It has been a while since we last posted and a lot has happened. Just before the world became all topsy turvy we packed up our lives in Australia and moved to a small village in the Netherlands. It has been a strange time to start a new life in a new country but we have tried to make the best of it. Last weekend, for example, we cycled to Amsterdam to visit our friends Henny and Cor, who live on a houseboat.
Category Archives: General
Video: A Summer Cycling in Europe with our Children
Incredibly it has almost been a year since we set out on our bicycle tour around Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany. Our kids love reminiscing with this video highlights reel:
Our three most frequently asked questions:
1. Your children aren’t wearing any shoes… (Most common in Germany and phrased more as an inquisitive statement).
Yes our children aren’t wearing shoes and that is because they don’t want to and we don’t feel it is an important battle ground to die on. As one of our Spanish friends in Berlin phrased it they are, “salvajes de la carretera” (wild things from the highway). After 2 and a half months of cycling and camping we are all a little rough around the edges and not wearing shoes is just a part of that. I think there are also some sort of cultural differences at play as well which we haven’t quite got to the bottom of.
2. How is it that your daughter is able to miss so much school?
This is a puzzling one for Europeans as they face strict rules in relation to school attendance and large fines if they don’t comply. This is true in Australia also but for some reason going overseas is considered a valid enough excuse to take one’s child out of school for large chunks of time.
We feel that the learnings that both our children have had during our cycle journey have been far more valuable than what can be achieved in a classroom.

Pouring over the map in the campground. They both have a good sense of where we are and where we have been.
3. Did you bring your bicycles with you from Australia or did you hire them here?
While this is a rather boring and inane question it tends to be one of the first things we are asked when people find out we are from Australia.
The answer is yes. We box up the bikes and check them in as luggage on the aeroplane. Most airlines accomodate bicycles as part of ones baggage allowance. I should probably dedicate an entire post to this one day as we have been transporting bikes on planes since 2004 and have a large amount of accumulated knowledge.
Our Journey so far.
Well we aren’t particularly diligent at blogging this trip. We have only posted once so far and we have had 900km worth of experiences to tell! It turns out that cycle touring with two children leaves little time for much else. It is also a telling fact that while we have seen scores of people cycle touring, we haven’t met any other family with small children who are on a long tour…
Happily, despite being all consuming we have been having an enriching time. As each kilometres clicks by we seem to draw closer as a family.
Our cycling has taken us down the length of the Netherlands, through the Ardennes region of Belgium, Luxembourg and we are currently cycling along the Moselle river in Germany. From here we intersect with the Rhine and follow it back into the Netherlands.
Some Highlights
- Hugging calves and hippopotami
Up close and personal with my unfounded fears
We suffer more from our imagination than from reality – Seneca
As everyone around me at home in Newcastle could attest, I suffered greatly from this trip.
There were so many unknowns.
Our young kids are growing and developing at such a rapid rate that their needs and desires appear vastly different from one trip to the next. Leaving me with a different set of challenges to problem shoot.
It was only a few weeks before leaving that I managed to quell my fears and embrace the excitement of an awesome opportunity! None of the ‘problems’ had been solved, none of my fears had been eliminated, but I had pre pared as best I could.
The hardest thing to do was to choose a different mindset. I had to believe that it would all work out (one way or another), because otherwise my brain would melt from anxiety. So I did it. I chose wanderlust, enthusiasm, and I harnessed my adventurous spirit.
And here we are doing it! We have cycled 141km! Not much, but for us it’s proof that we can do this thing!
From Amsterdam to Rotterdam we are finding our systems and rhythm. Things will get easier and easier as our strength increases and we truely get into the groove.
Of course (predictably) none of my fears were worth worrying about…
- How would Basti (super active 3 year old) go sitting in the bike trailer?…. totally fine
- How would Amaya go on her attached bike?…. also totally fine! Sometimes she pops into the trailer.
- How would she go missing school?… mixed bag, but now that school is back she’s a bit smug about not being stuck in a classroom!
- How would I go towing the trailer?… so far so good… although currently a bit slow due to a wicked cold!
- Etc 😜
Maybe I’ve just been incredibly lucky, but a lesson I have learned time and time again in my life is that when you try something tricky/challenging/seemingly impossible often people appear who help you. This time our friends who live in Amsterdam, Henny and Cor helped us enormously. 😌 We are so completely grateful!

Henny and Cor rode with us from the airport to their house boat and then helped us find our way out of Amsterdam

They also generously let us stay on their house boat while they stayed on a neighbours boat. The fun bit was climbing over 5 other boats to get to theirs.

So, this far it’s working out. Amazing! And despite being sick, I’m relaxed and enjoying it.
Now I need to take what I’ve written to heart so the next time I don’t suffer greatly all over again! Maybe Seneca can help me again… “He who is brave is free.”
Our Summer Cycling in Europe
So here we are again leaving our comfortable, predictable middle class lifestyle and opting for a much more challenging one with many unknowns.
The plan is to fly to Amsterdam and spend 3 months cycling around Northern Europe. We have worked out a vague route but it is more of a sketch than anything.
Sebastian (3) will assume Amaya’s old position and ride in the trailer, while Amaya (6) will ride her own bike with the possibility of attaching it to Mic’s bike when she is tired.
This is the first bicycle tour we have done with two kids so we have absolutely no idea how it will go. We are just looking forward to spending time with our children, sharing new and rich experiences, meeting interesting people and riding our bicycles.
Another baby on a bike…
In the last month or so of riding in Germany Shoshanna was complaining about being unusually tired. I just put it down to the fact that we were cycling 60km a day and parenting a temperamental toddler. But no! She was pregnant!
Sebastian Lior was born on the 1st of May. All are healthy and well and feeling very blessed.
We haven’t managed to put him on a bike yet but we are working on it. Any suggestions are welcome!

We were attempting the tricky task of taking a passport photo (we are off to San Fran in June) and Amaya wanted to help…
Baby on a Bike Beginnings:
She’s not strictly a baby anymore, nor is she on a bike… but the alliteration had a nice ring to it. So, regardless of technicalities our Baby on a Bike blog is about bike touring with our toddler sized midget who travels in her ‘magic buggy.’
We have big dreams and high hopes.
Next year our plan is a 4-6 month tour from Madrid to Berlin, probably covering between 4000-6000km. Currently our plan is almost as vague as that. Really we need to pull out a map of Europe and etch out a route.
Having completed a number of serious tours prior to having Amaya, we are intimately aware of the many challenges of completing a tour of this magnitude. However we have no concept of how it is going to pan out with a kid!!! For this reason we have decided to record our journey on this blog. Enjoy!