Tag Archives: english

Commuting in Leuven

About 90% of students (including me) in Leuven are regular cyclists. Not athletes nor sportspersons, but commuters on two wheels. As the bike is the fastest (if you do not count small motorcycles) and cheapest way to get from A to B, this is an evident choice for young people. But older businessmen (and women) are not a rare sight riding their bikes in suits (or costumes), either. And bad weather is not an excuse. Raincoats are not futuristic equipment, they are available for a long time…

I was already a hardcore bike commuter back in Hungary, where life on two wheels is not as easy as it is here in Belgium. The infrastructure for cyclists in the city of Budapest is – to be honest – close to being non-existent. Bike lanes are almost unknown, separated bike paths are badly designed and built (usually starting in the middle of nowhere and ending in the middle of nowhere), the number of parking spaces for bikes is too low, car drivers are aggressive (of course, when they are sitting in the endless traffic-jams all day), etc. So the background and support for bike commuters is generally vary bad, hence riding your bike among the cars in Budapest can be considered as an extreme sport, where survival is the main goal, and reaching the destination is only a bonus point… (Bike messengers are the champions of this “sport”. I have a single speed messenger bike and I carry my stuff in a special messenger bag – both for practical reasons – but I am still far from them. If you want to be fast, you have to ride among the cars, and I have learned how to do that in a safe way. This is a skill, which you have to learn and practice a lot, or you can use the terrible and unsafe bike paths with a speed of 15 km/h, because there are always pedestrians who are unaware of the fact, that they are walking on the bike path… The choice is yours.) But something has started in the last two years. There are more and more cyclists on the road every day. The numbers are “so high” (around 5%, but that was 1% two years ago), that the city will have to do something… It is also proven, that the number of potential bike commuters is high, but they won’t hit the road until they feel safe. That’s the reason why it is so urgent to develop the sufficient infrastructure for cyclists. This is inevitable if Budapest would like to be a viable city again, as it was a 100 years ago.

These are nearly unimaginable problems for Belgian people, because the infrastructure here – at least (but not only if) compared to the Hungarian – is almost perfect. You see bike lanes, bike paths and parking places everywhere. One-way streets are usually open for cyclist from both directions, etc (I will write a separate post about this subject later). So the number of bike commuters is not a surprise at all…

Now – in the 2nd part of this post – I will present my everyday commuting route. On the morning, I usually ride through the center to stop for breakfast at a store of the bakery chain called Panos. On the evening (or late afternoon) I am taking the shortest and fastest route back (or in case I have to buy some stuff at the supermarket, it can be a bit different). So here is my commute:


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The elevation profile of the morning ride:

2009leuvencommute1

The elevation profile of the afternoon ride:

2009leuvencommute2

And there are also two videos showing these routes, but they may be a bit boring (they are) even at double speed, and the quality is not that good (blame YouTube for that). If you are still interested, check them out clicking here (from home to the University) and here (back to home).

Instructions for commenting are now bilingual, so you can fill out the box below your personal details and comment in English too (just write there the name of the current day, e.g. Tuesday)!

Beer tasting in Geel

On Sunday – after I managed to overcame my thoughts about staying at home and not doing anything after the exhausting ride of Saturday – I took the bus to Geel (only 2.70 EUR) to meet Steven – whose family lives there – and Paul, and spend a nice afternoon together. Steven invited us because there was a beer tasting event (22ste Kempisch Bierfestival) this weekend, which gave us a very good opportunity to deepen our knowledge (and understanding) of Belgian beer (and) culture. ;)

20090927beertasting

We tasted 9 different beers out of the (mind-blowing) 121 kinds available. In the order of consumption (from the left to the right on the picture above), we had Schuppenboer Tripel, Schuppenboer Tripel 2009 (two almost identical bottles, but their taste is completely different), Malheur 8 (which is not produced anymore, so we were lucky enough to taste one of the last bottles of it), Girardin Gueuze (unfiltered beer with a very strange aroma – considered as a very high quality beer among the lovers of these Lambic ales, but Paul was not even able to drink it :D), La Trappe Isid’or (a Trappist beer, the only one from the Netherlands), Larumse Corneel 2004 (this was one of the old beers), Früli Aardbei (very good beer with a really dominant strawberry taste, usually preferred by girls, but who cares? – sadly it is produced for export only, not for Belgian market…), Bios Vlaamse Bourgogne and Tempelier.

I saw that the others (this was really a big event, with hundreds drinking there – like a small Oktoberfest, but without the drunk people and the loud folk music -, there was even an official booklet about all the different beers, listing their type, alcohol content, color, taste and aroma) were tasting small pieces of cheese too, so I suggested to do the same. We had a big plate of several different kinds of cheese, which made the tasting even better – as they were all delicious and separated the different beers well.

After the beer tasting we were kindly invited for a barbecue dinner at Steven’s place with his family (parents, brother and sister). I (and of course Paul too) really enjoyed their hospitality, we had a very pleasant conversation and the meal was also truly delicious. We took the train back to Leuven (9.90 EUR – just to compare it with the bus ticket…) at a quarter past eight (and we had not enough time to thank Steven’s family in a proper way), then I went home and read some 50 pages from the new Dan Brown novel… I am very happy that I was not crazy and tired enough to miss this fantastic Sunday – that’s how every week should end here in Belgium. And of course thanks for the invitation, Steven!

If you would like to leave a comment, then after the question “Milyen nap van most (pl. kedd)?” you have to type which day of the week is today, but in Hungarian ;) From Monday to Sunday, these are the days (without accents, but that’s OK, it will work): hetfo, kedd, szerda, csutortok, pentek, szombat, vasarnap. I will make small modifications in the (near) future to simplify this for non-Hungarian speakers (some 99.8% of the World). Update (05/10/2009): now it works on both languages.