous. These definitely looked unsafe, but we could not see another option. It looked like we should be able to get off in a few miles, then onto a smaller highway and possibly a bike path. RWGPS, OSM Cycle, and Google Maps all showed the SP as a bike road. And everything we had read said this side of the lake was bikeable.
We headed up the on ramp for the SP and rode for a mile or so hugging the white line as close as we could. There was no shoulder. We were not comfortable.
The SP joined the SS, and the traffic got scarier.
We came to a junction where one road branched through a tunnel to the right and the other branched through a tunnel to the left.
We went left.
Wrong choice. We were on the SS.
Two very long miles later, we emerged from the tunnel completely terrified. We had managed to survive because there was a bit of a shoulder, but the traffic tore past us, with drivers blowing their horns and flashing their lights. As we had neared the end, two police cars sped by. I expected to see them parked somewhere ahead, waiting to give us a stern scolding, but there was no place for them to park and we never saw them again.
We still had over a mile to go before we could exit the highway, and barely a shoulder to ride on, but there was no other way out of this mess. So we continued, Ken ahead, me close behind.
A minute later, a vehicle pulled up next to me with blue lights flashing, and a young man leaned out the passenger window and said, "Hi." I stopped, at first thinking it was police. I quickly glanced over my shoulder and saw that he was in a bright green van with the name Anas on the door. Not police. The young man gestured ahead and said, "Keep going." So I did, still thinking he might be some kind of government official who would fine us or something. (Later, I Googled Anas and found out it is the company that manages and maintains the SS.)
That van stayed right behind me, with the lights flashing, all the way to the exit. I was so grateful for the safety of the buffer zone it provided. I pedaled like crazy uphill, panting, hoping no one would run into the vehicle because it was going so slow, trying to catch up with Ken so he could benefit from the help.
When I finally caught Ken at the gas station on the exit, the van pulled up and stopped next to us. The young man got out and asked how we were doing.
"Alive, thanks to you. We made such a mistake and got on the wrong road."
He said, "That's okay. It happens. Don't worry. Where are you going?"
We told him. He said the bike path continued below the highway at this point. His partner, the driver of the van, showed us the stairs that led to a tunnel passing under the highway, and they helped us carry our bikes down.
We thanked them again, sincerely.
All those people who barreled past us in the tunnel, leaning on their horns, were absolutely justified. We had made a huge and very dangerous mistake. But these two men had taken a few minutes out of their day to help us, and turned a horrible situation into a better one.
Ken and I made a firm agreement to never, ever get on a highway that busy again. Ever.
Still shaking a little, we finished up our ride on bike paths, village roads, and a smaller, though still busy, highway. We struggled a little looking for our apartment in a tiny village called Pino high up above the lake a couple of miles south of Varenna. Our host had sent photos and detailed instructions, and when we finally found it, we had no trouble parking our bikes in the garage and letting ourselves into our cozy studio apartment.
After we showered, it was about 17:15. The one grocery store in Varenna closed at 18:00 and restaurants didn't open until 19:00 or 19:30. We had been lucky to avoid the rain so far, but the clouds were building and we did not want to get caught in a downpour in the dark.
So we got back on the bikes, made it to the grocery store--just a tiny market--in time, crowded inside with everyone else trying to grab food before they closed, and got enough for dinner and breakfast.
Back up the hill, bikes back in the garage, and ourselves back in the apartment before it rained.
A long day. Lessons learned.
We thought our big adventures were over and this last week in Italy would be easy and maybe a little boring.
You never know.
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| Part of the bike route was on a quiet gravel path along a river. This was nice. |
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| Part of the bike route was on a dedicated path along the lake. This was nice, too. |
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| As we cycled from the apartment to Varenna for groceries, the clouds were moving in and the sun was sinking behind the hills across the lake. |
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| Varenna is a small town tucked into a bay in the northern finger of Lake Como. When you are not on the state highway, it looks calm and peaceful. |