In the old days you'd get a copy of the appropriate Michelin maps and 
there'd be highlights along the routes that indicate that the road is 
scenic (green highlight for Michelin maps, purple for Kummerly+Frey). 
There's also a very nice cheat code that I've used successfully in the 
past, which is to contact the local touring club in the area and ask (I 
know you mentioned local cycling clubs only publishing group ride routes 
--- but those are usually not touring clubs). They usually have lots of 
rides in their ride database or worse comes to worse you can find someone 
who's led rides who can share their GPS tracks with you.

For various places I've discovered that certain people (e.g., the late 
Jobst Brandt) write detailed trip reports that reward careful reading and 
hence allow me to find "new to me" scenic routes that have ideal conditions 
for riding (e.g., shade or tailwinds in the afternoon, amazing descents, 
great places to eat or stay). By and large though most people aren't very 
good at writing good trip reports. And I've discovered that on certain 
websites they will post pictures of their bicycle tour only to tell me when 
I ask about their routes that because they paid someone to design their 
route they couldn't share their routes, which flabbergasted me, coming from 
the old school "share and share alike" ethic towards touring knowledge and 
route sharing.

For foreign countries my favorite go-to are the Rough Stuff Fellowship and 
Cyclists Touring Club (CTC) in England. Those clubs have been all over the 
world and have very good routes and are very happy to share for the price 
of membership (which years ago was only about $30/year). The OCD cycle 
touring club also has excellent guides to the Alps whose suggestions are 
never wrong.

I'll plug my book: Independent Cycle Touring (https://amzn.to/46Bc1EC) 
which has an entire chapter devoted to route design and map reading for 
bicycle touring. In these days of GPS and Google Maps nobody's buying that 
book but you may find it helpful even though it's filled with maps of 
places you'll never go.

On Saturday, September 13, 2025 at 3:01:47 PM UTC-7 [email protected] 
wrote:

> I'm looking for things like: tree cover, natural beauty, rolling hills, 
> country roads and stops along the way for great snacks/coffee/adventures. 
>
> RideWithGPS and Strava don't have a filter/metric for *scenic*. 
> Heatmaps only tell you a route is trafficked, not the *quality*.
> Local cycling clubs only publish group ride routes (not what I'm after).
>
> What's worked for me so far is sticking to dedicated cycling paths, using 
> google earth on RideWithGPS and my local knowledge of fun stops - but this 
> seems hard to replicate outside of your own city.
>
> I'd love to ride in an adjacent town or take a trip a few hours away for a 
> fun ride, but I haven't found a resource that's big, searchable list of 
> *scenic* rides across the US or globe.
>
> RideWithGPS offers Ride Reports <https://ridewithgps.com/ride_reports>. 
> This feels *almost* what I'm looking for except there's no way to filter 
> by location, length or type of ride.
>
> Has anyone found a better option?
>
> - Stephen in Dallas
>

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