I'm jealous. I want to go too!
A couple of friends and I did their Bike & Barge trip through Belgium and Netherlands a few years ago. We requested road bikes since that is what we are used to. They asked for our heights and inseam measurements as I recall. We brought our own saddles, pedals, and shoes.
When we got there, the trip leaders had brought the requested road bikes for us, but fortunately they also brought hybrids, and they strongly recommended we use the hybrids instead of the road bikes. There was plenty of time for the leaders to fit the bikes for each ride. We had a shake down ride the first day and they were happy to help make any adjustments throughout the trip. It would probably be good to bring a multitool if you are comfortable doing this yourself. Once out on the route you may or may not have immediate access to one of the leaders.
We were glad to have taken their advice on the hybrids. We did have some short (1-3-5 miles) stretches of cobblestones nearly every day, or other obstacles, and lots of rain. They installed our pedals for us, but I don't think any of us bothered with swapping out the saddles. I don't recall any fit issues, or needing to tweak the seat or handlebars that entire trip. They also provided toe clips for anyone that wanted them.
The bikes were very good quality, clean, and well maintained. I never had any problems with shifters - which you might expect on a bike that has a different rider each week. The bikes are made for, and branded "VBT." I tried to find out who made them but could not (mostly because I wanted to buy one for myself when I got home). They provided trunk and/or handlebar bags, spare tubes and tire levers, locks, helmets, & water bottles. They do wash and disinfect the helmets at the end of each trip.
I would suggest you bring a wireless computer that you can set for miles or KM. The cue sheets were all done in km, and when we went the bikes did not have computers - which made for some wrong turns since the streets were not always marked, and the instructions would say to turn at "the park bench after the statue." Guessing how long a KM is was, well anybody's guess.
It would also be good to arrange for cell phone service while you are overseas. That way if you do have a problem, you can call your trip leader to come and help you out. When I did that, I think I paid something like $5.00 for the month of international service, which I turned off once I got home. Of course there was that one phone call when someone called me... at 3am, forgetting I was in Europe. LOL! That also made it easy to send a few photos back to my family via cell phone, or short emails.
Bringing your own bikes would be a problem if the trip does not end where you started, not to mention the hassle of finding someone to unpack, assemble, store your box, disassemble, repack, and ship it. That would just add way too much stress for my taste. Not to mention if your bike missed an airline connection. I think VBT says their insurance prohibits them from assembling or repairing personal bikes in the event you break a cable or something but you should confirm that if you go that route.
Have a wonderful time, and remember, we want pictures!
We



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