What? Is it really that early? The alarm clock jolts me out of a deep sleep at 6.30 in the morning. Ouch... as I get out of bed in the hotel I can feel my thighs burning, and my legs shake as I make my way sleepily to the bathroom. Twenty minutes later I’m seeing the first familiar faces in the breakfast room. Sausage, cheese, bread rolls and smelling freshly-brewed coffee... if only it weren’t so early I could really indulge myself here! I force myself to take a bowl of muesli, although I’m not hungry. I know I need energy for the day ahead. At the thought of my bike saddle, my sit-bones begin to ache. We’ve been on the road for two days already, at the halfway point on the EXPOBIKE TOUR. But there’s no time for musing. In a few minutes I’m meeting my comrades in arms at the bike racks in the basement and we’re setting off on the leg from Bad Salzungen to Schweinfurt. The rain makes my heart sink, but there’s no going back now. We just have to keep pedaling, switch off our minds and conserve our strength. After the lunch break we start the last segment to our next overnight stop, where a well-earned evening meal will be awaiting us. But there’s also a certain sense of anticipation. I take a last mouthful and smile to myself. Target of the day: 100 kilometers? Yes, I can. // Some memories of the journey – by Sina Faass
480 kilometers in four days by bike through Germany. To a professional cyclist this is just a warm-up, but to an amateur it’s a form of torture. For the participants in this year’s EXPOBIKE TOUR, it’s both an inspiration and a challenge. The aim of ImmoSport, the initiator of the Tour, is to promote sustainability by offering a physically active alternative way of travelling to EXPO REAL, providing participants with an opportunity to network while reducing their carbon footprint. Eleven Dreso staff members joined the Tour, which is organized by real estate professionals, for real estate professionals. How did our colleagues Sina Faass, Nina Demirer, Franziska Polleter and Joachim Lenschow manage to complete the Hanover to Nuremberg leg together in only four days? What do they tell us about this special journey?