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In England, the EV5 is complete. The route is 113 mi (182 km) [citation needed] long and follows the National Cycle Network route NCR1 from Canterbury to Dover. From the ancient city of Canterbury which was the historic starting point of Sigeric's Via Francigena, the EV5 then travels to the coast and the port of Sandwich and ends at Dover, where a ferry can take you to France to continue the ride.
The 2025 Tour de France is the upcoming 112th edition of the Tour de France. It will start in Lille on 5 July, and will finish with the final stage at Champs-Élysées , Paris , on 27 July. Route and stages
Each year in late October, journalists and riders gather in Paris for the unveiling of the Tour de France (July 5-27, 2025) and Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift (July 26-August 3, 2025) routes ...
The 2025 Tour de France and Tour de France Femmes routes have been revealed. ... where the stage-five individual time trial is a 33km flat ride around Caen. The stage-seven finish on the Mur de ...
There are 20 routes, each one connecting Paris with some city on border of France. They can be ridden in both ways. The route distances range from 189 to 993 km. Participants can ride a Flèche de France either as a Tourist (minimum of 80 km per day) or as a Randonneur. The Randonneur option is divided in 2 levels, Silver and Gold.
Map of the EuroVelo 6 long-distance cycling route, from the Atlantic coast to the Black Sea.. EuroVelo 6 (EV6), named the "Rivers Route", is a EuroVelo long-distance cycling route that runs along 3,653 km (2,270 mi) some of Europe's major rivers, including much of the Loire, some of the Saône, a short section of the upper Rhine and almost the entire length of Europe’s second longest river ...
The Route nationale 5, or RN 5, is a trunk road [1] in France now connecting Dijon with the frontier of Switzerland. [2] It is also numbered the European route E21 . Reclassification
The European route E5 is part of the United Nations international E-road network. It is the westernmost north–south "reference road", running from Greenock in Scotland, south through Great Britain and France to Algeciras, Spain. [1] The route is 1,900 miles (3,100 km) long.