On the road to Lastovo, overlooking Zaklopatica, which looks like a really lovely port town. It always amazes me that we bike that whole elevation from the sea.

We’re half way through our two-week bike trip and, as Mark already noted, the days have a distinct regularity. Get up, have breakfast, bike from sea level to the top of some hill, bike back to sea level. Usually a swim or two somewhere in there, often while the boat just anchors at sea, which can be fabulous.

One change that we’ve made is that Mark & I typically figure out the route on our Google Maps and head off on our own before the rest of the group. That gives us the chance to bike on our own – with Mark on his e-bike far in front – and avoid the regular stops to regroup and all that. Big improvement.

We started Day Five on the island of Lastovo, one of the smaller inhabited Adriatic islands in Croatia. It’s also further out in the Adriatic than most islands so during the years of the Cold War Yugoslavia used it pretty much exclusively as a key military base barred to foreign nationals; even Yugoslavs were discouraged from coming to the island. As a result the island suffered economic stagnation and depopulation. It’s been reopened now for some 30 years, but it still has the feel of a place that time has kind of passed by. Which actually makes for some pretty good biking as the 18 miles we did across the island saw little traffic but some great vistas.

Our boat, the Romantica, tied up to a little pier in Lastovo

After the ride, over lunch, we sailed to the island of Korčula, one of Croatia’s premier tourist islands. The next morning we set off on a serious ride, by far the most difficult so far: 38 miles from west to east including not one but two big climbs. Definitely some rewarding views but I was exhausted. The good news was that there was a nice beach waiting for us at the end of the ride that included a cafè with cold beer. It may well have been the first beer I’ve had in four or five years and oh heavens was it good.

In the town of Korčula we discovered this great wine bar up a little alley with a beautiful view of the sea and a great cooling breeze. The white wine is a Grk (that’s right, no vowel) an obscure grape grown only in a small area of this island. It was honestly one of the best glasses of wine I’ve ever had.

Finally, the next morning over breakfast we cruised to the town of Prapratno on the mainland and bike on to Slano, less than 20 miles northwest of Dubrovnik. After the previous day’s 38 miles, this 17-mile ride seemed like a breeze. On the way we passed the town of Ston, which claims the second-longest stone walls in the world after the Great Wall of China. That may be true but having been to the Great Wall, well, you just shouldn’t make that comparison. It’s worth noting that the stop in Ston to see the not-as-great wall (honestly impressive but not a Great Wall) was our third stop of the day after just four kilometers. From there Mark & I took off on our own again.

From here it’s down to Dubrovnik for a rest day before we head back up the coast for week two.

Our friends Ethyl, Molly, and Chrissy enjoying Korčula

There are a lot of views like this

And this

Occasionally we find ourselves on tiny roads surrounded by vineyards

Mark took this shot of me biking away from Ston

Mark getting ready to enjoy a great seafood for two appetizer in Korčula

And me at the same dinner. Normally we have dinner onboard but in this case we had a free night in the city. Mark did the research to find a great restaurant, and with a reservation we scored this perfect table right on the sea.

One last shot of Korčula. There’s a reason it’s one of Croatia’s top tourist destinations and a place I could easily imagine coming back for a few days.

We spent one night in Split before joining up with the bike tour there. Had dinner at a fun restaurant with funky design and great food.

A wonderful lunch within the narrow walls inside of Diocletian’s palace in Split

Looking up from lunch

We are not generally fans of organized group travel, though we love to see places by bicycle, and biking often works better in organized group travel. We are also not generally fans of cruises, and yet here we are on a two-week organized boat and bike tour of Dalmatia.

Our friend Ethyl had signed up for this tour last year and urged us to check it out. We met Ethyl biking in Japan about five years ago. And we see each other a couple times a year in New York. She mostly lives in California but spends the winter in New York, where she is a conductor for the Christmas Spectacular at Radio City Music Hall. We love Ethyl, love biking, and love Croatia, so we actually ended up planning this whole eight-week summer getaway around this particular tour.

A few days into it, the tour comes with the expected annoyances. Our quarters are of quite minimal comfort, groups can be annoying, and we are subject to more talks and waiting for people than our low tolerance level ordinarily permits. No surprises there.

On the plus side, we’re getting to see a lot of beautiful Mediterranean landscapes, and there is something wonderful about the way you encounter those places from a bicycle.

We’ve so far completed 3 of 12 of our bicycling days. And by day 3, those have fallen into a pretty nice rhythm. Mediterranean islands are anything but flat. When you start and finish from a boat, that means you start each tour from a lovely harbor and begin with a lot of hard climbing. Then you ride between charming villages, along vineyards, between low stone walls. You get many glimpses of the turquoise waters in the distance. And the ride eventually ends with a long descent to another (or sometimes the same) beautiful harbor — often followed by a cooling swim in that turquoise water. Not a bad routine at all.

As for those initial climbs, they are a little easier for me than for Jim. When he signed us up for this trip, he signed me up for an e-bike, which I’ve never used before. Jim himself remains too purist for that, but I’ll admit, I really love the e-bike. I can set it to give me a nice little boost when I’m climbing these tough hills. Im still peddling and getting my share of exercise, but there’s no more dreading the long steep climbs. Makes the biking a pure joy.

Lots more islands to explore!

Day 3 started from the stunning harbor of Vis on the island of the same name

From Vis we rode across the island to the lovely harbor town of Komiža

Looking down on Komiža as we climb back up to the center

Great to see Ethyl again!

Guess which island we are on

Here we are early in the hike around the lakes. Pretty nice water, huh?

We made a two-day stop in Plitvice Lakes National Park, what the guidebook calls Croatia’s “Adriatic hinterland,” about a hundred miles southeast of Opatija. We’d wanted to go there way back in 2013 when we first came here on our big adventure but it’s really hard to get here without a car. So part of the calculation in deciding to rent a car for this leg of our Slovenia/Croatia trip was to get to Plitvice.

The whole reason one comes to the area is this series of cascading lakes and waterfalls, surrounded by lush forests. It isn’t cheap – it’s about $40 per person, plus $10 for parking – but for a day-long outdoor experience it’s hard to beat. I mean, it’s been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since the 1970s. Oh, and one historic note worth mentioning. When Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, the Yugoslav (i.e., Serbian) army’s first point of attack was Plitvice. They held the park through the duration of the war and in fact it is thought that some remote parts of the park – not anywhere close to where tourists go – may still have Serbian landmines. Yuck.

As Lonely Planet puts it, “It’s as though Croatia decided to gather all its waterfalls in one place and charge admission to see them.”

So what’s going on here? The basic idea is that the geology of the area is loaded with limestone. As all the water flows along it picks up limestone and drops chalk sediment all over. That creates ideal growing conditions for moss and algae which constantly reroute the flow of water. The result is an ever-changing landscape of waterfalls cascading to lower lakes, over and over, all in stunning turquoise. And apparently it’s been going on for a long time, as in since the last great ice age.

And that was it. Though shorter routes are available, including lovely tour boats that glide across the biggest lakes as significant shortcuts, the full route around the major lakes in the park is about 12 miles. Which of course I had to do. Admittedly, I was sore the next days but the views were spectacular and definitely worth it.

Now it’s down to the ancient city of Split on the coast and off on a 14-day bike trip!

We were there quite early, before the crowds and when everything was very still

During the early part of the hike the boardwalk was often right over flowing water. We were amused by the lack of safety provisions; I can’t imagine you could have something like this without guard rails in the U.S.

More waterfalls

On the trail

While most of the trail was immediately next to the lakes, sometimes it went high up into the forest

From high up you would get views like this

And this